Cullompton
Cullompton is a community and also civil parish in the district of Mid Devon as well as the area of Devon, England, in your area referred to as Cully. It is 13 miles (21 km) north-east of Exeter as well as rests on the River Culm. In 2011 the church as a whole had a population of 8,499 while the built-up area of the community had a population of 7,439. The earliest proof of occupation is from the Roman duration-- there was a fort on the hill above the town as well as occupation in the current town centre. Columtune was stated in Alfred the Great's will which left it to his youngest child Aethelweard (c.880-922). In the past the town's economic climate had a huge element of wool and also fabric manufacture, after that later natural leather working and paper manufacture. A huge percentage of community's occupants are commuters yet there is some local manufacturing, including flour and also paper mills. It has a monthly farmers' market hung on the second Saturday of each month which is the earliest occasion of its kind in the South West. It is home to two grade I listed buildings: the fifteenth-century St Andrew's parish church and also the seventeenth-century house referred to as The Walronds. The centre of the town is the only conservation area in Mid Devon and there are 7 grade II * listed structures and also ninety grade II listed buildings in the parish.