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King John's Hunting Lodge, Axbridge - Photo:
Martin Clark |
A small and ancient market
town, Axbridge sits on the banks of the River
Axe close to Wells and the Cheddar Gorge in
the Mendip Hills. Once the centre of a local
woolen industry, it was used as a base for
deer hunting by both Saxon and Norman kings.
King John's Hunting Lodge, a former merchant’s
house, is now a museum. Its exhibits include
stocks, a bull-baiting anchor and a Roman
skeleton. |
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Lying at the
mouth of the River Parrett on Bridgwater Bay
in the Bristol Channel, this is an evergreen
seaside resort with the shortest pier in
Britain and a stretch of treacherous mudflats.
It possesses a number of lighthouses including
a 19th century ‘lighthouse on legs’ built by a
local cleric who tried in vain to create a
local spa. The town’s church, St Andrews,
dates to the 14th century. A popular
attraction is a wildlife park fashioned from
disused clay pits. Wildlife-rich Brean Down is
a high, limestone promontory jutting into the
sea and owned by the National Trust. It
contains pre-Roman archaeology and a 19th
century fort.
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Brean Down Fort - Photo:
Eirian Evans |
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The road through Cheddar Gorge - Photo:
Tim |
For hundreds of years this
small village was the focal point for the
manufacture of Cheddar cheese, a morsel now
produced all over the world. The village
stands at the foot of the stunning Cheddar
Gorge whose high limestone cliffs soar to
nearly 500 feet. The rocks are peppered with
hundreds of caves and two of them, Gough’s and
Cox’s, have remarkable stalagmites and
stalactites. Cheddar Man – the oldest complete
prehistoric human skeleton ever found in
Britain - was discovered in Gough’s Cave in
1903. |
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A small, traditional
seaside resort, Clevedon existed as far back
as the 11th century but came of age during the
Victorian era when families from nearby
Bristol sought the sea air. Its pier, opened
in 1869, is one of the oldest in England.
Visitors can take cruises across the Bristol
Channel from here. The long seafront contains
gardens, a lake and other genteel asides while
a light railway carries tourists around
Salthouse Fields. The ‘Curzon’ cinema is the
oldest of its type in the world. |

Clevedon tidal lake - Photo:
Clive Perrin |
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Clevedon Court - Photo:
Derek Meek |
The poet Samuel Taylor
Coleridge honeymooned here with his bride
Sarah Fricker. Another writer, William
Makepeace Thackeray (‘Vanity Fair’), was a
frequent visitor to 14th century Clevedon
Court, now run by the National Trust. One of
the building’s former owners, Sir Edmund
Elton, created the famous ‘Elton Ware’
pottery. The Court was also once home to
Arthur Hallam who inspired Tennyson’s ‘In
Memoriam’. Nearby is an Iron Age fort known as
Cadbury Camp. |
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A village on the
banks of the River Yeo, Congresbury is
overshadowed by the magnificent Mendip Hills.
At 500ft, nearby Wrington Hill offers
irresistible views. |

Congresbury moor taken from Cadbury Hill -
Photo:
FollowMeChaps |
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St. Peter's Church, Evercreech - Photo:
Nigel Freeman |
A village in the
Mendip Hills, Evercreech lies close to Shepton
Mallet and boasts a 14th century church. |
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Bridge at Frome - Photo:
Phil Williams |
A market town at
the eastern end of the Mendip Hills, Frome has
the same name as the river that passes through
it. Spanning the river is a splendid,
five-arched stone bridge. Frome has an
atmospheric medieval town centre and once
stood at the heart of a prosperous weaving
industry. Many old weavers' cottages still
survive. Notable modern-day attractions
include a local museum and a Cheese and Grain
Hall that has been transformed into a concert
venue. The church of St John the Baptist,
built on the foundations of an earlier Saxon
structure, boasts a tall spire. |
Nearby is the village of
Norton St Philip where the timber-framed George
Inn – one of the oldest in England – has been
entertaining visitors since the 13th century. Its
most famous guests included the diarist Samuel
Pepys and the Duke of Monmouth.
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Lying on the banks of the
River Brue, glorious Glastonbury is a curious
amalgam of Christianity and paganism, the
reputed burial place of King Arthur and the
hiding place of the Holy Grail. During the
medieval period, the Benedictine Abbey of St
Mary was one of England’s richest monasteries.
According to legend it was founded by Joseph
of Arimathea who brought a sacred chalice
containing the blood of Jesus from the Middle
East. The ‘grail’ chalice is, supposedly,
secreted in the Chalice Well at the foot of
Glastonbury Tor, a 500ft hill. The Tor
dominates the town and is topped by St
Michael’s Tower. |

