Blog no.19.  Sennen Churchtown Cross.


This is Sennen Churchtown, also . known as Treeve, on the main road to Lands End. The First and Last Inn is on the left. The Dower House was built by the Vingoe family. The Sennen Cross stands in the field Opposite. The 1877 OS map 25 shows the cross in this field. Treeve was a farming settlement and can trace its history back to the Bronze and Iron Ages. It first appears in surviving documents as Treryf in 1334, and as Treruffe and Treyeuff in 1668, not to be confused with a hamlet of the same name in the Lamorna Valley!


John Thomas Blight in a note dated 5 May 1864 wrote that this cross lay across a little stream at Treveor Barton, Sennen, where it was in use as a footbridge. It has a quite distinctive design, a wheel head cross with an extended pillar. In about 1890 the cross was moved to the new cemetery that was built adjacent to the old Sunday school, just north of the church. In 1955 when this was sold off the cross was moved to Sennen Churchyard, where it still can be found.



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