Uphill is a village and former civil parish, now in the parish of Weston-super-Mare, in the North Somerset district, in the ceremonial county of Somerset, England, at the southern edge of the town, on the Bristol Channel coast.
The River Axe enters the Bristol Channel at Uphill where it is sheltered by Brean Down and it is possible that there was a port at Uphill in Roman times but no archaeological evidence has been found for this.
The place-name Ad Axium, often cited as being attached to a putative Roman port at Uphill is a modern name fabricated by antiquarians in the early 19th century. This name does not apply to Uphill itself but to a site on the hillside at Bleadon about to the south-east which modern archaeologists do consider to be probably of Romano-British date (North Somerset Historic Environment Record MNS25). The site is correctly marked on the respective First Editions of the Ordnance Survey's 25-inch and 6-inch maps. 25-inch: Somerset Sheet 16.8, surveyed 1885, published 1887; 6-inch: Somerset Sheet 16 North-East, surveyed 1885, published 1886 (the 25-inch map can be viewed on the North Somerset section of the KnowYourPlace website). Numerous attempts have been made to trace a continuous, unbroken route from Charterhouse to Uphill but have all ended in failure. Scepticism about the existence of this road has been expressed since at least the early 20th century, most notably by the leading scholar of Roman Britain at that time, Francis Haverfield. In his survey of Roman Somerset for the Victoria County History (1906) he found no vestiges, even in ploughed fields and woods, that indicate a Roman road (see pages 350 (for the road) and 368 for Ad Axium and supposed building foundations at Uphill). The current edition of the Ordnance Survey's map of Roman Britain (2016) shows a route from the Roman port at Southampton ( Clausentum) to Winchester and thence north-west to Charterhouse where it stops dead; it is not shown as continuing westward to Uphill (also see Evans and Richards (1984), Gough (1967), Todd (2011), Jamieson (2015) and Margary (1967)
At the time of Domesday Book (1086) the manor of Opopille was in the possession of four knights. 1 serf, 7 villeins and 4 bordars lived and worked here. Ships coming into Uphill fell under the limited jurisdiction of the Port of Bristol, however it was a free port as it did not have the customs officers to collect revenues which were present at larger ports. In 1591 the captured French ship the Gray Honde from Bayonne was brought into Uphill, however; the normal trade from the 16th century was in livestock, brought from South Wales to be fattened on the local rich grassland.
In the late eighteenth century visitors started to come to the area for health reasons. The philanthropist Hannah More convalesced at uphill in 1773 and a few years later Jane Biss was advertising summer accommodation in the village while the landlord of the Ship Inn had a bathing machine for hire. A 'Sea Bathing infirmary' was in operation from 1826 for a short while.
The Bristol to Exeter railway line runs through a deep cutting between Uphill and nearby Bleadon. This cutting is spanned by a high brick bridge known as "Devil's Bridge" and designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel.
Uphill was an ancient ecclesiastical parish, and had almost certainly been established as such before the Norman Conquest. It was a member of Winterstoke Hundred, again from probably before 1066. It became a civil parish in 1866, but on 1 April 1933 the civil parish was abolished and absorbed into Weston-super-Mare. Vision of Britain website In 1931 the parish had a population of 839.
The village is dominated on its southern side by a large hill, the southern slope of which and the quarry at its western end form the Uphill Cliff Site of Special Scientific Interest, notable for its species-rich calcareous grassland. It consists of species-rich calcareous grassland and rock-face situated on Carboniferous Limestone. Steeper banks and knolls in the grassland have a flora which includes orchids, Somerset Hair Grass ( Koeleria vallesiana), and Honewort ( Trinia glauca), and the Goldilocks Aster ( Galatella linosyris) along with several species of butterfly and Weevil ( Curculionoidea). The hill and Walborough common, which are adjacent to each other, are local nature reserves making a total area of . There are a range of flowers including Primula veris, Primula vulgaris and Anacamptis morio. The Salt marsh has Hordeum marinum, slender hare's-ear and sea clover and limestone grassland with Somerset hair-grass, Trinia glauca, Anacamptis morio and Orchis mascula. These attract Common redshank, dunlin, shelduck, black-tailed godwit, Alauda, Common linnet, rock and meadow pipit.
The Old Church of St Nicholas is situated on the hill and used to serve as a landmark for ships on the Bristol Channel. Also on the hill is a tower, the remains of a windmill. Although sometimes claimed to be medieval its construction date is unknown.
Links Road, which runs along below the hill, links the village with the beach to the west. Weston General Hospital is at the west end of the village adjacent to the A370 road. The old road to Weston-super-Mare runs northwards past Uphill Manor (which is known locally as Uphill Castle). The Mendip Way long-distance footpath has its western trailhead at Uphill near the wharf.
The present day Church of St Nicholas is situated on lower ground towards the north end of the village.
In addition, a separate Methodist Church is present in the village, located on Uphill Road South.
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