| Taunton, a busy regional shopping town,
with a good range of shops in the centre, and out-of-town shopping complex
which also has cinemas and 10
pin bowling. There is a horse racing course
just south west on the B3170.
In 1497 Perkin Warbeck seized the town and said he was King Richard
IV, the town was also involved in the Civil War and Monmouth's rebellion.
The town has some old pubs, and a few old street such as Hammet Street
with its 18th century houses, near the church.
Quite a lot to see and do around this area, and the M5 gives good
access north and south, the A358 will take up to Exmoor and the north
coast.

Taunton Somerset
Taunton
‘Town on the Tone’ - The county town of Somerset, founded by king ‘Ine’
in the 7th century, has had a turbulent past at the centre of many violent
uprisings, notably the determined anti-royalist stance the town took
during the Civil War (1642 - 1652) and later the duke of Monmouth’s
rebellion in 1685.
Set in the Vale of Taunton, rich in orchards and
pastures, the town was once dependent on the local agricultural economy
symbolised by the 18th century Market House at the Parade in the
centre.
Vivary Park - In the early 13th century the bishops of Taunton Priory maintained
parklands for food and sport, such as Poundisford and Nailsbourne.
In the area of the present Vivary Park there were two great ponds in
which large quantities of fish were stocked, the bishop’s ‘vivarium’.
The public park was laid out and opened in the mid 1890’s, with very
elaborate ironwork gates and a bandstand, both by Henry Phillips and
Son of Taunton. In 1907 a highly detailed fountain, cast by the Walter
McFarlane and Co. Foundry of Glasgow, was unveiled by the Mayor in
memory of Queen Victoria. The war memorial dates from 1922 and is
by Ivor F Shellard. The artificially straight stream is a remnant of a
former leat which was dug in the 14th century to carry water from the
Sherford Stream to drive Poolwall Mill in Upper High Street and to
supply the castle moat, as well as the market via sluices along the
High Street.
The Church of St. George is a perpendicular style church was almost entirely rebuilt in the 19th
century. There are traces of Saxon work in the west wall of the
north aisle and in the nave some 13th century responds.

