1 Chapel Row, Branscombe, Seaton, Devon, EX12 3AZ

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

1 Chapel Row, Branscombe, Seaton, Devon, EX12 3AZ 1 Chapel Row, Branscombe, Seaton, Devon, EX12 3AZ An outstanding Grade II Listed end of terrace cottage currently let as a successful holiday cottage. Sidmouth 5 miles Honiton 8.6 miles • Three Bedrooms • Sitting Room With Inglenook • Kitchen/ Dining room • Bathroom and downstairs shower room • Private Gardens • Established holiday let • Character Offers in excess of £325,000 01404 45885 | [email protected] Cornwall | Devon | Somerset | Dorset | London stags.co.uk 1 Chapel Row, Branscombe, Seaton, Devon, EX12 3AZ SITUATION OUTSIDE A charming thatched cottage set the highly regarded The garden predominately laid to lawn with mature coastal village of Branscombe with its well-regarded hedging and a stone path. The parking area across the village school, two popular public houses and stunning road has parking for around 2 cars. beach. This delightful part of East Devon which has been designated an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty forms SERVICES a major part of the Jurassic coast, a World Heritage site, Mains water, electricity and drainage. renowned for its dramatic cliffs and golden beaches. DIRECTIONS From the A3052 at Branscombe Cross travel south, sign There is a range of good independent schools in the area posted to Branscombe and Bulstone, continue on this with the revered Colyton Grammar School within easy road, passing the Fountain Head pub, for 1.7 miles and reach. The nearby Sidmouth provides for most everyday the property is on the left. requirements, including schools, shops, banks, post office, library, theatre and cinema. Honiton lies inland and offers a main line rail service to London Waterloo. Exeter is approximately 21 miles to the west with further amenities, a main line rail link to London Paddington, the M5 motorway and an International airport. DESCRIPTION This charming coastal end of terrace cottage features a cosy sitting room with feature inglenook fireplace, a kitchen/dining room with granite work top and Belfast sink and dining area with exposed stone fireplace. Also on the ground floor is a recently installed shower room. Rising up the spiral staircase is three bedrooms, two double and one single and a bathroom. 1 Chapel Row, Branscombe, Seaton, Devon, EX12 3AZ 1 Chapel Row, 1 Chapel Row, Branscombe, Seaton, Devon, EX12 3AZ Bank House, 66 High Street, Honiton, Devon, EX14 1PS 01404 45885 [email protected] @StagsProperty These particulars are a guide only and should not be relied upon for any purpose. stags.co.uk.
Recommended publications
  • Dorset and East Devon Coast for Inclusion in the World Heritage List
    Nomination of the Dorset and East Devon Coast for inclusion in the World Heritage List © Dorset County Council 2000 Dorset County Council, Devon County Council and the Dorset Coast Forum June 2000 Published by Dorset County Council on behalf of Dorset County Council, Devon County Council and the Dorset Coast Forum. Publication of this nomination has been supported by English Nature and the Countryside Agency, and has been advised by the Joint Nature Conservation Committee and the British Geological Survey. Maps reproduced from Ordnance Survey maps with the permission of the Controller of HMSO. © Crown Copyright. All rights reserved. Licence Number: LA 076 570. Maps and diagrams reproduced/derived from British Geological Survey material with the permission of the British Geological Survey. © NERC. All rights reserved. Permit Number: IPR/4-2. Design and production by Sillson Communications +44 (0)1929 552233. Cover: Duria antiquior (A more ancient Dorset) by Henry De la Beche, c. 1830. The first published reconstruction of a past environment, based on the Lower Jurassic rocks and fossils of the Dorset and East Devon Coast. © Dorset County Council 2000 In April 1999 the Government announced that the Dorset and East Devon Coast would be one of the twenty-five cultural and natural sites to be included on the United Kingdom’s new Tentative List of sites for future nomination for World Heritage status. Eighteen sites from the United Kingdom and its Overseas Territories have already been inscribed on the World Heritage List, although only two other natural sites within the UK, St Kilda and the Giant’s Causeway, have been granted this status to date.
