Wikipedia:WikiProject Cornwall/New articles/Archive

December 2010

 * Francis Vyvyan Jago Arundell, antiquary and traveller
 * Fowey Consols mine
 * Toldish Tunnel
 * Category:Archdeacons of Cornwall
 * List of Archdeacons of Cornwall
 * NCB Radio
 * Sennen Cove Lifeboat Station

November 2010

 * Fowey Lifeboat Station
 * St Ives Lifeboat Station
 * Towan Head

October 2010

 * Vic Roberts, rugby player for Penryn, Harlequins, Swansea, and England, the British Lions and the Barbarians
 * Category:Cornish-language activists
 * Gary Thomas (cricketer)
 * Godfrey Furse, cricketer
 * Falmouth Lifeboat Station
 * St Anthony's Church, Roseland
 * Treen, Cornwall is now a disambiguation page
 * Wenfordbridge, a hamlet near Wadebridge
 * Polmear, Cornwall, a hamlet in Fowey civil parish

September 2010

 * Old Cornish units of measurement
 * Category:Sports venues in Cornwall
 * Mennaye Field, rugby ground in Penzance-Newlyn
 * Margaret Steuart Pollard, bard, poet, church-builder
 * John Bettesworth-Trevanion, High Sheriff of Cornwall; MP for Penryn
 * Alexander Pendarves, MP for Penryn, Saltash, Helston, and Launceston
 * Thomas Tregosse, Puritan minister from St Ives
 * Church of Saint Laud, parish church of Mabe
 * Caerhays Castle, semi-castellated manor house located south of St Michael Caerhays
 * Harry Cann, footballer

August 2010

 * Catherine Payton Phillips, Quaker preacher
 * Come-to-Good a hamlet
 * Friends Meeting House, Come-To-Good a Quaker meeting house in above hamlet
 * Zennor Head Redirect page to Zennor
 * Abbey of St Mary and St Petroc, in Bodmin
 * Convent of the Epiphany (very little info)
 * Boardmasters Festival, annual festival in Newquay

July 2010

 * Roskear, cricket ground in Camborne
 * Boscawen Park, cricket ground in Truro
 * Maypole, Isles of Scilly hamlet on St Mary's
 * Old Town, Isles of Scilly village on St Mary's
 * Cornish cuisine, article split from Cuisine of Devon and Cornwall (now a disambiguation page)

June 2010

 * Darleyford, a hamlet near Linkinhorne
 * Wheal Eliza cricket ground at St Austell
 * Brea Hill redirect to Brea Hill, Trebetherick
 * Brea Hill, Trebetherick
 * Porthilly Cove redirect to Porthilly
 * Porthilly
 * Treclago redirect to Advent, Cornwall
 * Carnon viaduct

May 2010

 * North Cornwall Museum and Art Gallery, in Camelford
 * Point, Cornwall;  Trolver;    Penpol Creek;   three redirect pages to Chycoose
 * Chycoose (includes Penpol, Point and Trolver)
 * Penpol disambiguation page
 * Mylor Creek
 * Restronguet Passage
 * Porthgwidden disambiguation page
 * Harcourt, Cornwall a redirect page to Restronguet Point
 * Restronguet Point
 * Mylor Harbour a redirect page to Mylor Churchtown
 * Restronguet Creek
 * Restronguet disambiguation page
 * Wilcove
 * Balwest re-established article to replace redirect
 * Portscatho
 * List of civil parishes in Cornwall New content (original title)
 * List of civil parishes in Cornwall (pre-2009) Content from previous List of civil parishes in Cornwall
 * Joan Rendell MBE, Cornish historian and writer
 * St Austell parishes
 * Grampound with Creed new article replaces redirect to Grampound
 * 2010 United Kingdom general election result in Cornwall
 * List of Old Truronians
 * Penberth Cove a redirect page to Penberth
 * Dunheved Bridge a redirect page to Dunheved_Bridge
 * List of former administrative divisions in Cornwall
 * David Tyacke, last CO of the DCLI, GOC Singapore District, native of Breage
 * Notter Bridge a redirect page to Notter, Cornwall
 * Otterham Down a redirect page to Otterham
 * Otterham Mill a redirect page to Otterham
 * Meneage
 * Category:Copper mines in Cornwall
 * Carlyon Article on the new civil parish
 * Pentewan Valley Article on the new civil parish
 * St Austell Bay Article on the new civil parish
 * St Dominic, Cornwall Expanded article replaces St Dominick to reflect official spelling
 * Caerhays Castle Redirect to St Michael Caerhays
 * Source fm, a community radio station in Falmouth and Penryn

