Corfe-Castle (St. Edward the Martyr)
CORFE-CASTLE (St.
Edward the Martyr), an
incorporated town and parish, in the union of Wareham and Purbeck, possessing separate jurisdiction,
locally in the hundred of
Corfe-Castle, Wareham
division of Dorset, 23 miles
(E. S. E.) from Dorchester,
and 120 (S. W.) from London; containing 1946 inhabitants. This place, which
in the Saxon Chronicle is termed Corve and Corvesgeate, appears to have derived its importance from
a formidable Castle erected by Edgar prior to the
year 980, at the gate of which Edward the Martyr,
when calling to visit his step-mother Elfrida, was by
her order treacherously murdered. In the reign of
Stephen the castle was taken by Baldwin de Rivers,
Earl of Devonshire, who held it against the king: it
was frequently the residence of King John, who here
kept the regalia, and by whose orders twenty-two prisoners, some of them among the principal nobility
of Poitiers, were starved to death in its dungeons; and
Edward II., after his deposition in 1327, was removed
from Kenilworth to this fortress, where he was detained
for a short time prior to his tragical death at Berkeley
Castle. During the parliamentary war, Lord Chief
Justice Bankes, who then resided in the castle, being
with the king at York, Sir Walter Earl and Sir Thomas
Trenchard assaulted the place, thinking to obtain easy
possession of it for the parliament; but it was heroically
defended by Lady Bankes and her daughters, with the
assistance only of their domestics, until, on the approach
of Charles to Blandford, Captain Lawrence was sent to
her assistance, when, having raised a small guard of her
tenantry, she sustained a siege for six weeks, and, with
the loss of two men only, preserved the castle for the
king. In 1645, the castle was again besieged by the
parliamentarian forces, under Fairfax, when, by the
treachery of Lieutenant-Colonel Pitman, an officer of the
garrison, who deserted from the king's service, it was
taken and demolished. The remains of this stupendous
edifice are extensive and interesting, and plainly indicate
its former prodigious strength; they occupy the summit
of a lofty and steep eminence to the north of the town,
with which they are connected by a bridge of four narrow
circular arches, crossing a deep ravine, and leading to
the principal entrance between two massive circular
towers. The walls, which inclose a spacious area divided
into four wards, were defended by numerous circular
towers at convenient distances, of which several have
declined from the perpendicular line, owing to the attempts made to undermine them at the siege, and of
which, as well as of the walls, vast fragments have fallen
into the vale. At the western angle are the remains of
the keep, a massive octagonal tower, and in the inner
ward those of the king's and queen's towers, between
which is part of the chapel, with two pointed windows;
the east end of the king's tower, which is separated from
the main building, is overgrown with ivy, and forms a
picturesque feature in these extensive ruins, which, from
their elevated situation, are conspicuously grand and
majestic.

Seal and Arms.
The town stands on an eminence, nearly in the
centre of the Isle of Purbeck, and consists principally of
two streets diverging from the market-place, in the
centre of which is an ancient stone cross; the houses
are in general built of stone, obtained from the neighbouring quarries, and are approached by a flight of
steps; the inhabitants are well supplied with water.
The bridge connecting the castle with the town is called
St. Edward's bridge, and is said to be the spot where
Edward, fainting from the loss of blood, fell from his
horse and expired. At the entrance from the London
road is an ancient stone bridge over the small river
Corfe, by which the town is bounded on the east. The
population is chiefly employed in the quarries and claypits for which the isle is celebrated; and from the principal of these, called Norden, about a mile from the town,
a railway has been constructed, to facilitate the communication with Poole harbour, where the clay is shipped
for the Staffordshire and other potteries. A few of the
female inhabitants are engaged in the knitting of stockings. The market, which was held on Thursday, has
been for some time discontinued; the fairs are on May
12th and October 29th. The lord of the manor of Corfe
was anciently hereditary lord-lieutenant of the Isle of
Purbeck, and had the power of appointing all officers,
and determining all actions or suits by his bailiff or deputy; he was also admiral of the isle, and exercised the
authority of lord high admiral, in which capacity he was
entitled to all wrecks, except in cases where there was a
special grant to the contrary. These privileges ceased
on the passing of the Militia act, in 1757, Mr. Bankes,
then lord of the manor, having omitted to enforce his
claims. Though a borough by prescription, the town
was not incorporated till the 18th of Queen Elizabeth,
who invested it with the same powers as were enjoyed
by the cinque-ports. Under the existing charter of
Charles II., the corporation consists of a mayor, who
is elected at the court leet of the lord of the manor, held
at Michaelmas, and eight barons, who have previously
served the office of mayor; the mayor and the late
mayor are justices of the peace. The elective franchise
was granted in the 14th of Elizabeth, from which time
the borough returned two members to parliament, till it
was disfranchised in the 2nd of William IV.
The parish comprises 7193 acres, of which 1479 are
common or waste. The living is a rectory, valued in
the king's books at £40. 14. 7.; net income, £685;
patron, William Bankes, Esq. The church is a spacious
and ancient structure, partly Norman, and partly in the
early English style, with a lofty embattled tower,
crowned by pinnacles, and ornamented with niches in
which are some sculptured decorations of singular design; it contains a few old monuments and several
altar-tombs of Purbeck marble. The parish is in the
centre of a district of considerable extent, in which the
earliest of the Sunday schools were established, under
the auspices of William Morton Pitt, Esq., of Kingston
House. Several schools are supported by subscription;
and there are almshouses in East-street for six aged
persons, with an endowment in land. In making a road
near the town, in 1768, two stone coffins, formed of flat
stones placed edgeways, and containing a skeleton, were
found; in 1753, an urn containing burnt bones was discovered, with the mouth downwards, near St. Edward's
bridge. About two miles to the east of the town is an
eminence called Nine-Barrow Down, where are sixteen
barrows of various dimensions, chiefly circular, nine of
which are in a straight line; eight or ten of them are
surrounded by a narrow trench. The eminence commands a beautiful view of the bay of Swanwich, the
British Channel, and the Isle of Wight.
Corfe-Mullen
CORFE-MULLEN, a chapelry, in the parish of
Sturminster-Marshall, union of Wimborne and
Cranborne, hundred of Cogdean, Wimborne division
of Dorset, 3 miles (S. W. by W.) from WimborneMinster; containing 758 inhabitants, and comprising
3086 acres, of which 148 are common or waste. The
chapel is dedicated to St. Nicholas, and has been enlarged
by the addition of 140 free sittings. There is an annuity
of £27 for the support of a school, to which Richard
Lockyer in 1706 bequeathed £17.
