Cornwall. (Kelly's
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1282 TEATH. CORNWALL. (KELLY'S (r765~r873), to the Martyn (1796-r864), Bake (r686-r824), manor of Newhall, the Male family, owners of the manor of Bant and Wakeham families. The register dates from the Trehannick, and the Delabole Slate Company are the prin year. 1558; there are also churchwardens"' accounts from cipallandowners. The soil is various; subsoil, stone. The 1768~. 'the living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge chief crops are wheat, barley, oats and roots. The area is £1i3, net yearly value £r62, including 34 acres of glebe, 5,839 acres (including 6o of water); rateable value,£6,662; with residence, lmilt in r821, on the west side of the church- the population in rBgr was 1,703. yard, in the gift of the Bishop of Truro, and held since t8go Parish Clerk, Richard Parsons. by the Rev. William Stabback Johns, of Exeter College, MEDROSE, 2 miles north, and PENGELLY, 2 miles north, Oxford. The prebends appear to have existed until the are hamlets. beginning of the r]th century. Nearly the whole of the PosT OFFICE.-Marcena Oliver, sub-postmaster. Letters fractured Celtic cross formerly standing in the churchyard, are received through Camelford, arrive at g.ro a.m.; a granite monolith, 15 feet' in height, which had be·en re- dispatched at _15 p.m. The nearest money order & moved and used fQr building purposes, has now ~en re- 3 C If d p 1 d covered and re-erected on its original site. DELABOLE is in telegraph office is at ame or . osta or ers are c issued here, but not paid this parish. The church of St. John, erected in 1879, at a cost of £ 2,doo, is a building of stone, in the Early English WALL LETTER BoxEs, Pengelly, cleared at 2.50 p.m. ; Mad- style, consisting of chancel, nave of four bays, south aisle rose, cleared at 2 ·45 p.m and a tower. Here is a Wesleyan chapel, built in r86g, and PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office, Dela- seating 400 persons; the old chapel, erected in 18o6, is now bole.-Alfred Nute. sub-postmaster. Letters through used as a ~chool. The Bible Christian chapel, at Treligga, Camelford, arrive at 9 a. m. ; dispatched at 3·5 p.m. was built in 1836, for 70 persons, and conveyed to a new Camelford is the nearest telegraph otlice trust in 1859 ; there is also one at Medrose, built in 1835 SCHOOLS:- and rebuilt in 1863, fol' 250 persons, and a third in the A School Board of 7 members was formed April 13, 1875, Church town, built in 1833, with 150 sittings. There are for the united school board district of St. Teath & Michael- Free Methodist chapels in the Church town, built r86g, with stow, with the south-east portion of the parish of Lan- 300 sittings ; at Pengelly, erected about r865, and seating teglos-by-Camelford, which contributes 2 members; Job 550; and at Treligg-a, erected in rS3o, for 70 persons; at- Hockaday, hon. clerk to the board; Richard Parsons, at. tached to these are Sunday schools. The vast p.nd well tendance officer known slate quarries of the Old Delabole Slate Company are Board, Delabole, erected in 1878, in an Early Gothic style, at Delabole, about three miles from Camelford; fully 400 from designs by Mr. Silvanus Trevail, architect, of St. men and boys are employed in these quarries and in the Blazey ; the school buildings comprise a central block factories and workshops erected for splitting and dressing ; with wings & a turret with open octagonal belfry, sur- the roofing slates are of a greyish blue, very uniform in mounted by a spire & containing one bell ; adjoining is a colour, and combine lightness with strength and capacity master's house; for 3SO children; average attendance, to resist atmospheric influences; these quarries also produce So boys, So girls & 55 infants; Francis William Welch, all varieties of slate slabs and manufactured slates : the master ; Miss Ueatrice Reed, infants' mistress ; M1ss depth of the quarry is 400 feet. A.t Treburgett is a mine Evans, girls' mistress formerly yielding copper, lead and silver, but now closed. Board, St. Teath (mixed), designed by the same architect, Two fairs are held, one on the last Tuesday in February and for rso children; average attendance, Ss; William Henry the other on the first Tuesday in July. John Bevill Fortes- Thomas, master; Miss Hetty Lang, assistant mistress cue esq. D.L., J.P. of Boconnoc, Lostwit.hiel, who is lord of CoNVEYANCE.