Welcome to Visit Hale Mills Places
The Walkfo guide to things to do & explore in Hale Mills


Visit Hale Mills PlacesVisit Hale Mills places using Walkfo for free guided tours of the best Hale Mills places to visit. A unique way to experience Hale Mills’s places, Walkfo allows you to explore Hale Mills as you would a museum or art gallery with audio guides.

Visiting Hale Mills Walkfo Preview
Hale Mills is a hamlet in the parish of Chacewater, Cornwall, England. It is a small village in the south coast of the county. When you visit Hale Mills, Walkfo brings Hale Mills places to life as you travel by foot, bike, bus or car with a mobile phone & headphones.

  

Hale Mills Places Overview: History, Culture & Facts about Hale Mills


Visit Hale Mills – Walkfo’s stats for the places to visit

With 53 audio plaques & Hale Mills places for you to explore in the Hale Mills area, Walkfo is the world’s largest heritage & history digital plaque provider. The AI continually learns & refines facts about the best Hale Mills places to visit from travel & tourism authorities (like Wikipedia), converting history into an interactive audio experience.

Why visit Hale Mills with Walkfo Travel Guide App?


Visit Hale Mills PlacesYou can visit Hale Mills places with Walkfo Hale Mills to hear history at Hale Mills’s places whilst walking around using the free digital tour app. Walkfo Hale Mills has 53 places to visit in our interactive Hale Mills map, with amazing history, culture & travel facts you can explore the same way you would at a museum or art gallery with information audio headset. With Walkfo, you can travel by foot, bike or bus throughout Hale Mills, being in the moment, without digital distraction or limits to a specific walking route. Our historic audio walks, National Trust interactive audio experiences, digital tour guides for English Heritage locations are available at Hale Mills places, with a AI tour guide to help you get the best from a visit to Hale Mills & the surrounding areas.

“Curated content for millions of locations across the UK, with 53 audio facts unique to Hale Mills places in an interactive Hale Mills map you can explore.”

Walkfo: Visit Hale Mills Places Map
53 tourist, history, culture & geography spots


 

  Hale Mills historic spots

  Hale Mills tourist destinations

  Hale Mills plaques

  Hale Mills geographic features

Walkfo Hale Mills tourism map key: places to see & visit like National Trust sites, Blue Plaques, English Heritage locations & top tourist destinations in Hale Mills

  

Best Hale Mills places to visit


Hale Mills has places to explore by foot, bike or bus. Below are a selection of the varied Hale Mills’s destinations you can visit with additional content available at the Walkfo Hale Mills’s information audio spots:

Hale Mills photo Carn Marth
Carn Marth (Cornish: Karn Margh) is the name of a hill in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom, near Redruth. It is 235 m (771 ft) high and is well known for the granite quarried from it in the past.
Hale Mills photo Poldice mine
Poldice mine is a former metalliferous mine located in southwest Cornwall. It is situated near the hamlet of Todpool, between the villages of Twelveheads and St Day, three miles east of Redruth.
Hale Mills photo Wheal Gorland
Wheal Gorland was one of the most important Cornish mines of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. It is the type locality for the minerals chenevixite, clinoclase, cornwallite, kernowite and liroconite.
Hale Mills photo Wheal Jane
Wheal Jane is a disused tin mine near Baldhu and Chacewater in West Cornwall. The area itself consisted of a large number of mines.
Hale Mills photo Perranwell railway station
Perranwell is on the Maritime Line between Truro and Falmouth Docks in south-west England. It is 304 miles 78 chains (490.8 km) measured from London Paddington.
Hale Mills photo Consolidated Mines
Consolidated Mines, also known as Great Consolidated mine, was a metalliferous mine. Mainly active during the first half of the 19th century, its mining sett was about 600 yards north–south; and 2,700 yards east–west, to the east of Carharrack.
Hale Mills photo Wheal Maid
Wheal Maid (also Wheal Maiden) is a former mine in the Camborne-Redruth-St Day Mining District, 1.5km east of St Day. Between 1800 and 1840, profits are said to have been up to £200,000. In 1852, the mine was almalgamated with Poldice Mine and Carharrack Mine and worked as St Day United. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s the mine site was turned into large lagoons and used as a tip for two other nearby mines: Mount Wellington and Wheal Jane.
Hale Mills photo Mount Wellington Tin Mine
Mount Wellington Tin mine opened in 1976 and was the first new mine in the region in many years. With the fall of tin prices and the withdrawal of pumping subsidies, the mine finally closed in 1991. An attempt to revive the mine occurred when an individual tried to transform it into a visitor attraction, but his endeavour failed.
Hale Mills photo Killifreth Mine
Killifreth Mine was a mine near Chacewater in Cornwall, producing copper, tin and arsenic. The engine house over Hawke’s Shaft is a Grade II listed building; it has the tallest surviving chimney in Cornwall.
Hale Mills photo Wheal Busy
Wheal Busy was a metalliferous mine halfway between Redruth and Truro in the Gwennap mining area of Cornwall. During the 18th century the mine produced enormous amounts of copper ore and was very wealthy, but from the later 19th century onwards was not profitable. Today the site of the mine is part of the Cornwall and West Devon Mining Landscape World Heritage Site.

Visit Hale Mills plaques


Hale Mills Plaques 0
plaques
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Hale Mills has 0 physical plaques in tourist plaque schemes for you to explore via Walkfo Hale Mills plaques audio map when visiting. Plaques like National Heritage’s “Blue Plaques” provide visual geo-markers to highlight points-of-interest at the places where they happened – and Walkfo’s AI has researched additional, deeper content when you visit Hale Mills using the app. Experience the history of a location when Walkfo local tourist guide app triggers audio close to each Hale Mills plaque. Currently No Physical Plaques.