Carharrack

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Carharrack
Cornwall
Houses and Church, Carharrack - geograph.org.uk - 145454.jpg
Houses and Church at Carharrack
Location
Grid reference: SW732414
Location: 50°13’48"N, 5°10’55"W
Data
Post town: Redruth
Postcode: TR16
Dialling code: 01209
Local Government
Council: Cornwall
Parliamentary
constituency:
Camborne and Redruth

Carharrack is a village in western Cornwall, two miles east of Redruth, in a former mining area.

The parish has become rural and residential but it had an industrial past and relics of the past abound, primarily in the form of abandoned and broken down engine house buildings. The parish is comparatively small in area, and is bounded to the north and northwest by St Day parish, to the east and southeast by Gwennap parish, and to the southwest and west by Lanner parish.

Until 1985, Carharrack was part of the civil parish of Gwennap but it became a civil parish in its own right with the first meeting of Carharrack Parish Council on 28 May 1985.[1]

Name

The derivation of the modern form of the name Carharrack is uncertain. Craig Wetherhill [2] suggests it is a corruption of the Cornish ker/cayr Ardhek meaning Arthroc's fort. Eric Rabjohns, a locally based local-historian, while acknowledging this possibility, also advances another two contenders.[3] The first is that the name refers to a dwelling of religious purpose, a meeting place for travellers, originating from Carharrack's proximity to the pilgrimage trail between Canterbury and St Michael's Mount, which is known to have passed through the nearby villages of St Day to the north and Lanner to the south. The final option, again based on a corruption of the Cornish, this time of Car (or Caer) Harrack meaning a camp, enclosure, or settlement near the rock or Carn, presumably referring to the mass of Carn Marth whose granite bulk overshadows the village. Each derivative has a degree of evidence to support it.[3]

History

Mills Hall, Carharrack

Earliest references to the area appear around 1290, but references to dwellings on the current site only date from the 1700s. Boom years for the village were in the first half of the nineteenth century, with the expansion of the local mines which at peak employed several thousand people: Carharrack was the closest settlement and provided plenty of space for building. By the 1860s the copper industry in Cornwall was in decline and many residents emigrated in search of work. During the latter part of the twentieth century the village suffered a progressive loss both of local employment and local facilities and although there have been various new housing developments around the village it now functions more as a dormitory village.

Mining

Olivenite, common in the Carharrack area

Carharrack is within the Cornwall and West Devon Mining Landscape, a World Heritage Site, and specifically in the Redruth Mining District of the designated area.

The site of the Consolidated Mines, formed in 1782 by the amalgamation of Carharrack Mine and several other local tin and copper mines, is immediately east of the village. The mines were served by the Redruth and Chasewater Railway (an early narrow gauge line) which connected them to quays at Devoran on Cornwall's south coast. The railway closed in 1915 and its course is now a long-distance footpath and cycleway, one of Cornwall's Mineral Tramway Trails.

Carharrack is the type locality for the copper-arsenate mineral Olivenite, a crystalline lustrous rock which often has a green or olive hue.[4]

Culture and sport

The village also has a brass band, the Carharrack and St Day Band,[5] which notably play for the St Day feast dances.

The village has a football team, Carharrack AFC.

Outside links

Commons-logo.svg
("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Carharrack)

References

  1. Information on Carharrack  from GENUKI
  2. Wetherhill, Craig (2005), Place Names in Cornwall and Scilly, Wessex Books
  3. 3.0 3.1 Rabjohn, Eric & May, Barrie (Eds.) (2003), The Book of Carharrack - Born of the Mines Halsgrove, Tiverton
  4. [1] Mindat.Org website. retrieved May 2010
  5. Carharrack & St Day Band