1
Port Gaverne Village Sign
Image: © Roy Hughes
Taken: 28 Jun 2019
0.03 miles
2
A view across the Port Gaverne inlet
Prominent across the inlet is the erstwhile Headland Hotel. It was still open at the time of this photo, but was closed in 2011. The building has now seriously deteriorated and in 2019 planning consent was granted to demolish it and to construct a larger hotel on the site. At the time of writing, it does not appear that the demolition has commenced. The hotel was used a few times as a location for the 'Doc Martin' television series.
Image: © John Lucas
Taken: 3 Jul 2007
0.05 miles
3
Port Gaverne from Port Isaac
Image: © Steve Daniels
Taken: 15 Jun 2011
0.05 miles
4
Cliffs adjacent to Castle Rock
The set of cliffs east of Castle Rock which is at the end of the cliff in the foreground of the photograph.
Image: © Pam Brophy
Taken: 4 Aug 2006
0.05 miles
5
Port Gaverne Hotel
The Port Gaverne Hotel viewed from the haven.
Image: © Philip Halling
Taken: 30 Sep 2009
0.07 miles
6
Harbour at Port Gaverne
The boats are 'parked' against the wall and taken to sea by the tractor.
Image: © Trevor Rickard
Taken: 9 Sep 2007
0.07 miles
7
Port Gaverne, Cornwall
Pretty little harbour and village adjacent to the much more famous Port Isaac. Has been used as a location in at least one episode of TV's "Doc Martin" when the school's headmaster Mr Strane goes mad and walks into the sea.
Image: © Derek Voller
Taken: 20 Sep 2010
0.08 miles
8
Port Gaverne
This shows the small inlet just on the north side of Port St Isaac.
Image: © Nigel Mykura
Taken: 2 Mar 2016
0.08 miles
9
Port Gaverne, Cornwall
Just half a mile from bustling Port Isaac, this tranquil little harbour has a very fine pub.
Image: © Derek Voller
Taken: 20 Sep 2010
0.09 miles
10
St Endellion: Port Gaverne harbour
John Warden Page, writing 111 years ago, described Port Gaverne as ‘ a pleasant little inlet with a sandy beach at the head, about which stand a few whitewashed cottages and me teste a very snug little inn .. When I was last there, a coaster lay at anchor waiting for her cargo of slate from the great quarries at Delabole ..’ But the railway took the trade and Port Gaverne suffered
[Source: John Lloyd Warden Page. The North Coast of Cornwall, Truro, 1897, 103]
Image: © Martin Bodman
Taken: 17 Jun 2008
0.09 miles