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THE TREVITHICK SOCIETY
FOR THE PRESERVATION AND STUDY OF CORNWALL'S INDUSTRIAL HERITAGE
Established 1935 |
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The Trevithick Society is one of the oldest industrial preservation societies in the UK, having been founded in 1935 to save the Levant beam winding engine from being scrapped. The Society is based in Cornwall but has interests in Cornish industry wherever it may be. Membership is open to all who are interested in the region's great industrial past, whether or not they live in Cornwall. Members receive an annual Journal, containing original research material, and a quarterly newsletter. Members are also allowed free admission to several industrial sites in Cornwall.
The Trevithick Society, a registered educational charity (no. 246586), is the organisation for anyone who is interested in the industrial archaeology and all aspects of Cornwall's past. The Society takes its name from one of Britain's foremost inventors and pioneers of the Industrial Revolution, Richard Trevithick, a Cornishman whose name is inseparable from the development of steam power. Cornwall's mining industry was once the greatest in the world. Its needs spawned an inventive engineering industry that placed Cornwall in the forefront of the Industrial Revolution.
Copyright 2003 & 2006 Last updated 13 June 2008 |
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