Place:Bishops Lydeard, Somerset, England

Watchers
NameBishops Lydeard
Alt namesBishops-Lydeardsource: Family History Library Catalog
Cotford St. Lukesource: see below
East Lydeardsource: hamlet in parish
TypeAncient parish, Civil parish
Coordinates51.067°N 3.2°W
Located inSomerset, England
See alsoKingsbury Hundred, Somerset, Englandhundred in which it was located
Taunton Rural, Somerset, Englandrural district 1894-1974
Taunton Deane District, Somerset, Englanddistrict council covering the area 1974-2019
Somerset West and Taunton District, Somerset, Englanddistrict municipality covering the area since 2019
NOTE: Do not confuse Bishops Lydeard with two other parish in eastern Somerset with the names East Lydford and West Lydford. (These merged in 1933 as Lydford on Fosse.)


the text in this section is based on an article in Wikipedia.

Bishops Lydeard (#5 on map) is a civil parish and a village in Somerset, England, 5 miles (8 km) northwest of TauntonThe civil parish had a population of 2,839 persons as recorded in the 2011 census.

Since 1967 the village is bypassed by the A358 road; the West Somerset Railway also runs through the area. The hamlet of East Lydeard is within the parish and less than a mile to the east of the village. The now separate parish of Cotford St. Luke was the site of the Somerset and Bath Lunatic Asylum and the county isolation hospital which has been made into a "new town" since 1990. West of the village is Sandhill Park, an eighteenth-century country house.

Governance

Bishops Lydeard was an ancient parish in Kingsbury Hundred, one of the hundreds or early subdivisions of the county of Somerset. From 1894 until 1974 it was part of the Taunton Rural District.

In 1974, under the Local Government Act 1972, all urban and rural districts across England were abolished and counties were reorganized into metropolitan and non-metropolitan districts. Bishops Lydeard joined the non-metropolitan Taunton Deane District in 1974.

In May 2019, West Somerset and Taunton Deane merged into a single district named the Somerset West and Taunton District. The new district is not a unitary authority, and has not taken any county level functions from Somerset County Council. West Somerset covered a largely rural area, with a population of 35,300 in an area of 740 square kilometres (290 sq mi) and is the least populous non-unitary district in England. Taunton Deane's population was over 100,000, but it was still not considered a large enough district to be kept on its own.

Image:Taunton Rural 1900 small A.png

Research Tips

  • GENUKI page on Bishops Lydeard.
  • The Somerset Heritage Centre (incorporating what was formerly the Somerset Record Office and the Somerset Local Studies Library) can be found at its new location at Langford Mead in Taunton. It has an online search facility leading to pages of interest, including maps from the First and Second Ordnance Survey (select "Maps and Postcards" from the list at the left, then enter the parish in the search box).
    The Heritage Centre has an email address: archives@somerset.gov.uk.
  • Three maps on the A Vision of Britain through Time website illustrate the changes in political boundaries over the period 1830-1945. All have expanding scales and on the second and third this facility is sufficient that individual parishes can be inspected.
  • Somerset Hundreds as drawn in 1832. This map was prepared before The Great Reform Act of that year. Note the polling places and representation of the various parts of the county.
  • Somerset in 1900, an Ordnance Survey map showing rural districts, the boundaries of the larger towns, the smaller civil parishes of the time, and some hamlets and villages in each parish
  • Somerset in 1943, an Ordnance Survey map showing the rural districts after the changes to their structure in the 1930s
This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The original content was at Bishops Lydeard. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with WeRelate, the content of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.