The Project Gutenberg eBook of Cornish Characters and Strange Events
Title: Cornish Characters and Strange Events
Author: S. Baring-Gould
Release date: January 4, 2013 [eBook #41775]
Most recently updated: October 23, 2024
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Douglas L. Alley, III, Chris Curnow and the
Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
(This file was produced from images generously made
available by The Internet Archive)
CORNISH CHARACTERS
AND STRANGE EVENTS
BY THE SAME AUTHOR
UNIFORM WITH THIS VOLUME
DEVONSHIRE CHARACTERS AND STRANGE EVENTS
With 55 Full-page Illustrations
Reproduced from Old Prints, etc.
CORNISH CHARACTERS
AND STRANGE EVENTS BY S. BARING-GOULD, M.A.
WITH 62 FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS
REPRODUCED FROM OLD PRINTS, ETC.
"We all are men,
In our own natures frail, and capable
Of our flesh; few are angels."
Henry VIII (Act V, Sc. 2).
LONDON: JOHN LANE THE BODLEY HEAD
NEW YORK: JOHN LANE COMPANY MCMIX
PLYMOUTH: WILLIAM BRENDON AND SON, LTD., PRINTERS
PREFACE
Cornwall, peopled mainly by Celts, but with an infusion of English blood, stands and always has stood apart from the rest of England, much, but in a less degree, as has Wales. That which brought it into more intimate association with English thought, interests, and progress was the loss of the old Cornish tongue.
The isolation in which Cornwall had stood has tended to develop in it much originality of character; and the wildness of the coast has bred a hardy race of seamen and smugglers; the mineral wealth, moreover, drew thousands of men underground, and the underground life of the mines has a peculiar effect on mind and character: it is cramping in many ways, but it tends to develop a good deal of religious enthusiasm, that occasionally breaks forth in wild forms of fanaticism. Cornwall has produced admirable sailors, men who have won deathless renown in warfare at sea, as "Old Dreadnought" Boscawen, Pellew, Lord Exmouth, etc., and daring and adventurous smugglers, like "The King of Prussia," who combined great religious fervour with entire absence of scruple in the matter of defrauding the king's revenue. It has produced men of science who have made for themselves a world-fame, as Adams the astronomer, and Sir Humphry Davy the chemist; men who have been benefactors to their race, as Henry Trengrouse, Sir Goldsworthy Gurney, and Trevithick. It has sent forth at least one notable painter, the miner's boy Opie, and a dramatist, Samuel Foote, and a great singer in his day, Incledon. But it has not given to literature a great poet. Minor rhymes have been produced in great quantities, but none of great worth. Philosophers have issued from the mines, as Samuel Drew, eccentrics many, as Sir James Tillie, John Knill, and Daniel Gumb. And Cornwall has contributed a certain number of rascals—but fewer in number than almost any other county, if we exclude wreckers and smugglers from the catalogue of rascality.
Strange superstitions have lingered on, and one very curious story of a girl fed for years by fairies has been put on record.
It is somewhat remarkable that Cornwall has produced no musical genius of any note; and yet the Cornishman is akin to the Welshman and the Irishman.
Cornwall has certainly sent up to London and Westminster very able politicians, as Godolphin, Sir William Molesworth, and Sir John Eliot. It furnished Tyburn with a victim—Hugh Peters, the chaplain of Oliver Cromwell, a strange mixture of money-grasping, enthusiasm, and humour.
It has been the object of the author, not to retell the lives of the greatest of the sons of Cornwall, for these lives may be read in the Dictionary of National Biography, but to chronicle the stories of lesser luminaries concerning whom less is known and little is easily accessible. In this way it serves as a companion volume to Devonshire Characters; and Cornwall in no particular falls short of Devonshire in the variety of characters it has sent forth, nor are their stories of less interest.
The author and publisher have to thank many for kind help: Mr. Percy Bate, Mr. T. R. Bolitho, Rev. A. T. Boscawen, Mr. J. A. Bridger, Mr. T. Walter Brimacombe, Mr. A. M. Broadley, Mr. R. P. Chope, Mr. Digby Collins, Mr. J. B. Cornish, Mrs. Coryton of Pentillie Castle, Miss Loveday E. Drake, Mr. E. H. W. Dunkin, f.s.a., Mr. J. D. Enys of Enys, the Rev. Wm. Iago, Mrs. H. Forbes Julian, Mrs. de Lacy Lacy, the Rev. A. H. Malan, Mr. Lewis Melville, Mr. A. H. Norway, Captain Rogers of Penrose, Mr. Thomas Seccombe, Mr. Henry Trengrouse, Mr. W. H. K. Wright, and Mr. Henry Young of Liverpool—and last, but not least, Miss Windeatt Roberts for her admirable Index to the volume.
