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Gweek is a village and civil parish in the Kerrier district of Cornwall, England renowned for its Seal Sanctuary. A village is a clustered human settlement or community, larger than a hamlet, but smaller than a Town or City. A civil parish in the United Kingdom is a unit of local government. Housing On 9th January 2008 the ‘Regional Spatial Strategy for the South West’ (RSS announced plans to massively increase house-building in Cornwall stating that almost 70000 Cornwall ( Kernow ˈkɛɹnɔʊ is the most southwesterly county of England, on the Peninsula that lies to the west of the River Tamar England is a Country which is part of the United Kingdom. Its inhabitants account for more than 83% of the total UK population whilst its mainland The Gweek Seal Sanctuary is a charity funded sanctuary for injured seal pups

Gweek Village Hall.
Gweek Village Hall.

The Civil Parish of Gweek was created from part of the parish of Constantine by boundary revision in 1986. This place should not be confused with Constantine Bay, Cornwall which is west of Padstow.

Contents

Music

Gweek Silver Band

Like many Cornish villages, it features a brass band[1] that performs in the local community and provides backing at some Anglican services in the Gweek Mission Church. The band also organises a yearly "band week". This starts with a concert of three local brass bands in a field overlooking the Helford River. Helford River is not a river or an Estuary but a Ria located in Cornwall which passes the Trebah and Glendurgan gardens and the Afterwards, there is a pig roast with stalls and entertainment and at the end of the week a clay pigeon shoot.

The Cornwall Fiddle Orchestra

The Cornwall Fiddle Orchestra[2] was formed in 2007 by fiddle player Hudson Swan. Hudson Swan (born 1954 is a Scottish Musician, specializing in Folk music. He was a member of Scottish band, The Tannahill Weavers but now lives in Cornwall and works as a violin teacher for the Cornwall Music Service. The Tannahill Weavers are a popular band who perform traditional Scottish music. [3] The orchestra meet on a weekly basis on a Monday evening in Room M1 at Helston School at 7. 00pm where they rehearse their repertoire of Celtic traditional music.

Visitor facilities and attraction

The village is served by the Gweek Inn,[4] a convenience store, a tea garden and a restaurant; the village is home to the British National Seal Sanctuary.

The east bank of the river, viewed from the quay
The east bank of the river, viewed from the quay

Ancient harbour

Gweek is at the head of navigation of the Helford River. Helford River is not a river or an Estuary but a Ria located in Cornwall which passes the Trebah and Glendurgan gardens and the It has been a port since Roman times and was a thriving port in the Tudor period, with its own Customs House. [5]

During the mining boom, a tin-smelting blowing house operated at the quayside. A blowing house or blowing mill was a building used for Smelting Tin in Cornwall and on Dartmoor in Devon in South West England [6]

In a Topographical Dictionary of England published in 1848, it was described as:[7]

GWEEK, a small port, in the hundred of Kerrier, W. division of Cornwall, 3½ miles (E. by S. ) from Helston. The pilchard-fishery is carried on extensively, 200 boats being employed in taking the fish, which are cured in the various creeks and coves within the limits of the port. In addition to the fishery, the chief trade consists in the exportation of copper-ore, corn, moorstone, and oysters, and the importation of timber, coal, and limestone.

Current activities

Gweek is the home to Gweek Quay Boatyard,[8] which houses several boatbuilding, repair and maintenance companies, namely Hardman Jones Marine Services, A2 Rigging, Working Sail (builders of classic pilot cutters),[9] and David Walkey Yachtbuilders. Also here is Seacore, a marine drilling contractor,[10] which was acquired by Dutch Company Fugro NV to form Fugro Seacore, and as of 2007 is planning to move to Falmouth. Year 2007 ( MMVII) was a Common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar in the 21st century. Falmouth (Aberfal is a town Civil parish and Port on the River Fal on the south coast of Cornwall, England, UK. [11]

A directory of business in Gweek, Constantine and Mawnan parishes is published each year. This place should not be confused with Constantine Bay, Cornwall which is west of Padstow. Mawnan is a Civil parish in the Kerrier district of Cornwall, United Kingdom, comprising of several villages and hamlets including Mawnan [12]

Location

Map resources for Gweek at grid reference SW7026

Trivia

The Meaning of Liff offers this definition: GWEEK (n. The British national grid reference system is a system of geographic grid references commonly used in Great Britain, different from using Latitude and Longitude The Meaning of Liff (UK Edition ISBN 0-330-28121-6 US Edition ISBN 0-517-55347-3 is a humorous Dictionary of Toponomy and Etymology, ) A coat hanger recycled as a car aerial.

References

  1. ^ Gweek Silver Band
  2. ^ CFO website with music clips.
  3. ^ Cornwall Music Service
  4. ^ The Gweek Inn
  5. ^ Bill Scolding Five walks around Constantine: heritage, landscape, Wildlife; Constantine Enterprises Company, 2006 ISBN 0-9552816-0-1
  6. ^ D. B. Barton A history of tin mining and smelting in Cornwall; Revised edition 1969; Cornwall Books, reprint 1989 ISBN 1-871060-03-6, Page 20 (Footnote)
  7. ^ 'Gunthorpe - Gyhirn', A Topographical Dictionary of England (1848), pp. 360-62. Date accessed: 4 July 2007.
  8. ^ Gweek Quay Boatyard
  9. ^ Working Sail company website
  10. ^ http://www.seacore.co.uk/
  11. ^ Falmouth Packet 23 July 2007
  12. ^ Who's where in Constantine . . .


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