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Par, Cornwall

Par (Cornish: An Porth, meaning creek or harbour[1]) is a village and fishing port with a harbour on the south coast of Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. The village is situated in the civil parish of Tywardreath and Par, although West Par and the docks lie in the parish of St Blaise.

Par
The Par Inn
Par
Location within Cornwall
OS grid referenceSX072536
Civil parish
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townPAR
Postcode districtPL24
Dialling code01726
PoliceDevon and Cornwall
FireCornwall
AmbulanceSouth Western
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Cornwall
50°21′02″N 4°42′40″W / 50.3505°N 4.7111°W / 50.3505; -4.7111

Par is approximately 3.5 miles (5.6 km) east of St Austell.[2] Par has a population of around 1,600 (in 2012).

It became developed in the second quarter of the 19th century when the harbour was developed, to serve copper mines and other mineral sites in and surrounding the Luxulyan Valley; china clay later became the dominant traffic as copper working declined, and the harbour and the china clay dries remain as distinctive features of the industrial heritage; however the mineral activity is much reduced.

Par Harbour and the beach at Par Sands are south of the village, and the latter includes a large static caravan holiday park; another small beach is at Spit Point west of the harbour. Between these two beaches the South West Coast Path takes an inland diversion through the village.

Par lies in a triangle of streets which form a one-way traffic system. There is a variety of shops, a post office, a public house and other businesses.

Churches edit

 
The church of St Mary the Virgin

The Anglican church of St Mary the Virgin at Biscovey was completed in 1849. It was built mainly from the local reddish coloured Biscovey slates. The parish of Par was formed out of parts of St Blazey and Tywardreath parishes in 1846. In the churchyard is an inscribed cross shaft removed from the highroad in 1896. This stone is a sepulchral monument to a son of Ullicus erected by Alroron.[3] The church was the first to be designed by the notable architect G. E. Street. The design is an original and subtle adaptation of the Early English style. The chancel, nave and south aisle are well proportioned and the steeple is placed at the west end of the south aisle.[4] The church is a Grade II* listed building. The Church of the Good Shepherd at Par Green was designed by E. H. Sedding and built of granite with Polyphant stone dressings in 1896. It is in the Early English style; the sanctuary was embellished by Stephen Dykes Bower in 1948.[5]

Par Harbour and Canal edit

Joseph Treffry edit

Before 1800 the village was a small group of houses below the cliff overlooking the mouth of the River Par; the river was crossed by a ferry. During the first years of the nineteenth century small scale workings of china stone, china clay, copper and granite were developed.

 
Par Harbour in the early 20th century

Joseph Austen, born 1782, was an important Fowey businessman; he later changed his name to Joseph Treffry, and as that name is much better known it is used here. He acquired an interest on many mines and pits, and he re-opened the dormant Lanescot copper mine on the hill overlooking Par, and developed it further. With adjacent workings it became the rich and highly productive Fowey Consols mine. Treffry sought to build a tramway connection to Fowey Harbour from his workings, but was unable to acquire the necessary land, and instead he decided to develop a harbour at Par. He purchased the ferry and replaced it with a bridge in 1824, and started improvement of the harbour in 1829; it was completed in 1840.[6]

Par Canal edit

To bring the copper ore to Par, Treffry built a canal from Pontsmill to Par by canalising the river; he constructed a tramway on an inclined plane from Fowey Consols down to Pontsmill, so that Par harbour became a key location in the transport chain. The harbour development led to the expansion of Par, and the community was detached from the parish of St Blaise (later St Blazey) in the mid 19th century.

Treffry later built a new tramway up the Luxulyan Valley to Molinnis, and extended it down from Pontsmill to Par, by-passing the canal; this further developed the importance of Par. However copper was exported to Swansea for smelting and coal for powering mine engines were imported from there; this involved a difficult sea passage around Land's End, and Treffry announced his intention to continue his tramway to Newquay, on the north coast of Cornwall. This was not achieved in his lifetime.[7]

China clay edit

In the fourth quarter of the nineteenth century, the importance of copper working had seriously diminished, due to exhaustion and the availability of cheaper supplies of the mineral elsewhere in the world. At the same time, china clay (kaolinite) became ever more important, and industrialisation of the extraction and processing work took place. This mineral became the dominant outward traffic at Par, and clay dries were erected in the vicinity (at Par Moors and elsewhere), together with further expansion of the harbour.

