Winscombe

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The Millennium Green at Winscombe, on the site of the former railway station.
The Millennium Green at Winscombe, on the site of the former railway station.

Winscombe is a village in North Somerset, England, close to the settlements of Axbridge and Cheddar, on the western edge of the Mendip Hills. Weston-super-Mare is also nearby.

There are two schools in the village, as well as community and sports facilities. State secondary education is provided at nearby Churchill School. There is a Society of Friends' school called Sidcot near the village.

The Parish of Winscombe and Sandford, centred around the Parish Church of Saint James, includes the villages of Barton, Oakridge, Sandford, Sidcot and Woodborough.

Winscombe grew in the 19th century with the arrival of a branch of the Great Western Railway, opened in 1869. This was the Cheddar Valley line (also known as The Strawberry Line), which ran from Yatton to Wells via Cheddar. The railway was closed in 1963, and today, the route is a public footpath, and the site of the former Winscombe station is now the Millennium Green. It is possible to walk from the station to Yatton, and in the opposite direction through the railway tunnel at Shute Shelve Hill to Axbridge and Cheddar.

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