Poughill is mentioned in the
Domesday Book as
Pochehelle. The name is of uncertain origin. It may be from
Old English pohha 'pouch', used in the topographical sense of a deep valley, or
Pohha used as a personal name or nickname, and
hylle 'hill' or
wylle 'spring'. So the meaning could be "hill by a deep valley", "spring in a deep valley", "hill of a man named Pohha" or "spring of a man named Pohha". Poughill was an
ancient parish, in the
hundred of Stratton. It became a civil parish in 1866. In 1900 the developing area of
Flexbury was transferred from the parish to the new
Bude–Stratton Urban District. On 1 April 1934 a small part of the parish was transferred to
Kilkhampton, the remainder of the parish was transferred to Bude–Stratton, and the civil parish was abolished. At the 1931 census (the last before the abolition of the parish), Poughill had a population of 413.
Battle of Stamford Hill The
Battle of Stamford Hill, also known as the Battle of Stratton, was fought on the outskirts of Poughill on 16 May 1643. Each May, on the closest weekend to the anniversary, there is a two-day re-enactment of the battle, fought over the Saturday and Sunday, together with a procession through the streets of neighbouring Stratton village. ==Notable buildings==