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The Farmhouse, Lower Porthmeor

Near Zennor, Cornwall

 

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Lower Porthmeor is a township, or farm hamlet, typical of this area of West Penwith, where sometimes as many as four houses are grouped round a single farmyard. The houses are not themselves of great age, but they represent a tradition as old as the tiny stonehedged fields in which they stand, fields that have scarcely changed since the Iron Age.

With their pleasant sturdy buildings, such settlements can be seen dotted all along the green coastal shelf running west from St Ives, bounded on one side by a ridge of high moor, on the other by the Atlantic cliffs. We bought the farm, which had been derelict for some years, in conjunction with the National Trust. There are two houses, separated by the farmyard, both facing south, and each with its own granite-walled garden. Nearby across the road there is a third, not part of the farmstead, but which formerly played a part in the small community as a Nonconformist meeting place.

From their back doors, it is a short walk across fields to where a little valley cuts through the cliffs to form a rocky bay.

The Farmhouse was built in about 1800 and has a handsome front of granite ashlar, paid for perhaps with money from the tin stamps nearby. Inside are further hints of wealth, in a bedroom with a dado and a pretty fireplace. But the great chimney piece in the kitchen has a granite monolith for its lintel, like many older houses in the area.



Fire or stove Bath Dishwasher Open grounds, garden or terrace or yard Remote property or isolated location Dogs allowed (up to 2) Outside dining furniture

Sleeps: 4

Beds:

Features


  • Solid fuel stove
  • Garden
  • Adjacent parking
  • Dogs allowed


Other Landmarks at Lower Porthmeor:


The Captain's House
Arra Venton

 
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