The church of St Bartholomew appears to have a strange relationship with some of its clergyover the centuries, and is famous for its ghost-stories. In the 14th century Ralph Tremur, the son of the second rector, was generally regarded as a heretic and a witch, while the curate of 1774 and vicar of Luxulyan , Francis Cole, is said to still haunt the road outside Trengoffe, where the wheels of his carriage are reputedly audible at night.
The last vicar to live here, the Reverend Frederick Densham, whose eccentric ways led to a boycott by parishioners, eventually preached to an empty church…
... for over twenty years! It is even said that he preached to cardboard cutouts! He lived the life of a hermit until in 1953 he was found dead in his barricaded rectory aged 83.
Present day inhabitants of Warleggan claim that Rectory, now subdivided into flats is badly haunted – and there are reports that several different ghosts have been seen. Daphne du Maurier based a novel on Densham’s story.
The name Warleggan is instantly familiar to many, mainly because of the TV series based on Winston Graham’s Poldark books. It features as the surname of one of the featured families and is the title of the fourth book. The name seems to be from the Cornish Worlegan meaning a high place.
Warleggan
- Warleggan photos
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