St Wenn

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St Wenn
Cornish: Sen Gwenna
Cornwall
Rosenannon Downs with unfenced road - geograph.org.uk - 221925.jpg
Rosenannon Downs
Location
Grid reference: SW967648
Location: 50°26’53"N, 4°51’50"W
Data
Post town: Bodmin
Postcode: PL30
Local Government
Council: Cornwall

St Wenn is a village in Cornwall six miles west of Bodmin and nine miles east of Newquay. The parish population at the 2011 census was 299.[1]

Other settlements in the parish include Rosenannon, Demelza, Tregonetha and Tregurtha Barton, once the home of Michael Tregury, Archbishop of Dublin, who died in 1471. The last heir-male of the elder branch of this family died in the reign of King Henry V. The Borlase family, ancestors of William Borlase, were residents of this parish.

Later William Hals, who wrote the Parochial History of Cornwall, resided here in the latter part of his life:[2] Hals, who owned the rectorial tithes of St Wenn, died here.

Parihs church

St Wenn Church

The parish church is dedicated to Saint Wenna. The church was in the 12th century in the possession of the Earl of Gloucester who gave it to Tewkesbury Abbey ca. 1150. It was appropriated to the abbey in 1242 when the first vicar was instituted.[3]

The tower was built with three stages but now has only two as the top section was destroyed by lightning in 1663.[3] There is a nave and two aisles of three bays. The font is of the 15th century, in the Norman style.[3] and very similar to those of St Columb Minor and Mawgan-in-Pydar.[4]

On the North Downs, called Carenza Wortha, (now called Rosenannon Downs) there used to be a chapel dedicated to St Mary Magdalen: it was destroyed in the Civil War during the time of King Charles I.[5] There is a Methodist Chapel at Rosenannon and there used to be others.

St Wenn School is a primary school in St Wenn village.

Outside links

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References

  1. "Parish population 2011.Retrieved 14 Feb 2015". http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/Cornwall/StWenn/index.html#Population. 
  2. History of Cornwall
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Cornish Church Guide (1925) Truro: Blackford; p. 218
  4. Pevsner, N. (1970) Cornwall; 2nd ed. Penguin; p. 204
  5. Peter, Thurstan (1906) History of Cornwall; p. 387