Bures
Bures is a town with lots of facilities in eastern England that straddles the Essex/Suffolk boundary. It is comprised of the two civil parishes: Bures Hamlet in Essex and Bures St. Mary in Suffolk. The area is bisected by the River Stour, the area boundary from end of its tidewater to near its resource. The village is most often referred to collectively, as Bures. On corresponding banks are two civil parishes: Bures Hamlet in Essex and also Bures St. Mary in Suffolk. Each vary in region councils of those names as well as in area councils, in the 2nd tier of city government, (Braintree, and Babergh). The town offers a post town and its pre-1996 (obsolete) Postal County was Suffolk. Bures is offered by a railway station on the Gainsborough Line, seen here in 1966. On the left bank is the medieval-core church of St Mary the Virgin real estate eight bells with the biggest weighing 21 cwt. They were augmented from 6 to eight bells in 1951 by Gillett as well as Johnston of Croydon. In terms of the ecclesiastical church, and thus background before the invention of civil churches in the 1870s there is no department, conserve as to region; all comes under Bures St Mary, which includes a similar distance on each side of the river.