Sam,
Sorry, I forgot this came in. Actually there are a lot of stacks without
associated buildings too. We have stacks associated with boiler houses,
arsenic works, china clay dries, brick works, you name it. You could try
approaching the Cornwall Archaeological Unit or the Historic Environment
Service in Truro. A good deal of the historic environment information can be
found on the Cornwall Council interactive map:
https://map.cornwall.gov.uk/website/ccmap/?zoomlevel=4&xcoord=174569&ycoord=50327&wsName=ccmap&layerName=.
If you have any specific enquiries, especially for West Cornwall, let me
know.
Pete Joseph
-----Original Message-----
From: Sam Willis
Sent: Tuesday, July 25, 2017 2:31 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Chimney Ruins in West Devon and Cornwall World Heritage Site
Hi everyone,
I am doing some work on the history of chimneys and was hoping that someone
could tell me how many chimneys there are which survive as part of the
mining ruins of West Devon and Cornwall? I'm assuming that many of the
ruins don't have their chimneys....
Dr Sam Willis
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