ST AGNES

Charming village, north of Truro, retaining links with industrial past.
Famous for Stippy Stappy row of sea captain's cottages and surrounded by mine
engine houses. Craft shops and art galleries. Two good surfing beaches, Chapel
Porth (NT) and Trevaunance, once a busy port. Wheal Coates, on cliffs,
exceptional engine house. Village museum, Presingoll Barns craft centre and Blue
Hills Tin Streaming Works at Trevellas Coombe.ST ANTHONY (ROSELAND)
Magnificent headland with lighthouse, WW2 battery observation post and
beaches. Splendid views across Carrick Roads to Falmouth, Lizard Peninsula and
infamous Manacle Rocks.
ST AUSTELL

Capital of 'Cornish Alps', ethereal white mini-mountains of china-clay
industry. Bustling town with 15thC Holy Trinity church, market hall. St Austell
Brewery Visitor Centre. Wheal Martyn China Clay Heritage Centre. Nearby,
Mid-Cornwall Craft Centre at Biscovey, Automobilia motor museum at St Stephen,
Charlestown Shipwreck & Heritage Centre. Tregrehan Garden and Pine Lodge
Garden.
ST BREOCK
A village with a idyllic 13th
century church, a slab in the churchyard remembers wicked Jan Tregeagle, chief
steward of Lanhydrock, whose legendary punishments included emptying Dozmary
Pool with a leaking limpet shell. Nearby the village is the St. Breock Downs
with its megalithic stones and superb views.
ST BREWARD
A typical
Cornish moorland village with church, pub and a few shops.
To the west the ground falls away sharply to the lovely Camel Valley and the
well sheltered waters and sands of the estuary. The beaches there, at Rock and
Daymer Bay, are about a 12 mile drive away, whilst the coastal sands of
Trebarwith and Port Gaverne are 9 miles. The high untamed moorland of Bodmin
Moor hugs the eastern edge of the village - but circles show that Stone Age Man
was here about 3000 BC.
ST BURYAN
15thC church with rood screen, granite tower a daymark for shipping around
Land's End. Film Straw Dogs shot here. Bronze & Iron Age relics, including
19-stone Merry Maidens circle.
ST CLEER
Moorland village with 15thC church and enclosed well. Neolithic Trethevy
Quoit, inscribed 9th century King Doniert Stone, Siblyback Lake with fishing,
watersports and visitor centre and Golitha Falls beauty spot nearby.
ST CLEMENT
A pretty hamlet south of Truro, on the wooded tidal Tresillian River. it has
thatched whitewashed cottages, and a 13th century church which has a lynch gate
with a upper story room, used as a schoolroom in the past.
ST CLETHER
A small hamlet situated in the
scenic Inney Valley. Within the village you will find a beautiful Holy Well
dating back to Celtic times.
ST COLUMB MAJOR
The attractive village of St. Columb Major boasts an
impressive Parish Church, with an unusual four-tier tower. Each
year on Shrove Tuesday the villagers play the traditional medieval game of
‘Hurling the Silver Ball’, in which two teams of several hundred people
attempt to carry a silver painted ball between two goals set two miles apart.
Nearby Castle Downs is the site of an Iron Age Hill Fort called Castle-an-Dinas,
and is well worth climbing for the spectacular views it offers at the top.
ST DAY
Mining village adjacent to Gwennap Pit, where Wesley preached. Heritage
Trail takes in historic sites in St Day and nearby Lanner and Carharrack.
ST ENDELLION
Famous for its collegiate church
where John Betjeman worshipped. The church tower can be seen for miles.
ST ERTH
This peaceful village has a mixture of traditional cottages and modern houses.
It is ideally situated for touring local beauty spots and the beaches of the
north and south coasts, as this is effectively the narrowest part of the Cornish
Peninsula.
ST EVAL
Standing alone on a high plateau
is the 15th century church of St Uvelus. Its tower was used as a beacon for
pilots landing at a nearby airfield, and also a land mark by mariners. From here
you can walk to Bedruthan Steps, a giant stack of rocks in front of the cliffs.
ST EWE
An attractive village, west of Mevagissey with a 14thC church with octagonal spire,
inside the church are the village stocks, and a rood screen that is the only one
in Cornwall to have survived the attentions of Cromwell's soldiers. Village stocks.
Polmassick vineyard grows grapes in the wooded valley below the church and can
be visited by the public.
ST GERMANS
Rural village with outstanding church, former Augustinian priory and
cathedral church of Cornwall. 16thC almshouses. Tudor gateway leads to family
home of Eliots.
ST. GENNYS
Is a
delightful little village perched 400 feet up on the cliff side just above
Crackington Haven - it clings to the hillside and looks out to the great
headlands which drop sheer down to the sea. The churchyard is so steep that one
of its paths is almost level with the roof. Much of the church is as it stood in
Norman England.
ST ISSEY
An
interesting village with several inns. Also a church featuring medieval carved
stones and Victorian stencil work.
ST IVES

