- St Newlyn East
-
Not to be confused with Newlyn.
Coordinates: 50°22′01″N 5°03′18″W / 50.3669°N 5.0551°W
St Newlyn East (Cornish: Eglosniwlin) is a civil parish and village in Cornwall, United Kingdom. The village is situated approximately three miles (5 km) south of Newquay[1]. The name St Newlyn East is locally abbreviated to Newlyn East.
The parish is named after the patron saint of the church, St Newlina and the population was 1,390 in the 2001 census[citation needed].
The church was founded in Norman times and rededicated in 1259. Most of the present building is of the 14th and 15th centuries. There is a fine Norman font.[2]
The Lappa Valley Steam Railway tourist attraction operates near Newlyn East. At Trerice is the Tudor mansion of the Arundells now in the care of the National Trust.
East Wheal Rose disaster
On 9 July 1846 a disaster at the East Wheal Rose mine was caused by an unusually heavy thunderstorm which flooded the mine. Thirty-nine of the miners (mainly inhabitants of the village and its immediate vicinity) were drowned.[3] The mine was eventually closed in 1881.
After the disaster, villagers of St Newlyn East worked together and dug a pit in remembrance of the miners who died. The pit is still there today, and has been used frequently for church meetings and tea gatherings etc. When the pit was actually made, it was also used for Cornish wrestling, and was recently re-dug and made more usable with funding from the National Lottery Fund.
The St. Newlyn East Pit was already in existence at the time of the mining disaster and was used by a local preacher to preach sermons, as it provided shelter when the weather was inclement. It was originally an abandoned quarry. After the mining disaster, the pit was graded into tiers and dedicated to the memory of those who died in the disaster. It was restored with the aid of lottery funds in about 2003. More recently, the lease was taken over by the Parish Council and a new Management Committee formed to manage and promote the use of the Pit.[citation needed]
References
- ^ Ordnance Survey: Landranger map sheet 200 Newquay & Bodmin ISBN 9780319229385
- ^ Pevsner, N. (1970) Cornwall, 2nd ed. Penguin Books; p. 199
- ^ "The West Briton Newspaper: transcription of article from 17 July 1846.". Julia Mosman & Rita Kopp. http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~wbritonad/cornwall/1846/misc/jul.html. Retrieved 2009-07-24.
External links
- "Online Catalogue for Newlyn East". Cornwall Record Office. http://crocat.cornwall.gov.uk/dserve/dserve.exe?dsqIni=Dserve.ini&dsqApp=Archive&dsqDb=Catalog&dsqCmd=Overview.tcl&dsqSearch=((text)='newlyn%20east').
Geography of Cornwall Cornwall Portal Unitary authorities Major settlements Bodmin • Bude • Callington • Camborne • Camelford • Falmouth • Fowey • Hayle • Helston • Launceston • Liskeard • Looe • Lostwithiel • Marazion • Newlyn • Newquay • Padstow • Par • Penryn • Penzance • Porthleven • Redruth • Saltash • St Austell • St Blazey • St Columb Major • St Ives • St Just-in-Penwith • St Mawes • Stratton • Torpoint • Truro • Wadebridge
See also: Civil parishes in CornwallRivers Topics History • Status debate • Flag • Culture • Places • People • The Duchy • Diocese • Politics • Hundreds/shires • Places of interest • full list...Civil parishes of Truro and Falmouth constituency Chacewater • Cubert • Cuby • Falmouth • Feock • Gerrans • Gwennap • Kea • Kenwyn • Ladock • Mylor • Penryn • Perranarworthal • Perranzabuloe • Philleigh • Probus • Ruan Lanihorne • St Agnes • St Allen • St Clement • St Erme • St Just in Roseland • St Michael Penkevil • St Newlyn East • Tregony • Truro • VeryanCornwall Portal Categories:- Civil parishes in Cornwall
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