172 MYLOR CHURCH; ITS CROSSES, FRESCOES, (5jC. 



To tlie College of Glasney,'" at Penryn, in the parisli of Gluvias', 

 Mylor became a dependency, it appears, with certain privileges ; 

 and the Church was served by clergy sent from that College; but 

 King Henry VIII suppressed both Glasney and also the Chantry 

 in Mylor Church in connection Avith the Trefusis Aisle (south of 

 the Chancel). At the Manor of Eestronguet, in this parish, was a 

 Eeligious House {with its own Chapel probably). Its Cemetery, 

 about ^ acre, (now part of a grass field) is still pointed out, being 

 not liable to tithe. Eemains of the building may possibly exist 

 in some of the walls of the farm, now occupied by Mr. Eowe. 



The Church-town contains, besides the Vicarage and Cottages, 

 a Eoyal Dockyard. Within the parish of Mylor, are also the 

 populous villages of Flushing, Mylor Bridge, and Eestronguet.. 

 At the first named is a modern Chapel of Ease — St. Peter's. A 

 Private Chapel is attached to Carclew House, the mansion of 

 Colonel Tremayne. Trefusis has long been possessed by the 

 Clinton family, and its Courts Baron continue to be held as in 

 Feudal times. 



* Mr. Murray conjectures that the Late Perpendicular work, consisting 

 of Caeu-stone Arcade, windows, and entrance -doorway of the South Aisle 

 and Porch, may have been used originally at Glasney Collegiate Church, and 

 been removed to Mylor on the suppression of the College. The handsome 

 leaf moulding, the pierced tracery, and the cusped panelling of the entrance, 

 are so very superior to the stone-work around, and to the mode of the setting, 

 that ]\Ir. Murray is at a loss how to account otherwise for the manifest 

 incongruity. 



