Yeovil

Yeovil is a town in south Somerset, England, on the A30 and A37. It has a population of about 30,000, and is the old constituency of Paddy Ashdown. It is home of the FA cup giant killing team Yeovil Town FC. Famous as a glove making town in the industrial revolution, its football team retain the nickname The Glovers still today. The town's main employer is Westland Helicopters. The town has two train stations; Yeovil Pen Mill serving the Bristol-Weymouth line, and Yeovil Junction on the London-Exeter line. Outlying villages include East Coker, the former home of the poet T.S. Eliot, Sutton Bingham, Stoford, Evershot, Halstock and Yetminster, the home of folk band The Yetties. Other nearby villages include Bradford Abbas, Corscombe, the former home of singer Polly Jean Harvey, and Pendomer, where William Dampier (1651-1715) the controversial English explorer, sea captain, and scientific observer was born. The name "Yeovil" comes via Anglo-Saxon from Celtic gifl, which means "forked river".

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
gondola
identification friend or foe
electrostatics
georgism
demons and wizards
european serin
sidewinder (snake)
methylisothiazolinone
non governmental organizations in sweden
penny singleton
glenfield
bilston
there and back again
bishop's stortford
running on ice
bottesford
nancy lopez
darwen
lymington
loughton
ultrafiltration
microfiltration
tribune company
spalding
hardtack
dorothea puente
po
judd gregg
live stages
barbara mikulski
paul sarbanes
postcolonial theory
everything you want
1383 1385 crisis
interregnum
postcolonial literature
go (vertical horizon album)
jeffrey sachs
morse
garden path sentence
alfred vail
zelman cowen
victor rothschild, 3rd baron rothschild
purple finch