Calenick


Calenick is a hamlet in the civil parish of Kea, about a mile south of Truro in Cornwall, England, UK. It is at the head of Calenick Creek, which opens into the River Truro near Sunny Corner.
Calenick is also the name of a grade II* listed house and estate .
Circa 1702 The Newham Works opened. Smelting houses were sited close to coinage towns, with access to estuaries or the coast allowing for efficient import of coal and bricks. They required a source of water-power to run the stamps used to crush the slag for re-smelting.
Small ‘Calenick Crucibles‘ were manufactured in order to ‘assay’ or test the quantity of metal within the crushed ore. The crucibles resembled small china plant pots and were sold in nests like Russian dolls, exported as far as Australia and to other burgeoning tin mining economies. For this reason, Calenick House was once an important part of Cornwall's Tin Mining industry for both smelting and the manufacture of . Further historical information can be found on as well as the history pages of .