Mousehole

Village in southwest Cornwall, England


title: "Mousehole" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["mousehole", "fishing-communities-in-england", "villages-in-cornwall", "penzance", "penwith", "ports-and-harbours-of-cornwall", "populated-coastal-places-in-cornwall"] description: "Village in southwest Cornwall, England" topic_path: "geography/united-kingdom" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mousehole" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Village in southwest Cornwall, England ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox UK place"]

FieldValue
countryEngland
official_nameMousehole
cornish_namePorthenys
coordinates
population697
population_ref(2011 Census)
civil_parishPenzance
unitary_englandCornwall
lieutenancy_englandCornwall
regionSouth West England
constituency_westminsterSt Ives
post_townPENZANCE
postcode_districtTR19
postcode_areaTR
dial_code01736
os_grid_referenceSW468264
static_image_nameMousehole fromm air Fossick.jpg
static_image_captionMousehole Harbour
::

|country=England |official_name=Mousehole |cornish_name=Porthenys |coordinates = |population=697 |population_ref=(2011 Census) |civil_parish=Penzance |unitary_england=Cornwall |lieutenancy_england =Cornwall |region=South West England |constituency_westminster=St Ives |post_town=PENZANCE |postcode_district=TR19 |postcode_area=TR |dial_code=01736 |os_grid_reference=SW468264 |static_image_name=Mousehole fromm air Fossick.jpg |static_image_caption=Mousehole Harbour

Mousehole (; ) is a village and fishing port in Cornwall, England, UK. It is approximately 2.5 mi south of Penzance on the shore of Mount's Bay. The village is in the civil parish of Penzance. An islet called St Clement's Isle lies about 350 m offshore from the harbour entrance.

Mousehole lies within the Cornwall Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB). 27% of Cornwall has AONB designation, with the same status and protection as a National Park.

History

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c4/Mousehole_^Mousehole_Village-geograph.org.uk-_2096400.jpg" caption="Seaward view of Mousehole showing the cave from which the village takes its name"] ::

The first mention of the village of Mousehole is in 1283 and the first mention of Portheness is in 1267. Although usually thought of as the same place, a document from 1309 names Porthenys juxta Mousehole (i.e., next to Mousehole), implying two separate places. Compare with nearby Newlyn which is separated by a stream from Tolcarne and both were once considered individual places. There is also a 1339 document naming Porthengrous juxta Porthenes (harbour by the cross, next to the harbour by the island). If the amount of tax collected is indicative of how important a place was, in the 14th century, tax collected on the number of fishing boats from Mousehole was £5. Nearby Marazion paid £1 6s 8d, Newlyn £1, Penzance 12s and Porthgwarra and Penberth 12s. There were three medieval chapels, including the one on St Clement's island. In 1383 a chapel was dedicated to "the Blessed Virgin Mary" and was in ruins by 1414 due to storms. It was rebuilt around 1420 and finally destroyed during the Reformation. Another chapel was licensed in 1441 and dedicated to St Edward the Confessor.

Records show that pilchards were exported to France as early as 1302, and in the late 18th century there were five seines and 55 boats based in the harbour. In the 1880s there was still a drift pilchard fishery and in the autumn around sixty boats fished in the North Sea.

Along with Marazion, it was one of the principal ports of Mount's Bay until the 16th century. Before its decline as a major commercial centre, Mousehole also had a number of fairs and markets, including the charter for a market on Tuesdays, with a fair for three days at the festival of St Barnabas, granted to Henry de Tyes in 1292. Mousehole, like many communities in Mount's Bay, fell within the authority of the Manor of Alverton; all early charters, fairs etc. associated with Mousehole are associated with this manorial estate.

Mousehole, like Penzance, Newlyn and Paul, was attacked in the 1595 raid on Mount's Bay by Spaniard Carlos de Amésquita, the only surviving building being the 'Keigwin Arms', a local pub. Outside the Keigwin Arms (now a private residence) is a plaque with the wording "Squire Jenkyn Keigwin was killed here 23 July 1595 defending this house against the Spaniards".

20th century

Although a lifeboat had been available in Mount's Bay for many years, a new lifeboat station at Penlee Point, on the outskirts of the village, was opened in 1913. On 19 December 1981 the entire lifeboat crew of eight was lost during an attempted rescue in hurricane-force winds. The lifeboat was moved to Newlyn in 1983 but continues to be known as the "Penlee Lifeboat".

