Cornwall flag
CornwallMagazine
Tourism🐕 Dog Friendly

Drift Village

Drift, Cornwall

Drift, Cornwall TR19

Open daily

free

About Drift Village

Drift is a village on the A30 road in west Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. As a programmatic destination page, it works well as a hub for nearby beaches, walks, heritage sites, food spots and local itinerary links across CornwallMagazine.
villagecornwalltourismlocal-area

Location

Nearby Attractions

Merry Maidens Stone Circle

historic

The most complete and perfectly circular Bronze Age stone circle in Cornwall, the Merry Maidens stands in a field south of St Buryan with all nineteen stones upright. Local legend holds the stones are girls turned to granite for dancing on the Sabbath. The two outlying standing stones known as The Pipers — the musicians — stand in adjacent fields.

1.8 km away

Boscawen-Un Stone Circle

historic

A distinguished Bronze Age stone circle south-west of St Buryan, Boscawen-Un has nineteen outer stones and a leaning central pillar of white quartz that makes it instantly distinctive. It was here that the first recorded Gorsedh Kernow — the gathering of Cornish bards — was held in 1928, restoring a tradition that had lapsed for centuries.

2.2 km away

Newlyn Harbour Town

tourism

Newlyn is a seaside town and fishing port in south-west Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. As a programmatic destination page, it works well as a hub for nearby beaches, walks, heritage sites, food spots and local itinerary links across CornwallMagazine.

2.4 km away

Newlyn Harbour

tourism

Newlyn Harbour is one of those Cornish places that works both as a base and as an attraction in its own right, with enough character to justify a detour near Newlyn. Harbour life, local food, sea air and the surrounding walks usually matter as much as any single sight.

2.5 km away

Newlyn Art Gallery

arts

Occupying a handsome Arts and Crafts building at the heart of one of Britain's oldest fishing communities, Newlyn Art Gallery shows ambitious contemporary exhibitions alongside work rooted in the West Cornish tradition. The town itself gave its name to the celebrated Newlyn School of artists who settled here in the 1880s, drawn by the quality of the Atlantic light.

2.6 km away

St Buryan Church

historic

The massive granite tower of St Buryan's church has been a landmark for mariners rounding Land's End for centuries. The church contains one of the finest rood screens in Cornwall — a late fifteenth-century carved oak screen of exceptional quality — and the churchyard is the burial place of several local fishing families whose memorials tell the story of this remote parish's dependence on the sea.

2.7 km away

C

Cornwall Guide

Ask me anything about Cornwall

Your local Cornwall expert. Try asking: