Man standing in front of the water run at Carmears Wheel Pit in the Luxuylan Valley near St Austell, Cornwall. Man is dressed in a berghaus coat and oakley sunglasses smilling with his hands in pockets. hidden history

Hidden History started as a way for me to get out more. To spend a few hours properly exploring somewhere with a bit of purpose behind it, rather than just passing through.

I’ve always been drawn to places with a story. Old structures, forgotten industries, strange bits of landscape that make you stop and question what you’re looking at. The more curious I am about a place, the more naturally I seem to talk about it, so this became a way of building confidence on camera while leaning into something I genuinely enjoy.

Each location starts with a bit of research before I go, but what I love most is seeing how that compares to what it actually feels like on the day. Walking it, filming it, noticing things I didn’t expect. Hidden History is just that process captured properly. Real exploration, real reactions, and stories told from being there.

Explore the Series

Hidden History isn’t one story, and it’s not something you’ll find written clearly in front of you. It’s layers of history hidden in plain sight, built into landscapes, scattered across forgotten places, and waiting to be noticed if you know where to look.

Historic industrial waterwheel and rusted mining machinery in the Luxuylan Valley, set within overgrown stone ruins in a wooded landscape.

Industrial Legacy

Hidden industrial history carved into the landscape, mined, tunnelled, blasted or forced into place by humans. From abandoned mines to forgotten machinery, these places once powered everything. The beating hearts of industry, now reclaimed by nature and quietly slipping from memory.

Stone entrance to an ancient settlement (Carn Euny Ancient Village) with a person emerging from a low granite structure surrounded by weathered rocks

Ancient Settlements

If you looked hard enough, you’d find ancient villages and settlements hidden in plain sight all around us. Step into spaces where people once lived, built and survived, and you begin to see the landscape differently. These places haven’t disappeared, just been forgotten, waiting to be understood again.

Aerial view of a coastal wartime defence structure overlooking the sea, with concrete gun emplacements and surrounding cliffs. This is the gun placements at St Anthony's Head, Cornwall.

Wartime Coast

Wartime history lines the coastline around the UK in every direction. Hidden bunkers, coastal defences and shipwrecks from a time that shaped everything that followed. Built with purpose, these places now sit quietly on the edge of the landscape or submerged beneath it, waiting to be seen.

Where Hidden History Continues

The full Hidden History series lives across my social platforms. So why don’t you follow along to uncover places you’ve likely walked past without ever noticing, where history isn’t gone, it’s just hidden beneath your feet, waiting for you to see it properly for what it is.

You can also explore more about these landscapes through organisations like the National Trust, Cornwall Heritage Trust or English Heritage.

If you’ve got a piece of hidden history in mind that deserves to be explored, you can share it with via the Work With Me or Contact page.