The village's harbourside was once the location of the Lobster Pot guest house, in which Dylan Thomas and Caitlin Macnamara spent their honeymoon after marrying at Penzance register office.

In 1936 the GPO Film Unit made The Saving of Bill Blewitt, a short film to promote the Post Office Savings Bank, featuring local postman Bill Blewitt.

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b2/Mousehole_(Cornwall)_2014.jpg" caption="The Mousehole"] ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a5/The_Ship_Inn,Mousehole-geograph.org.uk-_1631449.jpg" caption="The Ship InnAn 18th-century building which was heightened in the 19th century and has whitewashed rubble walls with tarred plinth. One of the four windows is blocked the others have sashes without glazing bars. On the first floor is an oriel bay and th plain recessed door is under a bay window. The right hand part of the building is from the early 19th-century, of two storeys and has four windows which have sashes without glazing bars. The slurried roof has large slates and wide eaves."] ::

Mousehole hosts a vibrant variety of festivals and community activities. It is known for its Christmas illuminations. Since 1981, every 19 December the lights have been turned off in memory of the victims of the lifeboat disaster. Tom Bawcock's Eve is a unique celebration held on 23 December each year to celebrate the ending of a famine in the 16th century by local resident Tom Bawcock. This festival is the inspiration behind the book The Mousehole Cat by Antonia Barber and the associated television productions. This festival is also the origin of stargazy pie, a mixed fish, egg and potato pie with fish heads protruding through the pastry. Mousehole also holds a small maritime festival every two years called 'Sea, Salt and Sail'.

Parts of the 1995 feature film Blue Juice were filmed in the village. The local community radio station is Coast FM (formerly Penwith Radio), which broadcasts on 96.5 and 97.2 FM.

Local government

Mousehole was part of the ancient parish of Paul, and from 1866 part of the civil parish of Paul. In 1894 Mousehole became part of Paul Urban District. The urban district was abolished in 1934 and Mousehole was absorbed into the municipal borough of Penzance. Penzance Municipal Borough was itself abolished in 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972, and Mousehole became part of the new Penwith District. The former borough was unparished until 1980. The unparished area was formed into a civil parish in 1980, and the new Penzance parish council elected to call itself a town council. Penwith District was abolished in 2009, and Mousehole now falls under the unitary Cornwall Council.

Sport

There is a football team based nearby named Mousehole A.F.C., currently playing in the Southern League Division One South.

Notable residents

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/bc/Dorothy_Pentreath.jpg" caption="[[Dolly Pentreath"] ::

Penwith is believed to be the last part of Cornwall where the Cornish language was spoken as the community language. Dolly Pentreath, (1692–1777), popularly known as the last recorded speaker of Cornish, is often reported as being from Mousehole and as having a memorial in the village. In fact, she was from Paul (the parish of Paul historically included Mousehole).

A year after Dolly Pentreath died, Daines Barrington, (c.1727–1800) received a letter, written in Cornish and accompanied by an English translation, from a fisherman in Mousehole named William Bodinar stating that he knew of five people who could speak Cornish in that village alone. Barrington also speaks of a John Nancarrow from Marazion who was a native speaker and survived into the 1790s.

John Keigwin (1641–1716), a scholar in the Cornish language, William Carvosso (1750–1834), the Methodist, and Joseph Trewavas VC CGM (1835–1905) were also born in Mousehole.

Admiral of the fleet Sir Caspar John GCB (1903–1984) lived in Mousehole in retirement. The artist Jack Pender (1918–1998) was born in Mousehole and spent most of his career there. English writer and illustrator Michelle Cartlidge lives in Mousehole.

The potter Jack Doherty (born 1948) lives in Mousehole where he has his studio.

