Harvey's of Hayle - The Great Cornish Engineers
Miscellanea

Harvey's of Hayle - The Great Cornish Engineers

Walking around the run-down town of Hayle these days, you would never guess that the industrial heart of Cornwall once beat strongest here. Yet in the mid-18th century Hayle boasted perhaps 5000 jobs in industry. The National Explosive Company, the Cornish Copper Company and the docks were all major employers but the greatest of them all was Harveys.

In 1779 Gwinear blacksmith John Harvey started a small works in Hayle to make hand tools and pumps for the mines. Three generations of Harveys built the country's greatest engineering company, employing geniuses like Richard Trevithick and building beam engines, locomotives and iron packet ships.

Beam engines were the company's best known product and included the largest ever built, draining a polder at Cruquis in Holland and still in working order as a museum piece 150 years later. Cornish examples can be seen at Levant Mine and at Taylor's Shaft in Pool.

Most remarkable ship that Harveys built was the Cornubia, an iron-built paddle steamer, originally operating out of Bristol as a packet boat, bought by the Confederacy to act as an American Civil War blockade runner, then captured by the Union and used by them as a blockader of Gulf ports. Harveys final throw was to build 2nd World War landing craft.

You can see remains of Harveys in the area known as Foundry

Part of Harveys Hammermill and Ropewalk complex

This review was written by Oliver Howes and is reproduced here in his own words. All text and photographs remain his work, preserved in his memory.