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    Teignmouth (IPA: ) is a town on the north bank of the estuary mouth of the River Teign in south Devon, England. The town grew from a fishing port to a fashionable resort of some note in Georgian times with further expansion after the opening of the South Devon Railway on 30 May 1846, built by Isambard Kingdom Brunel which ran along a stone embankment between the sea and cliffs for several miles from Newton Abbot to the east towards Dawlish, ending at Exeter. A stretch of this line was originally both broad gauge (7ft.01/4Inch) and worked by the atmospheric system, with steam pump houses at regular intervals to create the vacuum. It was not successful for a host of reasons and was converted to normal steam locomotive working.

    The port, in existence since the 13th century, is still active, mostly handling clay, timber and grain, with many smaller pleasure craft mooring in the wide estuary. The town is linked with Shaldon, the village on the opposite bank, by a passenger ferry at the river mouth and by a road bridge further upstream. The granite for London Bridge was sent from here, having come down the unique granite railway from the quarries near Haytor and then down the Stover canal to the port.

    In the harbour area is Salty, a small island created through dredging operations. Salmon nets are still employed by locals, especially near Shaldon Bridge. This bridge is of Roman Origin and when the present bridge was constructed some of the roman wood was used to make a table which was kept at Lindridge House. Tragically it was destroyed in the fire that destroyed the house just as its conversion into a hotel was nearing completion in the 1960's.

    Although greatly reduced from its hey-day, Teignmouth still receives considerable numbers of holiday makers, most of whom visit the sea facing beach and the Pier with its amusement arcade and rides.


    The western half of the town was destroyed (apart from the Jolly Sailor public house) by fire during a brief invasion by the French in 1690, the last invasion of England (though not of Britain as the French invaded Carreg Gwastad, near Fishguard, Pembrokeshire in 1797). French Street with its museum is named in memory of the occasion.

    The poet Keats spent a few weeks here and completed his epic poem 'Endymion'.

    Charles Babbage (26 December 1791 – 18 October 1871) the English mathematician, analytical philosopher, mechanical engineer and (proto-) computer scientist who originated the idea of a programmable computer, lived here for some years and was warden of a local church.

    Donald Crowhurst, competing in the Sunday Times Golden Globe Race, started his ill-fated attempt to sail round the world single-handed from Teignmouth on October 31, 1968. His boat was a trimaran named the Teignmouth Electron after the town and his electronics company.

    In pop culture, the rock band Muse was formed in Teignmouth, and Neil Forrester, cast member of American reality television show The Real World spent his formative years there. Also, Patrick Wolf has written a song called Teignmouth, which can be found on his album Wind In The Wires.


        Teignmouth
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    Transport
    Teignmouth railway station is close to the town centre and is served by trains to most stations in Devon was well as London and further afield. The seawall between Teignmouth and Dawlish is the most expensive stretch of line to maintain of the whole British railway network. The Great Western Railway had surveyed a quadruple tracked inland deviation, but the the advent of World War 2 brought the project to an end.
     
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Teignmouth". link