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Wellingborough

 
 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Wellingborough
Wellingborough, town (1991 pop. 38,598) and district, Northamptonshire, central England. It is an extremely old market town. Formerly known for its chalybeate spring, Wellingborough is a rail center with leather factories, breweries, flour mills, and chemical works. It has a public school that was founded in 1595.


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Coordinates: 52°17′38″N 0°41′47″W / 52.29396°N 0.69645°W / 52.29396; -0.69645

Wellingborough
Wellingborough is located in Northamptonshire
Wellingborough

 Wellingborough shown within Northamptonshire
Population 72,519 (2001 Census)[1][2]
OS grid reference SP8967
    - London  69.8 miles (112.3 km) 
District Wellingborough
Shire county Northamptonshire
Region East Midlands
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town WELLINGBOROUGH
Postcode district NN8
Dialling code 01933
Police Northamptonshire
Fire Northamptonshire
Ambulance East Midlands
EU Parliament East Midlands
UK Parliament Wellingborough
List of places: UK • England • Northamptonshire

Wellingborough is a town in Northamptonshire, England situated some eleven miles from the county town of Northampton and eight miles south of Kettering. It dates from the 6th century and is mentioned in the Domesday Book under the name of Wendelburie, and was granted a royal market charter in 1201. It has a population of 72,519 (as of the 2001 census).[1] It is situated on the north side of the River Nene with most of the older town being sited on the flanks of the hills above the river's flood plain. Frequent flooding of the Nene's flood plain makes it obvious why the town was mostly built above the flood plain. It is twinned with Niort, France and Wittlich, Germany.

Wellingborough is the main town in the Borough Council of Wellingborough, with their office located in the town centre.[3]

Contents

History

The town was founded in the early 6th century Saxon period by a Saxon leader Waendel. The town was named 'Wendelingburgh' now known as Wellingborough.[4] There five wells that are found around the town these are Red Well, Hemming Well, Stanwell, Lady's Well and Whyte Well, which appear on its coat of arms.[5]

The medieval town of Wellingborough housed a modest monastic grange – now the Jacobean Croyland 'Abbey' – which was an offshoot of the larger monastery of Croyland Abbey, near Peterborough, some 30 miles down-river. This part of the town is now known as 'Croyland'.[6]

All Hallows Church[7] is the oldest existing building in Wellingborough and dates from c1160. The manor of Wellingborough belonged to Crowland Abbey Lincolnshire, from Saxon times and the monks probably built the original church.[8] The earliest part of the building is the Norman doorway opening in from the later south porch. The church was enlarged with the addition of more side chapels and by the end of the 13th century had assumed more or less its present plan. The west tower, crowned with a graceful broach spire rising to 160 feet, was completed about 1270, after which the chancel was rebuilt and given the east window twenty years later.[9] The twentieth century Church of St Mary was built by Ninian Comper.[10]

Wellingborough was given a Market Charter dated 3rd Apil 1201 when King John granted it to the "Abbot of Croyland and the monks serving God there" continuing, "they shall have a market at Wendligburg (Wellingborough) for one day each week that is Wednesday"[11]

In Elizabethan times the Lord of the Manor, Sir Christopher Hatton was a sponsor of Sir Francis Drake's expeditions; Drake renamed one of his ships the Golden Hind after the heraldic symbol of the Hatton family. A hotel in a Grade II listed building built in 1600s, is still named the Hind Hotel.[12]

During the Civil War the largest substantial conflict in the area was the Battle of Naseby in 1645, although a minor skirmish in the town resulted in the killing of a parliamentarian officer Captain John Sawyer. Severe reprisals followed which included the carrying off to Northampton of the parish priest, Thomas Jones, and 40 prisoners by a group of Roundheads. However, after the Civil War Wellingborough was home to a colony of Diggers. Little is known about this period and local historians suspect deliberate suppression, although the naming of a residential street after Gerrard Winstanley, a prominent leader of the Diggers, suggests some public knowledge. The neighbouring streets name other religious reformers John Knox and Matthew Newcomen, implying that the naming was based Winstanley's life rather than on the Digging.[13]

