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194:, the newly returned member for Helston, had "desired not to give any election entertainments, but to commute that expense for a subscription of 200 guineas to remove the Coinage Hall and rebuild it in a more convenient part of the town". The new coinage hall, situated at 53 Coinagehall Street was built for this purpose in the early 19th century and still survives, later having been used as a Duchy Office and surgeon's house. It was
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The St Mary's chapel was still performing its original functions of ministering to the burgesses and keeping
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Helston had been a coinage town since at least 1305 and continued those duties until relieved by the
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View looking up
Coinagehall Street, Helston, where the coinage hall would have stood prior to 1796.
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Essays in
Cornish History. By Ch. Henderson. Ed. by A.L. Rowse and M.I. Henderson
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in 1950. The site of the original coinage hall, once demolished, was used as a
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and sold to the town; thus sharing the same fate as the St Mary's chapel of
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for the soul of its founder in 1556, however by 1557 it had been seized by
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160:(the parish in which the borough was situate). In a 1356 petition to
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Charter of liberties to the tinners of
Cornwall, 1304
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324:The History of Helston, by H. Spencer Toy
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144:sometime before 1283 and dedicated to
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372:"COINAGEHALL, 53, COINAGEHALL STREET"
277:"Historical Helston - Hellys Istorek"
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175:under the
79:Demolished
173:Edward VI
117:out of a
69:Built for
327:. O.u.p.
210:See also
39:Location
158:Wendron
146:St Mary
136:History
105:Helston
91:Chantry
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307:. n.d.
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150:Edmund
109:was a
305:(PDF)
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