Lynmouth
Lynmouth is a town in Devon, England, on the north edge of Exmoor. The village straddles the assemblage of the West Lyn and also East Lyn rivers, in a gorge 700 feet (210 m) below Lynton, which was the only place to broaden to once Lynmouth ended up being as built-up as feasible. The villages are linked by the Lynton and Lynmouth Cliff Railway, which functions 2 cable-connected cars by gravity, using water tanks. Both towns are a civil church controlled by Lynton and Lynmouth Town Council. The church borders prolong southwards from the coast, and include communities such as Barbrook as well as little moorland settlements such as East Ilkerton, West Ilkerton as well as Shallowford. The South West Coastline Course and Tarka Route go through, as well as both Moors Way runs from Ivybridge in South Devon to Lynmouth; the Samaritans Way South West runs from Bristol to Lynton, and also the Coleridge Way from Nether Stowey to Lynmouth. Lynmouth was defined by Thomas Gainsborough, who honeymooned there with his new bride Margaret Burr, as "the most delightful place for a landscape painter this country can boast".