Penzance harbour wall 1861
treeve

Penzance harbour wall 1861

On top of the building now used by the IoSSCo on the South Pier, was formed a long seat in the high granite work, complete with chamfered back; much used in my grandfather's time, and in the generation before him, to watch for the incoming and outgoing Scillonian Packet ships. In the seat is chiselled the date '1861', by the mason himself, to record his work.
All becomes clear! It s easy to see why the circular, spiked barriers were put up along that wall! Has anyone ever dropped off and lived to tell the tale, excepting the young and not-so-young idiots that do such things on purpose? A rhetorical question!
 
In order to get this (and I do not suggest this is done at home) I stood, heels on the edge of the roof; the spike rails are more to prevent people getting fouled up with loading and passengers than anything else, I would have thought; Heaven forbid any HSE maniac closing off this vital walkway (for people with Soul, that is).
 
At the other end of the South Pier (beyond the toilets) the wall rises to an incredible height and is wisely spiked off, but as a child, I used to walk quite happily along the whole wall to the Parade Ground. I must have given a lot of people grey hair in my time.
 

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