Taunton , The High Street

Vivary Park War Memorial
Sherford Stream
flowis down from the Blackdown Hills and into the River Tone at
Tangier, the name of this stream is said to derive from ‘the brook in
which dung is thrown’.
The oldest part of the Church of All Saints, Trull
is the base of the tower, which dates from the
mid to late 13th century. At that time the church consisted of nave,
chancel and tower. A north aisle was added in the 14th century and a
south aisle a century later. The north doorway is thought to have been
moved from the north wall of the 13th century nave. The rood screen
dates from the late 15th century and is an example of the fan-vaulted
type that originated in Devon. The original tracery has now gone. Note
the richly carved cornice. There is a remarkably well preserved 15th
century wooden pulpit with undamaged carved figures of saints in
canopied niches. Many of the benches and bench ends date from the
early 16th century and among the fine carving is an unusual collection
of figures comprising a religious procession. In the churchyard the old
stocks can be seen under a yew tree. The Chantry Cottage to the north
west of the churchyard is late medieval in origin and was possibly the
priest’s house.
Amberd Farmhouse
is a late medieval cross passage farmhouse with 16th century ceiling
(a private dwelling).
To the south and west of Taunton can be seen the Blackdown Hills (Area of
Outstanding Natural Beauty), rising to 315 metres at Staple Hill.
Formed by an extensive outcrop of Upper Greensand from the
Cretaceous period, they are characterised by a dramatic, steep,
wooded scarp slope facing north, and a gently sloping plateau to the
south which is deeply dissected by the valleys of the Rivers Culm,
Otter and Yarty. To the north are theQuantock Hills (AONB), a
narrow ridge of Devonian slates rising to 386 metres at Will’s Neck.
They represent the eastern end of a belt of Devonian rocks, collectively
known as Old Red Sandstone, which extends from the coast near
Ilfracombe eastwards to embrace Exmoor and the Brendon Hills.
There are numerous listed houses in
Mount Street. Taunton Deane has a rich inheritance of listed buildings.
Approximately two thousand are grouped according to their importance,
Grade 1, Grade 2* and Grade 2. They are part of a national database,
the Statutory List of Buildings of Architectural or Historic Interest.
Rising above Mount Street is ‘Jellalabad’, the former barracks of Prince
Albert’s Light Infantry completed in 1880.
Industry developed around wharves by Tone Bridge or on
tributary streams of the navigable River Tone. The medieval trade and
manufacture of wool was succeeded in the late 18th century by the
manufacture of silk, lace and cotton.
Imported bar iron led to the
establishment of foundries and the suitability of the water encouraged
several breweries to flourish.
Taunton Castle and Museum is in a building that was an important Norman castle, originally that of the Bishops of Winchester.
The bishop’s hall was converted into a castle between 1107 and 1129 by
Bishop William Giffard. His successor Henry of Blois added the keep in
1138. Many additions and alterations have been made throughout history,
notably the building of the Great Hall by Bishop William Ralegh between
1245 and 1249. It was in this hall that assize courts were held, famously
the ‘Bloody Assize’ of 1685 when Judge Jeffreys condemned over 500
supporters of the failed Monmouth Rebellion to death or transportation.
Castle Green was formerly the large outer bailey of the castle added in
1215-16 and was also the site of Taunton’s only burial ground from Saxon
times until the 12th century. A Saxon minster is believed to have stood
here. The castle now houses the Somerset County Museum.
Goodland Gardens
named after the Goodland family who played a major role in the
water-borne coal trade locally and were involved in the work of the Tone
Conservators who annually inspected the river to ensure that it was
navigable. The gardens were laid out in 1971 on the site of the town’s
original fulling mill built in 1219.
The River Tone flows for 33km down from Beverton Pond in the Brendon Hills,
north of Clatworthy Reservoir, due south at first before turning east to
flow into the River Parrett at Burrowbridge. This then continues out to the
Bristol Channel through Bridgwater. It is an important wildlife corridor
through the Borough and notable species to be seen are kingfisher, bank
vole and otter, as well as the more common grey heron, moorhen, and
mute swan.
Parliamentary Cut
was the name given to the short length of canal built in 1834 and
intended to connect the Grand Western Canal to the River Tone.
Weirfield Riverside
is a section of the old canal, between the River Tone and the site of the
old Weirfield School, has now been designated a Local Nature Reserve.
Recolonisation has created habitat for a wide variety of mammals, birds
and insects. The mixture of vegetation heights forms ‘edge’ habitats much loved by dragonflies, butterflies and other invertebrates.
The Grand Western Canal was a short-lived canal was one of the few canals in the country to employ
mechanised lifts and inclines to overcome steep hills. Born of a plan in
the late 1700’s to build a waterway to connect the English Channel with
the Bristol Channel (thereby saving the small wooden freight ships from
a treacherous journey around Lands End), the canal was not actually
started until 1810 when work began on the 17.5km section between the
limestone quarries at Lowdwells (near the Devon and Somerset border)
and Tiverton. It was not until the 1830’s, once the Bridgwater and
Taunton Canal had been completed, that work continued to take the
canal across the 22.5 hilly kilometres of Somerset to reach Taunton.
Opened in 1838, the Grand Western Canal Company did not enjoy the
commercial success it had anticipated, and the building of the railway
between Taunton and Tiverton ten years later quickened the demise of
the canal, which was abandoned in 1867.
Roughmoor Farmhouse, this late 18th century building is now
the HQ for English Nature in Somerset, a Government agency that
champions the conservation of wildlife and geology throughout England.
Silk Mills Road
is the name of a busy road which remembers the importance of silk weaving in
this area from the late 1770’s until the mid 1800’s. Isaac Hawkins set up
a silk-throwing factory at a former cloth works near here in 1810, and
continued production until 1860.
Bridge House (The Old Mill)
Mill and millhouse dating from the late 18th and early 19th century.
Netherclay Community woodland was purchased by Taunton Deane and this four hectare site plans to create a new
community woodland which has now been planted with a mixture of
native species.
In the village of Bishops Hull the
church of St Peter and St Paul is chiefly noted for its 13th century
octagonal tower and 16th century bench ends.
Netherclay House is a grade 2 listed Georgian house built late 18th century.
Longaller Mill
was a flour mill converted in 1823 to replace the previous fulling and
tucking mill. It retains all its machinery and its low breastshot wheel,
which was built in Wellington in 1880 and is 3.6 metres in diameter and
1.8 metres wide. It was fed by a leat from the River Tone and was
described in 1828 as being “very powerful and roomy”.
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