Watchet is a harbour town, civil parish as well as electoral ward in the English county of Somerset, with a population of 3,785. It is located 15 miles (24 kilometres) west of Bridgwater, 15 miles (24 km) north-west of Taunton, and also 9 miles (14 kilometres) eastern of Minehead. The town exists at the mouth of the Washford River on Bridgwater Bay, part of the Bristol Channel, and on the edge of Exmoor National Park. The initial settlement may have been at the Iron Age fort Daw's Castle. It after that transferred to the mouth of the river and also a little harbour established, called by the celts as "Gwo Coed" implying Under the Wood. After the Saxon occupation of the area the community developed and was known as Weced or Waeced and also was assaulted by Vikings in the 10th century. Profession using the harbour slowly expanded, in spite of damages throughout numerous extreme storms, with import and also exports of goods including those from Wansbrough Paper Mill until the 19th century when it boosted with the export of iron ore, brought from the Brendon Hills using the West Somerset Mineral Railway, generally to Newport for onward transportation to the Ebbw Vale Steelworks. The West Somerset Railway also offered the town and port bringing goods as well as people from the Bristol and Exeter Railway. The iron ore profession reduced and discontinued in the early-20th century. The port continued a smaller industrial trade until 2000 when it was exchanged a marina. The church is devoted to Saint Decuman who is believed to have actually died below around 706. An early church was developed near Daw's Castle as well as a brand-new church was erected in the 15th century. It has a number of tombs and monuments to Sir John Wyndham and also his family members that were the lords of the estate. Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poem The Rime of the Ancient Mariner which was written in the area is memorialized by a statuary on the harbourside.