Tregardock (Cornish: Tregaradek, meaning homestead of Caradoc) is a coastal hamlet and beach in the civil parish of Delabole in north Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.
There were two and a half ploughs, 2 serfs, 4 villeins, 6 smallholders, 10 acres of pasture and 50 sheep.
[3] The manor of Treligga was recorded in the Domesday Book (1086) when it was held by Odo from Robert, Count of Mortain.
[5] Tregardock is also mentioned fondly by Ralph Clark, a British lieutenant on the First Fleet to arrive in Australia in 1788.
In his journals, Clark dreams that he "was going down to Tregadock (sic) to take leave of [the family] before I went down to the Botany"[6]