Corfton
CORFTON, a chapelry, in the parish of Diddlebury, union of Ludlow, hundred of Munslow, S. division of Salop, 8½ miles (N.) from Ludlow; containing
232 inhabitants.
Corhampton
CORHAMPTON, a parish, in the union of Droxford, hundred of Meon-Stoke, Droxford and N. divisions of the county of Southampton, 15 miles (S. W.
by S.) from Alton; containing 181 inhabitants. The
parish is situated on the London and Gosport road, and
comprises by computation 2500 acres; the scenery is
pleasingly varied, and combines several interesting features. Preshaw, the seat of Walter Long, Esq., is a
noble mansion of various styles, situated in an extensive
park commanding several fine views of the surrounding
country. The living is a perpetual curacy or donative;
net income, £39; patron and impropriator, Wadham
Wyndham, Esq. The church is an ancient edifice, apparently of early Norman construction.
Corley
CORLEY, a parish, in the union of Meriden,
Atherstone division of the hundred of Hemlingford,
N. division of the county of Warwick, 4 miles (N. N. W.)
from Coventry; containing 288 inhabitants. This place,
called in the Norman survey Cornelie, is supposed by
Dugdale to have derived its name from the British
"Coryn," signifying the top of anything, in reference
to its situation on one of the highest elevations in England. The parish comprises 1373 acres, of which 53
are common or waste; the surface is hilly, and the soil,
though somewhat sandy, is in general good and productive. Corley is intersected from south-east to northwest by the road between Coventry and Tamworth. The
living is a vicarage, endowed with the rectorial tithes;
net income, £400; patron, A. F. Gregory, Esq.
Cornard, Great (St. Andrew)
CORNARD, GREAT (St. Andrew), a parish, in
the union of Sudbury, hundred of Babergh, W. division of Suffolk, 1¼ mile (S. E.) from Sudbury; containing 938 inhabitants. It is bounded on the west by the
river Stour, which is here navigable. The living is a
discharged vicarage, valued in the king's books at £9,
and in the gift of Miss Mallows. The great tithes have
been commuted for £420, and the vicarial for £167; the
glebe contains nearly 10 acres, with a glebe-house.
Cornard, Little (All Saints)
CORNARD, LITTLE (All Saints), a parish, in the
union of Sudbury, hundred of Babergh, W. division
of Suffolk, 3 miles (S. E.) from Sudbury; containing
396 inhabitants. It is bounded on the south-west by
the navigable river Stour, and comprises about 1400
acres. The living is a rectory, valued in the king's
books at £8. 2. 8½., and in the patronage of Mrs. Green:
the tithes have been commuted for £492, and there is a
glebe of 50 acres.
Cornbrough
CORNBROUGH, a township, in the parish of
Sheriff-Hutton, union of Malton, wapentake of
Bulmer, N. riding of York, 11 miles (N. by E.) from
York; containing 63 inhabitants. The township comprises 920 acres by measurement, divided between arable
and pasture.
Cornelly (St. Cornelius)
CORNELLY (St. Cornelius), a parish, in the union
of Truro, W. division of the hundred of Powder and
of the county of Cornwall, ¾ of a mile (W. by S.) from
Tregoney; containing 119 inhabitants, and comprising
about 1047 acres. The living is a perpetual curacy; net
income, £47; patron, the Vicar of Probus; impropriators, the principal inhabitants: the glebe contains 12
acres. It was anciently annexed to Probus, from which
it was separated in 1532, the incumbent paying 6s. 8d.
annually to the vicar of that parish, as an acknowledgment. The Bishop of Exeter receives a tithe rent-charge
of £134, and the incumbent one of £15.
Corney (St. John the Baptist)
CORNEY (St. John the Baptist), a parish, in the
union of Bootle, Allerdale ward above Derwent, W.
division of Cumberland, 4 miles (S. E. by S.) from
Ravenglass; containing 273 inhabitants. This parish
is situated on the coast of the Irish Sea, and comprises
about 3000 acres, of which 1000 are common or waste;
it is bounded on the east by a lofty range of fells
stretching on the south to the mountain of Black Comb.
The surface is boldly varied, and the scenery in many
parts strikingly picturesque; the higher grounds command diversified prospects, and from Corney Hall is an
exceedingly fine view of the sea and numerous interesting objects. On the lands of the Hall are several veins
of iron-ore of very rich quality, but of limited depth,
which were wrought to some extent about 80 years
since. The living is a discharged rectory, valued in the
king's books at £9. 17. 1.; net income, £140; patron,
the Earl of Lonsdale. To the north of the village are
some extensive ruins, of which the history is unknown,
and in the neighbourhood are numerous Druidical remains. Mr. Troughton, an eminent philosophical instrument maker, was a native of the parish.
Cornforth
CORNFORTH, a township, in the parish of
Bishop's-Middleham, union of Sedgefield, N. E.
division of Stockton ward, S. division of the county of
Durham, 6¼ miles (S. S. E.) from Durham; containing
700 inhabitants. It comprises about 1570 acres. Coal
is obtained, which is shipped on the Tees; and a vast
quantity of limestone is quarried from a hill, at the bottom of which the village lies, in a low and warm situation: the houses are disposed in the form of a square,
with a green of several acres in the centre. The impropriate tithes have been commuted for £108. 6. 6., and
the vicarial for £28. 10. Dr. Hutchinson, a learned
writer, was born here. An extensive burial-ground was
discovered a few years since, in a field on the summit of
the high ground on the south of the village: the graves
are made in all directions, and at no great depth, in the
magnesian limestone; in one was found the umbo of a
shield, and in another the head of a spear.
Cornhill
CORNHILL, a parish, in the union of Berwickupon-Tweed, in Norhamshire, N. division of Northumberland, 1½ mile (E. by S.) from Coldstream; containing 823 inhabitants. It comprises about 4430 acres,
of which the soil is productive and chiefly arable, and the
scenery of a romantic character. The village, which is
pretty and salubrious, is separated from Scotland by the
Tweed only; Coldstream is the first town over the
border, and the river is crossed by a noble stone bridge.
There is a good hotel for the sporting gentlemen who
resort here to hunt in great numbers during the winter
months. A fair is held on December 6th. The living
is a perpetual curacy, in the patronage of the Dean and
Chapter of Durham, who are the appropriators. The
church, dedicated to St. Helen, was rebuilt in 1751,
when a stone coffin, containing fragments of a human
skeleton, and two urns of coarse earthenware, were
found; it was again partly rebuilt in 1840, at a cost of
about £500, and is principally in the early English style,
with a campanile bell-tower. The castle here was demolished by the Scots in 1385, and again in 1549, when
a considerable booty fell into their possession; the remains are built up in a modern mansion. To the southeast is an encampment of unusual construction; and a
quarter of a mile westward is another large collection of
earth-works, the most remarkable north of the Wall for
variety and extent. In a wood is St. Helen's well, the
water of which is serviceable in scorbutic and gravel
complaints; but it is not much used.