The publisher wishes me to say that he would much like to discover the whereabouts of a full-length portrait of Sir John Call, with a view of Bodmin Gaol in the background.
S. BARING-GOULD.
CONTENTS
| page | |
| WILLIAM PENGELLY, GEOLOGIST | 1 |
| SIR CHARLES WILLS, K.B. | 12 |
| LIEUTENANT GOLDSMITH AND THE LOGAN ROCK | 18 |
| HUGH PETERS, THE REGICIDE | 26 |
| JAMES POLKINGHORNE, THE WRESTLER | 54 |
| HENRY TRENGROUSE, INVENTOR | 59 |
| THE BOTATHAN GHOST | 72 |
| JOHN COUCH ADAMS, ASTRONOMER | 83 |
| DANIEL GUMB | 91 |
| LAURENCE BRADDON | 96 |
| THOMASINE BONAVENTURA | 108 |
| THE MURDER OF NEVILL NORWAY | 117 |
| SIR WILLIAM LOWER, KNT. | 126 |
| THE PIRATES AT PENZANCE | 130 |
| DAME KILLIGREW | 133 |
| TWO NATURALISTS IN CORNWALL | 141 |
| John Ralfs | |
| George Carter Bignell | |
| SIR JOHN CALL, BART. | 154 |
| JOHN KNILL | 169 |
| THOMAS TREGOSS | 176 |
| ANTHONY PAYNE | 181 |
| NEVIL NORTHEY BURNARD | 186 |
| SIR GOLDSWORTHY GURNEY, KNT., INVENTOR | 192 |
| THE JANES | 206 |
| THE PENNINGTONS | 222 |
| DOCTOR GLYNN-CLOBERY | 228 |
| THREE MEN OF MOUSEHOLE | 232 |
| DOLLY PENTREATH | 238 |
| ROBERT JEFFERY OF POLPERRO | 247 |
| ADMIRAL RICHARD DARTON THOMAS | 258 |
| COMMANDER JOHN POLLARD | 269 |
| THE CASE OF BOSAVERN PENLEZ | 270 |
| SAMUEL FOOTE | 280 |
| THE LAST LORD MOHUN | 298 |
| THE LAST LORD CAMELFORD | 318 |
| WILLIAM NOYE | 329 |
| WILLIAM LEMON | 342 |
| SAMUEL DREW | 346 |
| THE SIEGE OF SKEWIS | 364 |
| THE VOYAGE OF JOHN SANDS | 370 |
| CHARLES INCLEDON | 375 |
| THE MURDER OF RICHARD CORYTON | 388 |
| SIR JAMES TILLIE, KNT. | 399 |
| LIEUTENANT JOHN HAWKEY | 408 |
| DR. DANIEL LOMBARD | 424 |
| THE DREAM OF MR. WILLIAMS | 427 |
| SIR ROBERT TRESILIAN | 432 |
| PIRATE TRELAWNY | 441 |
| JAMES SILK BUCKINGHAM | 455 |
| MARY ANN DAVENPORT, ACTRESS | 466 |
| THE ROYAL FAMILY OF PRUSSIA | 470 |
| CAPTAIN RICHARD KEIGWIN | 479 |
| THE LOSS OF THE "KENT" | 489 |
| VICE-ADMIRAL SIR CHARLES V. PENROSE | 500 |
| SIR CHRISTOPHER HAWKINS, BART. | 515 |
| ANNE JEFFERIES | 531 |
| THOMAS KILLIGREW, THE KING'S JESTER | 544 |
| NICOLAS ROSCARROCK | 554 |
| LIEUTENANT PHILIP G. KING | 559 |
| HICKS OF BODMIN | 569 |
| CAPTAIN TOBIAS MARTIN | 579 |
| THE MAYOR OF BODMIN | 586 |
| JOHN NICHOLS TOM, ALIAS SIR WILLIAM COURTENAY, K.M. | 593 |
| THE BOHELLAND TRAGEDY | 614 |
| MARY KELYNACK | 620 |
| CAPTAIN WILLIAM ROGERS | 623 |
| JOHN BURTON OF FALMOUTH | 627 |
| THE FATE OF SIR CLOUDESLEY SHOVEL | 637 |
| FRANCIS TREGIAN | 652 |
| ANN GLANVILLE | 663 |
| JONATHAN SIMPSON, HIGHWAYMAN | 670 |
| DAVIES GILBERT | 675 |
| JAMES HOSKIN, FARMER | 682 |
| JOHN HARRIS, THE MINER POET | 692 |
| EDWARD CHAPMAN | 701 |
| JOHN COKE OF TRERICE | 704 |
| THOMAS PELLOW OF PENRYN | 707 |
| THE ORIGIN OF THE ROBARTES FAMILY | 718 |
| THEODORE PALEOLOGUS | 727 |
ILLUSTRATIONS
| Thomas Pitt, Lord Camelford | Frontispiece |
| to face page | |
| William Pengelly | 2 |
|
|
| Lieutenant-General Sir Charles Wills | 12 |
|
|
| A View of the Celebrated Logan Rock, near Land's End in Cornwall | 18 |
|
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| A View of the Southern Part of Castle Treryn, showing the Machinery erected for the purpose of replacing the Logan Rock | 22 |
|
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| Hugh Peters | 26 |
|
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| James Polkinghorne, the Famous Cornish Wrestler | 54 |
|
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| Henry Trengrouse, the Inventor of the Rocket Apparatus for Saving Life at Sea | 60 |
|
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| The Wreck of the "Anson" | 66 |
|
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| "Parson Rudall" | 72 |
|
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| John Couch Adams | 84 |
|
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| John Couch Adams | 88 |
| The Cheese-wring | 92 |
|
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| Nevill Norway | 118 |
|
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| Sir William Lower | 126 |
