Bude
Bude is a small seaside resort town in north eastern Cornwall, England, in the civil church of Bude-Stratton as well as at the mouth of the River Neet (additionally recognized locally as the River Strat). It was often previously known as Bude Haven. It exists southwest of Stratton, south of Flexbury as well as Poughill, and also north of Widemouth Bay as well as is located along the A3073 road off the A39. Bude is twinned with Ergué-Gabéric in Brittany, France. Bude's shore encounters Bude Bay in the Celtic Sea, part of the Atlantic Sea. The population of the civil church can be discovered under Bude-Stratton. Its earlier significance was as a harbour, and after that a source of sea sand beneficial for improving the moorland dirt. The Victorians favoured it as a watering place, and it was a prominent seaside destination in the 20th century. In the 1951 Cornwall volume of The Structures of England, Nikolaus Pevsner defined Bude as "Not an eye-catching harbour-town compared with others in Cornwall and also Devon", and also remains to state that the church is "useless".