The opening of the Cornwall Railway from Plymouth in 1859 encouraged further expansion of Par north-eastwards towards Tywardreath. The boundaries between the three settlements are now somewhat indistinct.

In 1858 15,154 tons of china clay were shipped out of Par. By 1885 86,325 tons were being handled at Par, but by this time Fowey had a railway connection and handled 114,403 tons. In 1987 Par handled 700,000 tons, by 2002 the port served 284 vessels per year which were loaded with 318,455 metric tons (313,425 long tons) of china clay, and 107 vessels loaded with 136,970 metric tons (134,810 long tons) of secondary aggregates for the building trade.[8]

 
Par Harbour in 2009

The harbour developed a range of industrial facilities including a lead smelter with a 248-foot (76 m) high chimney known as Par Stack. This was used as a navigation aid by shipping until it was demolished in 1907.

Present-day Harbour edit

A 450-foot (140 m) breakwater encloses 35 acres (14 ha) of water which is tidal with only 16 feet (4.9 m) depth of water and, unlike nearby Fowey, it cannot accommodate large ocean-going ships. The harbour is operated by the French mineral extraction company Imerys.

Today china clay is piped to the harbour in slurry form; most is dried in large sheds before exporting either from Par or Fowey, the two being linked by a private road. One berth at Par can also load clay slurry into coasting vessels. The harbour also has a rail link that is used to carry away dried clay loaded in rail vans.[9]

A major reduction in china clay operations, announced on 4 July 2006, included proposals to close Par to commercial shipping and to close some of the clay dryers. The closures took effect in 2007.[10] There were plans to re-develop the docks as part of the St Austell and Clay Country Eco-town. This would include a new marina and 500–700 homes.[11]

Railways edit

 
The line of the former Cornwall Minerals Railway passing under Par Viaduct near the entrance to Par Harbour

The first railway in Par was the southwards extension of Treffry Tramways, a horse-operated mineral railway that connected Molinnis and pits and quarries in the Luxulyan Valley with Par. This opened in 1855, replacing the canal.[7]

The Cornwall Railway opened from Plymouth to Truro on 4 May 1859 when Par railway station was opened to the north-east of Par, giving the village a connection to London Paddington. This involved the building of Par Viaduct to cross the old tramway. A siding was opened down to the harbour from the west end of the viaduct on 13 February 1860. The Cornwall Railway was built to the broad gauge of 7 ft (2,134 mm) but Treffry's line was to the 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge, so that through running was not possible. The Cornwall Railway line was converted to standard gauge on 21 May 1892, from which time ordinary interworking became possible.

Treffry's tramway was taken over by the Cornwall Minerals Railway (CMR). It was upgraded for locomotive operation and extended to form a link throughout to Newquay and Fowey. It reopened in this form on 1 June 1874; passenger operation started in 1876.[7]

Par harbour continued in importance in the 20th century; the restricted railway facilities on the site led to dedicated shunting locomotives, such as Bagnall 0-4-0ST "Alfred" and "Judy", being built specially for the work.

The railway line from Par to Fowey closed on 1 July 1968, and was converted to a private haul road linking the two harbours; it is now owned by Imerys. Par railway station is still open on the Cornish Main Line from Plymouth to Penzance. It is the junction for the Atlantic Coast Line local passenger train service to Newquay.

Today it is served by Great Western Railway services from London Paddington to Penzance as well as the Newquay line, while CrossCountry services operate north to Manchester and Glasgow.

