London Apprentice

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London Apprentice
Cornwall
Bridge by King's Wood - geograph.org.uk - 1215321.jpg
Bridge over St Austell River
Location
Grid reference: SX006502
Location: 50°19’4"N, 4°48’0"W
Data
Post town: St Austell
Postcode: PL26
Dialling code: 01726
Local Government
Council: Cornwall
Parliamentary
constituency:
St Austell and Newquay

London Apprentice is a village in southern Cornwall, on the banks of St Austell River in the Pentewan Valley approximately two miles south of St Austell. It was named after the London Apprentice Inn, which formerly stood on the St Austell to Pentewan road. The inn traded from 1815 to 1871 and probably longer.[1][2]

Tin-mining

In 1833, a coalyard was constructed on the Pentewan Railway situated near the inn to supply coal to the tin mines at nearby Polgooth and the settlement may have arisen around this point. According to nineteenth-century census returns, most of the villagers were engaged in tin-mining, either in the stream-works of Wheal Virgin, close to London Apprentice, or in Polgooth. The Wheal Virgin works closed in 1874,[3] and the Polgooth mine by 1900.

New Mills Primitive Methodist Church

The New Mills Primitive Methodist church was built in 1870 and closed in 1988, though the building still stands.[4]

The village today

Today, the village (which retains a shop and a restaurant) caters mainly for tourists. The route of the narrow gauge railway from St Austell to Pentewan is now a footpath and cycle path, known as the Pentewan Trail.[5]

Kings Wood, a remnant of ancient woodland, owned by the Woodland Trust, lies to the south of the village.[6]

References