Magnificently situated, overlooking spectacular crescent of beaches. Fishing
quarter a warren of stone cottages and cobbled alleys. Artists' colony for
almost 100 years: Sickert, Whistler, Nicholson, Lanyon. Tate Gallery, Barbara
Hepworth sculpture garden, Bernard Leach Pottery and numerous art galleries.
Major arts and folk festival each September. Local museum and golf course.
ST JUST IN PENWITH
Mainland's most westerly town, next to Cape Cornwall (NT). Iron Age village
of Carn Euny, Geevor mining heritage centre at Pendeen, Levant Beam Engine (NT),
Crown engine houses at Botallack, Pendeen lighthouse. Flights to Isles of Scilly
and pleasure flights from Land's End aerodrome at St Just.
ST JUST IN ROSELAND

Here you will find Cornwall's most photographed church, the 13th century St
Justus church built right beside the water. On the site of a 5th century chapel,
the churchyard slopes steeply upwards behind the church. A 19th century vicar
brought in many tropical plants, and the combination of the church on the
water's edge and the wonderful flowers and shrubs in the churchyard are pure
magic
ST KEVERNE
Pleasant village with square on Lizard Peninsula. 400 shipwreck victims of
nearby Manacles reef buried in churchyard. Statue celebrates leaders of 1497
Cornish rebellion. Annual August Ox Roast. Beaches at Porthallow, Coverack and
Kennack Sands. Nature trails at Tregellast Barton Farm shop.
ST KEW
St Kew is a small village with
some very old and interesting buildings, some of which include a bridge, an inn,
and a vicarage. St Kew church has some of the finest stained glass windows in
all of Cornwall.
ST MABYN
St Mabyn is a hilltop village
reached only by narrow lanes. Old cottages and a inn are built up around the
15th century church of St Mabena, whose door is made from Cataclew slate from
nearby St Merryn.
ST MAWES

