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==History== ==History==
The town's name comes from the title of ]'s ] '']''. The ] is therefore an intentional part of the town's name, the only such place name in the ]. The "Ho" in this name is the exclamation and not from ] ''hōh'' = "spur of high ground, heel-shaped hill". The town's name comes from the title of ]'s ] '']''. The ] is therefore an intentional part of the town's name, the only such place name in the ]. The "Ho" in this name is the exclamation and not from ] ''hōh'' = "spur of high ground, heel-shaped hill".


The town has recently become more residential as ]s closed and houses, flats and ]s were erected. One well-known former camp was Torville Camp. The two major ]s still running are Surfbay Holiday Park and Braddicks Holiday Centre. The town has recently become more residential as ]s closed and houses, flats and ]s were erected. One well-known former camp was Torville Camp. The two major ]s still running are Surfbay Holiday Park and Braddicks Holiday Centre.

Revision as of 14:01, 30 June 2006

This article is about the British town. For the novel, see Westward Ho! (book), or for other uses see Westward Ho.

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Westward Ho! is a seaside town in Torridge, Devon, England, near Bideford. The A39 road provides easy access from the towns of Barnstaple, Bideford and Bude. It lies at the south end of Northam Burrows, and faces westward into Bideford Bay, opposite Saunton Sands and Braunton Burrows.

History

The town's name comes from the title of Charles Kingsley's novel Westward Ho!. The exclamation mark is therefore an intentional part of the town's name, the only such place name in the British Isles. The "Ho" in this name is the exclamation and not from Anglo-Saxon hōh = "spur of high ground, heel-shaped hill".

The town has recently become more residential as holiday camps closed and houses, flats and apartments were erected. One well-known former camp was Torville Camp. The two major holiday camps still running are Surfbay Holiday Park and Braddicks Holiday Centre.

Westward Ho! is known for its surfing seas and the long expanse of clean sand backed by a pebble ridge which extends for about three miles. It is also known for the Royal North Devon Golf Club, the oldest golf course in England and Wales. Other attractions of the town include the arcades, go-kart track and the grasslands behind the pebble ridge. It has two churches, Westward Ho! Baptist Church & The Holy Trinity Church.

Westward Ho! beach, looking north towards the Taw and Torridge estuaries

Rudyard Kipling spent several of his childhood years at Westward Ho!, where he attended the United Services College (later absorbed by Haileybury College, which is now in Hertfordshire).

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