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Looe and Island
It deals with the conservation and preservation of Cornwall's wildlife and habitats managing over 50 nature reserves covering approximately, amongst them Looe Island.
St George ’ s Island ( or Looe Island ), near Looe
Looe Island.
In the 20th century, Looe island was owned ( and inhabited ) by two sisters, Babs and Evelyn Atkins, who wrote two books: We Bought An Island ( 1976, ISBN 0-245-52940-3 ) and its sequel Tales From Our Cornish Island ( 1986, ISBN 0-245-54265-5 ).
* The Looe Island Story: an Illustrated History of St George's Island, Mike Dunn, 2005, Polperro Heritage Press, ISBN 978-0-9549137-2-4
* Island Life: A History of Looe Island, David Clensy, 2006.
nn: Looe Island
Off shore to the west, opposite the stonier Hannafore beach, lies the picturesque St George's Island, commonly known as Looe Island.
Some time before 1144, a monastic order began using Looe Island, and built a chapel there ; the monks may have provided a rudimentary lighthouse service using beacons.
View towards Looe, taken on a boat trip, near Looe Island
Further south along the coast road is Hannafore Point, marking the edge of Looe Harbour, with to the west the wide, stony Hannafore beach, facing across a narrow channel to Looe Island ( officially called St. George's Island ).

Looe and also
In addition to a canal from Terras Pill, near Looe, to Moorswater, near Liskeard, they could also build roads to connect to the canal.
Beyond Polperro lies Talland Bay and Portnadler Bay, with the bird reserve of Looe Island ( also known as St George's island ) off shore.
The town is also served by the Looe Valley branch line to Looe.
His eldest son, the second Baron, sat as a Member of Parliament for West Looe, Grampound and Reigate and also served as Lord Lieutenant of Herefordshire.
Until 1928 some of the locomotives could also be found at St Blazey engine shed, Cornwall, where they worked on ex-Cornwall Minerals Railway branches, and also at Moorswater for working the Looe branch.

Looe and known
Shutta, on the steep hillside over East Looe, is known to have been inhabited by the twelfth century.
West Looe was given free borough status sometime after this ( the first known historical mention of the town dates from 1327 ) and in the 1230s East Looe gained the right to hold a weekly market and a Michaelmas fair.
Situated on the River Pol, 4 miles ( 6 km ) west of the neighbouring town of Looe and west of the major city and naval port of Plymouth, it is well known for its idyllic location, surrounded by tightly packed old fishermen's houses which makes it attractive to tourists, and particularly in the summer months.

Looe and St
The parish church of East Looe was at St Martin by Looe but there was a chapel of ease in the town.
The Church of St. Mary in East Looe was dedicated in 1259 by Walter Bronscombe, Bishop of Exeter.
St. Nicholas ' Church in West Looe was in existence before 1330, at which time it was endowed and enlarged.
An early wooden bridge over the Looe river was in place by 1411 this burned down and was replaced by the first stone bridge, completed in 1436 and featuring a chapel dedicated to St Anne in the middle ( the current bridge, a seven-arched Victorian bridge, was opened in 1853 ).
East Looe centres on its broad sandy beach, with the distinctive Banjo Pier, creation of Joseph Thomas, a new lifeboat station and St Mary's Church.
West Looe spreads west from the bridge on the Polperro Road towards Sclerder, and along the river south of the bridge, with hotels, restaurants and boarding houses along the waterfront and houses climbing the perilous cliff above, towards a cluster of shops and businesses and the Church of St Nicholas.
He was succeeded by his nephew, who was created Marquess of Abercorn in the Peerage of Great Britain on 15 October 1790, after having sat in the House of Commons as MP for East Looe and for St Germans.
After representing Horsham in the House of Commons for over four years, Goulburn was successively member for St Germans, for West Looe, and for the city of Armagh.
The district was formed on 1 April 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972, by the merger of the boroughs of Liskeard and Saltash with the urban districts of Looe and Torpoint, along with Liskeard Rural District and St Germans Rural District.
Arbuthnot sat as Member of Parliament for East Looe between 1795 and 1796, for Eye between 1809 and 1812, for Orford between 1812 and 1818, for St Germans between 1818 and 1827, for St Ives between 1828 and 1830 and for Ashburton between 1830 and 1831.
Some railway stations are promoted as a park-and-ride facility for a distant town, for instance for Looe and for St Ives, both in Cornwall, England.

Looe and is
The local bus service operates on different times during season, the service is run via Looe, Polperro, Lansallos and Greenbank.
Looe () is a small coastal town, fishing port and civil parish in the former Caradon district of south-east Cornwall, England, with a population of 5, 280 ( 2001 census ).
Looe is divided in two by the River Looe, East Looe () and West Looe () being connected by a bridge.
The town is situated around a small harbour and along the steep-sided valley of the River Looe which flows between East and West Looe to the sea beside a sandy beach.
In these early days, East Looe may have been a " planted borough ", a concept similar to modern new towns ; much of it is laid out in a grid-like pattern.
The Old Guildhall in East Looe is believed to date from around 1500.
Looe has been on the list of the top 10 places in the UK to celebrate New Year, and ranked third on the list for 2007 / 08 .. Looe is being regenerated, like many other ports, to serve as a small cargo port.
This is the terminus of the Looe Valley branch line to Liskeard ( at Liskeard, the line connects with the main Plymouth to Penzance Great Western Main Line ).
Looe is twinned with Quiberon ( Kiberen ) in Brittany, France.
The Liskeard and Looe Union Canal is a derelict broad canal between Liskeard and Looe in Cornwall, United Kingdom.
The town is at the head of the Looe valley in the ancient hundred of West Wivelshire and has a population of 8, 656.
Based in Looe, Cornwall, the sanctuary is home to woolly monkeys that are descended from the original rescued pets, a growing number of capuchin monkeys rescued from the current UK pet trade, and a small group of rescued Barbary macaques.

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