Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
In 1870 a parish pump was installed next to the pond.
But the parish pump is carved with all the creatures out of the wilderness.
The parish pump, though not the original, is sited near the tree.
The parish pump in the marketplace is unusual, doubling as a signpost.
In parts of the British Isles, it was often called the parish pump.
Perhaps the articles turned out badly because his heart wasn't really in that kind of parish pump, chatty writing.
There was a paper, the Villager, but a parish pump periodical wasn't really what the place needed.
The village consists of a local post office, and a working men's club, in addition to the Parish Pump community hall.
The centre of the drama is unnamed, but referred to as the community around the Parish Pump.
Until 1949 the village was served by a parish pump near to the entrance to the present playing field, although many houses had their own wells.
Digital parish pumps and an end to the windows tax on lit fibre for new entrants for 5 years.
George Pitcher's parish pump "
Mistakes were made at all levels of the disaster response, including the evacuation of Jefferson Parish pump operators.
Another (subscription-based) website The Parish Pump issues monthly contributions of new material which may also be used or adapted.
Dudleston Heath's main source of leisure is found at the local community hall, the Parish Pump.
Political leadership in the Cape had passed to the same elderly 'parish pump' politicians that he had previously despaired of.
Though such community pumps are no longer common, people still used the expression parish pump to describe a place or forum where matters of local interest are discussed.
The village also has five groups of churchyard gravestones, four farmhouses, a telephone kiosk and a parish pump that are Grade II listed features.
Parish Pump (CGA series)
The solution, though, is not to artificially prop up the local newspaper industry, but to recognise that the era of the local parish pump journalist is over.
The parish stocks and whipping post stand in the porch of the church and in the churchyard is the Shoreditch parish pump.
Parish Pump was a series of articles that ran between January 1971 and September 1975 in The Country Gentleman's Association monthly magazine.
Parish Pump: Study of Democratic Efficiency and Local Government in Ireland (with Myles Tierney)
Mildenhall publishes a monthly newsletter called The Parish Pump, now a joint publication with the neighbouring village of Axford.
It has a large Roman Catholic church, two schools, and restaurants, Thai and Chinese as well as a pub, The Parish Pump.