The Jamaica Inn is a traditional inn on Bodmin Moor in Cornwall in the UK, which was built as a coaching inn in 1750, and has a historical association with smuggling. Located just off the A30, near the middle of the moor close to the hamlet of Bolventor, it was originally used as a staging post for changing horses. The 1,122-foot-high "Tuber" or "Two Barrows" hill, is close by.The inn was the setting for Daphne du Maurier's 1936 novel Jamaica Inn, about the nocturnal activities of a smuggling ring, "portraying a hidden world as a place of tense excitement and claustrophobia of real peril and thrill." In the novel, it was transformed into a rendezvous and warehouse for smuggling that was solely the home of the landlord and his wife.
landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.BUTTONS.DOWNLOAD landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.BUTTONS.DOWNLOAD landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.BUTTONS.SEE_MOREWikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamaica_Inn
Official Website https://www.jamaicainn.co.uk/
landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.DETAIL.EMAIL enquiry@jamaicainn.co.uk
landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.DETAIL.PHONE +44 1566 86250
landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.DETAIL.ADDRESS PL15 7TS Bolventor, UK
landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.DETAIL.COORDINATES 50°33'44.417" N -4°34'0.225" E