Cornsay
CORNSAY, a township, in the parish and union of
Lanchester, N. W. division of Darlington ward,
S. division of the county of Durham, 6¼ miles (N. E.)
from Wolsingham; containing 201 inhabitants, and
comprising 2141 acres, of which 200 are common or
waste. The impropriate tithes have been commuted for
£119. 10. In 1811, Wm. Russell, Esq., of Brancepeth
Castle, gave an endowment of £20 per annum for a
schoolmaster, and built and endowed almshouses for six
men and six widows.
Cornwall
CORNWALL, a maritime county, bounded on the
north by the Bristol Channel, on the west by the Atlantic
Ocean, on the south by the English Channel, and on the
east by Devonshire. It extends from 49° 57' 30" to
50° 55' 30" (N. Lat.) and from 4° 10' to 5° 44' (W. Lon.),
and contains 1327 square miles, or 849,280 statute
acres: within its limits are 65,574 inhabited houses,
4962 uninhabited, and 926 in the course of erection;
and the population amounts to 341,279, of whom 164,757
are males, and 176,522 females. The part of Britain
including this county and a portion of Devonshire, from
its shape was called by its ancient British inhabitants
Kernou, or, as it is written by the Welsh, Kerniw, signifying "the horn," which word was Latinized to Carnubia or Cornubia; and when the Saxons gave the name of
Weales to the Britons, they distinguished those who had
retired into Kernou, or Cornubia, by that of Cornweales,
and their country was thus called Cornuwall, or Cornwall, that is, "Cornish Wales." At the time of the
Roman Conquest, the northern part was inhabited by
the Cimbri, the eastern by the Danmonii, and the remaining portion by the Carnabii, of whom the Danmonii
had subdued the two other tribes, and taken possession
of their territories; but on the completion of the Roman
Conquest, the whole became included in the great province of Britannia Prima. During the aggressions of the
Saxons, various acts of hostility occurred between them
and the Cornish Britons, and the latter were obliged to
invoke the assistance of the Danes, who arrived on this
coast in 806. King Egbert, nevertheless, overran the
whole territory; and the Britons were at length finally
reduced by Athelstan, prior to which time they had
occupied a great part of Devonshire, and inhabited
Exeter in common with the Saxons.
Cornwall is within the diocese of Exeter, and province
of Canterbury; and forms, with three parishes in Devonshire, an archdeaconry, comprising the deaneries of
East, Kerrier, Penwith, Powder, Pyder, Trigg-Major,
Trigg-Minor, and West, and containing 203 parishes: the
Scilly Islands are also in the archdeaconry of Cornwall.
The office of rural dean, which in most parts of the
kingdom has become nearly nominal, is here an efficient
office; the rural deans are appointed annually, perform
regular visitations to every church within their deaneries,
and report the state of each at the archdeacon's visitations. For civil purposes the county is divided into the
hundreds of East, Kerrier, Lesnewth, Penwith, Powder,
Pyder, Stratton, Trigg, and West. It contains the borough and market towns of Bodmin, Falmouth, Helston,
Launceston, Liskeard, Penryn, St. Ives, and Truro; the
following market-towns, also ancient boroughs, but deprived of their privilege of sending representatives to
parliament by the act of the 2nd of William IV., cap. 45,
viz., Bossiney, Callington, Camelford, East Looe, Fowey,
Lostwithiel, St. Mawes, Saltash, and Tregoney; four
decayed boroughs having no markets, deprived in like
manner, viz., Newport, St. Germans, St. Michael, and
West Looe; and twelve market-towns which are not
boroughs, viz., Camborne, Grampound, Marazion, Padstow, Penzance, Polperro, Redruth, St. Agnes, St. Austell,
St. Columb, Stratton, and Wadebridge. Of the above
towns, twelve are sea-ports, viz., Falmouth, Fowey, Looe,
Marazion, Padstow, Penryn, Penzance, Polperro, St.
Agnes, St. Ives, Truro, and Wadebridge; besides which,
there are the smaller ports of Boscastle, Bude, Charlestown, Gweek, Hayle, Helford, Mevagissey, New Quay,
Porth, Port-Isaac, Portleven, Portreath or Basset's Cove,
and Trevannance. By the act above named the county
was divided into two portions, called the Eastern and
the Western divisions, each sending two representatives
to parliament: the boroughs Bodmin and Truro continue
to return two members each, as also does Penryn, in
conjunction with Falmouth, which, prior to the passing
of the act, enjoyed no share in the representation: Helston, Launceston, Liskeard, and St. Ives, each now return
only one. Cornwall is included in the Western circuit:
the spring and summer assizes, and the quarter-sessions,
are held at Bodmin, where stand the county gaol and
house of correction; and the Easter quarter-sessions at
Truro.
Cornwall is a royal duchy, settled by act of parliament
on the eldest son of the sovereign; and its immediate
government is vested in the duke, who has his chancellor,
attorney-general, solicitor-general, and other officers,
and his court of exchequer, with the appointment of
sheriffs, &c. The important concerns of the tin-mines are
under a separate jurisdiction, the tin-miners being, by
ancient privilege confirmed by Edward III., exempt
from all other civil jurisdiction than that of the Stannary
Courts, except in cases affecting land, life, or limb. At
the head of this jurisdiction is the lord-warden of the
stannaries, under whom is the vice-warden, whose court,
held generally once a month, is a court of equity for all
matters relating to the tin-mines and trade, from which
no writ of error lies to the courts at Westminster, though
there is an appeal to the lord-warden, and from him to
the duke and his council. Issues are frequently directed
by the vice-warden to be tried in the stannary courts,
which are held at the end of every three weeks (except
in the stannary of Foymore, in which there is scarcely
any business for the court), before the steward of each
stannary and a jury, for determining on all civil actions
arising within the stannaries, which have reference
to the tin-mines; the decision of each of these courts is
subject to an appeal to the vice-warden, and from him
to the superior authorities. Henry VII., on confirming
their ancient privileges, decreed that no new laws affecting the miners should be enacted by the duke and his
council, without the consent of twenty-four persons,
called stannators, six being chosen out of each of the
four stannaries, or mining districts, of Foymore, Blackmore, Tywarnhaile, and Penwith and Kerrier. The
stannators for Foymore are chosen by the corporation of Lostwithiel, those for Blackmore by the corporation of Launceston, those for Tywarnhaile by the corporation of Truro, and those for Penwith and Kerrier by
the corporation of Helston; on assembling they elect a
speaker, and their meeting is called a stannary parliament.