April 2010

 * Angarrack viaduct
 * The Lizard lifeboat station
 * Castle Gate, Cornwall
 * Chynoweth, Cornwall a redirect page to St Hilary, Cornwall
 * Clear-flow, waste management company based in Bissoe Now deleted
 * Comfort, Cornwall a redirect page to Constantine, Kerrier
 * Corgee, Cornwall
 * Crean, Cornwall
 * Gluvian new article replaces redirect
 * Devoran new article replaces redirect
 * Goon Gumpas new article replaces redirect
 * Canworthy Water new article replaces redirect
 * Charaton Cross redirects to Pensilva
 * Pensilva
 * Gwinear, Cornwall
 * Towanroath redirects to Wheal Coates
 * Helstone new article replaces redirect
 * Higher Crackington redirects to Crackington Haven
 * Middle Crackington redirects to Crackington Haven
 * Lellizzick
 * Tregirls (includes Tregirls beach)
 * Tregirls beach redirect to Tregirls
 * River Ottery
 * De Lank River
 * Lank, Cornwall
 * Higher Lank redirect to Lank, Cornwall
 * Lower Lank redirect to Lank, Cornwall
 * Laddenvean
 * Lantyan article replaces redirect
 * Two Bridges, Cornwall
 * Lizard (village)
 * Luckett, Cornwall
 * Ben Asdale shipwreck article; material moved from Maenporth
 * Malpas, Cornwall new article replaces redirect
 * Metherell, Cornwall
 * Menagissey
 * Cornish Democrats, political party
 * Mithian new article replaces redirect
 * Colliford Lake
 * Angarrick new article replaces redirect
 * Mylor Churchtown
 * Nanstallon United Youth Football Club material transferred from Nanstallon article
 * New Mills, Cornwall

March 2010

 * Fisherman's Friends, Port Isaac choral group
 * Battle of Hehil
 * List of museums in Cornwall
 * Frogmore, Cornwall, redirect page to expanded Bodrean article
 * Bugle, Cornwall, the village in Clay Country
 * Scillonian (1955), the ship
 * Category:Council elections in Cornwall
 * Seven Bays unreferenced unpatrolled page about north Cornwall (needs attention)

January 2010

 * Robert Dunkin of Penzance, mentor of the young Humphry Davy

December 2009

 * Prophecy of Merlin contains notes in early Cornish
 * Josh Matavesi Cornish-Fijian rugby international

October 2009

 * White Island, Isles of Scilly
 * Trematon, village
 * Trewarmett, hamlet

September 2009

 * Cuisine of Devon and Cornwall
 * Tresinney, hamlet

August 2009

 * Dunmere, Cornwall, hamlet
 * Trelights, hamlet
 * The Cribbar, "Big wave" reef in Newquay
 * Newquay Surfing Reef, Artificial reef for Newquay

July 2009

 * Christianity in Cornwall
 * Tywardreath and Par civil parish

June 2009

 * Wildworks Cornish theatre company.
 * Royal charters applying to Cornwall - public domain text of medieval royal charters
 * Lux Park Liskeard sports centre

May 2009

 *  Alan M. Kent Cornish Writer

April 2009

 * Two Castles Trail, a trail from Launceston Castle to Okehampton Castle
 * Hevva, Cornish music and dance group
 * London Cornish RFC
 * Truro and St Austell (UK Parliament constituency)

March 2009

 * Cornish Language Partnership
 * Template:Cornish language

February 2009

 * Doom Bar, notorious hazard to shipping
 * Helston Town Band who play the Furry Dance

