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Exmouth is a town in Devon, England, at the east side of the mouth of the River Exe. Exmouth has a population of 32,972 (2001 census). Exmouth was a Roman port, and the working docks have only recently (2001-2002) been converted into a marina, although a small amount of commercial fishery is still undertaken. It has been also been known for several centuries as a seaside resort. Exmouth's Georgian terraces and sandy beach attracted people including Horatio Nelson, whose wife, Lady Nelson lies buried in the nearby Littleham Churchyard, and Lord Byron. The seafront has a traditional promenade. The RNLI has a lifeboat station at Exmouth, and the University of Plymouth has a campus in the town. Exmouth also serves as a commuter town for Exeter, to which it has good public transport links. Exmouth railway station is on the Avocet Line to Exeter St Davids station. A small passenger ferry operates during the summer months across the estuary of the River Exe to Starcross, where the remains of Brunel's Atmospheric Railway can be seen. Exmouth marks the start of the Jurassic Coast World Heritage Site, which stretches along the coast to Poole, in Dorset.