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Cornwall
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For centuries a focal point of
the tin industry, this historic town on the
south-western edge of rugged Bodmin Moor dates at
least to the 6th century when St. Petroc built a
priory which was later rebuilt to become the
largest church in Cornwall.
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St. Petroc's Church - Photo:
Janine Forbes
CCL |
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Bodmin Gaol - Photo:
Ron Strutt
CCL |
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An important building is the
town’s jail which was used to hold both the
Domesday Book and the Crown Jewels during the
First World War. It was also the site of Britain’s
last public hanging in the 19th century.
The regimental museum of the Duke of Cornwall’s
Light Infantry exhibits many military items while
an added delight is a ride on the Bodmin and
Wenford heritage railway. |
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Every July the town is the scene of an ancient
tradition known as the Bodmin Riding when locals
stage a horseback procession.
The town witnessed no less than three Cornish
rebellions, one of which involved the so-called
usurper Perkin Warbeck, who proclaimed himself
‘King Richard’.
On Bodmin Moor are three prehistoric stone circles
and the remains of a Bronze Age tomb. |

Bodmin Station - Photo:
Ron Strutt
CCL |
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Lying at the mouth of the
River Neet, Bude is a popular Georgian seaside
resort with its own sheltered harbour and
magnificent, bucket-and-spade beaches.
Its bay is comparatively shallow and is arguably
the best in the world for surfing. Indeed, the
first Surf Life Saving Club was formed here. |
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Crooklets Beach - Photo:
William Wells
CCL |
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Crooklets from Compass Point -
Photo:
Peter Land
CCL |
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The unique, heavily-banded
cliffs are frequently battered by the Atlantic and
look like rocky rainbows.
So many ships have been wrecked here that at one
time locals regularly plundered such hapless
vessels.
A local folk museum tells the full story of 19th
century Bude Canal around which the town was
originally built.
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Once one of the richest tin
and copper mining areas in the world, this is now
part of one of the largest urban areas in
Cornwall, though brooding mine stacks and engine
houses still survive.
Dolcoath mine was 3,500ft deep while South Crofty
was Cornwall’s last tin mine.
The area was home to the great foundry of Holmans,
Cornwall's largest maker of industrial equipment,
which included the Sten submachine gun. |
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Cambourne - Photo:
Toby Speight
CCL
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Cambourne Business Park -
Photo:
Toby Speight
CCL |
In 1801 Cambourne witnessed
the first-ever journey by a pioneering ‘motor
car’, the steam-powered ‘Puffing Devil’. The
invention of locally-born engineer Richard
Trevithick, it was tested on Cambourne Hill.
Trevithick, who worked for the ‘Ding Dong’ mine at
Penzance, went on to create the world’s first
proper steam engine to run on rails. His statue
stands outside Cambourne Library and each April
the town celebrates Trevithick Day. |
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According to legend this small
inland town on the edge of Bodmin Moor was none
other than the Arthurian capital of Camelot while
Slaughter Bridge was the scene of the British
king’s last great battle.
To add an extra mystery, another contender for the
title of Camelot, the brooding castle of Tintagel,
lies close by on the coast.
