Find the word definition

Wikipedia
Parracombe (locomotive)

Parracombe is the name of a steam outline Baguley diesel locomotive that currently resides on the Groudle Glen Railway on the Isle of Man in private ownership. It has not operated in service on the railway since arriving in 2007 from the Lynton and Barnstaple Railway in Devon, where it had seen service on the Lynbarn Railway at the Milky Way theme park in Clovelly. It was built by Baguley (works No. 3232 of 1947) and once worked at Butlins Clacton Holiday Camp, from where it featured on the closing credits to the situation comedy Hi-de-Hi! in the 1980s. Currently in store, it performed a very limited number of passenger services as part of an enthusiasts event in July 2007. It's planned that in the coming years, when finances permit, the locomotive will be rebuilt and returned to service.

A very similar loco "Dreadnought" operates infrequently at Amerton Railway in Staffordshire

Parracombe

Parracombe is a rural settlement near Lynton, in Devon, England. It is situated in the Heddon Valley, on Exmoor. The population at the 2011 census was 293.

A number Bronze Age barrows exist nearby, along with several other small earth-works throughout the parish. Beacon Castle and Voley Castle both Iron Age Hill forts are situated nearby. Rowley Barton ("rough clearing") was a manor mentioned in the Domesday Book along with East and West Middleton.

Holwell Castle, at Parracombe was a Norman motte and bailey castle built to guard the junction of the east–west and north–south trade routes, enabling movement of people and goods and the growth of the population. Alternative explanations for its construction suggest it may have been constructed to obtain taxes at the River Heddon bridging place, or to protect and supervise silver mining in the area around Combe Martin. It was in diameter and high above the bottom of a rock cut ditch which is deep. It was built, in the late 11th or early 12th century, of earth with timber palisades for defense and a one- or two-story wooden dwelling. It was probably built by either Martin de Tours, the first lord of Parracombe, William de Falaise (who married Martin's widow) or Robert FitzMartin, although there are no written records to validate this.

Parracombe's St Petrock's Church is now in the care of the Churches Conservation Trust.

Until 1935 the village was served by a halt on the Lynton & Barnstaple Railway which ran close to the centre of the settlement.