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Minehead is a coastal town in West Somerset, England with a population of around 10,000. Since 1974, Minehead has been administered by the West Somerset District Council. The Town Council was created in 1983. Since 1991, Minehead has been twinned with Saint-Berthevin, a small town close to the regional centre of Laval in the Mayenne département of France.
Tourist attractions
Environment and geology The town is overlooked by North Hill, and is close to Exmoor National Park. The cliff exposures around Minehead's shoreline are very dramatic and fossils are exposed. In 1999 much of Minehead's sandy beach was washed away in a severe storm; the erosion was caused as an unexpected side-effect of a £13-million Environment Agency sea defence project. The town has been a popular seaside resort since the 1850s, and tourism employs 60-percent of the local workforce. The Environment Agency thus had to replace 320,000 tons of fine sifted beach sand, at a cost to them of £2.4 million. The town's new coastal defences and flood defence officially opened in 2001, and the new beach is said to be better than the old one. Transport The Minehead Railway was opened on 16 July 1874, linking the town to Taunton and beyond. It was closed on 4 January 1971 but has since been reopened as a by the West Somerset Railway. The railway station is close to the beach. Famous people Seven of the rebels of the 1685 Monmouth Rebellion lived in Minehead. The wooded bluffs above Minehead feature as the Hermit's abode.... "in that wood which slopes down to the sea", in The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Romantic poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge. The poet lived nearby, at Nether Stowey (between Bridgwater and Minehead). His statue can be seen at the nearby harbour at Watchet. He and Wordsworth (who lived nearby at Alfoxden) would often roam the hills and coast on long night walks; leading to local gossip that they were 'spies' for the French. The Government sent an agent to investigate, but found they were, indeed, "mere poets". Minehead's beautiful scenery is said to have inspired the Irish-born hymn writer Cecil Frances Alexander to write the hymn "All Things Bright and Beautiful". Minehead is the birth place of science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke (born in Blenheim Road, 1917). Many famous entertainers have worked at Butlins holiday camp, which is well known for its live entertainment. Nick Partridge OBE, was born and raised in the town. He was the Chief Executive of The Terrence Higgins Trust, and a key campaigner on HIV and AIDS. Sport and recreation At Alcombe, Within the West Somerset Community College there is the Minehead Cricket Club, MCC, Who have 4 men's teams and one women's side, Also there are training nights throughout the summer on Monday and Thursdays for Under 15's. Minehead has a King George's Field in memorial to King George V | ||||||||||
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