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===Other churches=== The Chapel of St Thomas Becket is a ruin of a 14th-century building in Bodmin churchyard. The holy well of St Guron is a small stone building at the churchyard gate. The Berry Tower is all that remains of the former church of the Holy Rood and there are even fewer remains from the substantial Franciscan Friary established ca. 1240: a gateway in Fore Street and two pillars elsewhere in the town. The Roman Catholic [[Abbey of St Mary and St Petroc]], formerly belonging to the [[Canons Regular of the Lateran]] was built in 1965 next to the already existing seminary.<ref name="pevsner1970">[[Nikolaus Pevsner|Pevsner, N.]] (1970) ''Cornwall''; 2nd ed. Penguin Books.</ref> The Roman Catholic parish of Bodmin includes a large area of North Cornwall and there are churches also at Wadebridge, Padstow and Tintagel ([[St Paul's Church, Tintagel]]).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.stmarysbodmin.org.uk/ |title=Parish of St Mary, Bodmin |access-date=13 April 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130520182701/http://stmarysbodmin.org.uk/ |archive-date=20 May 2013}}</ref> In 1881 the Roman Catholic mass was celebrated in Bodmin for the first time since 1539. A church was planned in the 1930s but delayed by the [[Second World War]]: the Church of St Mary and St Petroc was eventually consecrated in 1965:<ref>Dyer, Peter (2005) ''Tintagel: a portrait of a parish''. Cambridge: Cambridge Books {{ISBN|978-0-9550097-0-9}}; p. 119</ref> it was built next to the already existing seminary.<ref name="pevsner1970"/> There are also five other churches in Bodmin, including a Methodist church.
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