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24 September 2014
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A lifetime in Polperro
Polperro Harbour
A busy harbour where Bill has spent his working life

Bill Cowan came to Polperro in the early 50s. He has remained ever since.

As well as his fishing career, Bill was instrumental in setting up the local museum.

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FACTS

+ Bill Cowan has lived and worked in Polperro for 50 years.

+ As well as being a fisherman, then skipper, Bill also found time to be the harbourmaster.

+ Bill was also instrumental in building up the Polperro museum which now attracts thousands of visitors every year.
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Bill Cowan was born and bred by the Barbican in Plymouth but has spent the majority of his life in Polperro.

His arrival in the fishing village came about by a chance meeting with a skipper in Newlyn.

"After the war I started working on fishing boats in Plymouth with younger members of the family," remembers Bill.

Crashing waves in Polperro
Bill would go out fishing in stormy seas

"I was a little bit older and maybe wiser and didn't feel I fitted in as well as I had done before the war. I was told there was a job going on a boat in Newlyn. I caught the train to Penzance and walked into Newlyn."

But Bill did not get too far when another offer came his way that proved to be the move of a lifetime.

"I was walking along the harbour when I met the skipper of the Patsy-Anne which was registered in Polperro," smiles Bill. "I told him where I was going to be working, and he offered me a job straightaway, saying it would be nearer to home. He told me to go and tell the Newlyn skipper I had changed my mind."

Polperro fishing boats
The Polperro fishing boats rest up in harbour

Bill was a bit reluctant but decided to go and tell the Newlyn crew he was taking up the Polperro job. Fifty years later Bill is still in Polperro.

"I went aboard the Patsy-Anne and started work in Polperro," he says. "It was very hard going, there was no radio or life-jackets. It was done with a compass and a clock. They have radar and satelite navigation nowadays. Ours was a little more hit and miss than that."

Bill may have been based in Polperro but he would spend many days away from home.

"We would fish around west Cornwall for maybe a week and then would come back to Polperro for the weekend."

Bill stayed with the Patsy-Anne for a few years. He started dating a local girl and married in 1952.

Bill shares his happy memories of life in Polperro

"I was harbourmaster before Chris Curtis took over from me," says Bill. "Nobody gets paid for the job, but I did the best I could. I think occasionally I would get one or two people who wouldn't stick to the rules which made it a bit of a difficult and thankless task at times."

During his fishing career in Polperro Bill did not have much spare time. "When we weren't out at sea we would be fixing nets and doing boat repairs," he remembers. "There wasn't much time for yourself back then."

Although it was hard work Bill would happily do it all again.

"It's a way of life, it isn't done for gain and money," he says. "I had my own boat come the end. It was a different lifestyle, there was none of this 9-5 shifts. You would work 14 hour days. It certainly wasn't done for the money. I am a pensioner today and it's a struggle to get by on that."

Polperro has depended on fishing for generations. In the 19th century, when pilchards were landed in large quantities, the fish were processed and packed in three factories near the harbour.

Polperro Museum
The Polperro Museum Bill helped to launch

The Heritage Museum now occupies one formerly owned by the Teglio family from Italy. Bill played a major part in the setting up of the museum.

"We had a meeting and it was decided we could utilise the stores that were empty for the museum," says Bill. "With a bit of moving around we put the three stores together. It took a few years to get it off the ground. I am very pleased to say its been a great success. Several thousands of people go through the museum each year. The museum generates the same amount of income as the fishing boats do for the harbour."

A traditional way of travel
A horse and cart carries people to the harbour

Located in The Warren overlooking the harbour, the Polperro Heritage Museum of Smuggling and Fishing houses a remarkable collection of exhibits and 19th century photographs as well as many items of memorabilia dating from the 18th century when both smuggling and fishing thrived in Polperro.

It vividly brings to life the story of this Cornish fishing village's extraordinary history and many of the people who featured in it.

2003 opening times

The Polperro Heritage Museum will be open between 10am and 6pm from March until October 2003.

For information and party bookings telephone 01503 272423.

Admission charges:
Adults: 拢1.50
Children: 拢1 (children under 5 free)
Family: 拢4 (2 adults and up to 3 children)

Meet the local vicar
Read the story of The RYDER
Growing up in Polperro with Chris Curtis

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