Treverbyn is a civil parish and village in mid-Cornwall, England, United Kingdom, lying north of St Austell.
The parish includes the villages of Treverbyn, Carclaze, Stenalees, Penwithick, Bugle (the largest of these), Rescorla, Kerrow Moor, Carthew, Ruddlemoor, Bowling Green, Resugga Green, Scredda and parts of Trethurgy. There is a railway station at Bugle. At the 2021 census the population of the parish was 9,204.
Treverbyn village is on the eastern outskirts of Stenalees and has the parish church, St Peter's. Another hamlet called Treverbyn lies to the east of Penwithick.
The church of St Peter the Apostle was built in 1848–1850 to designs of G. E. Street. Its Historic England listing states that the building "expresses the simplicity of design characteristic of the early Ecclesiological movement".
The Wheal Martyn Museum is at Ruddlemoor. Part of the area forms the Wheal Martyn SSSI (Site of Special Scientific Interest), noted for its examples of granite. Also within the parish is Carn Grey Rock and Quarry SSSI, again noted for its geology.
In 1894 Treverbyn and the other parts of St Austell civil parish outside the urban district of St Austell (which initially just covered the town itself) became a separate parish called St Austell Rural. St Austell Rural parish was abolished in 1934 and absorbed into St Austell Urban District. St Austell Urban District was abolished in 1968, when it merged with the neighbouring borough of Fowey to become a short-lived borough called St Austell with Fowey. The borough of St Austell with Fowey was abolished six years later in 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972, when the area became part of the new borough of Restormel.
The area of the former borough of St Austell with Fowey became an unparished area as a result of the 1974 reforms. In 1983, Treverbyn was one of five new civil parishes created from parts of the former borough of St Austell with Fowey.
Restormel was abolished in 2009. Cornwall County Council then took on district-level functions, making it a unitary authority, and was renamed Cornwall Council.
Cornish wrestling
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