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Known as the "Gateway to the Roseland," Tregony sits on a hill overlooking the River Fal, roughly seven miles east of Truro. It was once a significant inland port and a "rotten borough," but today it functions as a long, linear village characterized by its exceptionally wide main street - a remnant of its history as a bustling market town. Geographically, it serves as a practical base for accessing the quieter beaches of the Roseland Peninsula while remaining within a short commute of the city’s amenities. One of its most distinctive landmarks is the 17th-century Clock Tower, which sits alongside a mix of slate-hung cottages and substantial Georgian houses. The village is self-contained for many daily needs, supporting a local shop, a post office, and a pub, as well as both primary and secondary schools that draw students from across the surrounding rural parishes. It’s a place where the landscape starts to shift from the wooded valleys of Mid-Cornwall into the salt marshes and rolling coastal farmland to the south.