Knave-Go-By

Knave go by
Village
Stable building on grassy field
Stables at Knave go by
Etymology: Incident involving the rev. John Wesley.
Coordinates: Coordinates: 50°12′12″N 5°17′28″W / 50.20333°N 5.29111°W / 50.20333; -5.29111
Country United Kingdom
county Cornwall
Civil Parish Camborne
Named 1743
Population
  Total 120

Knave-Go-By (also known as Knave-go-bye or Knave Go By)[1][2] is a village located on the outskirts of Camborne in the English county of Cornwall in the South West region of the United Kingdom.[3] It is in the TR14 postcode area.[4]h

Knave go by is sometimes erroneously depicted as being located in Dartmoor in the neighboring county of Devon, despite no place of that name ever having existed there.[5] The village is featured as the backdrop to the 1951 book Knave-go-by: the adventures of Jacky Nameless. [6][7] It also occasionally features in books such as Collection of Weird: Place Names on account of its unusual name.[8]

Location

The village is within the Camborne and Redruth UK Parliament Constituency.[9] The current MP of this constituency is George Eustice of the Conservative Party.[10] It is represented at Cornwall Council as part of the Camborne Treslothan Unitary Authority Electoral Division. As of 2017, the current Cornwall Councillor for Camborne Treslothan is David Atherfold from the Conservative Party[11] For European parliamentary purposes, it is within the South West England constituency.[12] Although the Mebyon Kernow party has campaigned for Cornwall to have its own constituency.[13]

Name

The origin of its name has been subject to speculation. It refers to an incident involving the founder of the Methodist church the Reverend John Wesley.[14][15] Wesley came to the village several times in August 1743, it is supposed that he took the route to avoid the warden of the neighboring parish. He preached to the local population from a split Elm tree in the village centre. [16] After crowds gathered there to watch John Wesley, an incident occurred by which the village was named, however, the exact details of what happened are subject to speculation.

According to locals one supposed version is that during one of Wesley’s missionary visits, a woman leaned from her cottage window and shouted, “Let the knave go by”, a comment for Wesley to move on.[17] This is based on the supposition that the local Anglicans referred to Wesley as a Knave on account of his faith.[18] Another possible version is that Wesley was heckled by a drunk "knave" during a sermon, and when the crowd tried to detain the troublemaker, Wesley is reputed to have said, “Let the knave go by.” The area has been known as Knave-go-bye ever since, although the spelling has varied.[19][20] John Wesley's Elm Tree named Wesley’s Tree stood in the village until it died and blew over on Camborne Festival Day, circa mid 1980’s ( Exact date is published in The Camborne Packet Newspaper, with a front page photograph - To be supplied by a resident very soon) No new tree has been planted at the site to replace it.[21] BBC Radio Cornwall featured an item on the hamlet in 2014, and added a Facebook video of a resident who in part explains the historic nature of this British Heritage location. It was since learned that the tree was not an Oak, as spoken of in the video, but an Elm, which suffered Dutch Elm Disease and fell as described above. Pictures TBA.

THERE IS A CURRENT DISPUTE ABOUT PLANNING FOR TWO 3 BEDROOM PROPERTIES PROPOSED TO BE BUILT IN THE HEART OF THE VILLAGE BESIDE THE HISTORIC WATER CHUTE.

Residents have formed a group to oppose this planning request, and anyone can either oppose or support it by 12th September 2018. Further details and contacts will be added shortly.

References

  • Location data: Knave-Go-By: Grid Ref: SW 6554 3899 • X/Y co-ords: 165548, 38995 • Lat/Long: 50.2044,-5.2869427. Latitude: 50.2035 / 50°12'12"N. Longitude: -5.2912 / 5°17'28"W. Postcode: TR14 9AE. OS Eastings: 165240. OS Northings: 38908. OS Grid: SW652389.[22]
  1. Bond, Chris (2007-01-01). An Index to the Historical Place Names of Cornwall: Vol 1 - A to K. The Cornovia Press. p. 485. ISBN 9780952206422.
  2. Padel, Oliver James (1988). Popular Dictionary of Cornish Place-Names. Alison Hodge. ISBN 9780906720158.
  3. "Knave-Go-By, Cornwall - area information, map, walks and more". OS GetOutside. Retrieved 8 October 2017.
  4. "Interesting Information for Knave Go By, Beacon, Camborne, TR14 9AE Postcode". StreetCheck. Retrieved 8 October 2017.
  5. Miller, Bertha E. Mahony (1952). The Horn Book Magazine. Horn Book, Incorporated.
  6. Smith, C. Fox; Dohm, Janice; Ribbons, Ian. (1951). Knave-go-by: the adventures of Jacky Nameless. London: Oxford University Press.
  7. Smith, C. Fox (1951). Knave-go-by : the adventures of Jacky Nameless. Internet Archive. London : Oxford University Press.
  8. Quinn, Sunny (2011). Collection of Weird: Place Names. p. 52. ISBN 9781257811397.
  9. "camborne-treslothan electoral district" (PDF). Cornwall.gov.uk. Retrieved 8 October 2017.
  10. "George Eustice MP". UK Parliament. Retrieved 2017-10-09.
  11. "Councillor details - David Atherfold". 2017-10-09. Retrieved 2017-10-09.
  12. "BBC NEWS - European Election 2009 - UK Results - South West". news.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 2017-10-09.
  13. Cornwall, Mebyon Kernow - The Party for. "Kernow and the European Union". www.mebyonkernow.org. Retrieved 2017-10-09.
  14. Sidgwick, Mrs Alfred (1923). None-go-by. W. Collins.
  15. "Cecily Sidgwick biography - Chapter 5 - Vellensagia-None-Go-By". stivesartinfo. Retrieved 2017-10-09.
  16. "Grapevine Community Church..a potted history - Illogan, Redruth; Broadlane Primitive Methodist Church - Cornwall - Chapels - Primitive Methodists". www.myprimitivemethodists.org.uk. Community Sites (www.communitysites.co.uk). Retrieved 2017-10-09.
  17. "Methodist Writers/Methodist Readers". The Afterlife of Books. Retrieved 2017-10-09.
  18. Gill, Frederick Cyril (1962). In the Steps of John Wesley. Lutterworth Press. p. 100.
  19. "cybervicar.com". www.cybervicar.com. Retrieved 2017-10-09.
  20. "BBC - Radio Cornwall - Home". www.bbc.co.uk/radiocornwall. Retrieved 2017-10-09.
  21. "New song – Jan Penberthy". All Creation Sings. 2010-03-10. Retrieved 2017-10-09.
  22. Stuff, Good. "Knave-Go-By Hamlet, Camborne, Cornwall, England SW652389 - GeoBrit". geobrit.uk. Retrieved 2017-10-09.
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