January 2009

 * John Arundell (born 1576), of Trerice. Cornish MP and Governor of Pendennis Castle in the English Civil Wars.
 * Joseph Hocking, novelist and brother of Silas Hocking
 * Cornish American, Americans with Cornish ancestry
 * Thomas Bond (topographer), topographical writer from Looe
 * Gribben Head, near Fowey
 * James Jago FRS, President of the Royal Institution of Cornwall
 * Samuel Stephens (senior), MP for St Ives in the 18th Century
 * Samuel Stephens (junior), son of the above and also MP for St Ives
 * Falmouth Art Gallery
 * John Dyer (painter)
 * Camborne Science and Community College
 * Alison Treganning Existing page but entirely new article
 * Alfred C. Crowle, Cornish Miner who went on to manage Mexico national football team
 * Jack Trelawny, author of the Kernowland children's books

December 2008

 * Minions, Cornwall
 * Chiverton Cross
 * Carland Cross
 * Bodiniel
 * Bodrean
 * Bodgate
 * Boderwennack
 * Bodella
 * Bodbrane
 * Summercourt
 * Summercourt fair Existing page but entirely new article
 * Trewinnion
 * Bodanna
 * Blunts, Cornwall
 * Penhale
 * Blue Anchor, Cornwall
 * Blowinghouse
 * Black Rock, Cornwall
 * Bissom
 * Bishop's Quay
 * Bissoe
 * Billacott
 * Black Cross, Cornwall
 * Bilberry, Cornwall
 * Bethel, Cornwall
 * Bathpool, Cornwall
 * St Martin-by-Looe civil parish
 * Category:Civil parishes in Kerrier
 * St John, Cornwall civil parish
 * Sheviock civil parish
 * Morval, Cornwall civil parish
 * Lanteglos-by-Fowey civil parish
 * Landrake with St Erney civil parish
 * Lanteglos, a disambiguation page
 * Lansallos civil parish
 * Warleggan civil parish
 * Landulph civil parish
 * Dobwalls and Trewidland civil parish
 * Deviock civil parish
 * Hawker's Cove, Cornwall
 * Slaughterbridge inc Tregue and Camelford Station
 * Trewen civil parish
 * Tresmeer civil parish
 * Treneglos civil parish
 * Tremaine, Cornwall civil parish
 * St Thomas the Apostle Rural civil parish
 * South Petherwin
 * St Stephen-by-Launceston civil parish
 * Lesnewth (hundred)
 * Trevalga
 * St Stephens, Cornwall, a disambiguation page.
 * Longrock
 * St Blazey Gate
 * Poundstock
 * Otterham
 * North Tamerton
 * Lezant
 * Raymond Ray-Jones, St Ives artist
 * William Clift, naturalist and Fellow of the Royal Society
 * Menabilly Home of Rashleigh family; inspired Daphne du Maurier
 * Crugmeer village near Padstow

November 2008

 * Stephen Menheniott, learning-disabled murder victim
 * Camelford water pollution incident
 * Lowermoor Water Treatment Works
 * Lowermoor Incident Group
 * Crowdy Reservoir
 * Lawhitton
 * Forrabury and Minster
 * St Breock (parish)
 * Barcelona, Cornwall
 * Kennards House
 * Banns, Cornwall
 * Ball, Cornwall
 * Bake, Cornwall
 * Albaston
 * Four Lanes
 * St Mabyn Parish Church
 * Temple, Cornwall
 * Twelveheads Press
 * All Saints' Church, Bryher
 * St Carantoc's Church, Crantock
 * Church of King Charles the Martyr, Falmouth
 * All Saints' Church, Falmouth
 * St. Sampson church, Golant
 * St. Grada & Holy Cross Church, Grade
 * St. Wynwallow's Church, Landewednack
 * St. Uny's Church, Lelant
 * St Bartholomew's Church, Lostwithiel
 * St. Bridget's Church, Morvah
 * Church of St Morwenna and St John the Baptist, Morwenstow
 * Paul Parish Church
 * St Columb Minor Church
 * St Piran's Chapel
 * St. Agnes' Church, St. Agnes
 * St. Just in Penwith Parish Church
 * St. Levan's Church, St. Levan
 * St. Martin's Church, St. Martin's
 * St. Mary's Church, St. Mary's
 * St. Mary's Old Church, St. Mary's
 * St Enodoc's Church, Trebetherick
 * St. Nicholas' Church, Tresco
 * List of windmills in Cornwall
 * Trevose Head
 * St Ives Bay
 * Trevose Head
 * Red River, Cornwall
 * Watson-Marlow Pumps. a company based in Falmouth.