    [Show full text]
  • Site Improvement Plan Sidmouth to West Bay
    Improvement Programme for England's Natura 2000 Sites (IPENS) Planning for the Future Site Improvement Plan Sidmouth to West Bay Site Improvement Plans (SIPs) have been developed for each Natura 2000 site in England as part of the Improvement Programme for England's Natura 2000 sites (IPENS). Natura 2000 sites is the combined term for sites designated as Special Areas of Conservation (SAC) and Special Protected Areas (SPA). This work has been financially supported by LIFE, a financial instrument of the European Community. The plan provides a high level overview of the issues (both current and predicted) affecting the condition of the Natura 2000 features on the site(s) and outlines the priority measures required to improve the condition of the features. It does not cover issues where remedial actions are already in place or ongoing management activities which are required for maintenance. The SIP consists of three parts: a Summary table, which sets out the priority Issues and Measures; a detailed Actions table, which sets out who needs to do what, when and how much it is estimated to cost; and a set of tables containing contextual information and links. Once this current programme ends, it is anticipated that Natural England and others, working with landowners and managers, will all play a role in delivering the priority measures to improve the condition of the features on these sites. The SIPs are based on Natural England's current evidence and knowledge. The SIPs are not legal documents, they are live documents that will be updated to reflect changes in our evidence/knowledge and as actions get underway.
    [Show full text]
  • Summer 2014 Free
    SUMMER 2014 FREE Robots raise money for a Water Survival Box Page 26 Sea Creatures at Charmouth Primary School Page 22 Winter Storms Page 30 Superfast Mary Anning Broadband – Realities is Here! Page 32 Page 6 Five Gold Stars Page 19 Lost Almshouses Page 14 Sweet flavours of Margaret Ledbrooke and her early summer future daughter-in-law Page 16 Natcha Sukjoy in Auckland, NZ SHORELINE SUMMER 2014 / ISSUE 25 1 Shoreline Summer 2014 Award-Winning Hotel and Restaurant Four Luxury Suites, family friendly www.whitehousehotel.com 01297 560411 @charmouthhotel Contemporary Art Gallery Morcombelake Fun, funky and Dorset DT6 6DY 01297 489746 gorgeous gifts Open Tuesday to Saturday 10am – 5pm for everyone! Next to Charmouth Stores (Nisa) www.artwavewest.com The Street, Charmouth - Tel 01297 560304 CHARMOUTH STORES Your Local Store for more than 198 years! Open until 9pm every night The Street, Charmouth. Tel 01297 560304 2 SHORELINE SUMMER 2014 / ISSUE 25 Editorial Charmouth Traders Summer 2014 Looking behind, I am filled n spite of the difficult economic conditions over the last three or four years it with gratitude. always amazes me that we have the level of local shops and services that we Ido in Charmouth. There are not many (indeed I doubt if there are any) villages Looking forward, I am filled nowadays that can boast two pubs, a pharmacy, a butcher, a flower shop, two with vision. hairdressers, a newsagents come general store like Morgans, two cafes, fish and chip shops, a chocolate shop, a camping shop, a post office, the Nisa store Looking upwards, I am filled with attached gift shop, as well as a variety of caravan parks, hotels, B&Bs and with strength.
    [Show full text]
  • Ward Beer and Branscombe Reference 21/0302/FUL Applicant
    Ward Beer And Branscombe Reference 21/0302/FUL Applicant Mr & Mrs Reid Location Bumbles Locker Fore Street Beer Seaton EX12 3JB Proposal Proposed change of use of shops (A1) to living accommodation (C3) associated with a multi bedroomed self catering holiday let, alterations to the shop fronts, the conversion of existing attic space with the addition of two dormer windows and rear two storey extension to form a new stairwell RECOMMENDATION: Approval with conditions Crown Copyright and database rights 2021 Ordnance Survey 100023746 Committee Date: 5th May 2021 Beer And Target Date: Branscombe 21/0302/FUL 01.04.2021 (Beer) Applicant: Mr & Mrs Reid Location: Bumbles Locker Fore Street Proposal: Proposed change of use of shops (A1) to living accommodation (C3) associated with a multi bedroomed self catering holiday let, alterations to the shop fronts, the conversion of existing attic space with the addition of two dormer windows and rear two storey extension to form a new stairwell RECOMMENDATION: Approval with conditions EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The application is presented to committee as the officer recommendation differs from that of the ward member. The proposal relates to a mixed use property located in the centre of Beer within the defined built-up area boundary and village centre and the designated Beer Conservation Area. The ground floor of the front part of the property has a lawful commercial use, most recently for retail purposes but currently vacant. It is subdivided into 2 no. units a larger unit to the left and smaller unit to the right. The remainder of the ground floor and the first floor of the building are in residential use as a single unit.
