Stover (disambiguation)

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Stover is the leaves and stalks of field crops.

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Stover may also refer to:

Places

People

Other uses

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Newton Abbot</span> Town in Teignbridge District, Devon, England

Newton Abbot is a market town and civil parish on the River Teign in the Teignbridge District of Devon, England. Its population was 24,029 in 2011, and was estimated at 26,655 in 2019. It grew rapidly in the Victorian era as the home of the South Devon Railway locomotive works. This later became a major steam engine shed, retained to service British Railways diesel locomotives until 1981. It now houses the Brunel industrial estate. The town has a race course nearby, the most westerly in England, and a country park, Decoy. It is twinned with Besigheim in Germany and Ay in France.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Haytor Granite Tramway</span> Horse-drawn tramway built to convey granite (1820-1858)

The Haytor Granite Tramway was a tramway built to convey granite from Haytor Down, Dartmoor, Devon to the Stover Canal. It was very unusual in that the track was formed of granite sections, shaped to guide the wheels of horse-drawn wagons.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hackney Canal</span> Canal in Devon, England

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ventiford Brook</span> Stream in Devon, England

Ventiford Brook is a stream located in Devon, England.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">George Templer</span> British landowner

George Templer was a landowner in Devon, England, and the builder of the Haytor Granite Tramway. His father was the second James Templer (1748–1813) who had built the Stover Canal.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Teigngrace</span> Human settlement in England

Teigngrace is a civil parish centred on a hamlet that lies about two miles north of the town of Newton Abbot in Devon, England. According to the 2001 census, its population was 235, compared to 190 a century earlier. The western boundary of the parish mostly runs along the A382 road; its short northern boundary along the A38; and its eastern partly along the rivers Bovey and Teign. It comes to a point at its southern extremity, near Newton Abbot Racecourse. The parish is surrounded, clockwise from the north, by the parishes of Bovey Tracey, Kingsteignton, Newton Abbot and a small part of Ilsington.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">James Templer (civil engineer)</span>

James Templer (1722–1782) of Stover House, Teigngrace, Devon, was a self-made magnate, a civil engineer who made his fortune building dockyards.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Stover, Teigngrace</span> Historic estate in Devon, England

Stover is a historic estate in the parish of Teigngrace, about halfway between the towns of Newton Abbot and Bovey Tracey in South Devon, England. It was bought by James Templer (1722–1782) in 1765 and passed through three generations of that family before being bought by Edward St Maur, 11th Duke of Somerset in 1829.