Truro (England)

Truro (Cornish: Truru) is a small cathedral city (population 22,000) in the Duchy of Cornwall, of which it is the administrative capital.

Truro

Understand

Queen Victoria designated Truro a city in 1876, but it is the size of a small town.

Get in

By train

Trains go to 🌍 Truro station from London Paddington → Plymouth → Truro.

By car

Truro is at the junction of the A39 and A390 arterial roads, some 14 miles north of Falmouth.

By bus

Coaches from various parts of the UK call at Truro; you may have to change at Plymouth, via a seriously grotty and unwelcoming bus station. Buses from Truro go to numerous Cornish towns and villages but can be infrequent. Most services end at the bus station at Lemon Quay. However, for some unfathomable reason, the information office here is often closed.

Get around

Most attractions are within walking distance. However, there are buses in Lemon Quay. Check timetables, as service can be patchy.

See

  • 🌍 Truro Cathedral (The Cathedral of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Truro), 14 St Mary's St, TR1 2AF, +44 1872 276782. M-Sa 7:30AM-5PM, Su noon-4PM, Bank Holiday 9:30AM-5PM. Completed in 1910. There is a disabled ramp at the entrance and a disabled restroom near the restaurant. Free admission, but £5 donations recommended for upkeep.
  • 🌍 Royal Cornwall Museum, River Street, TR1 2SJ, +44 1872 272205, e-mail: . Tu-Sa 10AM-4:45PM, Su 10AM-4PM, closed Mondays except Bank Holiday Mondays & school holidays: 10AM-4:45PM. Includes the Courtney Library and exhibitions devoted to the history, culture and geography of Cornwall. Wheelchair accessible toilets and nappy changing facilities available Adult: £5.50 for a day pass, child (under 16): free.
  • 🌍 Victoria Gardens, St. George's Road, TR1 1EA (Nearest Car park - Edwards Street.), +44 1872 274766. Dawn until dusk. Created to commemorate Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee, Victoria Gardens is filled with exotic trees, shrubs & flowers.
  • 🌍 Trelissick Garden, Feock, TR3 6QL (south of Truro), +44 1872 862090, e-mail: . 10:30AM-5:30PM. Garden under the care of The National Trust. £10.90, children £5.45, parking £4.

Do

Buy

There is a good number of shops, including a rather large Marks and Spencer's.

There are two covered markets. One leads off the Piazza with several small traditional stalls. The other leads off Lemon St (near the cinema): the little shops here would appeal more to the eco/organic minded, with a pleasant coffee shop and art gallery upstairs, where you can usually find a seat.

On Saturday mornings, a great farmers' market on the piazza has good local produce, including delicious Cornish ducks, cheeses, bread, rose veal and plants to take home. Wednesday's market, in the same place, is smaller.

The Lander Gallery is recommended for those wishing to purchase Cornish artwork, both old and new.

Eat

  • 🌍 Charlotte's Teahouse, 1 Boscawen Street, TR1 2QU (On the top floor of the Coinage Hall), +44 1872 263706. M–Sa 10AM–5PM. This old fashioned tea room offers cream teas, sandwiches, cakes, savouries. The tea is grown in Cornwall.
  • Cornish pasty: Bakeries include W.C. Rowe's on Victoria Square and Lemon Quay, Oggy Oggy on River Street, and Warrens on New Bridge Street and the cathedral square. All the pasty shops do a variety of different pasties, the traditional beef and vegetarian pasties and for the more adventurous there are the more unusual fillings to try. Particularly recommended to try are W.C. Rowes.
  • Saffron buns: Delicious sweet fruit buns flavoured with saffron, from the bakers above. Also "tea treats" (bigger than a bun) and saffron cake, like a fruit loaf, to be sliced, and sometimes toasted and buttered.
  • 🌍 Tabbs Restaurant, 85 Kenwyn St,, +44 1872 262110.

Drink

  • 🌍 Old Ale House, 7 Quay Street, TR1 2HD (just on the corner by the bus station), +44 1872 271122. The old ale house, is a great place to go for traditional ales and a quick game of pool.
  • 🌍 The City Inn, Pydar St, TR1 3SP, +44 1872 272623. Traditional pub under the viaduct on Pydar Street.
  • The Rising Sun, Mitchell Hill, TR1 1ED, +44 1872 240003. A refurbished pub on Mitchell Hill.
  • 🌍 William IV, Kenwyn St, TR1 3DJ, +44 1872 273334. A nice gastropub in the centre of Truro, which serves good food and fine ale, considered among the best pubs in town.
  • 🌍 The Wig and Pen, 1 Frances St, TR1 3DP, +44 1872 273028. Spacious pub situated near Victoria Square, often open later at the weekends.
  • 🌍 Try Dowr, Lemon Quay, TR1 2LW, +44 1872 265840. No real deviation from the Wetherspoon formula; cheap and cheerful, with no shortage of cheer, open early and late.
  • 🌍 Bunters Bar, 58 Little Castle St, TR1 3DL, +44 1872 241220. A sports bar that shows the football and can get pretty lively at weekends, worth a visit.

Sleep

Go next

  • The A390 trunk road leads into St Austell
  • First Devon & Cornwall number 14 & 18 buses run up to every fifteen minutes (this is very good for anywhere in Cornwall, even central Truro); destinations include Truro Railway Station, Camborne, and Redruth, and can be caught at the bus station on Lemon Quay or Victoria Square.
  • Truro Railway Station is a short but uphill walk from the centre. InterCity trains are frequently run to Penzance and Plymouth, and less frequently to London and the Midlands. There is a half-hourly service to Falmouth all day and hourly into the evening; a single journey takes half an hour and the return fare is £4 per adult. It is quite busy in the peaks, with traffic mostly living in Falmouth and commuting to Truro. Visitors will find Falmouth Town station the most convenient of the three in Falmouth (Penmere, Falmouth Town and Falmouth Docks); Penmere is a commuter stop at the back of the town on a steep hill and Falmouth Docks is beyond the town centre, though convenient for Pendennis Castle.
Routes through Truro

merges with  N  S  Carnon Downs Falmouth
St Austell Grampound  N  W  merges with and


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