The parliaments have been convened occasionally by the
lord-warden, as the circumstances of the times have
required new laws, or the revision of the old; the last
met at Truro, in 1752, and continued by adjournments
until Sept. 11th, 1753. The stannary prison is at Lostwithiel, where the ancient records of the stannaries were
kept previously to the parliamentary war, when they
were burnt.
Nearly the whole of the county is remarkable for
the inequality of its surface. A large portion consists
of uncultivated moors, abounding with tors composed of
immense masses of granite, and extending from near
Blisland, on the west, to near Northill on the east, and
from near Davidstow, on the north, to the vicinity of
St. Neot's on the south, about twelve miles in length
and ten in breadth. The high grounds, through which
the great roads chiefly pass, present a dreary aspect,
especially in the mining district, where the surface has
in many places been greatly disfigured by the streamworks of successive ages; but in several parts there is
a pleasing diversity of hill and dale, and some of the
valleys are richly varied and beautifully picturesque.
The most agreeable scenery is found near the southern
coast, and along the course of the Tamar; Falmouth
bay and Mount's bay are considered equal in beauty to
any recesses on the English coast. So salubrious is the
climate, that Cornwall has long been celebrated for the
longevity of its inhabitants; and the southern coast,
especially towards the Land's End, is, on account of the
superior mildness of the air, much resorted to by invalids
in the winter season. The prevailing soils are, the
black gravelly, the shelfy or slaty, and various loams,
differing in colour, texture, and degree of fertility. The
labours of the farmer are entirely engaged in tillage, to
the exclusion of the dairy, one-third of the cultivated
lands being constantly under arable crops. The corn
crops usually cultivated are wheat, barley, and oats, including the naked oat, called in Cornwall pillis or pilez,
a word signifying "bald." The green and root crops
consists principally of turnips, ruta baga, potatoes, in
some places the flat-pole or drum-head cabbage, and
yellow clover, trefoil, and rye-grass, the last here called
eaver. The dry, light, friable and porous soils of Cornwall, and its moist and mild climate, are particularly
favourable to the growth of potatoes, which have here
been cultivated to a great extent longer than in any
other parts of the kingdom; in the vicinity of Penzance
the land produces two crops in the year, and an acre has
been known to yield 300 bushels of the early kidneypotatoes at the first crop, and 600 bushels of applepotatoes at the second: a large quantity is sent to
London, Plymouth, and Portsmouth. The natural
meadows are comparatively of small extent, and lie
scattered throughout the county; the only pasture
lands consist of the wastes, and of the fields of artificial
grasses. Many of the valleys are well wooded, particularly in the south-eastern part of the county, and in
the vicinity of Lostwithiel and Bodmin; and there are
extensive plantations at Tregothnan, Clowance, Tehidy,
Port Eliot, Carclew, Trelowarren, Boconnock, Heligan,
&c.: the principal landowners having of late years
directed their attention to planting, chiefly in elevated
situations, the face of the country, in the course of
twenty or thirty years, will present extensive woodland
scenery. Nearly a fourth part of the surface, from
150,000 to 200,000 acres, consists of uninclosed moors,
downs, and crofts, as the waste lands are here generally
called.
Cornwall has been celebrated for the produce of its
mines from a remote period of antiquity. Strabo,
Herodotus, and other ancient writers relate that the
Phœnicians, and after them the Greeks and the Romans,
traded for tin to Cornwall and the Scilly Islands, under
the name of the islands Cassiterides, from a very early
period; and Diodorus Siculus, who wrote in the reign
of Augustus, gives a particular account of the manner
in which the tin-ore was dug and prepared by the Britons. At what time the coinage of the tin procured here
was established is uncertain, but it was practised so
early as the reign of King John. In that of Edward I.
it was first ordered, for better securing the payment of
the duty to the earl, that all tin should be brought to
certain places appointed for that purpose, to be weighed
and stamped, or, as it is usually termed, coined; and that
no tin should be sold until the stamp had been affixed.
The term coinage, by which this process has always been
designated, appears to have been derived from cutting
off a coign, or corner of each block, to ascertain its
purity. The average annual quantity raised from these
mines in the years 1799, 1800, and 1801, was 16,820
blocks, each weighing about 3¼ cwt.; in 1811, the
quantity produced was only 14,698 blocks, but in 1824,
it had increased to 28,310, and in 1831 it was 25,155,
the average of the eight years from 1824 to 1831 inclusive being 26,647 blocks. The mineral rights of tin in
the duchy manors were sold, about 35 years ago, for a
term of years. The tin-ore has always been smelted
in the county, at first in blast-furnaces, the buildings for
which were called "blowing-houses;" but reverberatory
furnaces being introduced early in the last century, the
ore has since been smelted in them with pit-coal from
South Wales, the produce being called "common tin."
The blowing-houses are now used for smelting the
diluvial or stream tin, in which charcoal alone is employed; and the produce is called "grain tin," being of
purer quality, and bearing a higher price than the common kind. The Copper mines were not extensively
worked until the close of the 17th century, since which
the quantity of ore raised has been gradually increasing:
in 1824, 110,000 tons of ore were obtained, producing
8417 tons of copper, of the value of £743,253; in 1826,
128,459 of ore, producing 10,450 of copper, of the value
of £755,358; in the year ending June, 1831, 146,502
of ore, producing 12,218 of copper, of the value of
£817,740; and in 1837, 140,753 of ore, producing
10,823 of copper, of the value of £908,613. The produce of the Lead mines is inconsiderable, and the only
mine from which silver is extracted is in the parish of
Calstock. The various mines employ a fourth of the
entire population, and the wages paid from the copper-mines alone, exceed half a million annually; the
steam-engines employed at the mines annually consume
80,000 tons of coal.
Much use is made of the various kinds of stone
found in the county; and the Cornish slate is a considerable article of commerce. Of this, the principal
quarries are those on the southern coast, those between
Liskeard and the Tamar, those in the parishes of Padstow
and Tintagel, and the celebrated quarry of Delabole, or
Dennybal, in the parish of St. Teath, the produce of
which is held in the highest esteem, and is shipped in
large quantities from Port Isaac, about five miles distant, both coastwise and to the continent: the quartz
crystals found in this quarry are of great brilliancy.
