Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Sticker, Cornwall

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OS grid reference
  
SW978502

Country
  
England

Post town
  
ST AUSTELL

Local time
  
Tuesday 1:25 AM

Civil parish
  
St Mewan

UK parliament constituency
  
St Austell and Newquay

Region
  
South West

Sovereign state
  
United Kingdom

Postcode district
  
PL26

Dialling code
  
01726

Ceremonial county
  
Cornwall

Unitary authority
  
Cornwall Council

Sticker, Cornwall

Weather
  
10°C, Wind SE at 16 km/h, 94% Humidity

Sticker (Cornish: Stekyer) is a former mining village in south Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. It lies in the parish of St Mewan. The nearest town is St Austell three miles (4.5 km) to the north-east.

Contents

Map of Sticker, Saint Austell, UK

Great Hewas Mine

In 1785, Sticker was described as "a new place" and it was a settlement for workers in the Great Hewas Mine on its western outskirts. Great Hewas was worked in the 18th century, a 45-inch Boulton & Watt pumping engine was installed in the 1790s. By the 19th century, the mine employed over 250 people, producing not only tin, but copper, lead, and some silver. Two smaller mines to the west, Ventonwyn and Hewas Water, worked alongside Great Hewas. The last of these mines ceased production in 1926, though the chimney of Ventonwyn engine house is still a local landmark.

Village history

John Wesley, founder of Methodism, preached at Sticker in August 1785, when the Methodist theologian Adam Clarke was one of the circuit ministers for the village. A Methodist chapel in Lower Sticker was built by miners in their spare time in 1836. A second chapel was built in Sticker in 1876.

An Anglican church was designed by architect George Edmund Street in 1848/49, but was never built. The current St Mark's Mission Church was designed by James Piers St Aubyn and opened in 1877. St Mark's is a chapel of ease for the parish church at St Mewan.

One of the oldest establishments in the village is the Hewas Inn, formerly the Great Hewas Inn, which was rebuilt in 1825 and is now a Grade II listed building.

The village today

Since the 1960s, large numbers of bungalows and housing estates have been built in and around the village, which is within commuting distance of St Austell and Truro. As a result, Sticker now has around 450 homes, a population of about 1150 and an electorate of around 850. It has a shop and post office and a regular bus service to St Austell, Truro and the surrounding villages. The village hall is maintained and run by Sticker Village Association. St Mark's church and the Methodist chapel have community halls.

David Tremlett, the conceptual artist, was born in Sticker.

References

Sticker, Cornwall Wikipedia