Minster near Boscastle
Churches & Holy Sites

Minster near Boscastle

I first encountered Minster Church quite unexpectedly. I had parked in Boscastle and was walking up the Valency Valley, following the river on my right. After about a mile I saw a bridge over the river and a path heading up through dense woodland. I decided to see where it went and, after a few hundred steep yards through Peters Wood, found myself emerging through a gate on to a lane with Minster Church tucked below me. At that time I didn't look into the church as I had decided to follow the lane to Forrabury church, across the Stitches, an ancient systerm of small fields, and back to Boscastle on the Coast Path. However, I mreturned later for a look inside the church. The exterior of the church, tucked into the hillside below its graveyard, is unusual in one particular: its tower which boasts a saddleback roof. Such roofs were common in Anglo-Saxon times, suggesting that this church might be older than we think. In fact Pevsner thinks there may have been a small very early monastery here. As so often with Cornish churches, restoration was carried out in the second half of the 19th century by J P St. Aubyn. Inside, there are two 13th century windows, a simple Norman font, a good collection of slate memorial slabs, a rood over the chancel entrance, a fairly plain oak pulpit, a carved and pierced lectern, remnants of an elaborately carved screen, some elaborate marble wall memorials, a 1602 memorial brass to Hender Robarts, and a collection of flower patterned kneelers.

Minster Church in woodland

Hender Robarts 1602 Brass

Litany Desk 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.