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St Mawes Castle South West England
  St Mawes, Truro, Cornwall TR2 5DA English Heritage
St Mawes Castle

St Mawes Castle was built by Henry VIII in 1540-45 as one of a pair of artillery forts to protect this strategic area from the threat of invasion from Catholic France and Spain. Pendennis Castle was built on the opposite headland and between them their cannon could cover the entire entrance to the Fal estuary.

The castle has a central circular tower with three lower semi-circular bastions that give the castle the appearance of a clover leaf when viewed from above. The main entrance is on the landward side, protected by a rock-cut ditch. Cannon could be mounted on the roof of the main tower and bastions and on floors within the bastions. The defences at St Mawes were designed to counter the threat of an attack from the sea, but overlooked by high ground it was vulnerable to an attack from the land. The more defensible Pendennis Castle became the dominant fortress in the region and as a result St Mawes did not see the major alterations that took place at Pendennis and has retained most of its original Tudor design.

When the castle came under attack in 1646, during the Civil War, the governor of St Mawes surrendered without a shot being fired, realising it was hopeless to try and defend against an attack from the land. However it continued to serve a useful purpose as a gun emplacement protecting the harbour at Falmouth until as recently as the Second World War.

Visitor Information
Please contact the property or visit their official website for the latest opening times and price of admission www.english-heritage.org.uk
Telephone Number

Tel: 01326 270526

customers@english-heritage.org.uk

Parking

There is a car park

Disabled

Parking: Near entrance; there are steps with handrail down to the entrance and slopes for wheelchairs. Help available.

Access to castle: Level access for wheelchair users through shop and across drawbridge into main entrance floor. Battlements and bastions not accessible, and spiral staircase to other floors is narrow.

Gardens: Reached through side door via large, wide steps. All parts, including defences, are accessible on impacted gravel paths and smooth grass slopes. Benches provided. Excellent viewpoints.

Visually impaired visitors: Sounds of seabirds; a few scented plants in gardens.

Hearing impaired visitors: Audio tour with hearing loop included in admission price.

Toilets: One adapted WC.

Shop: Level access via a shallow step.

Toilets

There are toilets and baby changing facilities

Shop

There is a shop

Food & Drink

Drinks and icecream available from the shop

Picnics

Suitable for picnics

Dogs

Dogs allowed on leads in the grounds only

Guided Tours

Guided tours available. Phone for details.

Audio Tour

Audio tour available

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