Several people in Cornwall have been named in the New Year's Honours list for their contributions to their county and to Britain. People are being rewarded for a variety of achievements, from services to local badminton to lace making.
Services by people to civil aviation and local archaeological have also been rewarded.
Rugby World Cup winners Phil Vickery and Trevor Woodman, who were born in Cornwall, are to collect MBEs for their part in the team's victory.
 | It's a huge collective effort  |
The awards include MBEs for Pat Hollands for her services to badminton and Susanne Thompson, from Helston, who has been recognised for her lace making. The deputy head at Newquay's Tretherras School, Andy Bales, has been awarded an MBE for a 30-year association with the Duke of Edinburgh awards.
He has supported hundreds of children to achieve their goals, but said he will probably be joked with about the letters after his name.
He said: "I've no doubt we'll have a little bit of fun, but I'm sure it'll be very good-natured and I'm up for that."
MBEs are also going to Rosemary Ann Mumford for services to the community in the Isles of Scilly.
The same honour has gone to the chief executive of the Cornwall Mobility Centre, Meinwen Marsh, for services to disabled people.
The chairman of the British Air Transport Association, David Hopkins, who lives near St Mawgan in north Cornwall, gets the OBE for services to the civil aviation industry.
An OBE has also been awarded to Stuart Smith, from Camborne, for his services to industrial archaeology.
Mr Smith, who is the former chief executive of the Trevithick Trust, said he hoped his honour will help increase awareness of Cornwall's archaeological wealth.
He said: "It's an enormous number of people involved in doing this, in local authorities, in societies, in various museums, and amateurs doing recording and taking photographs.
"It's a huge collective effort which is changing the image of the county."