In 1857 the current railway station opened serving Kettering and a little later Corby, and a decade later the line was linked to London St Pancras, in 1898 a rail crash at Wellingborough station killed six people and injured 40. Originally the town had two railway stations: London Road which was the first station in the town, linking Peterborough with Northampton with a line that was closed in 1966. The second station, Midland Road, is in operation and has been renamed Wellingborough. In the 1880s two businessmen held a public meeting to build three tram lines in Wellingborough. The group merged with a similar company in Newport Pagnell which started to lay tracks, but within two years the plans are abandoned for lack of funds.[14]

From 1920-1950, Wellingborough grew into a rural market town and by the late 1950s possessed all the amenities of a small town including several dance halls and four cinemas.

Amenities

Cinema

At one time, the town had four cinemas in the town centre, possibly the largest number of screens per head of population in the country. The Palace (converted from a theatre), The Regal (same management as The Palace), The Silver Cinema and The Lyric (latterly the ABC). The oldest is now a kebab shop, although it still has distinctive pre-war cinema architecture on the first and second floors, and the newest of the three became a supermarket before being demolished in the 1990s to make space for a taxi rank. The Art Deco Lyric was demolished to make way for an Arndale Shopping Centre. The town no longer has a cinema, with the longest lasting one being The Palace, which has now been made into a new bar named 'The Cutting Room' downstairs and the upstairs into a snooker and pool hall. Local redevelopment plans have recently ruled out the building of a new cinema.

The Castle Theatre
Theatre

The Castle Theatre[15] was opened in 1995 on the site of Wellingborough's old Cattle Market. It brings not only a theatre to the area but other facilities for local people. Most rooms are used on a daily basis by the local community, users include the Castle Youth Theatre, Youth Dance, Youth Music and the Castle Youth Company. Annually there is a festival which is held by the Wellingborough Rotary Club in the Castle Theatre. Many people throughout the Wellingborough district enter this competition and there are many categories to enter. After the competition, some people are picked to perform in a concert. There are two main categories; Young Vocalist of the Year and Young Musician of the Year. Young Vocalist of the Year gets £50 and Young Musician of the Year gets £100.

Museums and libraries

Wellingborough has a public library in the corner of the market square.[16] The Wellingborough Museum, located next door to The Castle Theatre, has exhibitions which show the past of Wellingborough and the surrounding villages. Accompanying the exhibitions and articles is a souvenir shop.[17]

Sport and recreation

Football

Wellingborough is home to two football clubs: Wellingborough Town[18] and Wellingborough Whitworth[19]

Leisure centres

Wellingborough has five leisure centres and health clubs called Bannatyne's,[20] Club Diana,[21] Redwell, Waendel and Weavers (which is part of Weavers school).[22]

Demography

Following the post World War II arrival of immigrants from the commonwealth group of nations into Britain, Wellingborough was seen as an attractive location for many who chose to work in the many local industries, most of which are now extinct. A sizeable Black Caribbean and Indian/Pakistani community grew up in this small market town, and now represents 7% of the population in the Borough and to 11% within the town.[2]

Economy

Wellingborough has approximately 2,500 registered businesses within its boundaries. Much of the town centre was redeveloped during the 1970s, when it grew rapidly from London overspill. The Borough Council has adopted a 'Town Centre ActionPlan'.[23] (see Future Developments). The former traditional economic structure based on footwear and engineering is gradually diversifying with wholesale, logistics, and sevice sectors providing new opportunities for employment. Over 50 companies in the town employ between 100 to 500 people through a base of local companies and those that have arrived via inward investment.

The Swansgate Shopping Centre in 2008

As a market town, Wellingborough has major high street chains mainly located in the town centre. One shopping centre, the Swansgate,[24] previously known as the Arndale Centre, was built in the late 1970s. Supplementing the town centre shops are several out-of-town retail parks and large supermarkets including Sainsbury's, Tesco's, and Aldi, and a Morrisons store in the town centre. The town has a market three times a week and a weekly privately organised market.[11]

Sectors currently operating within the town include motorsport, high performance engineering, distribution, environmental technology and renewable energy, digital and creative media, financial and business services, and global brands. Several industrial estates include Park Farm, Denington, Layland and Finedon Road.

