The changing face of the Sunderland quayside
Well-preserved remains of limekilns on the north bank of the Wear, near the Stadium of Light.
Image courtesy of Derbyshire Local Studies Libraries and www.picturethepast.org.uk
By the 19th century Mousehole was just one distinct settlement. Its population growth was small, from 1461 in 1841 to 1655 in 1901.
Newlyn town had a quay since medieval times, but it appears to have collapsed.
By the 18th century, there was a quay or wharf at Street an Nowan, a fishing community which had sprang up since the early 17th century.
Penzance and Newlyn were rival ports in Mount's Bay - through out history they were competing for economic dominance of the bay.
The Wills Memorial Building was commissioned in 1912 by George Alfred Wills and Henry Herbert Wills, in honour of their father, Henry Overton Wills
This public house carries a carving of the sculptor's view of what a Native American would look like.
This pub is another link to the thriving Bristol sugar industry, although the refinery itself burnt down in 1859.