Articles of interest in Crediton
Ashton is a civil parish in the Teignbridge district of Devon, England. According to the 2001 census it had a population of 174. The parish consists of two villages, Higher Ashton and Lower Ashton, and is on the edge of the Dartmoor National Park.
Ashton railway station was a railway station serving the village of Ashton in Devon, England.
Upton Hellions is a village in Devon, England, located north of Long Barn and south of East Village, and near to Crediton.
Raddon Top is the highest point of the Raddon Hills, a small ridge of hills in the Shobrooke area of Mid Devon.
Oakfordbridge is a village in Devon, England.
Morchard Road is a small hamlet in mid Devon. It has a pub, The Devonshire Dumpling.
Marsh Barton Priory was a priory in Devon, England.
Lower Ashton is a village on the western slopes of Haldon in Teignbridge, Devon, England.
Indio Monastery was a monastery in Devon, England.
Higher Ashton is a village on the western slopes of Haldon in Teignbridge, Devon, England.
Eastington is a hamlet in the English county of Devon.
The County Ground is a cricket ground in Exeter, Devon. This is not to be confused with the County Ground Stadium also in Exeter. The earliest recorded match on the ground was in 1889 between the Gentlemen of Devon and Somerset. In 1902, Devon playe…
Cotley Castle is a large Iron Age Hill fort near Dunchideock in Devon and close to Exeter.
Chudleigh Knighton Heath, near Chudleigh Knighton, Devon is a Site of Special Scientific Interest, so designated because of its rare lowland heath vegetation. It is a habitat for many rare species including the ant, Formica exsecta.
Bowling Green Marsh is a nature reserve located on the confluence of the River Exe (at the top end of its estuary) and the River Clyst, near the town of Topsham in Devon.
Bovey Heath is a 32 hectare (50 acre) area of heathland between Bovey Tracey and Heathfield in south Devon, England.
Berry Castle is an earthwork probably dating to the Iron Age close to Black Dog in Devon north of Crediton and west of Tiverton. It does not fit the traditional pattern of an Iron Age Hill fort. Although the earthwork would seem to be an incomplete …
Alphington Halt railway station was a small station on the Teign Valley Line, which operated in the South West England county of Devon, diverging from the Great Western Main Line at Exeter.
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