Transport

Roads

The A45 dual carriageway skirting to the south, links the town with the A14, and M1 which also allows links to the east and west of the country. The A45 links Wellingborough with Northampton, Rushden, Higham Ferrers, Raunds, Thrapston, Oundle and Peterborough.

Buses

The town is served by a local bus network provided mainly by Stagecoach in Northants (the other being First Northampton), with buses departing every 30 mins for Northampton during the day. A half hourly X4 service also links the town with Milton Keynes, Kettering, Corby and Peterborough. Local buses W1, W2, W3, W4, W5, W6, W7, and W8 are branded Connect Wellingborough and are provided by Stagecoach and First.[25][26]

Wellingborough station building
Rail

East Midlands Trains operate direct trains to London St Pancras International from Wellingborough railway station, departing every 30 mins, with an average journey time of 55 mins.[27] The railway line also connects Wellingborough with Bedford, Luton, Kettering, Corby, Leicester, Nottingham, Derby, Sheffield and Leeds. Wellingborough originally had two railway stations: the current station and another on London Road. Wellingborough London Road station was linked to the Midland Main Line and provided connections to Peterborough and Northampton via the Northampton and Peterborough Railway. This station was closed to passengers in 1964.

Airports

Several UK airports are within 2 hours' drive of the town, including Luton, East Midlands, Birmingham International and Stansted. Luton can be reached directly by train and Stansted with one change at Leicester. Sywell Aerodrome, located 5 miles northwest of Wellingborough, caters for private flying, flight training and corporate flights.

Governance

The Borough Council of Wellingborough

Wellingborough is part of The Borough Council of Wellingborough which is currently (as of December 2009) a Covservative borough.[28] The borough council covers 20 settlements inculding the town. Other settlements include Bozeat, Earls Barton, Easton Maudit, Ecton, Finedon, Great Doddington, Great Harrowden, Grendon, Hardwick, Irchester, Isham, Little Harrowden, Little Irchester, Mears Ashby, Orlingbury, Strixton, Sywell, Wilby, and Wollaston [6]

Local Wards

The electoral wards in the town comprise:[6] Brickhill, Castle, Croyland, Hemmingwell, North, Queensway, Redwell East, Redwell West, South, Swanspool West while other, non-political divisions, are areas in Wellingborough such as as: Hampden Park, Hatton Park, Hemmingwell, Kingsway, Queensway, Redhill Grange, and Redwell.

Wellingborough Constituency

Wellingborough is part of the Wellingborough Constituency which includes the town, surrounding villages and other urban areas. The current MP is Peter Bone. Most wards in The Borough Council of Wellingborough are covered by the constituency and also include the wards in East Northamptonshire of: Brickhill, Castle, Croyland, Finedon, Great Doddington and Wilby, Hemmingwell, Higham Ferrers Lancaster, Higham Ferrers Chichele, Irchester, North, Queensway, Redwell East, Redwell West, Rushden Hayden, Rushden Spencer, Rushden Bates, Rushden Sartoris, Rushden Pemberton. South, Swanspool, and Wollaston[28]

Education

Fourteen governement controlled primary schools feed the secondary schools that include: Wellingborough School, an independent, fee-paying school with a cadet force, and the state secondary schools of Sir Christopher Hatton School, Weavers School, Wrenn School (formerly the Wellingborough Grammar School), and Friars School[29]

The Tresham College of Further and Higher Education has a main campus in Wellingborough, and outreach locations in Kettering, Oakham and Corby.[30] It provides further education and offers vocational courses, GCSEs and A Levels.[31] In collaboration with several universities the college also offers Higher Education options.[32]

The University of Northampton in Northampton, with around 10,000 students on two campuses. offers courses from foundation and undergraduate levels to postgraduate, professional and doctoral qualifications. Subjects include traditional arts, humanities and sciences subjects, as well as entrepreneurship, product design and advertising.[33][34]

Notable Wellingburians

Emergency services

Several NHS centres provide health care facilities, with Isebrook Hospital being equipped for procedures such as large X-Rays and neurological investigations, and long-term care, that are not catered for by primary care surgeries. Accident & Emergency, maternity[36], and surgical issues are mainly covered by Kettering General Hospital. Other emergency services are provided by the Northamptonshire Fire and Rescue Service and the Northamptonshire Police.

