English Heritage sites near Maker-with-Rame Parish

Royal Citadel, Plymouth

ROYAL CITADEL, PLYMOUTH

3 miles from Maker-with-Rame Parish

A dramatic 17th-century fortress built to defend the coastline from the Dutch, and keep watch on a recently rebellious town. Still in use by the military today.

Dupath Well

DUPATH WELL

11 miles from Maker-with-Rame Parish

This charming well-house of around 1500 stands over an ancient spring, believed to cure whooping cough.

Upper Plym Valley

UPPER PLYM VALLEY

13 miles from Maker-with-Rame Parish

This extraordinary landscape encompasses some 300 Bronze Age and medieval sites, covering 15 square kilometres (6 square miles) of Dartmoor.

Trethevy Quoit

TRETHEVY QUOIT

15 miles from Maker-with-Rame Parish

This well-preserved and impressive Neolithic 'dolmen' burial chamber stands 2.7 metres (8.9 ft) high. There are five standing stones, surmounted by a huge capstone.

Merrivale Prehistoric Settlement

MERRIVALE PREHISTORIC SETTLEMENT

16 miles from Maker-with-Rame Parish

The group of monuments at Merrivale is one of the finest on Dartmoor: side by side here are the remains of a Bronze Age settlement and a complex of ritual sites.

King Doniert's Stone

KING DONIERT'S STONE

16 miles from Maker-with-Rame Parish

Two richly carved pieces of a 9th century 'Celtic' cross, with an inscription commemorating Dumgarth, British King of Dumnonia, who drowned in c. AD 875.


Churches in Maker-with-Rame Parish

Cawsand: St Andrew's Mission Church

St Andrews Place Cawsand Plymouth
01752822264

Welcome to the parish church of Cawsand: St Andrew's Mission Church in the Anglican Diocese of Truro and county of Cornwall England.

Cawsand was in Rame parish (while Kingsand was in Maker) and the moves to establish a church nearer the people eventually led to the building in the village of St. Andrew’s Church in 1878. Since the two parishes were united in 1943, St. Andrew’s has continued to serve as the church in the village.

Maker: St Mary & St Julian

Maker
+44 (0)1752 8222

Welcome to the parish church of Maker: St Mary & St Julian in the Anglican Diocese of Truro and county of Cornwall England.

The parish of Maker with Rame has 3 churches - Maker, Rame and St Andrew's in Cawsand. The latter is known as a Chapel of Ease.

MAKER
The name means a stone wall, a ruin, in Cornish, but another Celtic name is Egloshayle, ‘the church on the estuary', and the tower is still a landmark commanding the Tamar estuary.
In their western advance across England the Anglo-Saxons halted at the Tamar but in AD 705 King Geraint of Cornwall gave the promontory on the Cornish side of the mouth of the Tamar, roughly from Kingsand to Millbrook, to Sherborne Abbey (which held much western land on behalf of the kings of Wessex) to keep control of the Tamar mouth in Saxon hands. This was royal land when the Normans came and remained in Devon until 1844. The Normans installed the Valletorts as tenants of most of the land controlling the mouth of the Tamar, including Maker. From them Maker passed by marriage to the Durnfords and then the Edgcumbes.
THE CHURCH is first mentioned in 1121 when it was given to Plympton Priory. On the Dissolution of the monasteries the right of appointing the vicar was taken by the Crown. There were earlier churches built on this remote site, to be near the holy well of a 5th century Cornish saint. A little chapel was built over the well in the 14th century and dedicated to St. Julian, patron saint of ferrymen. The little chapel is still hidden in the woods, close to the road leading up from Cremyll ferry. We do not know who the Celtic saint was, probably a follower of St. Samson, perhaps St. Sulian. At any rate the church is dedicated to St. Mary and St. Julian; possibly a mix of the ferry saint and the Celt. 
The present church building is a typical 15th century Cornish church. It was a time of much rebuilding in the county, churches designed for preaching the word (the influence of the Lollards) rather than stressing the liturgy. The aisles are the same length as the nave and there is a massive western tower. The Edgcumbe chapel was added in 1874.
To establish churches nearer people's homes, various chapels were established in the 19th century in Kingsand, and finally St. Paul's in 1882. It is now the Community Hall.