| The Killygrew Cup | 134 |
"1633. from maior to maior to the towne of permarin,
where they received mee that was in great misery" This cup has been recently valued at the sum of £4000. It measures just two feet in height |
|
| George Carter Bignell | 142 |
|
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| John Ralfs | 146 |
|
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| Sir John Call, Bart. | 154 |
|
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| Whiteford—the Residence of Sir John Call | 164 |
|
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| John Knill | 170 |
|
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| Glass inscribed "Success to the Eagle Frigate, John Knill, Commander" | 172 |
|
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| Anthony Payne | 182 |
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| Nevil Northey Burnard | 186 |
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| Wesley's Head over the Old Meeting-house, Penpont, Altarnon. Cut by Burnard when 16 years of age | 188 |
| Tombstones cut by Burnard | 188 |
|
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| Tombstones in Altarnon Churchyard. Cut by Burnard | 190 |
| Sir Goldsworthy Gurney | 192 |
|
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| Dorothy Pentreath of Mousehole in Cornwall. The last Person who could Converse in the Cornish Language | 232 |
|
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| Monschole, in Mount's Bay, from the Island | 238 |
|
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| Samuel Foote | 280 |
| The Last Lord Mohun | 298 |
|
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| The Duel between Lord Mohun and the Duke of Hamilton | 312 |
|
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| Sir William Noye, Attorney-General to King Charles the First | 330 |
| Sir William Lemon, Bart., M.P. for Cornwall | 342 |
|
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| Samuel Drew | 346 |
|
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| Henry Rogers, Pewterer | 364 |
| Charles Incledon, as Macheath | 376 |
|
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| Sir James Tillie, Knt. | 400 |
| Sir James Tillie's Monument at Pentillie | 406 |
| Edward John Trelawny | 442 |
|
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| James Silk Buckingham | 456 |
| Mrs. Davenport, in the Character of Mrs. Grundy | 466 |
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| At Prussia Cove. "Bessy's" Cove from Battery Point | 470 |
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| John Carter's House at Prussia Cove. (Demolished in 1906) | 476 |
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| Vice-Admiral Sir Charles V. Penrose, k.c.b. | 500 |
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| Thomas Killigrew, Groom of the Bedchamber to King Charles the Second | 544 |
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| Lieutenant Philip Gidley King | 560 |
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| William R. Hicks | 570 |
| William R. Hicks of Bodmin | 576 |
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| John Thomas, otherwise Sir William Courtenay, who shot Lieutenant Bennet in Basenden Wood, Boughton, near Canterbury, and the Constable Mears, on Thursday, May 31st, 1838. | 594 |
| Percy Honeywood Courtenay, Knight of Malta, etc. etc., as he appeared at the Election in 1832 | 608 |
| Mary Kelynack | 620 |
| Captain W. Rogers | 624 |
|
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| John Burton of Falmouth | 628 |
| Sir Cloudesley Shovel | 638 |
| Ann Glanville | 664 |
| Davies Gilbert | 676 |
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| John Harris, the Miner Poet | 692 |
| The Right Hon. John Earl of Radnor: Baron Roberts of Truro | 718 |
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| Memorial Brass in the Church of Landulph | 728 |
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