Bures
Bures is a village with several facilities in eastern England that straddles the Essex/Suffolk border. It is made up of the two civil parishes: Bures Hamlet in Essex as well as Bures St. Mary in Suffolk. The location is bisected by the River Stour, the county limit from end of its tidewater to near its source. The town is most often described jointly, as Bures. On corresponding financial institutions are two civil parishes: Bures Hamlet in Essex and Bures St. Mary in Suffolk. Each vary in area councils of those names as well as in district councils, in the 2nd rate of local government, (Braintree, and Babergh). The town provides a post town and also its pre-1996 (obsolete) Postal County was Suffolk. Bures is offered by a railway station on the Gainsborough Line, seen below in 1966. On the left bank is the medieval-core church of St Mary the Virgin real estate 8 bells with the biggest considering 21 cwt. They were enhanced from 6 to eight bells in 1951 by Gillett and also Johnston of Croydon. In terms of the ecclesiastical parish, and thus background before the development of civil parishes in the 1870s there is no division, save as to area; all falls into Bures St Mary, which reaches a similar range on each side of the river.