 

RAME
The name means ‘the high protruding cliff, the ram's head', from which the hamlet and parish take their name. The little chapel of St. Michael on the summit of Rame Head, licensed for Mass in 1397, is probably on the site of a much earlier, Celtic, hermitage. Earl Ordulf, owner of vast estates in the West Country and uncle of King Ethelred, gave Rame to Tavistock Abbey (which he had founded) in AD 981. Over the centuries the manor passed to the Dawneys, the Durnfords and finally the Edgcumbes.
As early as 1486 Plymouth was paying a watchman at Rame to maintain a beacon there to warn shipping and to bring news to Plymouth of important ships, such as the return of the Newfoundland fishing fleet in 1543.
THE CHURCH is dedicated to St. Germanus, the fighting German bishop who is supposed to have landed in the neighbourhood when he came to England to suppress the Pelagian heresy in about AD 400. It is all built of rough slate. The first stone building was consecrated in 1259. The slender, unbuttressed tower with its broached spire (an unusual feature in a Cornish church), the north wall, north aisle and the chancel are all probably of this date, when the church was cruciform in shape. The south transept went in a 15th century extension with a south aisle and arcade added, and some new windows. The south aisle wagon roof is original, and some pews survive from the 16th century, with Devon- style tracery on the bench-ends. There were restorations in 1848 and 1886, when slates replaced the stone-shingled roof. The church still has no electricity, and is lit by candles.
Cawsand was in Rame parish (while Kingsand was in Maker) and the moves to establish a church nearer the people eventually led to the building in the village of St. Andrew's Church in 1878. Since the two parishes were united in 1943, St. Andrew's has continued to serve as the church in the village.

 

Rame (St Germanus)

Rame Cawsand
01752822264

Welcome to the parish church of Rame: St Germanus in the Anglican Diocese of Truro and county of Cornwall England.

RAME
The name means ‘the high protruding cliff, the ram’s head’, from which the hamlet and parish take their name. The little chapel of St. Michael on the summit of Rame Head, licensed for Mass in 1397, is probably on the site of a much earlier, Celtic, hermitage. Earl Ordulf, owner of vast estates in the West Country and uncle of King Ethelred, gave Rame to Tavistock Abbey (which he had founded) in AD 981. Over the centuries the manor passed to the Dawneys, the Durnfords and finally the Edgcumbes.
As early as 1486 Plymouth was paying a watchman at Rame to maintain a beacon there to warn shipping and to bring news to Plymouth of important ships, such as the return of the Newfoundland fishing fleet in 1543.
THE CHURCH is dedicated to St. Germanus, the fighting German bishop who is supposed to have landed in the neighbourhood when he came to England to suppress the Pelagian heresy in about AD 400. It is all built of rough slate. The first stone building was consecrated in 1259. The slender, unbuttressed tower with its broached spire (an unusual feature in a Cornish church), the north wall, north aisle and the chancel are all probably of this date, when the church was cruciform in shape. The south transept went in a 15th century extension with a south aisle and arcade added, and some new windows. The south aisle wagon roof is original, and some pews survive from the 16th century, with Devon- style tracery on the bench-ends. There were restorations in 1848 and 1886, when slates replaced the stone-shingled roof. The church still has no electricity, and is lit by candles.
Cawsand was in Rame parish (while Kingsand was in Maker) and the moves to establish a church nearer the people eventually led to the building in the village of St. Andrew’s Church in 1878. Since the two parishes were united in 1943, St. Andrew’s has continued to serve as the church in the village.


Pubs in Maker-with-Rame Parish

Cawsand Bay Hotel

The Bound, Cawsand, PL10 1PG

Pub closed autumn 2014, to be turned into flats with a marina.
Cross Keys

The Square, Cawsand, PL10 1PF
(01752) 822309
crosskeysinncawsand.com

This friendly, rambling 17th-century pub in the centre of the village was recently refurbished. Once called the Smugglers Inn, it has a single bar room, with a games area and elevated dining space. Painted walls and a new slate floor add to...
Devonport Inn

The Cleave, Kingsand, PL10 1NF
(01752) 822869
devonportinn.com

Between a narrow lane and the sea, this old pub was formerly divided into two bars but is now partly opened out to one, albeit still as distinct drinking areas. The pub is situated by the beach and boasts fine views over Plymouth Sound - bu...
Edgcumbe Arms

Cremyll, PL10 1HX
(01752) 822294
edgcumbearms.co.uk/

This large and comfortable 18th-century inn is easily reached by the foot ferry from Plymouth. At the start of the Cornish section of the south west coast path, it is also handy for Mount Edgcumbe Country Park. The wood-panelled, low-ceilin...
Halfway House Inn

Fore St, Kingsand, PL10 1NA
(01752) 822279

Popular and friendly stone pub situated, as the name suggests, halfway between the villages of Kingsand and Cawsand. Modernised and repainted throughout due to storm damage in 2014, the pub is furnished with wooden tables, chairs and stools...
Old Ship Inn

Garrett Street, Cawsand, PL10 1PD

The original Old Ship Inn burned down in 2013, having already been closed a number of years. The site has now been acquired by the local community to enable it to rebuild and restore the pub, with aspirations to have it open again by Spring...
Rising Sun

The Green, Kingsand, PL10 1NH
(01752) 822840

The pub was once the Customs and Excise house in this village of narrow streets, close to the coastal footpath. Now a cosy, welcoming village inn, it is at once both popular and quiet. Its single but spacious bar room is carpeted throughout...