Heamoor

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Heamoor
Cornwall

Madron Road, Heamoor
Location
Location: 50°7’41"N, 5°33’14"W
Data
Local Government
Council: Cornwall
Parliamentary
constituency:
St Ives

Heamoor (formerly 'Hea') is a village in Cornwall. It was once a hamlet of the parish of Madron, but in modern times Heamoor has become a suburb of the swelling townscape of Penzance, two-thirds of a mile northwest of the town centre.

Sportsman's Inn, Heamoor

Heamoor has a number of shops, The Sportsman's Arms pub, The British Legion and Scout group as well as several community facilities. There are two schools; Heamoor Community Primary School and Mount's Bay Academy.

Churches

Until the mid-20th century, Heamoor had three centres of Christian worship: Wesley Rock Wesleyan Chapel; a Bible Christian Chapel; and the Church of England Church of St Thomas.

Wesley Rock Methodist Church is so called because of the frequent visits by John Wesley to the area where he is said to have preached from a rock in a field. The 'Rock' in question now forms the base of the pulpit in Wesley Rock Church itself: on completion of the church building, the rock was moved within. The rock is believed to have originally come from the Rosehill Area.

St Thomas's Church was built in Heamoor in the late 19th century as a Chapel of ease to serve those living in the outskirts of Penzance. The Church is part of Madron parish and was dedicated in 1892.

Heamoor churches celebrate Madron feast, as having been part of that parish.

History

Village Cross, Heamoor

The first mention of the village is in 1274 as La Hae/'Leye, followed by Hay Moor in 1663 and Hae/Anhea in 1869.[1]

Heamoor saw initial growth in the 19th century due to its proximity to a major crossroads and the need of farms for agricultural labour. The village originally consisted of two areas—the Hea which is the southern part of the village where the main road enters from Penzance and then to the east of this towards St Thomas's Church. The moor occupies the area at the opposite end of the village and could be seen as the poorly drained area now occupied by the playing fields of Mount's Bay Academy and the housing estate nearby. The reason for the moor was the poor drainage which in turn was due to the outcrop of a Felsite dyke (this rock is also called 'elvan' in Cornwall) that can be seen forming the ridge where Poltair woods abuts onto the road leading from Heamoor to Trengwainton. This dyke channels water onto the ground lying below it giving rise to the swampy conditions. Further along the same road are a pair of reservoirs that form the former main supply of the nearby town of Penzance, the water for these reservoirs comes from this dyke, the main water supply for the town being Drift Reservoir.

The Scout Hut, originally situated in Barn Lane, behind Rosparvah Gardens was the only building to be bombed by the Germans during the Second World War. After the war, the Scout Hut was rebuilt in Bolitho Road, behind the British Legion, and named the Venning Hall.

Following Second World War Heamoor was identified by the then Penzance Borough Council as area of potential development for housing, during the 1970s and 1980s this was realised with the building of a number of large modern housing developments.

References

  1. Pool, P A S (1985). The Place-Names of West Penwith (Second ed.). Heamoor: PAS Pool.