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Saltash  Cornwall

Brunel Bridge ,Saltash Town, Cornwall.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Saltash is a picturesque little town well worth a day for a visit. It's many shops provide you with all that you need and it's friendly pubs are a joy to be included in!

 

 

Statue of Brunel Saltash.

 

 


Known as the Gateway to Cornwall, Saltash lies on the River Tamar.

Saltash has good leisure facilities including sailing, a country club, a leisure center and is close to the sea and the major city of Plymouth.
Transport includes a railway station and the main A38 trunk road.

Saltash has a small but pleasant shopping high street, which lies in the heart of the town.
In 1829 easy contact with the outside world was made with the installation of a floating bridge or ferry over the Tamar.

Some Historical Notes.


Saltash owes it's status as a town due to the river crossing of the Tamar which has been in operation at least since Roman times. It has also served as a port and safe harbour well before Plymouth and Devonport developed.
Little is known of the Saltash history before 1066 but then came the Norman conquest and the construction of the castle at Trematon (on the outskirts of Saltash near the village of Forder and can be viewed on occasions in the year).

The castle was strongly linked to the early Christian cathedral at St Germans.
An early church building (Norman) was St Nicholas and St Faith just uphill from the ferry crossing. This however was not the main parish church for Saltash which is St Stephens (Perpendicular mainly 15th century) about a mile from the center of the town.
Sir Francis Drake of the Armada fame had strong connections with Saltash. He married a Saltash girl (Mary Newman - whose cottage is preserved and can be visited) and used the port facilities to unload some Spanish treasure ships of their cargo.
Another significant change was the coming of the railway to Saltash. The Great Western Railway and the construction of the Royal Albert Bridge made available markets for products (mainly agricultural) and brought about changes in the development of the town.
The Saltash ferry continued to operate for road and passenger services but this changed in 1961 with the construction of the Tamar road bridge. This enabled direct road links across to Plymouth and to the main trunk road network across the country.
The Waterside area of Saltash is dominated by these two major bridges. Recent times has seen the provision of a tunnel for the main A38 road to relieve the congestion in the shopping center of the town.

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