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Latitude: 50.0468 / 50°2'48"N
Longitude: -5.6549 / 5°39'17"W
OS Eastings: 138439
OS Northings: 22694
OS Grid: SW384226
Mapcode National: GBR DXFK.DJN
Mapcode Global: VH05T.X2VZ
Plus Code: 9C2P28WW+P3
Entry Name: Eastern House at Porthcurno Telegraph Station
Listing Date: 17 September 2008
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1392894
English Heritage Legacy ID: 505332
ID on this website: 101392894
Location: Porthcurno, Cornwall, TR19
County: Cornwall
Civil Parish: St. Levan
Traditional County: Cornwall
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Cornwall
Church of England Parish: St Levan
Church of England Diocese: Truro
Tagged with: Architectural structure
ST LEVAN
1621/0/10007 THE VALLEY
17-SEP-08 EASTERN HOUSE AT PORTHCURNO TELEGRAPH
STATION
II
Telegraph office building built in 1903-4 for Eastern and Associated Telegraph Companies on a terrace cut into the lower W facing slope of the Porthcurno valley. The concrete and metal building is two storeys, entirely covered by a flat roof and all the window openings have modern Upvc frames.
Exterior: The W elevation includes clear evidence of four major building phases. The original five-bay building is in a polite architectural style, has large rectangular portrait windows with those on the top floor being tallest and linked to each other by a sill band. The eaves cornice is decorated and above this is a low simple parapet. The N two-bay extension is slightly lower than the original, has similar windows openings and a string course rather than a sill band. The earliest two-bay extension attached to the S end of the original building is the same height as the 1904 build, has both a sill band and separate sills and only one window on the ground floor. The southernmost, and most recent, is similar in height to the N one, is of two-bays, has smaller windows - the lower ones with security bars - and a string course. At the foot of the wall are a series of cable hatches with metal doors.
The S three-bay elevation has large rectangular landscape windows with those on the upper floor being taller. The ground floor windows are all fitted with security bars. The E elevation is similar in character to the W one, apart from two windows being replaced by doorways defined by simple doorcases. Standing adjacent to and parallel to the E side of the building is a single storey service range with a square profile chimney for the central heating system. The N elevation is architecturally basic consisting of a plain wall with string course and a pair of glass doors together with sliding timber security doors.
Interior: The top floor of the original building consists of a large open space with a high ceiling supported by substantial metal girders carried on round profile iron pillars. The floor is of single herringbone parquet and around the base of the wall is a skirting box, with picture rail and decorative coving above. The remainder of the interior is rather simple with few architectural features of note. In the extensions the metal girder floors and ceiling are supported on reinforced concrete pillars. Parts of the building have been refurbished with the insertion of partitions and false ceilings.
History: The electric telegraph was introduced in the 1830s. Samuel Morse's dot-dash code evolved from 1835, and the technology of long-distance telegraph communication developed rapidly thereafter, with the underground and submarine cables being developed from the 1850s. The first transatlantic telegraph cable was a British and American enterprise with the cable running from Foilhommerum, Valentia Island in western Ireland to Heart's Content in eastern Newfoundland. The first attempts met with limited success and it was not until 1866 that a lasting connection was achieved.
The telegraph station and training school at Porthcurno were established in 1870 when a cable from Carcavellos in Portugal laid by the Falmouth, Gibraltar and Malta Telegraph Company arrived on the beach. This cable was the final link in a chain of cables leading from Bombay in India. The importance of this link at the height of the British Empire cannot be overstated. The original intention was to bring the cable ashore at Falmouth, but the sheltered, sandy beach at Porthcurno was felt to be a much more reliable option. The original telegraph station buildings were situated at and around what was to become known as Zodiac House. In 1872 the original company merged with three others to form the Eastern Telegraph Co. Ltd. A year later another cable was laid to Vigo in Spain and staff cottages were built in the valley. During the 1870s experiments to improve the quality and efficiency of the process were conducted at Porthcurno and were ultimately responsible for world-wide improvements in telegraph communication. In 1878, the third cable arrived at Porthcurno from the Isles of Scilly and a fourth to Gibraltar in 1887. The tennis courts were established on rented ground in the 1880s and separate accommodation for the Superintendent (Mercury House) was built in 1896. In the early part of the C20 considerable expansion of the operation saw many more cables brought into the valley.
In 1904 the telegraph station moved across the valley to new purpose built fire-proofed accommodation at what was to become known as Eastern House. The original building consisted of a five bay, flat roofed and two storey structure built at a cost of £2,086. On the top floor there was a large instrument room , workshop, experimental room, batteries and artificial lines. Whilst on the ground floor, as well as offices there was a practice room, abstract room and a slip room. A further two bay extension was added to the northern end of the building in 1906 as a result of the arrival of another cable, this time to Fayal in the Azores. A further two-bays were added to the south in 1950 and a final two-bays between 1954 and 1962.
In 1928 a conference held in London recommended an amalgamation of all the cable and wireless interests within the Empire. This resulted in the formation of Imperial and International Communications Ltd. The following year Porthcurno was accepted as the most important telegraph station in the British Empire, with 14 operational submarine cables terminating in a new concrete built cable hut situated close to the beach. The cable hut was erected when a number of cables were refurbished and a new cable link was laid from the hut to Eastern House. A few years later in 1934 the company changed its name to Cable & Wireless, the name it retains today.
During the World War II the importance and vulnerability of the telegraph station was recognised and the whole operation moved underground in early May 1941 into a pair of tunnels blasted into the adjacent hillside. Further protection was provided by a series of defences including barbed-wire entanglements, flood-lighting and flame throwers. Between the end of the war and 1950 the telegraph station was refurbished, extended and opened as a training school. In 1970, exactly 100 years after the arrival of the first cable, the telegraph station closed although the training school remained until 1993. Many of the modern buildings were dismantled, some were sold off and the remainder eventually transferred to the PK Trust who run Porthcurno Telegraph Museum.
Sources: Anon, Global from the start - A short history of Cable & Wireless (undated)
Barlow, D., From Spark to Satellite Marconi in Cornwall (undated), 33-35
Packer, J.E., The Porthcurno Handbook (undated)
St. Levan Local History Group, The book of St. Levan : crabs, croust and clerks (2004) 67-80
http://www.porthcurno.org.uk/html/centre.html Accessed 12th June 2008
http://www.atlantic-cable.com/CableCos/Porthcurno/ Accessed 12th June 2008
REASONS FOR DESIGNATION DECISION
Eastern House at Porthcurno Telegraph Station is designated at Grade II for the following principal reasons:
* Unique survival of a global telegraph station
* Forms the heart of the largest and most important telegraph station in the British Empire
* Tangible reminder of the importance of communication to the success of the British Empire
* Important to a full understanding of the technological and social significance of the communications revolution
* Retains its plan-form, whilst its architectural character reflects the rapid growth in early C20 global communications
* Contains the historic archive relating to early global telegraphy
Eastern House at Porthcurno Telegraph Station has been designated at Grade II for the following principal reasons:
* Unique survival of a global telegraph station
* Forms the heart of the largest and most important telegraph station in the British Empire
* Tangible reminder of the importance of communication to the success of the British Empire
* Important to a full understanding of the technological and social significance of the communications revolution
* Retains its plan-form, whilst its architectural character reflects the rapid growth in early C20 global communications
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