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Church History information for Hayle, St Elwyn and places above it in the hierarchy

Hayle, St Elwyn

  • Anglican. The parish was constituted in 1870, being carved out of the western part of the parish of Phillack. This tiny parish of only 198 acres was centred around the the needs of the Harvey iron foundry at the western end of Hayle, whilst the medieval Parish of Phillack mainly served the needs of the eastern end of the town where the Cornish Copper Company was based. For the first eighteen years of its existence the new parish did not have a church, services were conducted in the neighbouring parish of Phillack in the Mission Church of St John. In 1884 a site was found for the parish church and designed by the architect John D. Stedding and built by R. Stanslake of Plymouth, the foundation stone was laid on 5th May 1886 and the church consecrated on 5th August 1888 and dedicated to the fifth century Irish missionary St Elwyn, The Martyr.
    The parish church is located in OS Grid Square SW5537 and was dedicated to St Elwyn. There is no burial ground in this parish and so there are no Parish burial records; the parish church of Phillack served this purpose. However, the parish of Hayle has maintained its own baptism amd marriage records since 1888; these are now in the Cornwall Record Office.
  • Roman Catholic. In 1902, one of the Canons Regular from Bodmin was sent as chaplain to The Daughters of the Cross Convent, Hayle. He began to serve the tiny local Catholic population with the Sister's Chapel in The Downs functioning as a "Parish" Church. On 29th September, 1926, Bishop Kelly blessed the foundation stone of the present St. Michael's Hospital Chapel and it officially became the (Roman Catholic) Parish Church, although it was not then licensed for weddings.
    The present Church building was erected about one hundred years ago as a Baptist Chapel. After being derelict for some time, it was registered on the 11th October 1958 as a Place of Worship for Roman Catholics. A licence for weddings was also obtained. On 12th October 1958, St. Joseph's was formally blessed and opened as the Catholic Parish Church of Hayle.
  • Non-Conformist.
    • The Wesleyan Methodists had a chapel at Foundry Square built in 1845; they had another at Copperhouses. The chapel in Foundry Square is now converted for public use as a commercial market area. This chapel has unusual 19th century window tracery. A new Methodist Chapel is now located in Chapel Terrace.
    • The Free Methodists had chapels at Hayle and also at Ventonleage.
    • The Bible Christians had a chapel at High Lanes.
    • The Baptist chapel was in Commercial Road. (This eventually became the Roman Catholic Church - see above).

Cornwall

UK and Ireland