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IN 2009, a campaign to stop the closure of Bishop’s Nympton’s post office succeeded with residents’ help and the council’s. The shop on the premises has been run by volunteers as a community shop, again with support from the council, as well as the villagers themselves.
IN 2009, a campaign to stop the closure of Bishop’s Nympton’s post office succeeded with residents’ help and the council’s. The shop on the premises has been run by volunteers as a community shop, again with support from the council, as well as the villagers themselves.


A replacement for the previous (wooden) village hall was built after a long campaign of fund-raising by the villagers. Sources of funding included £15,000 from the parish council, £95,000 from the sale of the village hall, £100,000 from Leader 4 Funding and £17,000 from a section 106 agreement.<ref>http://www.thisisnorthdevon.co.uk/news/Hall-post-office-plan-village/article-1897532-detail/article.html</ref> It was formally opened by Mrs Frances Gunn on Friday, 3 June 2011. The village shop and Post Office moved to a purpose built part of the new hall in the summer of 2011.
A replacement for the previous (wooden) village hall was built after a long campaign of fund-raising by the villagers. Sources of funding included £15,000 from the parish council, £95,000 from the sale of the village hall, £100,000 from Leader 4 Funding and £17,000 from a planning agreement.<ref>'[http://www.thisisnorthdevon.co.uk/news/Hall-post-office-plan-village/article-1897532-detail/article.html Hall Post Office plan for village]' - ''This is Devon''</ref> It was formally opened by Mrs Frances Gunn on Friday, 3 June 2011. The village shop and Post Office moved to a purpose built part of the new hall in the summer of 2011.


==Great houses==
==Great houses==

Latest revision as of 17:56, 23 April 2018

Bishop's Nympton
Devon

St Mary’s, Bishop's Nympton
Location
Grid reference: SS758237
Location: 50°59’59"N, 3°46’15"W
Data
Local Government
Council: North Devon

Bishop's Nympton is an inland village in Devon, about three miles east of South Molton. The 2001 census recorded a population of 932.

Bishop's Nympton: decayed barn.
Bishop's Nympton: cemetery

The village was the main area for the filming of a 1990s television programme called The Passion. It is also home to wildlife filmmaker Johnny Kingdom.

The parish church, St Mary’s, has tall tower of the 15th-century church tower. The church contains a Norman font, a 15th-century arcade, and a "richly carved"[1] The Easter Sepulchre monument in the church is generally assumed to commemorate Sir Lewis Pollard (d.1526), Judge of the Common Pleas.

IN 2009, a campaign to stop the closure of Bishop’s Nympton’s post office succeeded with residents’ help and the council’s. The shop on the premises has been run by volunteers as a community shop, again with support from the council, as well as the villagers themselves.

A replacement for the previous (wooden) village hall was built after a long campaign of fund-raising by the villagers. Sources of funding included £15,000 from the parish council, £95,000 from the sale of the village hall, £100,000 from Leader 4 Funding and £17,000 from a planning agreement.[2] It was formally opened by Mrs Frances Gunn on Friday, 3 June 2011. The village shop and Post Office moved to a purpose built part of the new hall in the summer of 2011.

Great houses

Ancient historic residences within the parish include:

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Bishop's Nympton)

References

  1. Mee, Arthur: The King's England: Devon (Hodder & Stoughton)
  2. 'Hall Post Office plan for village' - This is Devon