    [Show full text]
  • Alisocysta Margarita Zone, 213-14, 220 Angulata Zone, 244
    Index Acadian Orogeny, 198 bed forms accommodation space migration, 44 and accumulation rates, 104 wave-modified, 52 condensed sections, 81 Beinn Iaruinn Quartzite, 262, 264 and cyclothems, 69 Belemnite Bed, 238, 244-5, 251 depositional response, 267 Belgium, 213 ooid shoals, 66 berthierine, 98-100 overprinting, 71 Binnein Quartzite, 266 and oxygen conditions, 82 biostratigraphic zones acritarchs, 206 Kimmeridge Clay, 87 Agat, 150, 159-61 Portlandian, 111 aggradation Turonian, 181, 183 Kimmeridge Clay, 83 biostratigraphical control, 2 Palaeocene, 223 biostratigraphical gaps, 111, 113 shelf margins, 37 bioturbation, 70, 91, 131 tidal flats, 71 Birnbeck Limestone Formation, 67, 69-70 albaniZone, 109, 115, 118, 123, 137 Bituminous Shales, 84, 238, 239 algaenans, 90 black shales, 77, 80, 82 Alisocysta margarita Zone, 213-14, 220 Black Ven Marls, 244, 248 allocycles, 72 Blea Wyke Sandstone Formation, 239, 248 Allt Goibhre Formation, 262, 264 Blue Lias, 82, 244-5,248 Alpine tectonics, 224 Blyth-Acklington dyke, 225 Alum Shales, 239 bone-beds, 98 Amazon Fan, 159 environments, 103 ammonites, 41-2, 48, 56, 109, 178 geochemistry, 101 biostratigraphy, 181, 231 bottom currents, 150, 159 amorphous organic matter, 77, 89-90 bottom water, volume, 82-3 Anglo-Paris Basin, 218 Boulonnais, 83, 85 anguiformis Zone, 131, 133, 139 brachiopods, 206 angulata Zone, 244 Branscombe Hardground, 193 anoxia, 81-2, 218 Breathitt Group, 36 and uranium, 235 British Tertiary Igneous Province, 224-6 apatite, 100-1,103 Bronnant Fault, 205 Apectodinium hyperacanthum Zone,
    [Show full text]
  • Minutes March 2020 110320
    Uplyme Parish Council 55 Shearwater Way, Seaton, Devon, EX12 2FT Tel: 07413 947067 Chairman: Councillor Chris James – Vice Chair: Councillor Paulene Frost - Clerk: Ricky Neave Minutes of the meeting of Uplyme Parish Council held at the Uplyme Village Hall on Wednesday, 11th March 2020 at 7.15pm. Present: Councillors Councillor A Turner, Pratt, Trundley, Mason, Duffin, James (Chair), Ostler, Pullinger, Frost and 8 members of the public. In attendance: The Parish Clerk, Ricky Neave Key: Councillors Hand Vote (For – Against) 7.15pm Public Question Time Public Bodies (admissions to meetings) Act 1960 s1 extended by the LG Act 972 s 100. Resident highlighted and complained about the state of the potholes and blocked up drainage and ditches adjacent to highways which are pushing the surface water back on to the roads and flooding private land in Uplyme. County Councillor Ian Hall received the complaints and would investigate on why this is happening. Councillor James remarked that drainage and ditches that were initially maintained by Highways, are now suddenly, the responsibility of the landowner. Report from County Councillor – Mr Ian Lloyd Hall Councillor Ian Hall updated Uplyme on the continued progress of Community groups in a triangle of towns in East Devon and West Dorset which are proposing to formalise a joint forum to cover all the angles of health and social care for more than 42,000 people living in the catchment area. This will continue to build on the success of community conversations and subsequent surveys carried out by LymeForward, Seaton Area Health Matters and Axminster Health Needs. The forum would aim to secure a model of place-based care to best serve communities within a triangle formed by Axminster to the north, Seaton to the south and Lyme Regis to the east, striving to improve procurement and delivery of all aspects of health and social care, including: GP surgeries, NHS clinics and hospitals, Health hubs, Mental health services, Care for the elderly.
