Eccleshall
Eccleshall is a small town in Staffordshire, England. It is located seven miles north west of Stafford, and six miles west of Stone.
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- 🌍 Holy Trinity Church, Eccleshall. Holy Trinity Church dates from 1195. The tombs of five Bishops of Lichfield lie in the church, that of William Overton beside the altar being particularly notable.
- 🌍 Eccleshall Castle. Eccleshall Castle was the palace of the Bishop of Lichfield. The Domesday Book details that the Eccleshall estate had been given to the Bishop of Lichfield some time before the Norman Conquest, possibly as early as the 7th century. By the time Bishop John Lonsdale died in 1867 the lack of a railway was one of the main reasons that his successor Bishop Selwyn gave for the decision to sell the castle and thus sever the long association of Eccleshall with the Bishop of Lichfield. At the beginning of the last century the castle passed into the hands of the present owners, the Carter family (distant relations of former US President Jimmy Carter). The town itself was a relatively important market town by the time of the Wars of the Roses. In 1459, the castle was briefly a residence for the Queen, Margaret of Anjou, in her preparation for the Battle of Blore Heath, the site of which lies a few miles north of the town near Market Drayton. Later, the castle suffered damage during the English Civil War.
- Eccleshall High Street. Eccleshall High Street, with many Georgian and earlier buildings, is a conservation area. The town has been a regular winner in the Britain in Bloom competition and, in summer, the main parts of Eccleshall are bedecked with colourful floral baskets, organised by the town's civic group.
- 🌍 Mill Meece Pumping Station (is to the north of Eccleshall). restored
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The high street has numerous shops, pubs, restaurants and businesses. A farmers market is held every month and the town holds its major festival every two years. The Eccleshall Show is held every Summer at Sugnall Parks.
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- 🌍 Kings Arms Hotel, 17 Stafford Rd, ST21 6BL, ☎ +44 1785 850294.
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gollark: It finally works *without* random BSODs in the background or other broken bits!
gollark: So it turns out that PotatOS has accidentally been shipping the wrong ECC library for several years.
gollark: I assume it's failed somehow to decode the public key, but I have no idea how or why.
gollark: It doesn't like it and I have no idea why.
gollark: This is an error in the several thousand line bundled code for potatOS (with stack traces, which is nice) in a third-party cryptography library!
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