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Cole (for Bruton) railway station

1862 establishments in EnglandBeeching closures in EnglandBrutonDisused railway stations in SomersetFormer Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway stations
Pages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1966Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1862Somerset building and structure stubsSouth West England railway station stubsUse British English from February 2018
Cole (former) station geograph 3086251 by Ben Brooksbank
Cole (former) station geograph 3086251 by Ben Brooksbank

Cole (for Bruton) railway station was a station on the Somerset and Dorset Railway in South Somerset, serving the village of Cole, which is now virtually joined to the village of Pitcombe and the town of Bruton. Cole was the station where the Dorset Central Railway line from Templecombe met the Somerset Central Railway line from Glastonbury and Street railway station in 1862. Later that year the two companies combined to form the Somerset and Dorset Railway. Just north of the station the line crossed the Wilts, Somerset and Weymouth Railway although the two railways were not connected here. The goods yard closed on 5 April 1965 and Cole station was closed with the railway in the Beeching cuts in 1966.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Cole (for Bruton) railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Cole (for Bruton) railway station
Mill Lane,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Cole (for Bruton) railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.09895 ° E -2.47123 °
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Address

Mill Lane

Mill Lane
BA10 0PQ , Pitcombe
England, United Kingdom
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Cole (former) station geograph 3086251 by Ben Brooksbank
Cole (former) station geograph 3086251 by Ben Brooksbank
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Nearby Places

Gants Mill
Gants Mill

Gants Mill is a watermill on the River Brue in Pitcombe near Bruton, Somerset, England. Much of the current mill was built in 1810 but includes parts of the 18th-century building and possibly some material from earlier mills, as there has been a mill on the same site since about 1290 which was originally a fulling mill. It is a grade II* listed building, and takes its name from John le Gaunt who owned it in 1290. The mill was owned for four centuries by the Weston family and papers relating to the mill are now held in the Somerset Record office.Most of the machinery, including the grindstones, conveyors, sackhoist and grain bins, date from 1888 and is still used for grinding animal feed and occasionally whole wheat flour. A 20 inches (51 cm) British Empire turbine by Armfields of Ringwood was also installed. Steam power was introduced in 1883, and replaced by semi-diesel in 1914.The South Somerset Hydropower Group was begun in 2001 and the first turbine, at Gants Mill, was commissioned in 2003. It was turned on by Adam Hart Davis on Friday 23 April 2004. It now produces up to 12 kW (16 hp) of electricity from a 300 millimetres (12 in) crossflow turbine made by Valley Hydro of Cornwall, and has a maximum flow rate of 495 litres (109 imp gal; 131 US gal) per second.Brian Shingler is the sixth generation of his family to act as the miller.The water garden includes seasonal displays of iris, roses, delphiniums, day lilies, clematis, and dahlias.

King's School, Bruton
King's School, Bruton

King's Bruton is an independent fully co-educational secondary boarding and day school in the English public school tradition located in Bruton, Somerset, England. It was founded in 1519 by Richard FitzJames, and received royal foundation status around 30 years later in the reign of Edward VI. It is a member school of the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference. Girls have attended the school's sixth form since the 1960s before King's became fully co-educational in the late 1990s. It has six houses: Wellesley, Priory and Arion for girls, with New, Blackford and Lyon making up the boys' houses. In September 1999, the Hobhouse Science centre was opened with a fully equipped observatory. The school has a purpose-built theatre, sports hall and fitness suite and sports surfaces for rugby, netball, tennis and cricket as well as two all-weather astro-turfs for hockey. The Basil Wright Building was opened in 2009 and houses the Headmaster's, Bursar's and Registrar's offices.King's School Bruton once owned a copy of Magna Carta dating from 1297, which it sold to the Australian Government in 1952 for £12,500.Old House was the original school building, later New House was built as an extension for school rooms and Old House was the headmaster's house. The Memorial Hall was built in the 1920s to commemorate the members of the school who died in World War I. Blackford and Lyon were built and were funded by beneficiaries such as Lord Blackford and James Lyon. On 28 March 2019, to mark the school's quincentenary, King's hosted Queen Elizabeth II during a wider Royal visit to the West Country. During the visit the Queen opened a new music school named in her honour.