Coordinates: 51°′″N 0°′″E / 51.4961, 0.0681
Woolwich (pronounced /'wʊlɪtʃ/ or /'wʊlɪdʒ/) is a suburb in south-east London, England in the London Borough of Greenwich, on the south side of the River Thames, though the tiny exclave of North Woolwich (which is now part of the London Borough of
Newham) is on the north side of the river.
It is notable as a river crossing point, having the Woolwich Ferry (and the
lesser-known Woolwich foot tunnel) to North Woolwich, and as the one-time home of
the Woolwich Building Society (now relocated in Bexleyheath and owned by Barclays plc).
History
The history of Woolwich is strongly associated with Britain's military past. It was home to the Woolwich Dockyard (founded in 1512), the Royal Arsenal (dating
back to 1671), the Royal Military Academy (1741) and the Royal Horse Artillery (1793); the town still retains an army base at the Royal Artillery Barracks, and the Royal Artillery Museum. The nearby Greenwich Heritage Centre also houses exhibits relating to the Royal Arsenal.
Arsenal Football Club were founded in Woolwich in 1886 by workers at the Arsenal - the
club were initially known as Dial Square, then Royal Arsenal and then became Woolwich Arsenal in 1891. They
moved to Arsenal Stadium, Highbury in north London in
1913, and dropped the Woolwich prefix the following year. This is a rare example of a British football team moving from its local
area, albeit relocating within the same conurbation. Royal Ordnance Factories
F.C. was founded in response to Woolwich Arsenal joining the League but only lasted several years.
Woolwich town hall dates from when this was a borough in its own right. (February 2007)
The original gatehouse to Woolwich Royal Arsenal. (February 2007)
Woolwich Polytechnic, founded in 1892, merged with other local colleges and
became Thames Polytechnic in 1970. In 1992 it was granted university status as the University of Greenwich. In
2000, the University began a relocation to the Old Royal Naval College, several
miles to the west in Greenwich town centre, leaving only an administrative presence in
Woolwich.
Woolwich was the start of the route of the last London tram, on 5 July 1952.[1] A special tram was driven through enormous crowds to New Cross, finally arriving at New Cross depot around 1am on the 6 July.[2]
Woolwich was home to the experimental Auto stacker car park. Officially opened in May
1961 by Princess Margaret, it was never actually used by the
public and was demolished in 1962, after the council could not get it to work.
Woolwich is the location of the United Kingdom's first branch of McDonald's (the 3,000th in the world), which opened in 1974. Woolwich was chosen because it was considered to
be a representative English town at the time.[3]
Woolwich once had four cinemas. Today, one is a bingo hall, another a nightclub, and another (which once hosted Buddy
Holly) is now a pentecostal church.
Woolwich was used as a location for the 2006 film Children of Men.
Recent development
The town centre began to decline in the 1950s. Department stores closed, being replaced by charity and pound shops. However,
once redevelopment of the former Royal Arsenal site began, Woolwich started to enjoy a small renaissance. Several High Street
chains previously absent from Woolwich have opened branches, and longer-established shops have been refurbished. An extension of
the Docklands Light Railway is under construction (expected completion Spring
2009) and other developments are planned.
In early 2007, large-scale redevelopment of the area around Love Lane, near the eastern end of Powis Street, was in the final
stages of consultation.[4] The proposed project will
include demolition of several buildings including the Post Office, Peggy Middleton House and Thomas Spencer Halls of Residence,
and the construction of new council offices and housing, local shops and a large branch of Tesco.
A tall residential tower block is planned for General Gordon Square.
Some local residents have been concerned about the design of the development.[5] Plans exhibited to the public originally preserved the Director General public house,[6] but in the later
plans by Greenwich Council the pub is to be demolished.[7].
Planning for further development around the "Woolwich Triangle" area at the other end of town is in the early stages. This
development includes plans to demolish the old art deco Co-op building at the west end of Powis Street.[8] These plans have now been made public and exhibitions of the plans held.
The 2012 Summer Olympics will include Woolwich as a venue for shooting events.
This combined with the optimistic redevelopment of much of Woolwich has led house prices to rise quite rapidly.
Famous residents
- William Barefoot, born to Plymouth
Brethren family, became the first socialist mayor of Woolwich in 1925.
- Mathematician Peter Barlow taught at the Royal Military Academy in Woolwich and his son
Peter W. Barlow, civil engineer, was born here
in 1809.
- Hubert Bland, early socialist and co-founder of the
Fabian Society, was born in Wood Street, now Wood Hill in 1855.
- Tom Cribb, English bare-knuckle boxing champion in
the early 19th century, retired to, died, and was buried (1848) in Woolwich.
- Andy Fordham, 2004 World darts champion, was publican of the Queen's Arms public
house in Woolwich.
- Julius Francis, heavyweight boxer (who fought
Mike Tyson in January 2000)
- General Charles George Gordon of Khartoum was born at 29 Woolwich Common and
educated at the Royal Military Academy.
- John Henry Hayes, politician, was born in
Woolwich.
- Richard Lovelace, poet.
- Scott Maslen, actor who plays DC Phil Hunter in ITV's
The Bill, was born and raised in Woolwich.
- Henry Maudslay, engineer and tool-maker, was born in Salutation Alley (now
demolished) and buried in the parish churchyard.
- Thomas Paine, author of the Rights of Man
and The Age of Reason, spent a short time living in Woolwich.
- Diarist Samuel Pepys lodged in Woolwich during 1665 to escape the Great Plague of London.
- Ollie Raison former breakfast radio presenter on Perths 92.9 in Australia, was born in
Woolwich
- Oswald Hope Robertson, the medical pioneer who invented blood banks, was born
in Woolwich in 1886.
- David Sheppard, former England
cricket captain, was bishop of Woolwich from 1969 to 1975.
- John Wilson, the 'Spurgeon of Woolwich', was a
notable Baptist preacher in the 1930s and served a congregation of 3,000 members
- Ian Wright, the Arsenal footballer and later a television personality, was born and raised in Woolwich.
Education
- For education in Woolwich see the main London Borough of Greenwich
article
Transport and locale
Nearest places
Inside Woolwich Foot Tunnel
Nearest tube station
Nearest railway stations
Docklands light railway
River
The free Woolwich Ferry service operates across the River Thames to North Woolwich in the London Borough of
Newham carrying trucks, cars, cyclists and pedestrians during the day until 8pm on Weekdays. A two boat service runs on
Mondays to Saturdays and Sundays only has a one boat service. Woolwich foot tunnel
is also available for use by pedestrians (and cyclists pushing their cycles) at any time. It is served by lifts during
traditional shopping hours.
Ferry departing north terminal
London River Services, operated by Thames
Clipper, provide a peak hour, seven days a week service to central London (Savoy Pier)
from Woolwich Arsenal Pier (adjacent to the Royal Arsenal residential
development).
The Thames flood barrier is located a mile upstream from the tunnel and ferry.
See also
References
External links
Future Development
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