CORN\VALL. Tl~T.AGEL

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CORN\VALL. Tl~T.AGEL DIRECTORY.] CORN\VALL. Tl~T.AGEL. 203 of Truro. This place derives its name from having been University, who is also rector of Warleggan, where he part of the po~sessions of the preceptory of the Knights resides. There is a Bible Christian chapel here, erected Templars at Trebigh. The church of St. Catharine, about 1879, and seating Ioo persons. Frederic Ernest. rebuilt at a cost of £8oo on the foundations of the late Remfrey esq. who is lord of the manor, Lord Robartes Norman chapel of the· Knights Templars, which had and Mrs. Edward Collins, of Trewardle, Blisland, are the been in ruins for 150 years, was opened May 3oth, 1883, chief landowners. At Temple Moor, about I~ miles from and is a small building of ashlar granite and stone in the village, is a tall cross with carved sides and the head the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, broken. The' soil is peat and clay loam; subsoil, clay, north transept, south porch and an embattled western !!late and granite. The chief crops are barley and oats tower containing one bell: there are four stained and there is much moorland. The area is- 843 acres; windows; the east window, representing the "Jliativity" rateable value, £225; the population in 1891 was 51. and the "Ascension," also bears the arms of the Knights Letters received from Bodmin, which is the nearest Templar!!, and one of the others has the figure of a money order & telegraph office, arrive tues. thurs. & Knight Templar on horseback: there are 100 sittings. sat. mid-day ; dispatched same time The register dates from the year 1882. The living is a This place is included in Blisland United School Board vicarage, net yearly value £25, including 14 acres of District, formed Sept. 29, I 875 glebe, in the gift of the Crown, and held since I 895 by Board School (mixed), built in 1893, for 30 children; the Rev. Charles Ernest Lambert Lie. Theol. of Durham average attendance, 18 Bate Thomas, farmer, Broad park Harris & Son, farmers, .Abbey Pearce Thomas, farmer, ~~Ierrifiehl Best George, f:lrmer, Tor ~Iichell "\\~illiam, farm~r, "Cnder Tor Riddle Ed warJ, farmer, Denaton Harper Chas. Wait. farmer, Greenover ST. THOMAS :BY LA UNCESTON, see Launcesbn. TIDEFORD is a village and ecclesiastical parish, well supplied with daily and weekly papers, and has a f,Jrmed :March 26, 1852, from the civil parish of St. library. The Earl of St. Germans is lord of the manor Germans, and is on the river Tiddy, 2 miles north from and principal landowner. The soil is clay and marl; sub-; St. Germans, the nearest railway station, on the Great soil, stone and slate. The chief crops are wheat, barley, Western railway, in the South Eastern division of the oats and turnips. The area is 2,ooo acres; the popula­ county, southern division of the hundred of East, petty tion in 1891 was 693. sessional division of East South, union of St. Germans, Parish Clerk, Richard Richards. county court district of Liskeard, rural deanery of East, Post & M. 0. 0., S. B. & .Annuity & Insurance Office. archdeaconry of Bodmin and diocese of Truro. The -:\Irs. Elizabeth J. Broad, sub-postmistress. Lette:rs church of St. Luke is a small and plain edifice of stone received through St. Germans R.S.O. which is the in the Early English style, consecrated July 31, 1845, nearest telegraph office, at 6.50 a.m. & 2.50 p.m.; and consisting of chancel, nave and a gable cot con­ dispatched at 10.30 a.m. & 5.50 p.m taining 2 bells: the interior is fitted with oak pulpit, readin~ desk and pews: the stained east window was Wall Letter Boxes. placed to the memory of his daughter by the Rev. Edward Tideford Quay, cleared 10 a.m. & 5.40 p.m Glanville, a former incumbent of this parish: there Blunts, cleared 11.20 a.m. week days only are 200 sittings. The register dates from the year I 845. Letters for Coldrenick to be addressed :\'Ienheniot R.S.O. The living is a vicarage, net yearly value £270, with & for Bethany & Budge's shop, St. Germans residence and two acres of glebe, in the gift of the vicar National School (mixed), with residence for the mistress of St. Germans, and held since 1873 by the Rev. David attached, built in I 848, &; enlarged in I 896, for 120 Jenkins )LA. of Exeter College, Oxford. The Wesleyan children; average attendance, 82; l\Irs. JessaminE> chapel here affords 85 sittings. T4e Wesleyan Reform Luxton, mistress chapel, at Bethany, was erected in 1838, and will seat Carrier to Plymouth (:\Iillbay dock) (Boat, cargo only.