The Deanery of Hartland represents the Church of England in the north west corner of Devon within the Archdeaconry of Barnstaple and the Diocese of Exeter.[1]
Rural Dean of Hartland: The Reverend Penelope Dobbin
Benefice of Hartland Coast
[edit]Parishes within the benefice:
- Alwington (St Andrew)
- Buckland Brewer (St Mary and St Benedict)
- Bucks Mills (St Anne)
- Clovelly (All Saints; St Peter's Chapel)
- Hartland (Saint Nectan)
- Lundy (St Helen)
- Parkham (St James)
- Welcombe (St Nectan)
- Woolfardisworthy West (All Hallows)
Clergy and readers:
- Jane Skinner - team Rector (Parkham, Alwington, Buckland Brewer, Hartland, Welcombe, Clovelly, Woolfardisworthy West, Bucks Mills and Lundy)
- Madeline Bray - team vicar (Parkham, Alwington and Buckland Brewer)
- Jane Hayes - team curate
- Andrew MacWilliam - reader
- Margaret Rickard - reader
- Eunice Dunn - reader
Benefice of Torridge Estuary (Bideford)
[edit]Parishes within the benefice:
- Appledore (St Mary)
- Bideford (St Mary; St Peter)
- Landcross (Holy Trinity)
- Littleham (St Swithin)
- Monkleigh (St George)
- Northam & Westward Ho! (St Margaret; Holy Trinity)
- Weare Giffard (Holy Trinity)
Clergy and readers:
- Clare Rose-Casemore - priest-in-charge
- Ian Lovett - team vicar
- Sandra Juniper - assistant curate
- Alan Glover - self-supporting minister
- Glen Yeo - reader
- Peter Hooper - reader
- Nigel Price - reader
- Sarah Cordingley - reader
Benefice of Abbotsham
[edit]Clergy:
- Francis Otto - priest in charge
References
[edit]- ^ Worth, R. N. (1882). "Address at the opening of the session 1882–83". Journal of the Plymouth Institution – Plymouth Athenaeum - Annual report and transactions. p. 191.
that the deaneries continue living units of county organization, in a sense which the hundreds have long ceased to fill ... Hartland Deanery includes not only the whole of the present Hartland Hundred, but the northern portion of Shebbear, over ...
- "The Deanery of Hartland". Devon Family History Society.
- Chope, Richard Pearse; Thornley, Isobel Dorothy (1940). The book of Hartland. The Devonshire Press.
Well, that’s interesting to know that Psilotum nudum are known as whisk ferns. Psilotum nudum is the commoner species of the two. While the P. flaccidum is a rare species and is found in the tropical islands. Both the species are usually epiphytic in habit and grow upon tree ferns. These species may also be terrestrial and grow in humus or in the crevices of the rocks.
View the detailed Guide of Psilotum nudum: Detailed Study Of Psilotum Nudum (Whisk Fern), Classification, Anatomy, Reproduction