Wadebridge is a community as well as civil church in north Cornwall, England, UK. The town straddles the River Camel 5 miles (8.0 km) upstream from Padstow. The permanent population was 6,222 in the census of 2001, increasing to 7,900 in the 2011 census. There are two selecting wards in the town (East and West). Their overall population is 8,272. Initially known as Wade, it was a harmful fording point throughout the river until a bridge was constructed below in the 15th century, after which the name changed to its present type. The bridge was strategically essential during the English Civil War, and Oliver Cromwell went there to take it. Ever since, it has actually been broadened twice and refurbished in 1991. Wadebridge was served by a railway station in between 1834 as well as 1967; part of the line now forms the Camel Trail, a recreational route for walkers, cyclists as well as equine motorcyclists. The community used to be a road web traffic bottleneck on the A39 road up until it was bypassed in 1991, and the main shopping road, Molesworth Street, is currently pedestrianised. The town has a secondary school where a number of significant sports-people were educated. The Royal Cornwall Program is a three-day agricultural program held at the close-by Royal Cornwall Showground every June, and also the 5-day Cornwall Folk Festival takes place around the August Bank Holiday.