1
The Lazy Toad, Brampford Speke
An excellent pub/restaurant visited on a very wet Sunday. It is reflecting in the wet road surface.
Image: © Chris Allen
Taken: 10 Jun 2012
0.01 miles
2
Brampford Speke Churchyard
The thatched cottage at the back, the tiled wall and the weathered gravestones are so typical of this area. The folk in the grave in the foreground are Emma and Mark Oldridge.
Image: © Ken Ripper
Taken: 19 Jun 2009
0.02 miles
3
The Lazy Toad - used to be The Agricultural Inn
Image: © Rob Purvis
Taken: 23 Jul 2009
0.03 miles
4
The road through Brampford Speke
Image: © Rob Purvis
Taken: 23 Jul 2009
0.03 miles
5
Car park, Lazy Toad
At the former Agricultural Inn in Brampford Speke.
Image: © Derek Harper
Taken: 14 Dec 2012
0.04 miles
6
Brampford Speke from across the Exe
St Peter's church occupies a fine site at Brampford Speke when viewed from the flood plain of the Exe (foreground). The tower is C15; the rest rebuilt in the mid-C19 http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-86080-the-parish-church-of-st-peter-brampford-s . In the centre is The Cottage, formerly Tower Lodge, and partly C17.
Image: © Derek Harper
Taken: 23 Jul 2010
0.04 miles
7
Brampford Speke: churchyard
The church is dedicated to St Peter and was heavily rebuilt in 1852-3, excepting the west tower
Image: © Martin Bodman
Taken: 12 Sep 2005
0.04 miles
8
Brampford Speke
A distant view of the village on the bluff above the Exe, seen from the railway line at Upton Pyne. The nearby field boundary marks the course of the dismantled railway line up the Exe valley to Tiverton, curving to converge with the main line.
Image: © Derek Harper
Taken: 1 Apr 2019
0.04 miles
9
Brampford Speke : Village Road
A road heading through the village of Brampford Speke in East Devon.
Image: © Lewis Clarke
Taken: 21 Sep 2012
0.04 miles
10
Brampford Speke : The Parish Church of St Peter
BRAMPFORD SPEKE SX 99 NW 3/20 The Parish Church of St Peter 30.6.61 - I Parish church. C15 west tower, the remainder, 1852-3 by Butcher, consisting of nave, north aisle, south porch, south transept, north-east organ chamber and vestry. Ashlar. Impressive west tower, slender proportions, 2 stages. Diagonal buttresses with 3 offsets plus C17 corner obelisks serving as pinnacles. North- west half-octagonal stair turret. Heavy base moulding which forms the hood mould of west door. Doorway with concave moulded jambs. 4-light Perpendicular west window. 2-light square-headed belfry openings, with shallow-chamfered lights. Small north window, hood formed by string course. The 1852 church is a fine, balanced composition. Exterior: all windows decorated. South-front: wide transept with 3-light south window above a lean-to lit by small punched sextafoil (marking an internal recess). 1 flush 2-light window to nave, 2 to chancel with hood-moulds. 3-light east window with large sextafoil in head. Strong double set- off buttresses; vestry east front with bold asymmetrical fenestration. North side with flush 2-light windows. Interior: mediaeval work: tower arch responds with wave moulding. C16 tower ceiling. Cusped, original tomb recess in south transept, with 4 heads facing downwards, of good quality. The font, possibly C15, recut, octagonal with traceried panels, wanting its plinth. 1852 rebuild: 3-bay north arcade, Decorated octagonal piers. Double-chamfered chancel arch with moulded capitals. Good roofs : arch-brace and collars to chancel and nave, scissor-braces to south transept. Minton tiling in chancel. Contemporary wooden commandment board: now in tower. Large, assertive, wooden pulpit. Monuments: of historical interest (see below) wall monument to Rev. G C Gorham, d. 1865, by Hale of London (south transept, east wall); mural monument to J Sheppard, 1865 by Stephens of Exeter (south transept, west wall). Glass: good heraldic glass in south transept, south window and north aisle. West and 2 north window, dated 1852. Historic interest: in 1847 the Bishop of Exeter, suspecting the Rev. G C Gorham's orthodoxy on baptismal regeneration, refused to institute him to Brampford Speke. Gorham appealed to the Privy Council and won. The Gorham Judgement forced many (including Wilberforce and Manning) to secede to Rome. Source: Devon C19 Churches Project.
Image: © Lewis Clarke
Taken: 21 Sep 2012
0.04 miles