Cornelly, St. Cornelius Church
Churches & Holy Sites

Cornelly, St. Cornelius Church

On the same day in late March 2018 that I looked at churches in Tregony and Kenwyn, I paid a visit to the tiny church at Cornelly, tucked away off a quiet lane near Tregony. Normally this is locked tight but information from the flower ladies in Tregony told me that St. Cornelius church would be open for Easter flower arranging. So it was and lovely the flowers were, too. Like so many churches in Cornwall, this one, high on a raised mound, is probably on a pre-Christian site. First thing you notice is the oddly small tower, partly 13th century, pinnacled and leaning away from its church. Inside, the church was beautifully decorated with Easter flower arrangements. Other than the lovely flowers, the most noticeable features were the wagon roofs and the hexagonal wooden pulpit, its panels bearing crudely painted coats-of-arms, presumably of local families including early patrons, the Gregors. The octagonal font is late medieval but surprisingly rustic for that period. The altar is unusual and seems to be constructed of Delabole slate. Notable monuments include one to Jane Reeves and another to Elizabeth Gregor. A panel on the wall portrays the church's patron saint, Cornelius. Do note the unusual altar pictured below and the pulpit panel featuring, I think, martlets.

Unusual Altar

Cornelly Church

Pulpit Panel

Photographs

This review was written by Oliver Howes and is reproduced here in his own words. All text and photographs remain his work, preserved in his memory.

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Creed, St. Crida and St. Andrew

Creed, St. Crida and St. Andrew

I visited Creed church a couple of times in June 2016, the first on my own just to see the church, the second with Jane for a garden opening day at Creed House. I have a particular personal interest in Creed because my father's cousin Bertie - the Rev. A.E. Coulbeck - was rector there from 1947 to 1950, before he moved on to St. Just in Roseland. His home was the Rectory, now known just as Creed House. Oddly, while you might expect that tiny Creed, a mile south of Grampound, would be no more than an adjunct to it, it is Creed which is the original settlement, with the major church, while Grampound's church is no more then a Chapel of Ease. There is very little to Creed, just the handsome airy church, the big house, Creed House, and its lodge east of the church, Creed Farm, one of it's barns now converted to a dwelling, and a small but handsome old square barn with tallet steps abutting the churchyard. Creed House has a pleasant garden with fine specimen trees. I had always known that my father's cousin Bertie had, as Rev. A. E. Coulbeck, been rector of St. Just in Roseland. In 2016 it came as a surprise to me that he had previously been rector here and that Creed House had been his rectory. Notable figures linked with Creed were William Gregory, discoverer of titanium, and Parliamentarian John Hampden representing Creed and Grampound in the time of Charles I and Cromwell.