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Hatherleigh

Coordinates:50°49′00″N4°04′00″W / 50.8167°N 4.0667°W /50.8167; -4.0667
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Town in Devon, England
This article is about the town in England. For the town in Australia, seeHatherleigh, South Australia.

Human settlement in England
Hatherleigh
Hatherleigh church
Hatherleigh is located in Devon
Hatherleigh
Hatherleigh
Location withinDevon
Population1,306 (Parish, 2001)
OS grid referenceSS5404
Civil parish
  • Hatherleigh
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townOkehampton
Postcode districtEX20
Dialling code01837
WebsiteCommunity page website
List of places
UK
England
Devon
50°49′00″N4°04′00″W / 50.8167°N 4.0667°W /50.8167; -4.0667

Hatherleigh is a smallmarket town in theWest Devon district, in the county ofDevon, England. In 2011 the parish had a population of 1306.

Churchyard in Hatherleigh

The name Hatherleigh derives from either theOld Englishhaguþornlēah meaning 'hawthorn wood or clearing' or fromhǣddrelēah meaning 'heather wood or clearing'.[1]

It hosts an arts festival in July,[2] and a carnival in November featuring two flaming tar barrel runs.[3] The Walruses meet on New Year's Day to jump into theRiver Lew to raise money for local good causes, this tradition which started in the 1980s came to end on 1 January 2018. An annual half-marathon called the Ruby Run takes place usually in June between Holsworthy and Hatherleigh, starting from each town in alternate years.

Hatherleigh Market has weekly sales of sheep, cattle and poultry with increased sales on Tuesdays. It is thesmallest town in Devon. The market formally closed in February 2018 due to the site being sold to make way for a new housing development, the Tuesday pannier market continues and there will be provision and a new building in the development. In September 2019 the demolition of the site began as of March 2020 only one building of the market remains to temporary house the pannier market, the new development is moving at pace with many of the new buildings now rising from the ground.

Hatherleigh is home to two pubs, The Tally Ho and The George. The George was burned down in an arson attack on 23 December 2008 and has subsequently been rebuilt and re-opened in 2010. More than 100 firefighters from across the county were drafted in to help fight the blaze which was still burning well into the early hours of Christmas Eve. Hatherleigh also has a cafe, two hairdressers, craft shops, a beauty salon, a butcher, a newsagency, a vets, medical centre, a convenience shop and a petrol station.

The parish church is dedicated to St John the Baptist and has a western tower topped by a shingled spire. The spire was destroyed in theBurns' Day Storm of 1990 and a replica of the original now stands in its place. The nave and aisles are divided by granite arcades. The font is Norman and the original wagon roofs remain.[4] Since 2024, a disused vestry in the church grounds has housed a gymnasium.[5]

An impressive obelisk one mile (1.6 km) east of the town commemorates Lt Col.William Morris (d. 1858 in India): it was built in 1860.[6][7]

Hatherleigh was the beginning of the 7th stage of theTour of Britain in September 2009 and record numbers turned out to watch the famous race begin. Hatherleigh had often been on the course of the Tour but this was the first time a stage had started in the town.

Hatherleigh saw the Olympic torch pass through the town on 21 May 2012.[8]

There is an electoral ward with the same name. The population at the 2011 census was 2,218.[9]

There is no railway station within Hatherleigh's boundaries. However residents can use the nearby railway station inOkehampton now that the Dartmoor Line has reopened with regular services to Exeter.

The village is part of theRuby Country which covers 45parishes around themarket towns ofHolsworthy and Hatherleigh. These two towns were at the centre of the2001 Foot and Mouth Disease outbreak, and althoughagriculture was directly affected, most local businesses suffered considerable financial hardship. As a result, the Ruby Country Initiative was established, anot for profitpartnership, to help create a more robust and sustainable local economy, and to create an identity for the area.[10]

References

[edit]
  1. ^http://kepn.nottingham.ac.uk/map/place/Devon/Hatherleigh
  2. ^"Welcome to the Hatherleigh Festival Website". Hatherleigh Festival Website. Retrieved16 December 2008.
  3. ^"Carnival Index Page". Hatherleigh.net. Retrieved16 December 2008.
  4. ^Pevsner, N. (1952)North Devon. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books; p. 96
  5. ^Walsh, Simon."Church gym proves popular with fitness enthusiasts".Church Times. Retrieved4 September 2024.
  6. ^Pevsner, N. (1952)
  7. ^"William Morris Monument, Hatherleigh, Devon, UK". Waymarking. Retrieved18 April 2010.
  8. ^"Olympic Torch Blazes Way Through North Devon".Express and Echo. 17 May 2012. Retrieved16 October 2016.[permanent dead link]
  9. ^"Ward population 2011". Retrieved17 February 2015.
  10. ^"Welcome to the Ruby Country". Ruby Country. Retrieved5 July 2016.

External links

[edit]
Unitary authorities
Boroughs or districts
Major settlements
(cities in italics)
Rivers
Topics
Exeter1,2
  • None
East Devon1
Mid Devon1
North Devon1
Torridge1
West Devon1,3
South Hams1
Teignbridge1
Plymouth2,4
  • None
Torbay4
Bold text denotes a parish council referred to as a "town council".
  1. Non-metropolitan district of thenon-metropolitan county of Devon (administered byDevon County Council).
  2. Hascity status in the United Kingdom.
  3. Hasborough status in the United Kingdom.
  4. Unitary authority not part of the non-metropolitan county, thus not administered by Devon County Council.
  5. The remainder of Torbay isunparished.


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