Saturday 27 March 2021

The Somerset village of Corfe and its Church of St. Nicholas.

The Somerset village of Corfe straddles a short stretch of the B3170, the road linking Taunton with the A303, a mile south of Taunton Racecourse.  I visited the village a couple of years ago and had a stroll around after leaving the car in the small car park alongside the Church of St. Nicholas.

The Somerset Federation of Women’s Institutes beautifully described Corfe in their The Somerset Village Book (Countryside Books, 1988).

“Corfe is a small, pretty village on the northern slopes of the Blackdown Hills , four miles south of Taunton.  The name is said to have been derived from an ancient word meaning ‘gap’ or ‘pass’ and this is borne out by the cleft in the hillside which takes the Honiton road over the Blackdowns from the village.  Although it is not mentioned in the Domesday Book the village has existed since Norman times.

Calamine and limestone were quarried on the hills around the village and there were numerous lime kilns for burning the lime for agricultural use.

The ancient woodlands which provided fuel for the kilns remain and provide a magnificent backcloth to the village.”

The Church of St. Nicholas in the Somerset village of Corfe.

The charming little Church of St. Nicholas with its uncommon tower has its rebuilding chronicled by Ronald Webber in his The Devon and Somerset Blackdowns (Robert Hale & Company, 1976).

"The church of St. Nicholas at Corfe is built in Norman style, but this was done in the nineteenth century – most of it in 1844 and the rest (including the tower) in 1858. The old (1844) tower was small, low, square and ugly, so it was replaced by the present one of blue stone with a peal of four bells; a great improvement, it would seem, to the old one."

The village war memorial outside the Church of St. Nicholas in the Somerset village of Corfe.

The plaque on the village war memorial in Corfe, Somerset.



I came across this just inside the gate at St. Nicholas Church, Corfe, Somerset. Never seen one like it in a churchyard before!

Friday 19 March 2021

Dragon's teeth in the undergrowth defending Ilminster in South Somerset.

While on an afternoon stroll in South Somerset a couple of days ago I came across some relics from World War Two.  What looks like some strange form of alien plant life lurking in the undergrowth are actually concrete dragon’s teeth covered in ivy.  For most of the year they are hidden by the greenery, but at this time of year they are easily visible.  

 They were used to form part of the Ilminster Anti-Tank Island in the early years of the Second World War when a German invasion was considered possible.  The dragon’s teeth originally ran all along the eastern side of Dillington Park Drive.  An information board near a concrete pill-box in the Drive is very informative and explains the role of Anti-Tank Islands.

World War Two dragon's teeth in Dillington park Drive, Ilminster, South Somerset.