October 2008

 * St Austell Gulls speedway team.
 * St. Sampson church, Golant
 * '''List of railway stations in Cornwall
 * L.C.R. Duncombe-Jewell Founder of the Cornish Celtic society.
 * Sir Walter Raleigh Gilbert, Bodmin-born soldier.

September 2008

 * List of Grade I listed buildings in Cornwall
 * Category:Elections in Cornwall
 * Black Tor Ferry, from Padstow to Rock.
 * A Seaside Parish, a documentary about the vicar of Boscastle.
 * South Hill, Cornwall, a village and civil parish in Caradon.
 * Sir John Call, 1st Baronet. MP for Callington, and High Sheriff of Cornwall.
 * Whiteford House, near Stoke Climsland.
 * Edward Hearle Rodd, ornithologist.
 * Edwin Dunkin, FRS, Deputy Astronomer Royal.
 * Category:Cornish mineralogists
 * Standard Written Form
 * Category:Cornwall templates
 * Dehwelans Kernow, a Cornish festival.
 * Template:SSSIs Cornwall, for use on articles about Sites of Special Scientific Interest.
 * North Cornwall by-election, 1932
 * Category:Comprehensive schools in Cornwall.

August 2008

 * List of Cornish dialect words
 * Category:Nature reserves of the Cornwall Wildlife Trust
 * North Cornwall by-election, 1939
 * Redlake Cottage Meadows, a nature reserve near Lostwithiel.
 * Churchtown Farm, a nature reserve near Saltash.
 * Marsland Valley, an SSSI in Cornwall.
 * Sylvia's Meadow, a Site of Special Scientific Interest near Gunnislake.
 * Bodmin manumissions, a ninth-century manuscript.
 * Beunans Meriasek, a life of the patron saint of Camborne.
 * Ordinalia. Cornish mystery plays.
 * Fred W.P. Jago, scholar of the Cornish language.
 * River Menalhyl
 * Category:Ruins in Cornwall
 * Sticker, Cornwall

July 2008

 * Golant, a village on the Fowey.
 * St Ives School, a group of artists in St Ives.
 * Camborne Grammar School, a former school in Camborne.
 * Roger Hosen, Cornwall and England rugby player, and Captain of Cornwall in cricket.
 * King Arthur's Hall, a prehistoric site on Bodmin Moor.
 * Richard Nanckivell Rugby player
 * Bodmin College, a school in Bodmin.
 * Redruth Grammar School, a former school in Redruth.

June 2008

 * Cornwall County Council
 * Victorella pavida, a bryozoan which is found in Swanpool and nowhere else in the United Kingdom.
 * Cornish conspiracy theory, an alleged conspiracy against Cornish identity.
 * '''Category:Battles involving the Cornish
 * SS Mohegan, wrecked on The Manacles in 1898.
 * Lanner and District Silver Band
 * Category:University College Falmouth, with sub-categories for alumni and others associated with the college.
 * Charles Chorley, journalist and man of letters.
 * Mining Exchange, a building in Redruth.
 * Gwilt Jolley (1859-1916), an English painter, who worked at St. Ives.

May 2008

 * Edward Budge, writer on the geology of the Lizard.
 * William Jordan author of the Cornish language play The Creacion of the World.
 * Battle of Stratton, a battle of the English Civil War.
 * Kernowek Standard, a new written form of the Cornish language.
 * Come, all ye jolly Tinner boys Patriotic Cornish song, possible inspiration for Hawker's The Song of the Western Men.
 * Battle of Braddock Down, in the First English Civil War.
 * Category:Members of Parliament for constituencies in Cornwall
 * Category:Water transport in Cornwall

April 2008

 * Category:Cornish musical instruments
 * Holman Bros Ltd, the famous engineering firm
 * Andrew Passmore, material scientist.
 * Penryn College, a school in Cornwall.
 * Kescusulyans Kernow (Conference of Cornwall), a Cornish think tank.
 * David Treffry, colonial servant, international financier and High Sheriff of Cornwall.
 * Richard Parkyn, Cornish wrestler.
 * St Cleer, a village in Caradon.
 * '''Great Cornish families.
 * Edwin Jaggard, historian of the politics of Cornwall, UK in the 19th century.
 * Edward Brydges Willyams (1836-1916), MP

