Menheniot

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Menheniot
Cornish: Mahynyet
Cornwall
Menheniot Church - geograph.org.uk - 171719.jpg
Menheniot parish church
Location
Grid reference: SX289628
Location: 50°26’24"N, 4°24’43"W
Data
Population: 1,655  (2011)
Post town: Liskeard
Postcode: PL14
Dialling code: 01579
Local Government
Council: Cornwall
Parliamentary
constituency:
South East Cornwall

Menheniot (pronounced Men-en-yut) is a village in southern Cornwall, two and a half miles southeast of Liskeard. The name comes from the Cornish language and means is "sanctuary of Neot" (from minihi and Neot).[1]

Menheniot village

Menheniot had a population of 1,655 at the 2011 census. The village has a primary school, a pub, a shop and a post office.

Geography

To the south of the civil parish is Clicker Tor Quarry, a Site of Special Scientific Interest noted for its geological interest, containing one of the best examples of ultramafic rocks in the West Country.[2]

At Coldrennick is a black and white mansion dated 1870 by the architect C. F. Hayward.[3] At Merrymeet is an Anglican mission church dedicated to St Mary the Virgin.

Parish church

The parish church, located in the village, is dedicated to St Lalluwy. It has a buttressed tower and a spire.[4]

The alleged dedications to St Antoninus and St Corentin derive from errors made by John Whitaker and Dr George Oliver. The church is a fine building of the 14th century but has been rendered less interesting by unsympathetic restorations. Accounts of four guilds associated with the church have been preserved: they relate to part of the reigns of Queen Mary I and Queen Elizabeth I. The date of the parish feast was altered in 1405 from March 8 to October 6. In 1478 the benefice was appropriated to Exeter College, Oxford and the cure of souls became a vicarage. Five chapels in the parish are recorded in the Middle Ages but they were abolished at the Reformation. There was also a lazar house at Maudlin near Liskeard which did remain in existence for some time after. As a valuable benefice several of the incumbents have been men of some distinction, including William Wykeham in 1365, Peter Courtenay, afterwards Bishop of Exeter, in 1477, and John Moreman, DD, 1529-54.[5] Dr Moreman was the author of a commentary on the epistle to the Romans and also the first to teach his people the Lord's prayer, creed and ten commandments in English.[6] George Hall became vicar of Menheniot and in 1641 archdeacon of Cornwall.[7][8] He was deprived of his offices under the Commonwealth but became a bishop after the Restoration.

Features of interest include the ceiled wagon roofs, the pulpit (1891 by Harry Hems of Exeter), which depicts the polar exploits of Vice-Admiral Trelawney-Jago, and the earliest monumental brass in Cornwall (commemorating Sir Ralph Carmynow, d. 1386). There are a number of interesting monuments to the Trelawnys, including Jonathan Trelawny (d. 1674) and Edward Trelawney, Dean of Exeter (d. 1726). The black marble slab to L. Stephens (d. 1724) and the tablet to Lady Charlotte Carr (by M. Eames of Exeter) are also of interest.[9]

Captain John Richards Lapenotière who lived in the parish until his death in 1834 is buried in the churchyard.

Economy and transport

Menheniot lies in a former mining area and is surrounded by disused shafts and engine houses. Lead seams were discovered in the 1840s and Menheniot became the centre of a mining boom which lasted until the 1870s. During this period the population doubled.[4] Wheal Trelawney was a lead and arsenic mine which was worked from 1840 to 1890 and again in 1900-02. [10]

The village has a station, Menheniot railway station, on the Cornish Main Line.[11][12]

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Menheniot)

References

  1. Cornish Church Guide (1925) Truro: Blackford; p. 157
  2. SSSI listing and designation for Clicker Tor Quarry
  3. Pevsner, N. (1970) Cornwall; 2nd ed. Harmondsworth: Penguin; p. 54
  4. 4.0 4.1 Information on Menheniot  from GENUKI
  5. Cornish Church Guide (1925) Truro: Blackford; p. 157-58
  6. Brown, H. Miles (1964) The Church in Cornwall. Truro: Blackford; p. 40
  7. [1]
  8. Concise Dictionary of National Biography
  9. Nikolaus Pevsner: The Buildings of England: Cornwall, 1951; 1970 Penguin Books ISBN 978-0-300-09589-0
  10. Todd, A. C. & Laws, Peter (1972) The Industrial Archaeology of Cornwall. Newton Abbot: David & Charles; p. 235
  11. National Rail website; Menheniot; retrieved April 2010
  12. British Railway Stations website; retrieved April 2010