Sheltered, popular sailing centre on Roseland, overlooking Falmouth. Three
beaches and fine clover-leaf Tudor castle, sister to Pendennis castle. Ferries
to Place Manor (summer) and Falmouth.
ST MAWGAN
The village of St Mawgan is just two miles up the vale from
the beaches of Mawgan Porth. In a county that has many
delightful villages, this must be one of the most attractive. There is a granite
and slate manor house, once the home of Richard of Arundel, Marshall of England
some 700 years ago, and two shops, also the Falcon Inn with its granite pillared
porch which must have one of the loveliest gardens of any English pub. Although
popular in high season, St Mawgan never loses its identity as a village and
provides an excellent base for holidays. The two miles of golden sands of
Watergate Bay are just over two miles away. Newquay with its many holiday
entertainments is six miles away.
ST MERRYN
A cluster of gray slate cottages round the church of St Marina. Around is Trevose
head with its lighthouse, and a number of good surf and swimming beaches. Mother
Ivy's Bay is the home of the Padstow lifeboat, and Rick Stein, the TV cook.
Between this bay and Harlyn Bay is Cataclews Point, which was quarried for the
greenstone used for church fonts and windows. On the other southern side of
Trevose Head is Constantine bay and Booby's Bay.
ST MINVER
A quiet village with the church of
St Minefreda. Close by on low lands is Jesus' Well, the water of which were said
to have great healing powers.
ST NEOT
Once thriving on wool, now famed for 15thC church with magnificent stained
glass. Slate Caverns, Colliford Lake Park Education & Adventure nearby.
Pottery and craft.
ST NEWLYN EAST
Pretty village south of Newquay. Trerice Manor & gardens (NT), Lappa
Valley Steam Railway nearby.
ST TEATH
St Teath is one of
those pleasant Cornish villages, typical of this part of the County, being set
back a couple of miles from the north coast to secure the shelter of high ground
from winter gales. Situated on the slopes of the lovely Allen Valley, the
village is centred around a square with a clock tower, a handsome church, mostly
15th Century and, of course, the village Inn. St Teath is well place for a
variety of beaches, coves and holiday activities. Trebarwith Strand is four
miles away and the picturesque Port Isaac, 5 miles.
ST TUDY
Nestling
close to Bodmin Moor in North Cornwall, lies the picturesque parish and village
of St Tudy, which has a long and distinguished history.
It has grown around the original Celtic graveyard (God's acre) now
containing the beautiful Grade 1 listed parish church and interesting 'Clink'
building to the north. The village name is derived from Tudy a 6th
Century monk and missionary strongly associated with the founding of monasteries
and churches in Brittany.
SALTASH

17thC Guildhall, Mary Newman's cottage (home of Mrs Francis Drake). Tamar
river cruises. Brunel's iron railway bridge (1859), suspension road bridge
(1961). Nearby Trematon Castle (restricted access) associated with Black Prince.
SANCREED
An attractive inland village in the Lands End
peninsula. It has a 15th century church with a carved rood screen and two
noteworthy crosses in the churchyard. Above the village is Sancreed beacon with
extensive views. A little to the west s the Iron age fort of Caer Bran, reached
by footpath from Grumbla.. There is a well preserved Iron Age courtyard village
at Carn Euny, reached from Brane.
SEATON
A notorious smuggling area in the last century
because it was wild and remote. Brandy, silk and spices were brought in from
Brittany.. Today the sheltered coast between Looe and Nare Head has a number of
sandy tourist beaches. There is a monkey sanctuary at Murraytown a mile east of
Seaton which has the first protected breeding colony of Amazonian Woolly monkeys
in the world.
SENNEN

Far west village and bathing beach, voted 'cleanest in Britain' 1998.
Popular with surfers. Lifeboat slip and former windlass house, now a crafts
gallery. Cliff castle. Cliff walks to Land's End.
SHEVIOCK
This charming
village, situated on the beautiful Rame Peninsula, is the perfect base for
exploring an area of great natural beauty and secluded beaches. This is a
popular area for sea angling and bird watching, and nearby Antony House is one
of Cornwall’s most impressive stately homes.
STITHIANS
Inland rural village with nearby reservoir for watersports, south of
Redruth. Second-largest agricultural show in Cornwall every July.
STRATTON
The
parent town of Bude, probably dates back to Roman times, but it was as the
stronghold of King Charles and the Royalists that it made its mark in history.
During the Civil War the 7'4" Cornish giant, Anthony Payne, was enlisted as
a bodyguard to the Royalist Sir Bevil Grenville. He fought beside Sir Bevil, Who
commanded the King's army in the victorious battle at nearby Stamford Hill in
1643. Payne lived and died in the Grenville manor house at Stratton - now the
Tree Inn. It is said that, when the giant died, the house had to be restructured
to allow his huge coffin to be carried in and out. Many of the very fine
churches of Cornwall still bear the Royal Crest decreed by the King in gratitude
to his loyal Cornishmen during the Civil War.
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