-The North Cornwall· coach passes through the manor of Tregardock, Lord Robartes, who owns the daily to & from Tresmeer & Padstow St. Teath. Mewton Jn. SI. timberdlr. Trehannick Bunt John Bawden, saddler, Higher Hockaday Job, Windsor house Mutton John, farmer, Hilland Medrose Johns Rev. Wm. Stabback M.A.Vicarage Neal William, carpenter Higham Edward, North Delabole inn Shephard Mrs. The Laurels· Nichols John, farmer, Dinna Broad Jenkins Anthony (Mrs.), shopkeeper N ute N ehemiah, farmer & butcher, N ute Alfd. grocer & draper, Post office COMMERCIAL. Rock head Old (The) Delabole Slate Co. Amy John, jun. farmer, Rough parlt Nute Thomas, farmer, West down (JobHockaday,sec.&commercialman) Amy Robert, farmer, Vicarage Nute William, butcher Rome William, fishmonger Auger Thomas. blacksmith Nute William Hy.carpenter,West down Ruse John, shopkeeper Auger William, machine maker Oatten George, farmer, Middle Hendra Stephens John, farmer & butcher Baker John, farmer, Treveans Oliver Marcena, shopkeeper, Post office Tucker James, shopkeeper .I:Saker John, jun. farmer, Tregonnick Parsons John, shoe maker p l} Baker Thomas, farmer, Treligga Parsons Rd. assist. overseer & shopkpr enge · Y• Baker William, farmer, Treligga Parsons John, jun. carpenter COMMERCIAL. Bassett John, thrashing machine propr Pearce William, farmer, Lanagan Bickle Geo. blacksmith,Rock head Bate Elizh. (Mrs.),New White Hart P.H Philp James, farm bailiff to J. Treleaven Blake Edward & Son, machinists Beer Adolphus, farmer, Trehannick esq. Lower Suffenton · Blake Samuel Higgs, shopkeeper Beer Joseph, farmer, Benbowl Philp Richard, farmer, Car Keen Box James, hawker Billing Samuel, farmer, Higher Hendra Philp William Hy. farmer, Treburgett Commins Louisa (Mrs.), shopkeeper Brown Isaac & Wm.farmers,Tregragon Pinch Emma (Mrs.), farmer, Tines Cory John, tailor Brown John, farmer, Treligga Roose John, farmer, Deli Delabole Co-operative Society (Th<Jmas Brown Samuel, farmer Rosevear William, dairy farmer Bate, manager) Burnard George, tailor' Seldon James, farmer, Bakehouse park Ede John, farmer Davey William George,farmer, Treligga Sleeman 'J'homas, farmer, Deer park Gill Thomas Smith, shopkeep3r, Higher Fisher Thomas, farmer, Lower Hendra Sloggett Richard, shoe maker Pen1relly George John Tremain, miller (water), Smith John, farm bailiff to Adolphus Hart William, Station hotel Knights' mill Beer esq. Tines Harvey Mary Ann (Miss), New inn Greenwood lsaa'h, farmer, Delinuth Smith Dan, tailor Hawkey John, shopkeeper, Pengelly Greenwood Thos. jun. frmr.'fhe Barton Stephens John, farm bailiff toW. & G. Hockaday Job, commercial manager & Greenwood Thos.sen. frmr.Ennormead Heath, Trevilley sec. to the Delabole Slate quarri~, Haw key Mary (Mrs.), farmer & butcher Strout William, farmer, Tregardock Windsor house Hicks John, farmer, Church town Teague William, builder Jenkins Aaron, carpenter Hicks William Henry, blacksmith Treleaven Jolm, yeoman, Trekee Jenkins Harry, blacksmith Hockin Hugh, farmer, Trewennen Wallis Richard, farmer Jenkins John, shopkeeper JewellEdwin,dairy farmer,Church twn Warne Mary (Mrs.), dress maker Kellow William, quarry manager Lane William, farmer, Newhall Warne Thomas, farm bailiff to Charles Kendal William, boot & shoe maker Lobb Francis, farmer, Rock head Menhenick esq. Dannon chapel Knight William, bookseller Lobb William, farmer, Treburgett Newton James, hair dresser May John, yeoman, Higher Suffenton Medrose. Philip Francis, Commercial inn . Magor William, farmer, Treroosal Bate George Henry, farmer Symons Caleb Lord, stone engraver & May Thomas, miller (water), N ewhall Bennallick George, farmer painter TEMPLE is a small parish, on the road from Bodmin to· church of St. Catharine, r~built at ·a cost of £8oo on the Launceston, 6 miles north-east from Bodmin station on the foundations of the late Norman chapel of the Knights Temp Great Western railway, in the North Eastern division of the: Jars, which bad been in ruins for rso years, was opened county, hundred and petty sessional division of Trigg, union May 3oth, 1883, and is a small building of ashlar granite 1 aad county cour~;district of Bodmin, rural deanery and arch- and stone in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, deaconry of Bodmin and diocese of Truro. This place de- nave, north transept, south porch and an embattled western rives its-aame from having been part of the possessions of tower containing one bell: there are four stained windows; the preceptory of the Knights Templars at Trebigh. The .1 the east window, representing the . "Nativity" and the .