Chacewater

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Chacewater
Cornish: Dowr an Chas
Cornwall

Chacewater Village from Chacewater Hill
Location
Grid reference: SW751444
Location: 50°15’25"N, 5°9’25"W
Data
Population: 1,580  (2011, parish)
Post town: Truro
Postcode: TR4
Dialling code: 01872
Local Government
Council: Cornwall
Parliamentary
constituency:
Truro and Falmouth
Website: www.chacewater.net/

Chacewater is a village in Cornwall, three miles east of Redruth, in the west of the county. The hamlets of Carnhot, Cox Hill, Creegbrawse, Hale Mills, Jolly's Bottom, Salem, Saveock, Scorrier, Todpool, Twelveheads and Wheal Busy are in the Chacewater parish.[1]

Chacewater sits in a valley between hills separating it from Threemilestone, Scorrier and St Day close to Wheal Busy and the Poldice Valley and the Coast to Coast cycle route.

Society

The village has three pubs and a club, the Chacewater Literary Institute; the latter was was given to the village in 1893 by John Passmore Edwards. There are also a health centre, a primary school, a village hall and small selection of shops.

A village carnival is held each year in August.

Local clubs and activities include:

  • Chacewater Old Cornwall Society,[2]
  • The Chacewater Players
  • The Blind Club
  • Chacewater Women's Institute
  • The Kernow Microscopical Society, which meets in Chacewater.

A free monthly magazine What's on in Chacewater reached its 200th issue in July 2007. It lists events and activities

Sport

  • Bowling: Chacewater Bowling Club[3]
  • Cricket: Chacewater Cricket Club[4]
  • Football: Chacewater FC[5]

Economy and transport

Chacewater railway station was opened by the West Cornwall Railway on 25 August 1852 but has long since closed.

There are two Nursery Gardens in Chacewater; Sunny Corner Nurseries and Roseland House Nursery, which holds a National Collection of Clematis viticella cultivars and of Lapageria rosea, the Chilean Bellflower.

Twelveheads Press, an independent publishing company, is based in Chacewater. It is best known for the Cornish Heritage series but also publishes transport and mining books.

Churches

St Paul's was built in 1828 and rebuilt (apart from the tower) in 1892 by Edmund H. Sedding. The stonework is partly of granite and partly of [polyphant stone: the interior is lofty and the walls unplastered.[8]

The Methodist Chapel[9] is closed, pending repairs.

Gallery

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Chacewater)

References