OF CORNWALL. 37 
which was on the fummit of a moor, from whence the ground 
declining to the North, makes way for part of the water to run 
the town of Biaetord, and the ground fhelving away on the other 
i a tue fame tune to the South, drains away the bogs of the fame 
^Southward from the fame fountain, and forms the be- 
ronfT m 1 amar ’, whlch ’ at the diftance ° f ten miles, becomes 
con hderabie enough to give name to the fmall parifh and village of 
on to the , WhCre e f‘ n 8 a bnd S e of ft °ne, it continues 
of whf m enters the P arifllofSt - Stephen’s ', at the corner 
of Which panfh it receives a very plentiful ftream, called Werinmon 
River About a mile and half farther down it receives the Atefey 1 
f f 1“ ( Jp C m rUnS | "" der , the WaI !? of L^neefton), and becomes foon 
H^ce r A §£ a o COn , fiderable > wide > ™ d rapid ftream. 
fide till itT ir n “ rl y Sou th. receiving the brooks from each 
cei ’ I h2S i" id . Gralftun bridge-, a mile below which, it re- 
ft" J 1 ' Cowley River, and foon after a more plentiful ftream 
l.om Altarnun, Lewamc and Lezant parilhes, called the Inny, and 
the place where it joins the Tamar, called luny-foot -. The Tamar 
cXd comm ;VH f 1 ’n f ^ in StokelynXnd 
^117 ’ Budge, but b y Leland - Hawtebrig ; thu 
Calftok hen S£ " f r C . a ^ bnd S e ° n 'his River is in the parifh of 
1 a’ % s Leland , by Sir Perfe Edgcumbe '. The tide 
a moft reached this bridge in the time of Henry VIII \ but it was 
Sta^r S. than M ° rICham ’ ab0Ut ^ below, "to 
i - , S b 1 come. Five miles farther down, the Tamar 
receives the I avy on the Eaft, and, having made a Creek into the 
parilhes of Botsfleming and Landulph on the Weft, becomes a fpa- 
sZk' ai tr r ’ I 2 "' Waflll , ng thC f ° 0t ° f the antient borough P of 
River rh hm . n ™ P ‘ * j 01ned b y the L y nber Creek and 
Hamoze t:iil'Vr° 1 )° I ' C lorward iorms the noble harbour of 
Creeks one r if , 7 7’ amerwortl i > ; where making two large 
Stonehoufe Creek V ^ ?' :ber Millbr0 °k. at the- Weft, and 
nearly South) rJ r v ^;l tcr . a c °urfe of about forty miles, 
Edncumbe for its w ft ? aiieS mt ° t ^ ie Sea > having Mount 
" L eftern > and die lands of Stonehoufe and St. Ni- 
h The Tamara of Ptolemy, as is fupnofed 
Camden’s laft edition, page 2 c. ^ ' ’ 
k % Lancefton. 
Sub, "u A Broke renning in the botom in thp 
A «'y” 
UhAfe lf, K k b "" in S" f ftone ’ built . as 
» So in i Si f y f he Abb 7 of Tavyflock. 
n A li-h* u n fc lb ’ for Greyftone. 
nine arches’ 5??®* of ftone > confiding of 
mw * £ , « 3 f f« long, twelve 
n the walls, and twenty-feven high 
from the water, in fummer. 
T he fame River gives name alfo to a wood 
in the Manor of Lawhitton, called Inny-ham 
Wood. 3 
p Vol. II. page 78. 
1 Ibid. 
It is fometimes called Newbridge, fornetimes 
Caulftoke Bridge. See Leland, vol. III. pane 20. 
s Leland, ib. & y " 
Saxon name Ham-ozc j that is, the wet oozy 
habitation, circuit, or inclofure. 
“ Camden, page 26. 
cholas 
