St Eval

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St Eval
Cornwall

St Eval church
Location
Grid reference: SW883685
Location: 50°28’41"N, 4°59’2"W
Data
Population: 906  (2011)
Post town: Wadebridge
Postcode: PL27
Dialling code: 01841
Local Government
Council: Cornwall
Parliamentary
constituency:
North Cornwall

St Eval is a hamlet in north Cornwall about four miles south-west of Padstow. The parish population at the 2011 census was 960.

Much of the village land was acquired by compulsory purchase in 1938 to build an RAF Coastal Command Station, RAF St Eval. Many buildings were demolished leaving only the Norman church, the Vicarage, and Trevisker Farm. These buildings were effectively surrounded by RAF activity, and during Second World War they too were taken over for use by the Royal Air Force: the church tower used as an observation post and navigation mark.

The parish incorporates the southern part of Porthcothan and the hamlets of Engollan and Treburrick.

Parish church

The parish church is dedicated to St Uvelus or Eval. In the Middle Ages, St Eval lay within the episcopal fief and peculiar deanery of Pawton. In 1297 the benefice was appropriated to the Dean and Chapter of Exeter; in 1312 the Dean and Chapter were in dispute with the vicar about the repair of the chancel. This was settled in 1322 by the vicar lengthening the chancel by six feet and rebuilding its walls.

The aisle and tower were added before 1662 and in 1725 collections were made throughout the diocese for funds to rebuild the tower. The merchants of Bristol acknowledged the usefulness of the church tower as a sea mark and provided the funds for this in 1727.[1]

The oldest part of the church is Norman but the north transept has been rebuilt. The south aisle is Perpendicular; the arcade has six arches but only four belong to the nave and the fifth arch is low but the sixth high again. Features of interest are the plain Norman font, the base of the rood screen, the octagonal pulpit dated 1688, and a good set of bench ends, reused in the restoration of 1889.

A Victoran restoration was undertaken by John Dando Sedding. The stained glass was installed in 1989 and commemorates the RAF station.[2] The churchyard contains the war graves of 23 Commonwealth air force personnel of Second World War.[3]

Today the church is part of a combined benefice know as the 'Lann Pydar Benefice' which extends to include St Columb Major.[4]

In the Middle Ages there were chapels at Efflins (dedicated to St Katherine) and Trethewell.[5]

Prehistoric settlement at Trevisker round

In 1955 and 1956 excavations were carried out on behalf of the Ministry of Works on the site currently occupied by Trevisker School and playground. The Excavation found evidence of a Bronze Age and Iron Age settlement. From the pottery found at Trevisker round at St. Eval it was possible to distinguish several stages of occupation. This was the first Bronze Age site of this kind in Britain.

The type of Bronze Age pottery found is today known as Trevisker ware.[6]

St Eval parish hall

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about St Eval)

References

  1. Cornish Church Guide (1925) Truro: Blackford; pp. 93-94
  2. Beacham, Peter & Pevsner, Nikolaus (2014) Cornwall. New Haven: Yales University Press; pp. 539-40
  3. [1] CWGC Cemetery report, St Eval Churchyard. Details from casualty record.
  4. The Lann Pydar Benefice, Cornwall
  5. Cornish Church Guide (1925) Truro: Blackford; pp. 93-94
  6. "Fire-cracked stones and ceramic production". Saveock Water Archaeology. http://archaeologyonline.org/BAR%201224/Page%203.htm. Retrieved 29 April 2009.