An irresistible double act. |
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Camelford Centre - Photo:
Chris Heaton
CCL |
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Crantock Beach - Photo:
Tony Atkin
CCL |
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This peaceful village, full of
lovely thatched cottages, lies near the mouth of
the River Gannel and looks out towards Newquay.
St Carantacus is reputed to have established an
oratory here in the 5th century.
The mainly Norman church has fine carvings and a
set of old-fashioned stocks.
Nearby is dramatic Kelsey Head and a cliff top
Iron Age fort. |
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The ever-enthralling resort of
Falmouth - otherwise known as Pennycomequick -
lies at the mouth of the River Fal on Cornwall’s
idyllic south coast, the so-called Cornish
Riviera, and looks out onto the world’s third
largest natural harbour.
An important port since the days of the Tudors, it
is guarded both by Henry VIII’s angular Pendennis
Castle and St Mawes Castle (1543).
A Ness-style, hump-backed sea monster said to lurk
in the bay has allegedly been sighted many times. |
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Falmouth Custom House Quay -
Photo:
Tony Atkin
CCL |
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Falmouth Harbour - Photo:
John Spivey
CCL |
The town only became a holiday centre with the
arrival of the railways but before that pioneered
the use of mail boats from the Continent.
Britain's defeat of the French at the Battle of
Trafalgar, and the death of Admiral Nelson, are
said to have been first announced here.
Curiously, Falmouth was the inspired creation of
Sir John Killigrew in the early 1600s. He had been
urged to build it by Sir Walter Raleigh, a man
well aware of its strategic position. On the
harbourside is the award-winning National Maritime
Museum Cornwall.
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With its steep, narrow streets
and busy, sea-going atmosphere, Fowey (pronounced
‘Foy’) is one of Cornwall’s leading tourist
hotspots.
In a waterside house lived Sir Quiller-Couch
(1863-1944), author of some of the best stories
written about Cornwall, who turned Fowey into
‘Troy Town’. |
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Fowey Town Quay - Photo:
Graham Proud
CCL |
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Fowey Harbour - Photo:
David Stowell
CCL |
A second literary connection
was provided by the modern writer Daphne du
Maurier who lived at 17th century ‘Mennabilly’.
She immortalised the house as ‘Mandaley’ in her
1938 novel ‘Rebecca’.
Today’s ships carry cargos of china clay from
Fowey but in the past it was this seaport which
fitted out ships for the Crusades. Later, locals
raided the French coast during the Hundred Years
War and became known as ‘Fowey Gallants’. |
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With popular sands and
intimate dunes, Hayle is a port and market town
lying in the estuary of the Hayle river in St Ives
Bay.
A scenic trek leads to Godrevy Lighthouse, the
dramatic setting for Virginia Woolf’s famous novel
‘To the Lighthouse’. |
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Hayle Beach near Black Cliff -
Photo:
Sheila Russell
CCL |
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Helford Village - Photo :
Richard Johns
CCL |
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This one-time tin mining
port is superbly situated on the Helford River
and has its own ferry service.
Thanks to its small and intimate harbour, it
is a popular place for yachters and has been
described as the loveliest village on the
Cornish coast.
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A short walk takes the visitor
to idyllic Frenchman’s Pill’, or cove, the setting
of Daphne Du Maurier’s world-famous novel
‘Frenchman’s Creek’. |

