Serpentine is the beautiful stone found at the foot of the
Lizard peninsula, Cornwall's most southerly point. Though it occurs
elsewhere, the Cornish variety is uniquely coloured; dark green, red or grey,
run through with contrasting seams, it polishes like marble to a wonderfully
deep sheen.
For centuries, serpentine-bearing blocks were used to build the
Lizard’s homes and farm buildings. Local
people also carved small decorative objects but it was a Mr Drew who first saw business
possibilities for ornamental items, when he arrived in 1828 to repair the peninsula’s
lighthouse. The rock’s glorious tones must
have caught his eye; he developed a polishing technique to buff it to a fine
lustre, and opened a concern in his home town of Penzance which cut and carved serpentine
items commercially.
A second factory soon opened nearby, at Wherrytown, also in
Penzance; at first, orders were taken for items such as pedestals, vases, flower
stands and mantelpieces. But a boost came
in 1846, when Queen Victoria and Prince Albert called at the town aboard the
royal yacht. Ashore, they were shown
specimens of polished serpentine.
Enchanted by the colours, the royal holidaymakers made an
unscheduled visit to see the rock in its natural surroundings. They ordered many serpentine items for their Osborne
House residence, including several mantelpieces and twelve polished vase bases. News of the stone travelled among the
great-and-good of the land; with royal approval, serpentine grew as a fashionable
material.
During 1851 the Great Exhibition was held in Hyde Park, an
enormous show of culture and industry; from May to October, six million people
visited. Serpentine was exhibited there,
bringing the unfamiliar rock before a huge audience. Business soared; to represent the stone in
the capital, the London and Penzance Serpentine Company was formed.
Orders arrived for ever-larger pieces: towering obelisks, columns,
ecclesiastical pieces, fireplaces. Cornish
serpentine found its way to Chatsworth House, Hampton Court and Westminster
Abbey. Across Britain, the stone decorated
the exteriors of municipal buildings and prominent shops. Locally, serpentine was used to create ornamental
items within the Lizard’s churches, including lecterns and pulpits at Grade and
St Wynwallow.
In 1853 the Lizard Serpentine Company was founded, on the
peninsula close to the stone, in tiny Poltesco valley; it too opened a London
office. Whereas Wherrytown used a steam
engine to power its processing machinery, at first Poltesco relied on a
waterwheel driven by the stream which ran through the valley; later, it acquired
an engine of its own.
The two factories were great rivals, but there seemed enough
work to go round. Quarrying increased, all
within a few miles of Lizard Village. The
raw serpentine was hewn in ever larger slabs; blasting damaged the material, so
instead jacks, wedges and cranes were used.
But gradually a problem emerged with some of the veneers adorning
building exteriors. Serpentine wasn’t sufficiently
resilient in the face of severe cold or frost, and away from the Lizard’s gentle
climate the thin sheets began to flake and crack. Serpentine’s critics, not least those from
the rival marble trade, lost no time in hand-wringing.
Wherrytown put up the shutters but its rival continued,
buoyed temporarily by the closure; during 1871 a change of ownership created
the Poltesco Serpentine Marble Company.
Finally though, in 1893, the Lizard enterprise closed down too. Processing and manufacturing equipment was
sold off, the workforce left and the valley fell silent.
That might have been the end of the story, but as
serpentine’s large-scale uses fell into decline, a new market emerged for items
which could be made by small workshops: the tourist trade. By the 1880s, amongst its myriad routes the
Great Western Railway had opened a branch line to Helston, the Lizard’s
northernmost point. Later an omnibus connection
appeared between Helston and Lizard Village.
Holidaymakers eagerly bought serpentine keepsakes: ash-trays,
paperweights, tobacco jars. Tourism developed
into a mainstay of Cornwall’s economy, and demand for souvenirs grew. The serpentine workers improved their
artistry, creating bowls, miniatures and vases as well as elegant lighthouses, symbolic
reminders of the seas around the Duchy’s long coastline.
Today a handful of craftsmen still work at Lizard Village and
local showrooms sell serpentine pieces. Poltesco
valley shows evidence of its former use; the three-storey warehouse built in
1866 remains, as well as workshop footings and the waterwheel pit, during springtime
surrounded with vivid wild flowers.
The best place on the Lizard to see serpentine in its raw
state is Kynance Cove, where the pounding sea’s natural polish has fashioned
and smoothed the rocks, leaving them gleaming as it recedes. Against the soft white sand, Cornish
serpentine stands out rich and unique.
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3 comments:
Fascinating. Very good article.
i have seen the stone in the raw being carved on an old lath and then polished
there was an old fellow doing it at church cove i expect that he maybe there any more
we worth the visit
in 1993 I visited the Lizard - as enchanting a place as anywhere - and on my last day there purchased a small red serpentine vase. Very small, about 3" high. The cost seemed exorbitant - 50 pounds sterling! I was told that the red variety only developed below the water's surface. Mining could occur only at very low tides. Made a good story for a gullible tourist! Still wonder if it's true?
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