Princetown

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Princetown
240px
The Jubilee Memorial and Railway Inn, Princetown
Princetown is located in Devon
Princetown
Princetown
 Princetown shown within Devon
OS grid reference SX588736
   – London  181 miles (291 km) 
Civil parish Dartmoor Forest
District West Devon
Shire county Devon
Region South West
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town YELVERTON
Postcode district PL20
Dialling code 01822
Police Devon and Cornwall
Fire Devon and Somerset
Ambulance South Western
EU Parliament South West England
UK Parliament Torridge and West Devon
List of places
UK
England
Devon

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Princetown is a village[lower-alpha 1] situated in the Dartmoor national park in the English county of Devon. It is the principal settlement of the civil parish of Dartmoor Forest.

The village has its origins in 1785, when Sir Thomas Tyrwhitt, Secretary to the Prince of Wales, leased a large area of moorland from the Duchy of Cornwall estate, hoping to convert it into good farmland. He encouraged people to live in the area and suggested that a prison be built there. He called the settlement Princetown after the Prince of Wales.

Princetown is the site of Dartmoor Prison. At around 435 metres (1,430 feet) above sea level,[1] it is the highest settlement on the moor, and one of the highest in the United Kingdom. It is also the largest settlement located on the high moor. The Princetown Railway, closed in 1956, was also the highest railway line in England, its Princetown terminus being 435 metres (1,427 ft) above sea level.

History

In 1780, a farm was reclaimed on the site of an ancient tenement near the Two Bridges, and in 1785, Sir Thomas Tyrwhitt set about improving the moor at a place which he named Tor Royal (present day Tor Royal farm), about 1 km (0.62 mi) south-east of Princetown.[1] He made an estate and built a house in 1798. Later the road from Tavistock to Princetown was built, as well as the other roads that now cross the Moor.

File:1900 Princetown, Prison Gate.jpg
Photograph of prisoners on a work party at Dartmoor Prison about 1900

He also proposed that a prison be built on Dartmoor to house the thousands of captives of the Napoleonic Wars and the later War of 1812, who had become too numerous to lodge in the prisons and prison-ships at Plymouth. The site was given by the Prince of Wales, who held the lands of the Duchy of Cornwall to which all the Moor belonged. This is why the settlement is named Princetown. Dartmoor Prison was built in 1806 at a cost of £130,000 and at one time had a capacity between 7,000 and 9,000 prisoners.

A small town grew up near the prison. Two large inns were built during the war. Many of the prisoners had prize-money to come from their own country; many others made their own in their hammocks at night, even forging Bank of England and local bank notes, which they passed off in the great daily market held in the prison. With the closing of the prison in 1816, the town almost collapsed, but the completion of the Dartmoor Railway in 1823 brought back many people to the granite quarries. The prison remained derelict until 1851, when it was reopened for prisoners serving long sentences. It has since been considerably extended.[2]

Geography

File:Church St Michael Princetown.jpg
Church of St Michael, Princetown

The village is located on the B3212 road between Yelverton and Two Bridges, and is surrounded by moorland. Several footpaths across the moor pass through the village, including one leading west to Sampford Spiney and one leading south to Nun's Cross and Erme Head.

Tor Royal Lane is a dead end road which leads down from the village to the site of the disused Whiteworks tin mine, about 3 km or 2 miles to the south-east, which overlooks Fox Tor Mires, the presumed site of the Grimpen Mire to be found in Arthur Conan Doyle's tale The Hound of the Baskervilles. Conan Doyle stayed at the former Duchy Hotel whilst writing and researching the story with his friend, Bertram Fletcher Robinson. The hotel has long since closed and the building now houses the National Park Visitor Centre which is an all-weather Centre and activity hub. With interactive displays, films, inspiring exhibitions and a fun children’s discovery area. Visit this free centre to find out more about the Dartmoor Story, and Dartmoor’s Sherlock Holmes connection.

Other points of interest in the village include the prison museum and the churchyard which includes the graves of French and American prisoners of war who were housed at the prison. The Church of St Michael has the distinction of being the only one in England constructed by POWs and is dedicated, as are many churches in high locations, to St. Michael. It was taken out of use due to structural problems and damp and is now maintained by the Churches Conservation Trust, although the building has been stabilised and made safe. Services are held nowadays in the Methodist chapel at the other end of the village.

The village is overlooked from the north-west by North Hessary Tor upon which is a tall transmitting mast that provides a useful guide point for walkers from miles around.[3]

Demography

The village is mainly made up of white British people living in a mix of social and private housing. There are currently 74 children enrolled at the Primary school and a further 17 at the pre-school, which is contained within the Community Centre in its own purpose-built wing. Most people living in Princetown commute to Plymouth and Tavistock for work but with the expansion of the brewery more jobs have been created locally. The brewery is set to double in size in 2014, creating further local jobs. The population is projected to keep increasing in the future [4] mainly due to the improved amenities within the village itself and the relatively high percentage of young people living there.[5] Princetown is undergoing significant regeneration and expansion, with new private housing being built at several sites in the village and a football pitch being built behind the Community Centre. The High Moorland Visitor Centre has been renamed as the 'National Park Visitor Centre' with the area outside the centre being altered to include artwork and new seating areas, local consultation is currently ongoing to decide the nature of the artwork and layout of the new seating area.

Economy

In terms of tourism, Princetown is popular destination and hub for people traversing the moors, and the sight of large groups of hikers and walkers is especially common during the summer months. A bunkhouse, bed and breakfast and camping facilities are available in the village and there are also a handful of local shops.

Princetown has a brewery producing the appropriately named Jail Ale, Legend and Dartmoor IPA. This used to be housed in the Prince of Wales pub, but now occupies a modern purpose-built building on the edge of the village, close to the former railway. The other pub is the Plume of Feathers (the Railway inn – "The Devils Elbow" – has closed as a pub recently) and there are also a couple of cafes, one of which is in what used to be the police station.

In recent years Princetown has seen the opening of both the Princetown Centre for Creativity in Duchy Square (which closed in 2011), on the site of the former village supermarket, and a new village Community Centre, which also houses a GP's office, library and pre-school.

Transport

A summer bus service, the Transmoor link (no. 82 bus) from Plymouth to Exeter and vice versa, passes through the village and there is a daytime service linking Princetown to Yelverton and Tavistock.[6] The Transmoor link operates in the winter, but only on Sundays.

Notes

  1. Despite its name, Princetown is not classed as a town today – it is not included in the County Council's list of the 29 towns in Devon: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  4. http://www.dartmoor-npa.gov.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0015/43440/pl_dnp-_population-projection-2010.pdf
  5. http://www.devon.gov.uk/dnpbaselineprofile.pdf
  6. http://www.cartogold.co.uk/Devon_Transport/timetables/98_Tavistock-Princetown.pdf

External links