This is the first volume in a series dedicated to reproducing some of the long-forgotten articles from historical journals relating to Cornwall’s illustrious and ancient past. The articles themselves are taken from a variety of publications, both local and national, and from a wide span of time. To have these valuable sources in a set of compact volumes makes not only for an interesting read, but also a useful tool for reference. This initial volume includes: Account of Antiquities discovered in Cornwall, by the Rev. Malachy Hitchins ( Archæologia 15, 1806); Pendarvis Quoit, Cornwall by J. S. Storer and J. Greig ( Antiquarian and Topographical Cabinet , 1808); The Hurlers ( Light From the West , 1833); Some Account of the Opening of a Barrow near Newquay by The Rev. Canon Rogers ( Report of the Royal Institution of Cornwall , 1840); King Arthur’s Hall by S. R. Pattison ( Report of the Royal Institution of Cornwall , 1852); The Celtic and Other Antiquities of the Land’s End District of Cornwall by Richard Edmonds ( Archæologia Cambrensis , 1857-8); Notes on Stone Circles by J. T. Blight ( The Gentleman’s Magazine , 1868); Remarks on the Stone-Circles at Boscawen-un and Boskednan in West Cornwall by E. H. W. Dunkin ( The Reliquary Quarterly, Archæological Journal and Review , 1869-70); Cornish Antiquities Viewed in the Light of Modern Research by William C. Borlase ( Transactions of the Penzance Natural History and Antiquarian Society , 1880-81); Duloe Stone Circle by C. W. Dymond ( Journal of the British Archaeological Association , 1882); Prehistoric Remains in Cornwall: 1 - East Cornwall by A. L. Lewis ( Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland , 1896) and Note on an Unrecorded Cromlech in North Cornwall by Henry Dewey ( Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall , 1911). The volume also contains a bibliography and an introduction by Chris Bond.