Glastonbury Tor - Photo:
Alan Simkins |
The abbey was largely
destroyed on the orders of Henry V111 during the
Dissolution of the Monasteries. It is said to
contain the tomb of St Patrick, not to mention the
re-interred bones of both King Arthur and his
queen, Guinevere.
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Dunes at Sand Bay - Photo:
Tom Pennington |
This pretty
coastal village near Weston-super-Mare
overlooks Sand Bay on the Bristol Channel. A
local Pontins camp is now known as 'Sand Bay
Holiday Village'. |
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An attractive
village with stone-built houses and thatched
cottages, Mells also boasts an Elizabethan
manor house and a 15th century
church with a tall tower. There are fine views
from the village and nearby are several
prehistoric camps. These include Tedbury Camp
with earthworks that rise in places to 13
feet. The Manor is erroneously linked with the
nursery rhyme ‘Little Jack Horner’ it was
owned for centuries by the Horner family. |

Mells Manor - Photo:
Derek Hawkins |
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Tyntesfield house - Photo:
Dave Bushell |
This old village
is famous for the manufacture of glass after
John Lucas created one of the world’s largest
glassworks here in the late 18th
century. Nearby at Wraxall is the
many-turreted, Gothic Revival mansion of
Tyntesfield. Built in the 19th
century, the house and gardens are in the
hands of the National Trust. |
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A ‘twin town’ in an area
famous for coal mining and railways, Norton
Radstock consists of Midsomer Norton, on the
banks of the River Somer, and Radstock. Two
15th century churches are among the oldest
buildings of note. One of them, the Roman
Catholic Church of the Holy Ghost, is housed
in a tithe barn that was converted by
architect Gilbert Scott. Radstock Museum is
housed in a restored Victorian market hall and
possesses memorabilia from the Somerset Coal
Canal and Somerset and Dorset Great Western
Railways. Writhlington School has the largest
collection of orchids outside Kew Gardens. |

Midsomer Norton Highstreet - Photo:
Nigel Shoosmith |
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Priddy Church - Photo:
MYM |
One of the
highest villages in the Mendip Hills, Priddy
once lay at the heart of a widespread lead
mining industry. The workers often frequented
the isolated Castle of Comfort Inn. Nearby is
a set of prehistoric barrows and the huge
limestone cleft known as Ebbor Rocks. |
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High in the
Mendip Hills, this delightful town was an
historic centre of the wool trade. Its ancient
market area has a 50ft cross dating to 1500.
The town witnessed the first skirmish of the
English Civil War when royalists cut down a
band of local parliamentarians. More blood was
spilled here in 1685 when a dozen of the Duke
of Monmouth’s rebels died on notorious Judge
Jeffrey’s gibbets. |

Market Cross at Shepton Mallet - Photo:
Nigel Freeman |
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Two brewers pub in Street - Photo:
Brian |
This small
Somerset town owes its name to its proximity
with a Roman ‘street’, the Fosse Way. Its most
famous citizens were a family of shoemakers,
the Clarks, who started a global footwear
company by selling slipper-linings from
sheepskin off-cuts in the early 19th century.
The firm’s original buildings later became the
first purpose-built factory outlet in the UK. |
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England’s smallest city is
also one of its most picturesque and
evocative. It is dominated by a magnificently
ornate and detailed Gothic cathedral and
associated ecclesiastical buildings. The
cathedral’s west front, for example, has no
less than 386 niches containing a phalanx of
medieval sculptures featuring saints and
kings. Within are a remarkable ‘scissors
vault’ and a 14th century clock on which
knightly figures regularly do battle. |

Wells Cathedral - Photo:
Pam Brophy |
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Croquet lawn at Bishops Palace in Wells -
Photo:
Danny Robinson |
Nearby Bishop’s Palace has
been home to the Bishops of Bath and Wells
since the 13th century and is encircled by a
picturesque moat fed by qderground springs. |
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This well-known
seaside resort underwent its first tourist
boom in the 19th century when the Victorians
fled cities in search of beachside holidays
following the opening of the railways. The
town’s Grand Pier arrived in 1904. Then, in
1927, the Winter Gardens and Pavilion were
built.
Today’s attractions include a helicopter
museum, aquarium and miniature railway while
the paddle steam Waverley and a second boat,
the Balmoral, offer trips across the Bristol
Channel and into the Severn Estuary.
Ellenborough Park lies in the centre of the
resort and has been designated as a Site of
Special Scientific Interest.
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Beach at Weston-Super-Mare - Photo:
Roy Parkhouse |
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Subterranean Lake at Wookey Hole - Photo:
Pam Brophy |
A small village with a big
reputation, Wookey is close to Wookey Hole,
one of Britain’s most famous cave systems.
Carved out of Somerset’s limestone bedrock by
the waters of the River Axe, the caves contain
fascinating rock sculptures including, in the
Great Cave, a huge stalagmite known as the
‘Witch of Wookey’. A local museum explains the
history of this subterranean world and
displays many archaeological finds. The nearby
Wookey Hole Paper Mill dates from 1610 and is
one of the oldest paper mills surviving in
Britain. |
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