
Wadebridge is a bustling
former market town situated alongside the river Camel in North Cornwall. The
town is the gateway to the Camel Trail – Cornwall’s largest free visitor
attraction – and opens up not only the Camel estuary but also Betjeman country
and the clean beaches of Rock, Polzeath and Daymer Bay, Port Isaac (Portwenn in
the Doc Martin television series) and Padstow, now renowned for its quality restaurants. There are many independent shops in Wadebridge offering
long-forgotten personal service; a number of good, reasonably priced eating
houses and pubs, an indoor leisure centre, swimming pool and a two screen
cinema offering latest releases. In short, a place to visit and spend some
time.
The initial settlement of
Wade, the name of Wadebridge before the bridge was built, owed its existence to
a ford across the River Camel. Two chapels, one each side of the ford, would see
travellers seeking a blessing asking for a safe crossing and on reaching the
other side, giving thanks to God for their safe arrival. The Reverend Thomas
Lovibond, the vicar of Egloshayle, on the south side of the river, distressed
at the large number of deaths resulting from the dangerous crossing, both of
people and livestock, planned the building of a bridge which was completed in
1468 – hence Wade became Wadebridge and it revolutionised life in the town. Given that the roads were so poor the
river Camel obviously played an important part in the town’s early prosperity
as all manner of cargoes would have travelled by boat, unloading and loading
from the quays just below the bridge.
Another important event in
the town’s history was the opening of the Bodmin and Wadebridge Railway line in
1834. This was one of the first built in the world and the second in the country, carrying the first steam
trains in Cornwall, and was the first in West Britain to carry passengers.
Unfortunately in January 1967 the North Cornwall line fell under the Beeching
axe. However, the old railway station, now called the Betjeman Centre, has become a centre for the more senior
of the local inhabitants. The route of the old
railway line is now known as the Camel Trail, a track extending over 17 miles through beautiful countryside. The Trail runs from Wadebridge to Padstow and from
Wadebridge to Bodmin and is hugely popular with cyclists, walkers and bird
watchers.
In summary, Wadebridge forms
a thriving hub for North Cornwall, serving the needs of local residents, the
wider outlying agricultural area, and for the tourists who regularly come to
this beautiful area. |