Instow is mentioned in the
Domesday Book as having two ploughlands and of meadow, pasture and woodland. The name of Instow derives from
Anglo-Saxon of ''St John's Holy Place
, which would have been Johnstow
, or Jonestow
. The suffix Stow'', denotes a holy place in the Anglo-Saxon language, and the name is found in many places across Devon which had a church (
Churchstow,
Christow,
Virginstow). The original settlement was on the high ground opposite the more modern site of the village low against the riverside. This is where the 14th century Church of St John the Baptist is located, near to the Instow Community Primary School. The parish was formerly in the
hundred of Fremington, some north-east of
Bideford, and west of
Barnstaple. In 1889, a directory described the village as being from London, and on "the high road from Bideford to Barnstaple." Before the arrival of the railway in 1855, the village was quite small consisting of two sets of cottages, one by Lane End, and the other set next to the quay. The quay was built , and is a Grade II listed structure. The village hall, which was built in 1911, was formerly known as
Rifle Hall, as it was used to train soldiers on rifle drills for the
First World War. Military training in the
Second World War included practise D-Day landings with walls built into the dunes near to Instow. These were removed quite quickly after the war had ended. ==Instow Railway Station==