Geology

The town is sited on the hills adjoining the flood plain of the River Nene[37][38]. In the predominantly agrarian medieval period, this combination of access to fertile, if flood-prone, valley bottom soils and drier (but heavier and more clay-rich) hillside/ hilltop soils seems to have been good for a mixed agricultural base. The clay-rich hilltop soils are primarily a consequence of blanketing of the area with boulder clay or glacial till during the recent glaciations.[39] On the valley sides and valley floor however, these deposits have been largely washed away in the late glacial period, and in the valley bottom extensive deposits of gravels were laid down, which have largely been exploited for building aggregate in the last century. While important for the environment of the area, in economic and employment terms, this industry was minor.[citation needed]

Iron ore

The most economically important aspect of the geology of the area is the Northampton Sands ironstone formation. This is a marine sand of Jurassic age (Bajocian stage), deposited as part of an estuary sequence and overlain by a sequence of limestones and mudrocks. Significant amounts of the sand have been replaced or displaced by iron minerals giving an average ore grade of around 25% wt/wt iron. To the west the iron ores have been moderately exploited for a very long time, but their high phosphorus content made them difficult to smelt and produced iron of poor quality until the development of the Bessemer steel making process and the "basic slag" smelting chemistry, which combine to make high quality steelmaking possible from these unprepossessing ores. The Northampton Sands were a strategic resource for the UK in the run-up to World War II, being the best developed bulk iron producing processes wholly free from dependence on imported materials. However, because the Northampton Sands share in the regional dip of all the sediments of this part of Britain to the east-south-east, they become increasingly difficult to work as one progresses east across the county.[40][41]

Around Wellingborough it was possible to extract the ore by systematically stripping the overburden of mudrocks and limestone off the ore bed, then removing the ore, and finally replacing the overburden (often the cleaner limestone was removed to make the lime for the "basic slag" process) in the exposed cavity. This left distinctive arcuate quarries across much of the landscape around Wellingborough and north-north-east towards Corby. Further east, around Finedon, Raunds and Chelveston, quarrying was carried out during the Second World War by underground "pillar and stall" mining. These mines were abandoned and sealed in the 1950s, and the number of people who even know of their existence is rapidly decreasing.[citation needed] It became uneconomic to extract such ores although the Corby smelters continued using ore imported through Humberside until finally closed in the late 1980s. Pieces of the iron ore can still be found around Wellingborough and the rest of the ore field. A style of architecture in a wide area of Northamptonshire and parts of neighbouring Bedfordshire includes buildings faced with the local iron ore, which weathers to a variety of ochre and dark brown colours.[citation needed]

Future developments

Milton Keynes South Midlands Study

As part of its Milton Keynes South Midlands (MKSM) study, the government has identified Wellingborough as one of several towns in Northamptonshire into which growth will be directed over the next thirty years. It allocates 12,800 additional homes to Wellingborough, and will also create additional facilities, further improve the town centre, improve infrastructure and increase employment opportunities. A jobs growth target of 12,400 jobs has been set to accompany the large scale housing growth.[42][43]

As a result, plans have been made for a major urban extension in the town, mainly to the east of the railway station. When finished, the town would be around 30% larger and 3,200 new homes would be built on 'Stanton Cross' site, with new Schools, Bus stops, Community Centres, Shops, a Doctor's surgery, and new open spaces. The railway station would be developed into an 'interchange' with local buses and trains. Building a new road bridge from Midland Road over the railway line is also planned with a new footbridge to reach the new development. The station would also get a new platform, footbridge and new station buildings.[44] Other plans to include the development of the High Street and Shelley Road areas and the north of the town are being considered.[45] [46]

Town Center Action Plan

The Borough Council of Wellingborough have also developed plans to improve the town centre called the 'Town Action Plan'.[47]

This Action Plan aims to create:

