VisitBritain - The official website for tourism in Britain
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Experience the hidden delights of this secluded valley garden surrounding a grand Elizabethan manor house. Take a step back in time to discover the roots of one of the crucial tools of gardening - the lawnmower.
Lighthouse tower built in 1900. Engine room with all original equipment, including the largest fog horn (sounder) in England.
A longstone of pre-historic date originally about 16ft high.
Heritage railway operating mainly steam trains. Special events include Easter Family Fun Weekend; Steam at War; Spring Steam & Diesel Weekend; Murder Mystery. Pasty Specials; Steam, Beer & Jazz , a Day out with Thomas; Steam Gala, Dining
Dual purpose viaduct/aqueduct built between c1839 and c1842, 90ft high, 670ft long. Carried tramway for local mines. Idyllic picnic spot.
A 17thC house largely rebuilt after fire in c1881. The 116ft gallery with magnificent plaster ceiling illustrates scenes from the Old Testament. Park, gardens, walks.
Museum housed on first floor of 19thC Oddfellows Hall. Reconstructed Cornish kitchen. Regular exhibitions about parish history.
Originally occupied almost 2000 years ago, the village contained eight stone-walled homesteads, each with a central courtyard surrounded by thatched rooms.
Well preserved 13th-14thC dovecote, the only one of four surviving, in Cornwall.
On the south west slope of Caer Brane, occupied from about 500BC to 400AD. Especially noted for its well preserved south terrain or fougou (Cornish translation).