Cornish wrestling edit

Cornish wrestling tournaments took place in the following locations all around Par Green over the last 200 years:

  • A field at the back of Par Green[12]
  • Field at the back of the Welcome Home Inn which was a field behind the old foundry[12][13]
  • Field behind the Par Green Post Office[14]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Henry Jenner, A Handbook of the Cornish Language: Chiefly in Its Latest Stages, with Some Account of its History and Literature, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1904 reprinted 2012, ISBN 978 1 108 04702 9
  2. ^ Ordnance Survey: Landranger map sheet 200 Newquay & Bodmin ISBN 978-0-319-22938-5
  3. ^ Cornish Church Guide (1925) Truro: Blackford; p. 174
  4. ^ Peter Beacham; Nikolaus Pevsner (2014). Cornwall. Yale University Press. pp. 396–97. ISBN 978-0-300-12668-6
  5. ^ Beacham (2014), p. 397
  6. ^ Cornwall Archaeological Unit, The Luxulyan Valley Project: an Archaeological and Historical Survey, Truro, 1988
  7. ^ a b c John Vaughan, The Newquay Branch and its Branches, Haynes/Oxford Publishing Company, Sparkford, 1991, ISBN 0-86093-470-5
  8. ^ Imerys Blueprint for Cornwall 2003: Vision for the future, page 42
  9. ^ "Transport Background Technical Report – South West Regional Spatial Strategy" (PDF). South West Regional Assembly. September 2006. p. 20. Retrieved 23 May 2007.
  10. ^ BBC (6 July 2006). "China clay job cuts close docks". BBC News. Retrieved 26 November 2007.
  11. ^ "Par Docks – creating a 21st century harbour". ECO-BOS.[permanent dead link]
  12. ^ a b Cornish Guardian, 27 May 1904.
  13. ^ Cornish Guardian, 24 May 1907.
  14. ^ Cornish Guardian, 30 August 1945.

Further reading edit

John Keast OBE, The King of Mid-Cornwall: the Life of Joseph Thomas Treffry (1782–1850), Truran, 1983, ISBN 978-0907566199