March 2008

 * Tregatillian, a hamlet near St Columb Major.
 * Cape Cornwall Secondary School.
 * Gerry Cawley, Cornish wrestling champion.
 * Camborne Hill, the famous Cornish folk song.
 * Nine Maidens stone row, a prehistoric monument near St Columb Major.
 * Rough Tor, a Cornish hill.
 * Week St Mary, a village and civil parish in North Cornwall.
 * Porth Reservoir, near Colan.
 * Garry Tregidga, an academic at the Institute of Cornish Studies.
 * Michael Williams (1784-1858), MP for West Cornwall and owner of Caerhays Castle.
 * Edward William Wynne Pendarves (1775 – 1853), MP for West Cornwall.
 * John Hearle Tremayne (1780 - 1851) was Tory MP for Cornwall for 20 years.
 * Arthur Tremayne (1827 - 1905), Crimean War soldier and Cornish MP, son of J.H. Tremayne.
 * Francis Gregor (MP) (1760 - 1815 ), MP for the County of Cornwall.
 * Sir William Molesworth, 6th Baronet (1758 - 1798), MP for Cornwall 1784 until 1790.
 * Heligan estate, home of the Tremaynes and the "Lost garden".
 * Richard Davey (MP) (1799–1884), of Bochym in Cury. MP for West Cornwall for 11 years.

February 2008

 * Duporth Holiday Village
 * Bal Maiden, a woman or girl working at a mine.
 * Cornish Institute of Engineers
 * Ivan Rabey, Cornish historian
 * Dobwalls
 * Landrake
 * River Tiddy
 * John Arthur Phillips, geologist, metallurgist and mining engineer, of Polgooth.
 * Robert Barclay Fox (1873-1934), Falmouth businessman and Cornish politician.
 * Charles Foster Barham, physician, Truro mayor, and President of the RIC.
 * Edward Smirke, lawyer and antiquary.

January 2008

 * Rescorla, Cornwall, a village in the heart of Clay Country.
 * Pillaton, a vilage and civil parish.
 * Humphry Davy School
 * Trerulefoot, a village.
 * Falmouth Quay Punt
 * Flora and fauna of Cornwall
 * Transport in Cornwall
 * List of foreign-language names for Cornwall
 * Thomas Brown Jordan, engineer, of Falmouth, worked with Robert Were Fox the Younger
 * Second Cornish Uprising of 1497
 * William Oliver (physician), FRS, friend of Ralph Allen and William Borlase, and inventor of the Bath Oliver biscuit.
 * Tim Saunders, poet.
 * E.G. Retallack Hooper, writer and Grand Bard of Gorseth Kernow.
 * Richard Jenkin, Grand Bard and a founder of Mebyon Kernow.

December 2007

 * Cornish and Breton twin towns
 * John Ralfs, botanist, of Penzance.
 * Arthurite, a mineral discovered at Hingston Down.
 * Russellite, a mineral with its type locality in Cornwall.
 * Jonathan Couch, of Polperro, naturalist and doctor.
 * John Rogers (divine), clergyman and writer on religion, geology and botany.
 * John Hawkins (geologist), geologist and traveller.
 * Maker-with-Rame, a civil parish in Caradon.
 * Philip Rashleigh, mineralogist & MP.
 * Howard Fox (1836 - 1922), businessman, natural historian, geologist, of Falmouth.

November 2007

 * Skinner's Bottom. a village.
 * Saltash Tunnel - started as a stub.
 * Richard Quiller Couch, naturalist.
 * Walter Hawken Tregellas, writer, born in Truro.
 * Geography of Cornwall - started as a stub.
 * Richard Edmonds (scientist), geologist, born and lived in Penzance.
 * Matthew Paul Moyle, meteorologist and writer on mining, lived in Helston.
 * Elizabeth Catherine Thomas Carne, geologist and philanthropist, born in Phillack.
 * Cornish currency, issued by the Revived Stannary Parliament.
 * Richard Gurney, claimed to be MP for Tregony, and father of Archer Thompson Gurney.
 * Archer Thompson Gurney, clergyman, hymn-writer and poet, born in Tregony.
 * Joseph Henry Collins, mining engineer, geologist, and President of the Royal Geological Society of Cornwall, Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society and Royal Institution of Cornwall.
 * Mark Guy Pearse, Camborne-born clergyman and writer.
 * Royal Geological Society of Cornwall, founded in 1814 for the study of the Geology of Cornwall.
 * Anna Maria Fox  (1816 – 1897) was promoter of the Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society and the artistic and cultural development of Falmouth in Cornwall, UK.
 * Sir Charles Graves-Sawle, 2nd Baronet, Member of Parliament.

