Carnhell Green (Cornish: Glesin Karnhel) is a hamlet in west Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. It is situated approximately three miles (5 km) southwest of Camborne at grid reference SW 617 374. It is in the civil parish of Gwinear-Gwithian.
Location
1 explorer visited this place
1.3 km
Coswinsawsin is a hamlet in the parish of Gwinear-Gwithian, Cornwall, England.
1.7 km
Reawla is a hamlet in Penwith district in Cornwall. It is in the civil parish of Gwinear-Gwithian.
The name Reawla comes from the Cornish language words riwel, meaning 'royal', and la, meaning 'place'.
1.9 km
Barripper is a village in west Cornwall, England, United Kingdom, approximately one mile south-west of Camborne . The village has a public house named the St Michael's Mount Inn, so called as an outbuilding on that site was a resting place for druids and saints. Having landed at Godrevy, they followed a riverside trail from there through Roseworthy and Penponds to Barripper, where they were housed for the night, before continuing their pilgrimage to St Michaels Mount.
2.1 km
St Gwinear's Church, Gwinear is a Grade I listed church in the Church of England in Gwinear, Cornwall.
2.2 km
Penponds Viaduct is a railway viaduct which carries the Cornish Main Line west of Camborne in Cornwall, England. It crosses over a small valley containing the southern arm of the Red River, and a minor road known as Viaduct Lane.
The Hayle Railway opened the railway through this site in 1837 to link Hayle and Redruth. To overcome a significant change in elevation an inclined plane was built to the east of the present viaduct. When the West Cornwall Railway took over the route, it built a timber trestle viaduct as part of a more gently graded route which by-passed the inclined plane.
The present-day viaduct was built by the Great Western Railway in 1888 as part of a programme to replace the timber viaducts on the line and prepare the single-track route for double track. It is built of brick arches on stone piers.