St Eval (Cornish: S. Uvel)[2] is a civil parish and hamlet in north Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.
In early times St Eval lay within the episcopal fief and peculiar deanery of Pawton.
The merchants of Bristol acknowledged the usefulness of the church tower as a sea mark and provided the funds for this in 1727.
Features of interest are the plain Norman font, the base of the rood screen, the octagonal pulpit dated 1688, and a good set of bench ends, reused in the restoration of 1889.
[10] In 1955 and 1956 excavations were carried out on behalf of the Ministry of Works on the site currently occupied by Trevisker School and playground.
The homes, which had been constructed as temporary structures soon after the Second World War and lacked insulation, were reconstructed by Annington while preserving the original roofs in order to relieve the company from a responsibility to provide affordable housing.