  • A safe place for people to meet for play, recreation and shopping
  • A celebration of the towns unique heritage by promoting the historical elements of the town
  • A centre supported by sustainable public transport, improved cycle routes and easy pedestrian access
  • Improvements to existing open spaces
  • Promotion of green links and ecology

The Borough Council and Town Centre Partnership have produced a promotional brochure entitled Why Wellingborough? to bring people and business to the town.[48]

Wellingborough Masterplan

The Borough Council have made long term plans for the town centre, the masterplan inculdes:[49]

  • Rebuilding the Swansgate shopping centre
  • Removing the Swansgate car park and rebuild it underground
  • Demolishing the Libary and the old Woolworth blocks
  • Develop the Market Square
  • If the Tresham College of Further and Higher Education decides to move, then new shops would be built on the site
  • New leisure facilities on Castle Way
  • New retail developments on Midland Road
  • Improvements and adding Bus stops

Geography

Wellingborough's nearest towns are Rushden, Higham Ferrers and Irthlingborough.

Twin towns

Wellingborough is twinned with:

See also

References

  1. ^ a b http://www.statistics.gov.uk/census2001/pyramids/pages/34uh.asp
  2. ^ a b The Borough Council of Wellingborough: Population Retrieved 23 August 2009
  3. ^ The Borough Council of Wellingborough Location map
  4. ^ The Borough Council of Wellingborough: Wendel History
  5. ^ Explore Northamptonshire: About Wellingborough
  6. ^ a b c The Borough Council of Wellingborough: Councillors by Wards Access date 19 November 2009
  7. ^ All Hallows Church Retrieved 23 August 2009
  8. ^ Crowland Abbey Retrieved 21 August 2009
  9. ^ All Hallows Church: History
  10. ^ Comper churches Retrieved 23 August 2009
  11. ^ a b Wellingborough Market
  12. ^ Hind Hotel Retrieved 21 August 2009
  13. ^ Winstanley Rd-Google Maps
  14. ^ The Northants Evening Telegraph, 'Millennium Memories', Saturday 1 January 2000, IBSN 0-9502845-1-3
  15. ^ Castle Theatre Retrieved 23 August 2009
  16. ^ Northamptonshire County Council: Wellingborough Library
  17. ^ Wellingborough Museum entry on Culture24
  18. ^ Wellingborough Town F.C.
  19. ^ Wellingborough Whitworth
  20. ^ Bannatyne Wellingborough
  21. ^ Club Diana Wellingborough
  22. ^ The Borough Council of Wellingborough: Leisure centres
  23. ^ Growth in Wellingborough
  24. ^ Swansgate Shopping Centre
  25. ^ Stagecoach in Northants
  26. ^ First Northampton
  27. ^ East Midlands Trains: Midland Main Line Timetable
  28. ^ a b Wellingborough Conservatives
  29. ^ Northampton County Council: Map of Schools
  30. ^ Tresham College: Our Campuses. Retrieved 8 August 2009
  31. ^ Tresham College: Our Courses. Retrieved 8 August 2009
  32. ^ Tresham College: Higher Education. Retrieved 8 August 2009
  33. ^ The University of Northampton: Course finder. Retrieved 8 August 2009
  34. ^ The University of Northampton: About Us. Retrieved 8 August 2009
  35. ^ Wellingborough Grammar School
  36. ^ [1] Maternity services
  37. ^ Northamptonshire flood plains
  38. ^ Wellingborough Geology Map
  39. ^ Wellingborough Council: Northamptonshire Geology
  40. ^ Northants Geology Map
  41. ^ Northamptonshire Jurassic age
  42. ^ North Northants Development Company
  43. ^ Communities and Local Government: How Milton Keynes and South Midlands will be developed
  44. ^ The Borough Council of Wellingborough: Growth Area Development May 2009 accessed 22 November 2009
  45. ^ Wellingborough planning
  46. ^ The Borough Council of Wellingborough Housing Strategy (PDF) Retrieved 23 August 2009
  47. ^ The Borough Council of Wellingborough: Town Centre Action Plan
  48. ^ Borough Council and Town Centre Partnership initiatives Retrieved 23 August 2009
  49. ^ The Borough Council of Wellingborough: Wellingborough Masterplan Access date: 18 November 2009

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