There is a large quantity of stone suitable for building
in various parts of the county; it is principally taken
from the porphyry dykes, or elvan courses, which traverse both the granite and slate strata; the granite, or
moor-stone, which abounds on the surface of the moors,
has of late years been exported for the erection of
bridges and other public buildings. Steatite, or soap
rock, of a fine soft texture, is found imbedded in the
serpentine, near the Lizard, and is the most curious of
all the earthy substances found in Cornwall; it is of
various colours, but the pure white is most esteemed for
the porcelain manufacture, for the use of which much
of it is exported. An abundance of felspar-clay, resulting from the decomposition of granite, is obtained in
the parishes of Roche, St. Stephen, and St. Denis; and
is likewise shipped, chiefly at the neighbouring ports of
Charlestown and Pentuan, for the manufacture of china
and fine earthenware. A yellow sandy clay, which,
from its resisting intense heat, is called fire-clay, found
near Lelant, is sent to Wales, for laying the bottoms of
copper furnaces. In the parish of St. Keverne is a
yellow clay used to make moulds for casting metals;
and near Liskeard is found a clay of a slaty nature, but
of a soapy texture, which has fertilizing properties.
Among the Cornish ornamental stones may be enumerated its serpentine or porphyry, its marbles, talc, stalactites, and the asbestos and small gems: its fossils are of
great variety, many of them beautiful in colour, and
some clear and transparent, from which they have obtained the name of Cornish diamonds.
The abundance of Fish on the coast constitutes an important source of trade. The most esteemed species for
the table, such as the turbot, dory, piper, sole, red mullet,
whiting, &c., are plentiful; but the most important of
the fisheries are those of mackerel, herrings, and pilchards, particularly of the last, which are peculiar to
this coast, the opposite coast of Britanny, and the south
of Ireland. After supplying the inhabitants with their
winter stock, the great mass of pilchards are salted, the
oil is then pressed out of them, and they are packed in
hogsheads for exportation, principally to the ports of
Italy. The chief stations of the pilchard-fisheries are
Fowey, Looe, Mevagissey, St. Mawes, the coves of the
Lizard, and in Mount's bay, on the south coast; and
St. Ives and New Quay, on the north coast. About
21,000 hogsheads are annually produced; 2000 tons of
mackerel are also taken. Oysters are found in great
abundance in the creeks of the Hel, and exported to the
Medway, where they are laid down to fatten for the
London market.
There are few branches of Manufacture, except such
as relate to the smelting and preparation of the metals.
The manufacture of carpets is carried on at Truro, and
coarse woollen-cloths are made at Truro and PerranArworthal; there are iron-foundries at Perran-Wharf
and Hale, and manufactories for gunpowder at Kennall
Vale, in the parish of St. Stythians, and at Cosawes, in
that of St. Gluvias. With regard to the state of the
Harbours, the mouths of nearly all the tide rivers on the
north coast have been almost choked with sand cast up
by the surge, or drifted in by the north-westerly winds.
The principal rivers are, the Tamar, which forms, from
the sea up to its source (excepting only for the space of
about three miles) the boundary between this county
and Devonshire, and is navigable as high as New Quay,
about 24 miles above Plymouth; the Lynher or Lyner,
which becomes navigable at Noddetor or Notter Bridge,
and spreads into the Lynher creek, four miles below
which it falls into the Tamar; the Tide, or Tidi, which
becomes navigable two miles above St. Germans creek,
which forms a junction with the Lynher creek; the
East Looe river, which is navigable up to Sand-place;
the Duloe, a tributary of the East Looe, and navigable
up to Trelawnwear; the Fawy, which becomes navigable,
at high water, at Lostwithiel, three miles below which it
joins the Leryn creek, and forms a wide and deep
haven, falling into the sea below Fowey; the Fal, which
about a mile below Tregoney spreads into a wide channel, and soon afterwards opens into the broad expanse
of Falmouth harbour, through which it empties itself
into the sea, being navigable in all its creeks; the Hel,
which at high water becomes navigable at Gweek, and,
being joined in the latter part of its course, by several
small creeks, forms Helford haven, within a mile below
which it falls into the sea, through an estuary about a
mile broad; the Heyl, which at St. Erth spreads into
the estuary of Hayle, the latter about two miles further
opening into St. Ives' bay; the Alan or Camel, which is
navigable up to Polbrock; and the Seaton.
A canal was constructed from Bude harbour to
Thornbury, in the county of Devon, by a company
formed in 1819. It has divers branches: from Red
Post a branch, nineteen miles in length, extends down
the western bank of the Tamar to Druxton Bridge,
about three miles north of Launceston; and from
Burmsdon there is a branch, nearly a mile and a half in
length, up the west bank of the Tamar to Moreton Mill,
where it receives a feeder from a reservoir on Langford
Moor. In 1825, an act was obtained for the construction of the Liskeard and Looe canal, which commences
at Tarras Pill, and terminates at Moorswater, being five
miles and seven furlongs in length, and having twentyfive locks: there is a branch, about a mile in length,
to Sand-place. In 1824, an act was obtained for
making a railway from Redruth to Point Quay, in the
parish of St. Feock, with several branches; also for
restoring, improving, and maintaining the navigation of
Restrongett-creek. The Redruth and Chacewater railway,
commencing at the town of Redruth, proceeds in an
eastern direction to Nangiles, where it is joined by a
branch from the mines near Scorrier Hall. The Hayle
railway, chiefly for the conveyance of minerals from that
place to Redruth, with a branch to Portreath, joins the
Redruth and Chacewater railway; it has been bought
by the West Cornwall Railway Company, and will form
part of their line from Truro to Penzance. The Bodmin
and Wadebridge railway, for the conveyance of minerals
and passengers, was opened in 1834: the line is 12
miles in length.
Cornwall abounds with rude monuments of its aboriginal inhabitants, much resembling those found in
Ireland, Wales, and North Britain, consisting of large
unwrought stones placed erect, either singly or in circles, or with others laid across, and of tumuli of stones
or earth: the numerous circles of erect stones are generally termed Dawns-mên, "the stone dance." There are
also two circular inclosures of stone, or earth, one at St.
