English Heritage sites near Morval Parish

Porth Hellick Down Burial Chamber

PORTH HELLICK DOWN BURIAL CHAMBER

1000 miles from Morval Parish

A large and imposing Scillonian Bronze Age entrance grave, with kerb, inner passage and burial chamber all clearly visible.

Halliggye Fogou

HALLIGGYE FOGOU

1000 miles from Morval Parish

Roofed and walled in stone, this complex of passages is the largest and best-preserved of several mysterious underground tunnels associated with Cornish Iron Age settlements.

Innisidgen Lower and Upper Burial Chambers

INNISIDGEN LOWER AND UPPER BURIAL CHAMBERS

1000 miles from Morval Parish

Two Bronze Age communal burial cairns of Scillonian type, with fine views. The upper cairn is the best preserved on the islands.

Harry's Walls

HARRY'S WALLS

1000 miles from Morval Parish

An unfinished artillery fort, built above St Mary's Pool harbour in 1552-53.

Garrison Walls

GARRISON WALLS

1000 miles from Morval Parish

You can enjoy a two-hour walk alongside the ramparts of these defensive walls and earthworks, dating from the 16th to 18th centuries.

Cromwell's Castle

CROMWELL'S CASTLE

1000 miles from Morval Parish

The castle stands guarding the lovely anchorage between Bryher and Tresco and is one of the few surviving Cromwellian fortifications in Britain.


Churches in Morval Parish

St Wenna

Morval Looe
01503240218
http://morvalwidegates.weebly.com/index.html

About 1,500 years ago, a Welsh King named Brychan heard about Jesus, and decided to spread the message of tolerance, love and forgiveness. Brychan sent his descendants out to live as Christians and show people how Jesus wanted them to be.

They travelled in small boats, called Coracles, and many crossed the Bristol Channel, where the tides brought them to Hartland point in Devon. Whenever one of the ‘children of Brychan' found a source of clear water, they would make that their home, building a simple hut among the trees.

Wenna found clear water near the South coast of Cornwall in a forest, near a tidal creek. She stayed there, and some of her ‘brothers and sisters' continued their journey across the English Channel to the part of France we now call Brittany.

Wenna built her hut, or ‘cell' in the forest, 40 paces away from the well. People came to see this kind lady, leading a quiet life of prayer and meditation, and she told them about Jesus.

Gradually more and more people would gather to pray with her, and after her death, her followers continued to meet. We believe the first wooden church was built near Wenna's well in the 7th Century about 200 years after she died. The well is still there, just within the private grounds of Morval House.

The church in which we now worship in Morval was probably started in the 13th century on the same site and completed in the 15th, about 500 years ago.

The Millennium Window, at the back of the North Aisle, was designed and made by local artist Julian George. The central panel depicts St Wenna in her coracle, and the panels around her represent elements of parish life up to the present day, thus placing our saint in our community.



Pubs in Morval Parish

Looe Golf Club
Snooty Fox

Morval, PL13 1PR

Images show it as a pub 2008. By 2014 it had become accommodation & restaurant only. Premises for sale or sold in 2017 after which it seems to have become a guest house only with no restaurant.