Media and literary associations

Gallery

Mousehole fromm air Fossick.jpg|Aerial shot Mousehole fromm air2 Fossick.jpg|Aerial shot Mousehole rock pool from air Fossick.jpg|Aerial shot of rock pool Mousehole St Clements Isle from air Fossick.jpg|St Clements Isle File:Mousehole - Sea Salts and Sail Festival 1 - Kernow Skies.jpg|Sea Salts and Sail Festival File:Mousehole - Sea Salts and Sail Festival 2 - Kernow Skies.jpg|Sea Salts and Sail Festival File:Mousehole - Sea Salts and Sail Festival 3 - Kernow Skies.jpg|Sea Salts and Sail Festival File:Mousehole - Sea Salts and Sail Festival 4 - Kernow Skies.jpg|Sea Salts and Sail Festival File:Mousehole - Sea Salts and Sail Festival 5 - Kernow Skies.jpg|Sea Salts and Sail Festival File:Mousehole - Sea Salts and Sail Festival 6 - Kernow Skies.jpg|Sea Salts and Sail Festival File:Mousehole - Sea Salts and Sail Festival 7 - Kernow Skies.jpg|Sea Salts and Sail Festival File:Mousehole - Sea Salts and Sail Festival 8 - Kernow Skies.jpg|Sea Salts and Sail Festival File:Mousehole - Sea Salts and Sail Festival 9 - Kernow Skies.jpg|Sea Salts and Sail Festival File:Mousehole Sailing Race.webm|Sail race video File:The Old Coastguard Hotel Mousehole.jpg|The Old Coastguard Hotel and Restaurant File:St_Clements_Isle_Mousehole_HDR.jpg|St Clements Isle

References

References

  1. "Mousehole (EN) - Henwyn Tyller".
  2. "Must see fishing villages in Cornwall". Travel Daily News.
  3. Ordnance Survey: Landranger map sheet 203 ''Land's End'' {{ISBN. 978-0-319-23148-7
  4. (2001). "Crosses and Churchway Paths in the Land's End Peninsula, West Cornwall. Parishes of Paul & Sancreed". Men-an-Tol Studio.
  5. (1985). "The Place-Names of West Penwith". Peter Pool.
  6. (2006). "The fishing boats and ports of Cornwall: An alternative way to explore Cornwall". Channel View Publishing.
  7. (1970). "A short history of Mousehole: with personal recollections". N M Pender.
  8. (19 October 1882). "Mousehole". The Cornishman.
  9. (18 October 2003). "West Penwith Resources – Paul (Lysons)". West-penwith.org.uk.
  10. Thomson, Lizzie. (2022-03-21). "Only house in village to survive Spanish Armada shelling up for sale".
  11. (27 September 2010). "Solomon Browne history". BBC.
  12. Leach, Nicholas. (2006). "Cornwall's Lifeboat Heritage". Twelveheads Press.
  13. (25 October 2010). "City and County of Swansea – The 1930s". Dylanthomas.com.
  14. Anthony, Scott. "BFI Screenonline: Saving of Bill Blewitt, The (1936)". BFI.
  15. An 18th-century building which was heightened in the 19th century and has whitewashed rubble walls with tarred plinth. One of the four windows is blocked the others have sashes without glazing bars. On the first floor is an oriel bay and th plain recessed door is under a bay window. The right hand part of the building is from the early 19th-century, of two storeys and has four windows which have sashes without glazing bars. The slurried roof has large slates and wide eaves.
  16. "Home". Seasalts.co.uk.
  17. (18 April 2021). "Cornwall famous film locations to visit on holiday". [[Cornwall Live]].
  18. "Volunteer run Penwith Radio to change its name to Coast FM".
  19. [http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/unit/10135928 Vision of Britain website: Paul UD]
  20. "A complete list of orders affecting Cornwall County from 1973 to the present". Local Government Boundary Commission for England.
  21. . (2025). ["League Table: Southern League Div One South - 2025/2026"](https://southern-football-league.co.uk/league-table/Southern%20League%20Div%20One%20South/2025/2026/P/).
  22. . ["A memorial obelisk commemorating Dorothy "Dolly" Pentreath set in a wall of the churchyard of St Pol de Lion's Church, viewed from the north-west"](https://historicengland.org.uk/images-books/photos/item/BAR03/01/203). *Department for Culture, Media and Sport*.
  23. Ellis, P. Berresford (c. 1970) ''The Story of the Cornish Language''. Penryn: Tor Mark Press
  24. (2004). "Keigwin, John".
  25. "William Carvosso".
  26. (26 June 2002). "A CEREMONY TO UNVEIL A MEMORIAL PLAQUE TO JOSEPH TREWAVAS VC, CGM, RN, TOOK PLACE AT ST POL DE LEON CHURCH, PAUL VILLAGE, CORNWALL.".
  27. "Michelle Cartlidge". Mabecronbooks.co.uk.
  28. "Jack Doherty {{!}} Bils & Rye Ltd".
  29. (7 April 2001). "The Little Country". Macmillan.

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mouseholefishing-communities-in-englandvillages-in-cornwallpenzancepenwithports-and-harbours-of-cornwallpopulated-coastal-places-in-cornwall