Just near the Land's End, and the other at Peranzabuloe,
within which are rows of seats, having formed amphitheatres, originally designed for the exhibition of
various sports, and where, in later times, the Cornish
plays were acted: these are called "rounds," or plan
an quare, "the place of sport." Tumuli are to be seen in
all parts of the county. Another kind of rude stone
monument, most probably sepulchral, occurs in many
places, viz., the cromlech, which consists of a large flat
stone laid horizontally upon several others fixed upright
in the ground, and which is provincially called the
"quoit," or the "giant's quoit." Celts have been found
here more abundantly than in any other part of the
kingdom. Several artificial caves, or subterranean passages have been discovered, consisting of long galleries
extending in various directions, formed of upright stones
with others laid across. In 1749, a great number of
gold coins, believed to be British, was found in the middle of the ridge of Carnbrê Hill. In several parts of the
county may be seen rude stones of granite, with inscriptions, supposed to be ancient British, and some of
them coeval with the time of the Romans. The Roman
antiquities consist mostly of coins, which of late years
have been discovered in abundance in the western
part of the county; and of spear-heads, swords, and
other weapons of mixed metal, which have frequently
been found in the ancient mines and stream-works. The
situation of any of the Roman stations has not been
ascertained. Ancient roads, or fragments of them, are
visible in various parts of the county: one of these,
believed to be British, traverses the hills, with barrows
at intervals along its line, from the Land's End towards
Stratton and the north of Cornwall, passing near the
great British station of Carnbrê. Two Roman roads
enter the county from Devonshire, one of which was a
continuation of the great road from Dorchester and
Exeter; the other appears to have led from Torrington
and the northern part of Devonshire towards Stratton.
Camps and earthworks are particularly numerous, the
greater part of them being nearly round or oval. In
many places along the coast a single vallum runs across
from the edge of one cliff to that of another, with a ditch
on the land side. There are considerable remains of a
vallum called the "Giant's Hedge," which appears to
have been originally about seven miles and a half in
length, extending in an irregular line from the river Looe,
a little above the town of West Looe, to Leryn.
Before the Reformation, there were about twenty
religious establishments, including two alien houses, and
one commandery of the Knights Hospitallers; there were
also eleven colleges and seven hospitals: but the
monastic remains are few, and, excepting those of St.
Germans Priory, not remarkable. Small chapels, or
oratories, erected over wells or springs to which extraordinary properties have been attributed, abound in
most parts of the county, the greater part of them however in ruins; and throughout the whole of it are ancient
stone crosses, not only in the churchyards, but on the
moors, and in other solitary situations. There are also,
particularly in the narrowest parts of the county, from
St. Michael's Mount to the Land's End, remains of
several rude circular buildings on the summits of hills,
of very remote antiquity, and still denominated Castles;
together with several cliff castles, formed by stone walls
running across necks of land from one cliff to another
on the sea-coast. Of more regular fortresses the principal remains are those at Launceston, Carnbrê, Tintagel,
Trematon, and Restormel, all of high antiquity, and the
first believed to be of British origin. The most perfect
specimen of ancient domestic architecture is Cothele
House, built in the reign of Henry VII. Many others
of the houses of the landed proprietors are also fine old
family mansions, of very antique structure, though some
of them have been altered, enlarged, and modernised.
Notwithstanding the abundance and variety of the mineral strata, there are few springs possessing mineral properties. The Cornish men were formerly much addicted
to sports and pastimes, especially to the miracle play,
wrestling, and hurling; the practice of wrestling still
prevails. Cornwall, as before noticed, gives the title of
Duke to the eldest son of the sovereign.
Cornwell
CORNWELL, a parish, in the union of ChippingNorton, hundred of Chadlington, county of Oxford,
4 miles (W.) from Chipping-Norton; containing 97 inhabitants. The living is a discharged rectory, valued in
the king's books at £7. 4. 2., and in the patronage of the
Crown; net income, £140.
Cornwood (St. Michael)
CORNWOOD (St. Michael), a parish, in the union
of Plympton St. Mary, hundred of Ermington, Ermington and Plympton, and S. divisions of Devon;
containing, with the village or post-town of Ivy-Bridge,
1080 inhabitants. The parish comprises 10,680 acres,
of which 7459 are moor, common, and waste; it is intersected by the river Yealm, and bounded on the northeast by the Erm. About 5000 acres of moor are, for nine
months in the year, appropriated to the pasture of large
quantities of cattle and sheep. Granite is found in abundance, and extensively quarried for building. Cattlefairs are held on the first Monday in May, and the fourth
Monday in September. The living is a vicarage, valued
in the king's books at £33. 4. 7.; net income, £405;
patron, the Bishop of Exeter; impropriator, Sir J. L.
Rogers. The glebe comprises about 80 acres. The
church is in the ancient English style, and has three stone
stalls and a piscina. There is a chapel for the district
of Ivy-Bridge, at the extremity of the parish: the living
is in the gift of Sir J. L. Rogers. A school on the national plan is aided by an endowment of £10 per annum
by the Rev. Duke Yonge, the late vicar, who also bequeathed £20 per annum for affording medical assistance
to the poorer inhabitants. The Rook charity, comprising
upwards of 27 acres, produces a rent of £44, which is
distributed among the poor. The aunt of Sir Walter
Raleigh resided at Fardd, in the parish.
Cornworthy (St. Peter)
CORNWORTHY (St. Peter), a parish, in the union
of Totnes, hundred of Coleridge, Stanborough and
Coleridge, and S. divisions of Devon, 4¼ miles (S. E.
by S.) from Totnes; containing 554 inhabitants. The
parish is situated on the navigable river Dart, and separated from Ashprington by the river Harborne, which
falls into the Dart. It comprises by estimation 1600
acres: the soil is fertile in some parts, in others poor;
there are some good pastures, and productive orchards.
About fifty persons are employed in the paper manufacture. Here are quarries of limestone, which is raised
for building purposes, but chiefly for burning into lime,
and for the roads. The living is a discharged vicarage,
valued in the king's books at £10; net income, £210;
patron, the Rev. Charles Barter; impropriators, Edward
Holdelet, J. Peete, and H. Tucker, Esqrs. The church
is a neat structure in the later English style, and contains a monument to Sir Thomas Harrison. A school,
now conducted on the national plan, was founded in
1609, by Elizabeth Harris, and endowed by her with
land producing about £25 per annum. Sir John Peters
bequeathed a small sum from the great tithes, to be distributed to poor people; and there are some cottages
erected on land given for that purpose by Sir Peter
Edgecumbe. A priory for seven nuns of the order of
St. Augustine, said to have been founded by the family
of Edgecumbe, and valued at the Dissolution at £63 per
annum, formerly stood here: two of the arched gateways still remain.
Corpusty (St. Peter)
CORPUSTY (St. Peter), a parish, in the union of
Aylsham, hundred of South Erpingham, E. division
of Norfolk, 6 miles (W. N. W.) from Aylsham; containing 449 inhabitants. The parish is on the road from
Norwich to Holt, and comprises 1018 acres, whereof 49
are common or waste: the village is situated on the
south side of a branch of the river Bure, on which is a
flour-mill. The living is a discharged vicarage, valued
in the king's books at £4. 12. 8½.; net income, £62;
patron, the Bishop of Norwich; impropriator, J. R.
