Charlestown Cornwall
Charlestown is one of the most perfectly preserved and most evocative small harbour towns in Cornwall, a Georgian planned port near St Austell that was built in the 1790s by the entrepreneur Charles Rashleigh to export the china clay of the St Austell area and import coal and lime for the local agricultural and industrial economy. The combination of the original Georgian harbour architecture, the lock gates, the china clay cellars and the dramatic sight of the tall-masted sailing vessels that are frequently moored in the harbour make it one of the most atmospheric small harbour experiences in the southwest.
The harbour at Charlestown is one of the most frequently used film locations in Britain, its complete Georgian character and the absence of modern development within the harbour basin making it ideal for productions set in the age of sail. Poldark, Hornblower, Alice Through the Looking Glass and numerous other productions have used the harbour, and the sight of a nineteenth-century square-rigger moored in the lock basin against the backdrop of Georgian stone warehouses is one of the most frequently photographed scenes on the Cornish coast.
The Shipwreck and Heritage Centre in the harbour area provides an excellent collection of material from the many vessels wrecked on the Cornish coast over the centuries, and the combination of the working harbour, the heritage centre and the beautiful setting above the sea makes Charlestown one of the most rewarding coastal heritage destinations in Cornwall.