Description
Grampound, a decayed ancient town in Cornwall. It stands on the river Fal, 1 1/2 mile SSE of Grampound Road station on the G.W.R. (Cornwall), and 2 1/2 miles NNE of Tregony, and has a post, money order, and telegraph office. It is supposed to have been the Voliba of Ptolemy; took the name of Grampound, originally Grandpont, signifying " great bridge," from a bridge built at it over the Fal; acquired the right of a market from John of Eltham, Earl of Cornwall, brother of Edward III.; was made a borough after the Earl's death by Edward III.; sent two members to parliament from the time of Edward VI. to 1824, when it was disfranchised for corrupt practices; had for one of its parliamentary representatives, in 1620, John Hampden; consists now chiefly of one street on a declivity, and has a granite cross, a town-hall, and Bible Christian, Congregational, and Wesleyan chapels. Six ancient camps are in its neighbourhood on the Fal; one of them, 1 mile S, on Golden farm; another, half a mile NE, on the road to St Austell; another, 1 mile W, on the road to Truro; another, 1 mile N, close to the Fal; another, a little farther N, called Resugga Castle; and another, 1 mile W of Resugga, on Barrow Down. A chapel of ease, now used as the parish church, was erected in 1869, and is in the Early English style.
Grampound, Cornwall
Transcribed from The Comprehensive Gazetteer of England and Wales, 1894-5