External links edit

cornwall, cornish, porth, meaning, creek, harbour, village, fishing, port, with, harbour, south, coast, cornwall, england, united, kingdom, village, situated, civil, parish, tywardreath, although, west, docks, parish, blaise, parcornish, porththe, innparlocati. Par Cornish An Porth meaning creek or harbour 1 is a village and fishing port with a harbour on the south coast of Cornwall England United Kingdom The village is situated in the civil parish of Tywardreath and Par although West Par and the docks lie in the parish of St Blaise ParCornish PorthThe Par InnParLocation within CornwallOS grid referenceSX072536Civil parishTywardreath and ParSt BlaiseUnitary authorityCornwallCeremonial countyCornwallRegionSouth WestCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townPARPostcode districtPL24Dialling code01726PoliceDevon and CornwallFireCornwallAmbulanceSouth WesternUK ParliamentSouth East CornwallList of places UK England Cornwall 50 21 02 N 4 42 40 W 50 3505 N 4 7111 W 50 3505 4 7111Par is approximately 3 5 miles 5 6 km east of St Austell 2 Par has a population of around 1 600 in 2012 It became developed in the second quarter of the 19th century when the harbour was developed to serve copper mines and other mineral sites in and surrounding the Luxulyan Valley china clay later became the dominant traffic as copper working declined and the harbour and the china clay dries remain as distinctive features of the industrial heritage however the mineral activity is much reduced Par Harbour and the beach at Par Sands are south of the village and the latter includes a large static caravan holiday park another small beach is at Spit Point west of the harbour Between these two beaches the South West Coast Path takes an inland diversion through the village Par lies in a triangle of streets which form a one way traffic system There is a variety of shops a post office a public house and other businesses Contents 1 Churches 2 Par Harbour and Canal 2 1 Joseph Treffry 2 2 Par Canal 3 China clay 4 Present day Harbour 5 Railways 6 Cornish wrestling 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksChurches edit nbsp The church of St Mary the VirginThe Anglican church of St Mary the Virgin at Biscovey was completed in 1849 It was built mainly from the local reddish coloured Biscovey slates The parish of Par was formed out of parts of St Blazey and Tywardreath parishes in 1846 In the churchyard is an inscribed cross shaft removed from the highroad in 1896 This stone is a sepulchral monument to a son of Ullicus erected by Alroron 3 The church was the first to be designed by the notable architect G E Street The design is an original and subtle adaptation of the Early English style The chancel nave and south aisle are well proportioned and the steeple is placed at the west end of the south aisle 4 The church is a Grade II listed building The Church of the Good Shepherd at Par Green was designed by E H Sedding and built of granite with Polyphant stone dressings in 1896 It is in the Early English style the sanctuary was embellished by Stephen Dykes Bower in 1948 5 Par Harbour and Canal editJoseph Treffry edit Before 1800 the village was a small group of houses below the cliff overlooking the mouth of the River Par the river was crossed by a ferry During the first years of the nineteenth century small scale workings of china stone china clay copper and granite were developed nbsp Par Harbour in the early 20th centuryJoseph Austen born 1782 was an important Fowey businessman he later changed his name to Joseph Treffry and as that name is much better known it is used here He acquired an interest on many mines and pits and he re opened the dormant Lanescot copper mine on the hill overlooking Par and developed it further With adjacent workings it became the rich and highly productive Fowey Consols mine Treffry sought to build a tramway connection to Fowey Harbour from his workings but was unable to acquire the necessary land and instead he decided to develop a harbour at Par He purchased the ferry and replaced it with a bridge in 1824 and started improvement of the harbour in 1829 it was completed in 1840 6 Par Canal edit To bring the copper ore to Par Treffry built a canal from Pontsmill to Par by canalising the river he constructed a tramway on an inclined plane from Fowey Consols down to Pontsmill so that Par harbour became a key location in the transport chain The harbour development led to the expansion of Par and the community was detached from the parish of St Blaise later St Blazey in the mid 19th century Treffry later built a new tramway up the Luxulyan Valley to Molinnis and extended it down from Pontsmill to Par by passing the canal this further developed the importance of Par However copper was exported to Swansea for smelting and coal for powering mine engines were imported from there this involved a difficult sea passage around Land s End and Treffry announced his intention to continue his tramway to Newquay on the north coast of Cornwall This was not achieved in his lifetime 7 China clay editIn the fourth quarter of the nineteenth century the importance of copper working had seriously diminished due to exhaustion and the availability of cheaper supplies of the mineral elsewhere in the world At the same time china clay kaolinite became ever more important and industrialisation of the extraction and processing work took place This mineral became the dominant outward traffic at Par and clay dries were erected in the vicinity at Par Moors and elsewhere together with further expansion of the harbour The opening of the Cornwall Railway from Plymouth in 1859 encouraged further expansion of Par north eastwards towards Tywardreath