October 2007

 * Downderry, a village in south-east Cornwall.
 * Category:Cornish novelists
 * John Trevanion, Royalist
 * Ambrose Manaton, Royalist MP
 * Cornwall in the English Civil War
 * Lusty Glaze famous beach.
 * Timeline of Cornish history
 * John Boson (writer) - writer in the Cornish language
 * Nicholas Boson - writer in Cornish
 * Thomas Boson - writer in Cornish
 * Post Office Packet Service, Falmouth was a station, serving the Americas and southern Europe.
 * Gus Honeybun famous television rabbit, part of Flambards at Helston.
 * John Carne, author and traveller.
 * Joseph Carne, geologist and industrialist.

September 2007

 * William Hals, historian.
 * Susan Elizabeth Gay, chronicler of Old Falmouth
 * Miss Susan Gay's Falmouth chronology
 * Philip Melvill, nineteenth century philanthropist of Falmouth, Cornwall
 * Cumpas Ltd. is an organisation for promoting Cornish music and dance.
 * National Maritime Museum Cornwall, in Falmouth.
 * Rooz, album by Dalla.
 * Nanstallon, a village in North Cornwall.

August 2007

 * Sladesbridge, a village near Wadebridge.
 * Oliver Padel, an authority on the origin and meaning of place-names.
 * Bernard Deacon, multidisciplinary academic, based at the Institute of Cornish Studies.
 * Churchtown is the settlement in a parish where the church stands.
 * Hilary Coleman is a Cornish musician, song-writer and promoter of Cornish culture.
 * Fore Street: a name often used for the main street of a town. There are over seventy "Fore Streets" in Cornwall and about twenty-five in Devon.
 * Myrna Combellack, academic researcher and writer of the Institute of Cornish Studies, translator of Beunans Meriasek.
 * Henry Rolle, MP for Callington and then Truro.

July, 2007

 * The Fox family of Falmouth, influential in the development of the town of Falmouth in the 19th Century and the Cornish Industrial Revolution
 * List of Cornish flags --MacRusgail 12:46, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
 * Stranger (magazine) - a bi-monthly creative lifestyle magazine based in Falmouth, Cornwall, England that focuses on the alternative, creative, non-metrocentric side of British culture. --  Jreferee  (Talk) 07:17, 19 July 2007 (UTC)

June 2007

 * St Endellion,a civil parish in North Cornwall.

May 2007

 * Cornish hedge, iconic landscape feature.
 * The Cornish Studies Centre (Cornish: Kresenn Kernow), is in a building called The Cornwall Centre, which it shares with a Tourist Information Centre.

March 2007

 * Joseph Antonio Emidy was a slave in early life, but later became a famous and celebrated violinist and composer.
 * Tregellas a tapestry created by a Bard of the Cornish Gorseth

February, 2007

 * Cornish Riviera Express - a Great Western Railway express train from London to Penzance, first introduced in 1904. Geof Sheppard 13:37, 14 February 2007 (UTC)
 * Benjamin Carvosso, Methodist missionary.
 * William Carvosso, Methodist missionary.

January 2007

 * Philip Payton, Director of the Institute of Cornish Studies.

December, 2006

 * Egloskerry, a village in Cornwall
 * St Piran's Day - Thought this needed its own article and more in depth look at the celebration now rather than the life of the Saint - Please help me by expanding it!! Reedgunner 09:55, 20 December 2006 (UTC)
 * The Institute of Cornish Studies started in 1970/71 as a research centre.

November, 2006

 * Carn Brea -- Neolithic remains between Redruth and Camborne
 * Mary Ann Gilbert (c.1776 – April 26, 1845[1]): Agronomist, wife of Davies Gilbert. She was loosely connected with Cornwall. He and their son, John Davies Gilbert of Trelissick were strongly connected.
 * Alice Hext (1865 - 1939) of Trebah, philanthropist, garden developer and magistrate.