­ about 130 persons, and there is another in the village John Ellis, occasionally with So sittings. The Workin~ )!en's Reading Room is Carrier to Plymouth.-:\Irs. Elizabeth Haddy, sat Blake Philip, Kilna Carpenter Francis Jn. Render, farmer, Kendall Henry, ironmonger Jenkins Rev. David )LA.. (vicar), Pennywin Liptrot .Alfred Bailey L.R. C.P .Eclin., Vicarage Congdon Joseph, butcher :\Il.R. C.S .Land. surgeon, Woodleigh Kelly Richard ~Iargaret (~Irs. ~Iavnard • Congdon ), farmer Henrv,• farmer, Cutcrew Lewis William Dunstan William, grocer O'Dogherty Jane (:\Irs.), farmer, Liptrot .Alfred Bailey, lYoodleigh Govett Philip Brenton,grocer & carpnt-r Tredudwea Porcher .AmeJee J. Woodview house Greet Thomas, boot & shoe maker Panter Richar 1, hrmer, Oinick Robert'! William Harvey, S'pringbank Greet; "'\Yilliam, boot & shoe maker Peters .Ann ()Irs. ), shopkeeper . / Tregoning .Arthur S Ha::ldy Cyril, farmer, Trewolsta Pete:-.<; Thomas, boot ma. Budge·s ~p Turker Klmund, Molenick Haddy Richard, carpent€r PuunJ Samuel, Commercial inn Hancock John :\Iaynard, farmer, Richa7ds John, farmer, Trewolsh COliliERCIAL. Trenethick Roseveare George, farmer, Palm B: tton Eumund & Frederick William, Hancock 1Yilliam Thomas, saddler >& Tucker EJmund. farmer, :\Iolenit-k farmers, Coldrenick ironmonger Weeks 1Yil:inm Henry, miller (wat 1) Be~t 1Yilliam John, farmer, Trebrown Harvey Richard, butter & egg dealer Criffi~ mill (postal address, St. Ge B:ake Philip, miller (water), Heskyn Henwood l\icholas, timber merchant, mans) mill & merchant, Kilna Cutcrew mill Workin~ }!en's Reading Room ( m. Brenton&Son,builders &c.Budge's shop Hawke Bertha Ann (:Miss), linen drapr Hambly &. Philip B. Govett, joint Broad .Alfred, coach builder & grocer Hocken James, farmer, Bara Pill secs) Burrows William, farmer Kelly John, farmer, Tresulgan TINTAGEL, anciently called Dundagell, is a parish standing on a hill overlooking the sea, about half a mi~e on the coast, near the entrance of the Bristol Channel, west of the village, is an ancient cruriform building of 5 miles from Camelford station, opened in August, 1893, stone in the Xorman and Perpendicular styles, consist­ on the new branrh of the South 1Vestern railway from ing of chancel with north chapel, nave, ai•les, transepts, Lannceston to 1Yarlebridge, 6 north-west from Camel- north and south porches, and an embattled western tower ford, 14 north-east from Warlebridge, 20 north from Bod- of three stages, containing 5 bells, dated respectively min and 20 from Launceston; the parish is in the North 1735, 1868, 1783, 1828, and 1868: several of the windows Eastern division of the county, Lesnewth hundred and are stained, one being a. memorial to John Douglas Cook petty sessional division, Camelford union and county esq. formerly editor of the "Saturday Review," who died court district, rural deanery of Trigg l\Iinor, archdeaconry 1oth .Aug. 1868, and i~ buried in the churchyard; there of Bodmin and diocese of Truro. The now villages of are others to Robert Jape Kinsman esq. and Susannah, Trevena and Bossiney in this parish formed by prescrip- his wife, d. 1855; Sarah Anne Radcliffe, d. 31st :\lay, tion a united borough, which received its first charter 1865, and Peter Radcliffe, d. 13th July, 1868: in the from Richard (Plantagenet), Earl of Poitou and Cornwall south transept (but formerly in the chancel) is a stone and King of the Romans, and this charter was confirmed coffin lid with a floriated cross, and above it the head by Richard II. and Henry VI.: in 1685 James II. granted only of a priest, and near it is a brass with half effigy a new charter constituting Tint a gel, Trevena and Bossiney and inscription to J oan, the mother of John Kelly, dean a body corporate and politic: the borough returned two of the collegiate church of Crantock, near Padstow, to members to Parliament from 1552 to 1832, 'when it was which he was appointed .Tanuary 16, 1430: on the south disfranchised under the Reform Act, there being then side of the chancel is a piscina and an Easter sepulchre, only 19 electors; and the corporation was thereupon inclosing a low raised tomb: on the north side is an allowed to become extinct. The church of St. Materiana, aumbry; the reredos is fcrmed out of anrient bench ends; • .
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