The boundaries between the three settlements are now somewhat indistinct In 1858 15 154 tons of china clay were shipped out of Par By 1885 86 325 tons were being handled at Par but by this time Fowey had a railway connection and handled 114 403 tons In 1987 Par handled 700 000 tons by 2002 the port served 284 vessels per year which were loaded with 318 455 metric tons 313 425 long tons of china clay and 107 vessels loaded with 136 970 metric tons 134 810 long tons of secondary aggregates for the building trade 8 nbsp Par Harbour in 2009The harbour developed a range of industrial facilities including a lead smelter with a 248 foot 76 m high chimney known as Par Stack This was used as a navigation aid by shipping until it was demolished in 1907 Present day Harbour editMain article Par Docks A 450 foot 140 m breakwater encloses 35 acres 14 ha of water which is tidal with only 16 feet 4 9 m depth of water and unlike nearby Fowey it cannot accommodate large ocean going ships The harbour is operated by the French mineral extraction company Imerys Today china clay is piped to the harbour in slurry form most is dried in large sheds before exporting either from Par or Fowey the two being linked by a private road One berth at Par can also load clay slurry into coasting vessels The harbour also has a rail link that is used to carry away dried clay loaded in rail vans 9 A major reduction in china clay operations announced on 4 July 2006 included proposals to close Par to commercial shipping and to close some of the clay dryers The closures took effect in 2007 10 There were plans to re develop the docks as part of the St Austell and Clay Country Eco town This would include a new marina and 500 700 homes 11 Railways edit nbsp The line of the former Cornwall Minerals Railway passing under Par Viaduct near the entrance to Par HarbourThe first railway in Par was the southwards extension of Treffry Tramways a horse operated mineral railway that connected Molinnis and pits and quarries in the Luxulyan Valley with Par This opened in 1855 replacing the canal 7 The Cornwall Railway opened from Plymouth to Truro on 4 May 1859 when Par railway station was opened to the north east of Par giving the village a connection to London Paddington This involved the building of Par Viaduct to cross the old tramway A siding was opened down to the harbour from the west end of the viaduct on 13 February 1860 The Cornwall Railway was built to the broad gauge of 7 ft 2 134 mm but Treffry s line was to the 4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gauge so that through running was not possible The Cornwall Railway line was converted to standard gauge on 21 May 1892 from which time ordinary interworking became possible Treffry s tramway was taken over by the Cornwall Minerals Railway CMR It was upgraded for locomotive operation and extended to form a link throughout to Newquay and Fowey It reopened in this form on 1 June 1874 passenger operation started in 1876 7 Par harbour continued in importance in the 20th century the restricted railway facilities on the site led to dedicated shunting locomotives such as Bagnall 0 4 0ST Alfred and Judy being built specially for the work The railway line from Par to Fowey closed on 1 July 1968 and was converted to a private haul road linking the two harbours it is now owned by Imerys Par railway station is still open on the Cornish Main Line from Plymouth to Penzance It is the junction for the Atlantic Coast Line local passenger train service to Newquay Today it is served by Great Western Railway services from London Paddington to Penzance as well as the Newquay line while CrossCountry services operate north to Manchester and Glasgow Cornish wrestling editCornish wrestling tournaments took place in the following locations all around Par Green over the last 200 years A field at the back of Par Green 12 Field at the back of the Welcome Home Inn which was a field behind the old foundry 12 13 Field behind the Par Green Post Office 14 See also edit nbsp Cornwall portalPar Coastal Gun BatteryReferences edit Henry Jenner A Handbook of the Cornish Language Chiefly in Its Latest Stages with Some Account of its History and Literature Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1904 reprinted 2012 ISBN 978 1 108 04702 9 Ordnance Survey Landranger map sheet 200 Newquay amp Bodmin ISBN 978 0 319 22938 5 Cornish Church Guide 1925 Truro Blackford p 174 Peter Beacham Nikolaus Pevsner 2014 Cornwall Yale University Press pp 396 97 ISBN 978 0 300 12668 6 Beacham 2014 p 397 Cornwall Archaeological Unit The Luxulyan Valley Project an Archaeological and Historical Survey Truro 1988 a b c John Vaughan The Newquay Branch and its Branches Haynes Oxford Publishing Company Sparkford 1991 ISBN 0 86093 470 5 Imerys Blueprint for Cornwall 2003 Vision for the future page 42 Transport Background Technical Report South West Regional Spatial Strategy PDF South West Regional Assembly September 2006 p 20 Retrieved 23 May 2007 BBC 6 July 2006 China clay job cuts close docks BBC News Retrieved 26 November 2007 Par Docks creating a 21st century harbour ECO BOS permanent dead link a b Cornish Guardian 27 May 1904 Cornish Guardian 24 May 1907 Cornish Guardian 30 August 1945 Further reading editJohn Keast OBE The King of Mid Cornwall the Life of Joseph Thomas Treffry 1782 1850 Truran 1983 ISBN 978 0907566199External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Par Cornwall Cornwall Record Office Catalogue for Par Geograph photos of Par and surrounding area Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Par Cornwall amp oldid 1182198492, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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