What We Do

For all enquiries please contact the Parish Clerk Jim Murray – 07714 300981  or email clerk@easthuntspillparishcouncil.org

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Public Footpaths and Bridleways

Nuisances to report

  • Any premises in such a poor state
  • Fumes
  • Gases
  • Dust
  • Accumulations – eg refuse in garden




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The Parish Council

The parish council’s role also includes initiating projects for the maintenance and repair of parish facilities, as well as consulting with the district council on the maintenance, repair, and improvement of highways, drainage, footpaths, public transport, and street cleaning. Conservation matters (including trees and listed buildings) and environmental issues are also the responsibility of the council.

 




East Huntspill pc

Community

East Huntspill  village community shares a common social, economic, and cultural characteristics.

Our History

Huntspill was listed in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Honspil, meaning ‘Huna’s creek’ possibly from the Old English personal name Huna and from the Celtic pwll. An alternative origin is from Hun’s Pill in Old English, meaning a port on a tidal inlet, or pill, belonging to a Saxon lord, or hun.


The mouth of the River Brue had an extensive harbour in Roman and Saxon times, before silting up in the medieval period. The village was flooded in the Bristol Channel floods of 1607. Huntspill ‘River’ is actually a canal dug during WW2, firstly to supply fresh water to the Ordinance Factory for munitions manufacture and secondly to drain the peat moors to stop them flooding on an annual basis. Therefore its official name is the ‘Huntspill Drainage Canal’. It was dug in part by Italian prisoners-of-war. In fact, one of our Parish Councillor’s ancestors (Gordon Boyer) was one of the carpenters that worked on its construction.


The Anglican parish Church of All Saints in East Huntspill was built in 1839 by G P Manners, with the bell-chamber being added in the late 19th century.


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