Ives, Esq., whose tithes have been commuted for £256.
The church, which stands on an eminence commanding
very fine views, is chiefly in the decorated style, and
consists of a nave and chancel, with a square embattled
tower; the nave is separated from the chancel by the
remains of a carved screen, and there is a handsome
sculptured font. The Wesleyans and Primitive Methodists have each a place of worship.
Corridge
CORRIDGE, a township, in the parish of Hartburn, union of Morpeth, W. division of Morpeth
ward, N. division of Northumberland, 11 miles (W.
by S.) from Morpeth; containing 22 inhabitants. The
families of Aynsley, Robson, and Carr have held lands
here. The township is divided into two farms, East
and West, and comprises 329a. 1r. 19p., of which 67
acres are arable, 262 pasture, and the remainder woodland; the river Wansbeck passes on the north. A
rent-charge of £24 is paid to the vicar of Hartburn.
Corringham (St. Mary)
CORRINGHAM (St. Mary), a parish, in the union
of Orsett, hundred of Barstable, S. division of Essex,
3 miles (E.) from Horndon-on-the-Hill; containing 255
inhabitants. The parish is situated between Tilbury
Fort and Canvey Island, and bounded on the south by
the river Thames: at the time of the Norman survey it
belonged to the Bishop of London. The living is a rectory, valued in the king's books at £22. 13. 4.; patron
and incumbent, the Rev. J. H. Stephenson, whose tithes
have been commuted for £830, and whose glebe contains
29 acres. The church, situated on the Green, is an
ancient building, with a low tower surmounted by a
shingled spire.
Corringham (St. Lawrence)
CORRINGHAM (St. Lawrence), a parish, in the
union of Gainsborough, wapentake of Corringham,
parts of Lindsey, county of Lincoln, 4 miles (E. by
N.) from Gainsborough, on the road to Louth; comprising the hamlets of Aisby, Dunstall, and Yawthorpe,
the township of Little Corringham, and the chapelry of
Somerby; and containing 564 inhabitants, of whom 189
are in Little Corringham. This parish is in the Norman
survey called Coringeham; it gives name to the wapentake, and is the head of a deanery, the original establishment of which, though not exactly known, must have
been prior to the year 1100. The hamlet of Great Corringham comprises 1889 acres; that of Little Corringham 987: including respectively 595 and 275 acres of
common or waste. The village is seated between two
branches of the small river Eau. The living is a vicarage, valued in the king's books at £12, and in the patronage of the Bishop of Lincoln: the great tithes have been
commuted for £532. 12. 11., and those of the vicar for
£170. 18. The church, which belonged to the Knights
Templars, is an ancient stone structure in the Norman
style, with later additions, and has a tower; the south
doorway has a richly ornamented Norman arch, and
there are several similar arches within the church, which
evidently consisted originally only of a nave and chancel.
Here are two places of worship for Wesleyans.
Corscombe (St. Michael)
CORSCOMBE (St. Michael), a parish, in the union
and hundred of Beaminster, Bridport division of
Dorset, 3½ miles (N. E.) from Beaminster; containing
810 inhabitants. The parish comprises by computation
5000 acres; the soil is various, in some parts chalky,
in some clayey, and in others a rich black mould. The
village is situated on the north side of a hill, and commands extensive views over the county of Somerset to
the Bristol Channel, and the mountains of Wales. The
Court-house, belonging to the lord of the manor, and
now occupied as a farmhouse, is nearly encompassed by
a moat, over which was a drawbridge. The living is a
rectory, valued in the king's books at £21. 3. 4., and in
the gift of W. Maskell, Esq.: the tithes have been commuted for £573, and the glebe comprises 61 acres. The
church is a neat edifice, erected about 1675.
Corse (St. Margaret)
CORSE (St. Margaret), a parish, in the union of
Newent, Lower division of the hundred of Westminster, E. division of the county of Gloucester, 6 miles
(N. N. W.) from Gloucester; containing 482 inhabitants.
This parish, which comprises by measurement 1901
acres of land, is beautifully situated on the road from
Gloucester to Ledbury, and has been improved by the
inclosure of upwards of 1300 acres, that anciently
abounded with wood, and were called "Corse Lawn."
Stone is quarried for the building of cottages and the
repair of roads. The living is a discharged vicarage,
endowed with the rectorial tithes, valued in the king's
books at £6. 2. 9., and in the patronage of the Crown;
net income, £443. The glebe consists of 5½ acres, with
a glebe-house. The Wesleyans have a place of worship;
and a sum of about £20 per annum, derived from land,
is applied to charitable purposes.
Corsenside
CORSENSIDE, a parish, in the union of Bellingham, N. E. division of Tindale ward, S. division of
Northumberland, 17 miles (N. by W.) from Hexham;
containing 1108 inhabitants. This parish, anciently
Crossan-set (the place of the crosses), lies on the Watlingstreet, and comprises by measurement 7840 acres, of
which about 2500 are arable, 5000 pasture, and 340
wood. On the east and west sides the land is bleak,
moorish, and sterile, but along the banks of the Rede
the soil is light, dry, and gravelly, producing good crops
of grass and corn; the surface is in general rugged in
the extreme, and the scenery uninteresting, except during
the summer, when, in the vicinity of Woodburn, it becomes highly picturesque. There are several quarries of
excellent limestone and freestone; seams of coal in
different places; and an extensive mine of iron-ore of
superior quality. An iron-foundry employs between
200 and 300 hands. The parish contains the beautiful
hamlet of West Woodburn, and that of East Woodburn,
the latter chiefly remarkable for having been the residence of the distinguished family of De Lisle. The
living is a discharged vicarage, endowed with the rectorial tithes, in 1736, by the Aynsley family, and in the
patronage of Messrs. Tweddell: the tithes have been
commuted for £184, and the glebe consists of 84 acres,
with a good glebe-house. The church is a small ancient
edifice; one of the Umfrevilles gave the advowson and
impropriation of it to the convent of Hallystone, which,
about 1240, held "Cressenset" in pure alms, of Gilbert
de Umfreville. A large quantity of iron-ore, supposed
to have been dug up by the Romans, who had iron-works
here, was found on the surface near the parish borders;
tumuli are frequently met with near the river, and many
vases have been discovered.—See Chesterhope and
Risingham.