Helford Estuary - Photo:
Chris Johnson
CCL |
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Helston Church Area - Photo:
T. J. Wright
CCL |
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Lying on the Lizard Point,
this one-time tin mining centre is the most
southerly town in Britain but is famous for its
annual ‘furry dance’ (later corrupted into ‘floral
dance’) in which couples dance not only through
the streets but also through the houses.
Once an inland port, Helston lies on the River
Cober and overlooks the largest natural freshwater
lake in Cornwall. |
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The local scenery is
magnificent although, for some, Flambards Theme
Park, will prove equally attractive.
The town was the birthplace of Bob "Ruby Robert"
Fitzsimmons, the first-ever triple world boxing
champion.
In 1901 Marconi transmitted his first wireless
message across the Atlantic from nearby Poldhu
Point. |

Cannon Helston Folk Museum -
Photo:
T. J. Wright
CCL |
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Holywell Perran Beach - Photo:
Tony Atkin
CCL
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This sleepy village shelters
beneath Penhale Point and boasts no less than two
‘holy’ wells – hence its name.
One of these springs is contained in a small
shrine while the second, about a mile away, is
within a cave accessible only at low tide. |
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No trip to
this part of the world would be complete
without a sightseeing tour of Land’s End, the
most westerly point on the British mainland.
Now designated an area of outstanding natural
beauty, it is replete with quiet coves,
towering cliffs, raging seas and romantic
locations.
The best times to experience its raw
magnificence are at sunrise and sunset,
particularly if you are equipped with a
camera. |
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Lands End Granite Cliffs -
Photo:
Roger Butterfield
CCL |
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Launceston Castle - Photo:
Chris Shaw
CCL |
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Close to the border with Devon
and lying on the River Tamar, this evocative
hillside town was once the county’s capital and is
often called the ‘gateway to Cornwall’.
Dominated by an 11th century Norman castle, it is
largely Georgian, though the heavily-carved church
of St Mary Magdalene dates to the 16th century.
Cromwell’s Parliamentarians captured the town in
1645 during the Civil War. During the medieval
period Launceston was the only walled town in the
county.
Local attractions include the Launceston Steam
Railway. |
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A once-booming tin mining
centre, this hillside town lies at the head of the
River Looe valley.
Within easy reach are the coves and resorts of the
Cornish Riviera on the south coast as well as the
rugged expanse of Bodmin Moor.
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Liskeard Town Centre - Photo:
Tony Atkin
CCL |
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Lizard Point Kynance Cove -
Photo:
John Spivey
CCL |
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This is the most southern
point of England and boasts glorious scenery and
multi-coloured serpentine rock.
The area is replete with sheltered bays and
charming coves, particularly Kynance Cove.
There are breathtaking views from the Point and
its twin- towered, 18th century lighthouse.
The local rock can be seen in all its glory in the
serpentine tower of 15th century Landewednack
Church. |
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This attractive coastal resort
sits contentedly in beautiful Looe Bay, not far
from its neighbour Fowey, and is split into two
parts by the Looe estuary.
At one time local fisherman would set off on sea
voyages in search of the humble pilchard but today
the quarry might bite back – Looe is the
undisputed capital of Britain’s shark-fishing
industry. |
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Looe Beach - Photo:
Tony Atkin
CCL |
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Mevagissey - Photo:
Fiona Avis
CCL |
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A former tin mining centre and
pilchard port, this quaint village-resort with
narrow, congested streets lies on Cornwall’s north
coast, near St. Austell, and boasts two
picturesque harbours which attract thousands of
visitors each year. |
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At one time it was a veritable paradise for
smugglers who built their own fast sailing boats
to outrun eagle-eyed customs officers.
Hugging a dramatic coastline
and sheltered by Mount’s Bay, this is a
delightfully relaxed settlement and the epitome of
a Cornish fishing village.
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Mousehole Harbour South Pier -
Photo:
Richard Thomson
CCL |
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Mousehole Harbour -
Photo:
Steven Muster
CCL |
In the 16th century it was virtually burned to the
ground by Spanish looters who left only one
building – a pub – standing.
It was also the home
of Dolly Pentreath, reputedly the last surviving
exponent of the original Cornish language.
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The Welsh poet Dylan Thomas described Mousehole as
the ‘loveliest village in England’ after
honeymooning here in the 1930s. |

Mousehole Harbour - Photo:
Nigel Smith
CCL |
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Mullion Church Cove - Photo:
Steve Rigg
CCL |
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The picturesque harbour and
handsome cove of this timeless village on the
Lizard peninsula form one of the prettiest sights
on the Cornish coast.
Above the village are tall, erratic serpentine
cliffs, the famous Poldhu Caves and a memorial to
the Italian wireless inventor Guiglielmo Marconi,
whose first transatlantic Morse signal was sent
from here.
In the 18th and 19th centuries, Mullion Cove was
one of the county’s busiest smuggling areas.
Bronze and Iron Age burial mounds lie nearby. |
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The largest fishing port in
England, Newlyn lies in Mount’s Bay and centres on
a cluster of Cornish cottages that rise from the
sea to occupy a steep hillside.
It is famous as the setting for the ‘Newlyn
School’ of artists founded in the 19th century by
Stanhope Forbes. |
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Newlyn Harbour - Photo:
Bob Jones
CCL |
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The Huer's Hut - Photo:
David Long
CCL |
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Lying on the north
Atlantic coast, Newquay is one of Cornwall’s
top seaside resorts yet dates back into
prehistory.
Archaeologists have found a late Iron age hill
fort and say occupation of the site lasted
from the third century BC to the fifth or
sixth century AD.
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It was a fishing village
famous for its pilchards until the early 20th
century.
Now a prominent tourist destination, its has no
less than 10 sandy beaches and styles itself “The
Surfing Capital of Britain”, regularly staging
major international competitions. |

Lusty Glaze Beach - Photo:
Gary Rogers
CCL |
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Fistral Bay - Photo:
David Long
CCL |
Newquay is also known for the "Run to the Sun"
event, which takes place each May.
Thousands of people descend on the town in camper
vans and customised cars.
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Nearby, at Trerice, is a fine
Elizabethan manor house now administered by the
National Trust.
The 630 mile-long South West Coast Path runs
through the town. |

Trerice house - Photo:
Andrew Longton
CCL |
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