    [Show full text]
  • Geological Sights! Southwest England Harrow and Hillingdon Geological Society
    Geological Sights! Southwest England Harrow and Hillingdon Geological Society @GeolAssoc Geologists’ Association www.geologistsassociation.org.uk Southwest England Triassic Mercia Mudstone & Penarth Groups (red & grey), capped with Early Jurassic Lias Group mudstones and thin limestones. Aust Cliff, Severn Estuary, 2017 Triassic Mercia Mudstone & Penarth Groups, with Early Jurassic Lias Group at the top. Looking for coprolites Gypsum at the base Aust Cliff, Severn Estuary, 2017 Old Red Sandstone (Devonian) Portishead, North Somerset, 2017 Carboniferous Limestone – Jurassic Inferior Oolite unconformity, Vallis Vale near Frome Mendip Region, Somerset, 2014 Burrington Oolite (Carboniferous Limestone), Burrington Combe Rock of Ages, Mendip Hills, Somerset, 2014 Whatley Quarry Moon’s Hill Quarry Carboniferous Limestone Silurian volcanics Volcaniclastic conglomerate in Moon’s Hill Quarry Mainly rhyodacites, andesites and tuffs - England’s only Wenlock-age volcanic exposure. Stone Quarries in the Mendips, 2011 Silurian (Wenlock- age) volcaniclastic conglomerates are seen here above the main faces. The quarry’s rock types are similar to those at Mount St Helens. Spheroidal weathering Moons Hill Quarry, Mendips, Somerset, 2011 Wave cut platform, Blue Lias Fm. (Jurassic) Kilve Mercia Mudstone Group (Triassic) Kilve St Audrie’s Bay West Somerset, 2019 Watchet Blue Lias Formation, Jurassic: Slickensiding on fault West Somerset, 2019 Triassic, Penarth Group Triassic, Mercia Mudstone Blue Anchor Fault, West Somerset, 2019 Mortehoe, led by Paul Madgett. Morte Slates Formation, Devonian (Frasnian-Famennian). South side of Baggy Point near Pencil Rock. Ipswichian interglacial dune sands & beach deposit (125 ka) upon Picton Down Mudstone Formation (U. Devonian) North Devon Coast, 1994 Saunton Down End. ‘White Rabbit’ glacial erratic (foliated granite-gneiss). Baggy Headland south side.
    [Show full text]
  • This Talk Was Illustrated with a Great Many Pictures by John White and Other Local Painters
    This talk was illustrated with a great many pictures by John White and other local painters. Unfortunately we have been unable to source many of them and have therefore not been able to get permission to use them. We have therefore decided to use them more sparingly, and if anyone does have copyright we apologise and, if notified, will take the picture off the website. Tonight the Branscombe Project has teamed up with the Branscombe Players, and some noble volunteers to give you the words of various visitors to Branscombe, some literary and some less so. We shall also show you a few paintings by some of the artists who visited Branscombe. I’ll start by telling you about the painters. The best known, of course, is JOHN WHITE, who arrived as a visitor, but then settled here. He was a Scotsman, born in 1851. When he was a child, his family emigrated to Australia, but he returned and studied art at the Royal Scottish Academy. Then he came south, first to London, and then, around 1878, to Branscombe. He lived in Marine Villa (now Still Point) with his wife, Emma and four children. 1 Emma died in childbirth in1888 and a year later he married a local girl, Rosetta Perry and six or seven more children were born at fairly regular intervals. Around 1906 the family move to Exeter, but eventually they moved to Beer (4 Belmont Terrace) where John White died in 1933. In Census Returns he’s often described as ‘Artist Painter’ - he sold to local people, and no doubt to tourists.
    [Show full text]
  • Lyme Bay (East) Snapshot Key Characteristics Description Visual Resource Mapping
    Seascape Assessment for the South Marine Plan Areas MCA 2: Lyme Bay (East) Snapshot Key Characteristics Description Visual Resource Mapping © Crown copyright and database right 2013. All rights reserved. Permission Number Defra 012012.003. Contains Ordnance Survey Licence No. 100049981 and UK Hydrographic Office data. © Marine Management Organisation. Licence No EK001-201188. MCA 2: Lyme Bay (East) Overall cShnaarpaschteort Key Characteristics Description Visual Resource Mapping Location and boundaries This Marine Character Area (MCA) stretches from Branscombe in the west to the beginning of the causeway linking Weymouth with the Isle of Portland to the south-east. The western boundary marks the transition from Cretaceous chalk and limestone (exposed at Beer Head) to the characteristic Triassic red sandstone associated with the coastline around Sidmouth (MCA 1). This transition is broadly followed offshore, extending to a maximum distance of approximately 36 kilometres (19 nautical miles) from the coast and bathymetry of 57 metres. The offshore boundary is largely consistent with the limits of the inshore marine plan area, also following the 50 metre contour line in parts (shown on the Admiralty Charts) to capture the full extent of waters associated with the Bay. The eastern MCA boundary marks the transition to seas influenced by the strong tides of the Portland Race (MCA 3). Please note that the MCA boundaries represent broad zones of transition (not immediate breaks in character). Natural, visual, cultural and socio- economic relationships between adjacent MCAs play a key role in shaping overall character. Therefore individual MCAs should not be considered in isolation. This MCA is particularly related to MCA 1 (Lyme Bay (West)); together providing a description of the expansive bay as a whole.