Corsham Regis (St. Bartholomew)
CORSHAM REGIS (St. Bartholomew), a parish,
and formerly a market-town, in the union and hundred
of Chippenham, Chippenham and Calne, and N. divisions of Wilts, 4 miles (S. W. by W.) from Chippenham;
containing 3842 inhabitants. This place is of very considerable antiquity: it is recorded in the Saxon Chronicles that, in 1015, "King Ethelred lay sick at Cosham,
and Alderman Edric collected an army there." According to the Norman survey it was held by Tosti, Earl of
Northumberland, and at the Conquest became part of
the royal possessions; and from the Malmesbury Chronicle, preserved in Leland's Collectanea, it appears that,
in 1358, the king and queen spent all the summer at
this place and at Marlborough. It comprises the royal
manor and the manor of the rectory: the former was
granted in the reign of Henry III., by Richard, Earl of
Cornwall, to the tenants as farmers in fee, on condition
of their paying the annual sum of 110 marks; and the
original charter, which is deposited with the court rolls,
is in excellent preservation. The bailiffs of this manor
are chosen by the tenants from among themselves; they
are invested with the powers of sheriff and coroner
within the parish, and the tenants of the rectory manor
owe suit and service to their court leet.
The town principally consists of one long street, the
houses of which, built chiefly of freestone, have a very
neat appearance: its situation is dry and healthy, and
the free access which the inhabitants have to Corsham
Park renders it desirable as a place of residence. Corsham House, the seat of Lord Methuen, lord of the
manor, who was raised to the peerage by the title of
Baron Methuen, of Corsham, July 13th, 1838, was built
on the site of the ancient palace, in 1582, and was considerably enlarged by the late Mr. Methuen, in order to
receive the extensive gallery of pictures which had been
collected by Sir Paul Methuen. The manufacture of
woollen-cloths was formerly carried on, and in the last
century had obtained some degree of celebrity, but it
has since that period altogether disappeared. The market has been discontinued; but fairs for cattle are held
on March 7th and September 4th. A new markethouse, which is also a court-house, was built with a view
of reviving the market, in 1784, in the centre of the
town. The Great Western railway runs in the vicinity.
The parish comprises 6498a. 3r. 14p., of which more
than 2200 acres are arable, nearly 3800 pasture, and 228
woodland: the peasantry are partly occupied in raising
stone from the numerous quarries in this parish and that
of Box.
The living is a discharged vicarage, valued in the
king's books at £10. 16.; patron, Lord Methuen; impropriators, the landowners. The vicarial tithes have
been commuted for £299. 10.; the vicar enjoys some
peculiar privileges, and possesses an official seal. The
church is an ancient structure, with a tower rising from
four massive piers and arches in the centre, between the
nave and the chancel, and formerly surmounted by a
lofty spire, which, being deemed insecure, was taken
down in 1812. The aisles are separated from the nave
by low Norman pillars and small arches: in the north
aisle is a small chapel, divided from it by a stone screen
of handsome design; and on the north-western side is
the ecclesiastical or consistory court of the incumbent.
There are places of worship for Baptists and Independents. At the south-east entrance to the town is a free
school, with an almshouse for six aged poor, built and
endowed by Lady Margaret Hungerford, in 1668, and
both under the superintendence of a master, who occupies a lodge adjoining the schoolroom. The first master,
appointed by Lady Hungerford, was the Rev. Edward
Wells, vicar of the parish, and father of the learned
author of Sacred Geography; and Mr. Hasted, the historian of the county of Kent, who died here in 1812,
held the same appointment. Some valuable lands are
vested in trustees for repairing the church, sustaining the
poor in the parish-dwelling, and for the repair of the
bridges. Richard Kirby, of Islington, in 1672 bequeathed his interest in an estate near Dublin, to be
distributed among eight poor persons; and Lady James'
charity, producing £57. 8. per annum from the three
per cents., of which the parish receives two-thirds, is
appropriated to the distribution of blankets and coats.
Bishop Tanner states that here was an alien priory,
and that William the Conqueror gave the church of this
place to the abbey of St. Stephen, at Caen, in Normandy,
the monks of which held it until, as parcel of the late
possessions of that foreign house, it was assigned by
Henry VI. to King's College, Cambridge; but he is at a
loss to reconcile this fact with the gift of the church and
other possessions by Henry II. to the Benedictine monks
of Marmonstier, in Tourrain, who had a cell here.
During the wars with France, this priory was in the
custody of the Bishop and Chapter of Exeter. It was
given, in the 1st of Edward IV., towards the endowment
of the monastery at Sion, and as parcel thereof was
granted by James I. to Philip Moore; the revenue was
£22. 13. 4. There was also a nunnery, which occupied
the present site of the Methuen Arms inn.
Corsley (St. Margaret)
CORSLEY (St. Margaret), a parish, in the union
and hundred of Warminster, Warminster and S. divisions of Wilts, 3¼ miles (W. N. W.) from Warminster;
and containing 1621 inhabitants. The parish comprises
by measurement 2580 acres. Stone for building and
road-making is quarried; and the weaving of cloth
employs about thirty persons. Fairs are held on WhitTuesday and the first Monday in August, for cheese,
pigs, and toys. The ancient manor-house, in which it
is said Sir Walter Raleigh passed much of his time in
concealment, is now occupied as a farmhouse. The
living is a discharged rectory, valued in the king's
books at £11. 0. 10.; net income, £215, arising chiefly
from 98 acres of land allotted under an act for inclosing
the parish, in 1780; patron and impropriator, the Marquess of Bath. The present handsome church was
erected on the site of a former structure, at an expense
of £3500, and was opened for divine service on the 22nd
of October, 1833. On the summit of Clea Hill are remains of a strong intrenchment, to which the Danes are
said to have fled from Edindon, where they had been
attacked by Alfred; numerous fossils are found imbedded in the chalk of which the hill consists.
Corston (All Saints)
CORSTON (All Saints), a parish, in the union of
Keynsham, hundred of Wellow, E. division of Somerset, 3¾ miles (W.) from Bath; containing 604 inhabitants. The river Avon bounds the parish on the northeast, and the Great Western railway intersects it; the
area is 1145 acres. Cornua ammonis and various petrified shells abound in the quarries. The living is a discharged vicarage, valued in the king's books at £6. 3. 9.;
net income, £150; patron, the Bishop of Bath and
Wells; impropriators, the family of Langton.
Corstone
CORSTONE, a chapelry, in the parish, union, and
hundred of Malmesbury, Malmesbury and Kingswood,
and N. divisions of Wilts, 2½ miles (S. by W.) from
Malmesbury; containing 273 inhabitants. The chapel,
dedicated to All Saints, exhibits some portions of early
English architecture.