    [Show full text]
  • George Collier Master Baker of Branscombe
    George Collier Master Baker of Branscombe. By Mervyn W Tims. George Collier was born 16th June 1864 at Beer, Devon. He was the fourth of eight children to George Sansom Collier and Elizabeth Ann, nee Bartlett of Beer. (My great great grandparents.) His older siblings were Mary Collier (my great grandmother) born 1857, John William Bartlett Collier, born 1858. Hannah Searle Collier born 1860. George's younger siblings were Alfred born 1866, William Frederick in 1868, Elizabeth Ann in 1871, and Frank born 1873. George was christened at the parish church on 24th July 1864. His father worked at Beer as a farm labourer, and his mother worked at home as a lace maker for the Honiton lace trade. Past generations of Colliers had lived in Dorset, and it was George's grandfather William, who as a young man left Hawkchurch and arrived in Beer around 1820, a couple of years before he married George's grandmother, Mary Stokes in 1822. George's father George Sansom Collier got his middle name from previous generation of Colliers who very often added the alias Sansom to their name; becoming Collier alias Sansom, and at times Sansom alias Collier; and one member of the Collier family dropped the name of Collier altogether to become Sansom. George was almost four years old in March 1868 when the London & South Western Railway arrived at nearby Seaton. This brought much excitement to the village, especially for the local fishermen who could get their fish to far off markets, especially the herring to Billingsgate in London. And for the villagers who could afford it there was the chance to travel easier and faster to Axminster on market days, or get to Exeter or Yeovil, and for the more adventurous who could afford it, a chance to see London.
    [Show full text]
  • Afoot in England
    Afoot in England W.H. Hudson Afoot in England Table of Contents Afoot in England.......................................................................................................................................................1 W.H. Hudson..................................................................................................................................................1 Chapter One: Guide−Books: An Introduction...............................................................................................1 Chapter Two: On Going Back.......................................................................................................................5 Chapter Three: Walking and Cycling............................................................................................................9 Chapter Four: Seeking a Shelter..................................................................................................................11 Chapter Five: Wind, Wave, and Spirit.........................................................................................................15 Chapter Six: By Swallowfield......................................................................................................................22 Chapter Seven: Roman Calleva...................................................................................................................25 Chapter Eight: A Gold Day At Silchester....................................................................................................28 Chapter Nine:
    [Show full text]
  • Map Referred to in the County of Devon
    East Devon District. Ottery St Mary and Sidmouth Sidford divisions OTTERY ST MARY RURAL WARD Raxhayes Farm GITTISHAM CP HONITON CP FENITON AND BUCKERELL WARD Church Green HONITON ST MICHAEL'S Willmoreleigh Farm School Caravan Site WARD Higher Holcombe Farm PUTTS CORNER Boycombe Farm Cemy Ware Farm Burnt Common OTTERY ST MARY Littlewell Farm Wolversleigh Farm FARWAY CP School Chineway Farm Great Well Farm Sallicombe Farm OTTERY ST MARY TOWN Lambrook Farm WARD Idehill Farm Pin Hill Farm Coldharbour Slade Farm Higher Knapp Farm Court Farm Gerway Farm Lower Knapp Farm HONITON ST MICHAEL'S Rill Farm ELECTORAL DIVISION Roncombe Gate Farm Roncombe Farm Plyford Farm North Mincombe Farm RONCOMBE CORNER Burrow Woods Farm Beechwood Lower Mincombe Farm Farm Wiggaton OTTERY ST MARY RURAL ELECTORAL DIVISION Mincombe farm Moorlands Farm Round Ball Farm OTTERY ST MARY CP Farwell Farm Sandcombe Farm Cawley's Farm Putts Farm Lincombe Farm Burcombe Manor Farm Wiscombe Linhay Farm Mincombe Post Farm Hill Farm Blacklake Farm Broad Down Farm Synderborough Farm Rough Common SOUTHLEIGH CP SIDBURY PARISH WARD OTTERY ST MARY RURAL Sidbury Manor WARD Rakeway Head Bridge Waxway Manor Park Sand Farm Farm COLY VALLEY WARD WHITE CROSS Claypits Farm Cotford Home Farm Cotford Bridge Lower Sweetcombe Farm Goosemoor Farm Chelson Farm Filcombe Church Farm Filcombe HOLLOW HEAD CROSS Sidbury Cricket Furze Hill Ground SIDMOUTH RURAL WARD Farm Fire and Smoke Farm SIDMOUTH CP Burscombe Farm Cemetery 2 Ebdon Farm 05 A3 Wood's Farm Harpford Common Voggis Hill Farm O T Buckley
    [Show full text]