Wellingborough

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Wellingborough
Wellingborough (United Kingdom)
Wellingborough

Wellingborough shown within the United Kingdom
Population 46,959 (2001 Census)
OS grid reference SP8967
 - London 69.8 mi
District Wellingborough
Shire county Northamptonshire
Region East Midlands
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town WELLINGBOROUGH
Postcode district NN8
Dialling code 01933
Police Northamptonshire
Fire Northamptonshire
Ambulance East Midlands
UK Parliament Wellingborough
European Parliament East Midlands
List of places: UKEnglandNorthamptonshire

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

Wellingborough is a town in Northamptonshire, England situated some eleven miles from the county town of Northampton and eight miles south of Kettering. It has a population of 46,959 (2001 census).

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.

It is twinned with Niort, France and Wittlich, Germany. Recently there has been talk of a new twinning with Mont Sillia in Italy and the population await further developments.

Wellingborough dates from the 6th century. It is mentioned in the Domesday Book under the name of Wendelburie, and was granted a market charter in 1201.

Contents

As mentioned above, the town was founded in the early Saxon period. The name is formed from elements which translate, roughly, as "the town of the people of Waendel", or Waendel-ingas-burgh. Many newcomers to the town mistakenly think that the name comes from the 5 wells that are found around the town (Red Well, Hemming Well, Stanwell, Lady's Well, Whyte Well), which appear on its coat of arms.

The medieval history of Wellingborough had no features that stand out from any other small town in the country. It housed a modest monastic grange – now the Jacobean Croyland 'Abbey' – which was an offshoot of the much larger and better known monastery of Croyland Abbey, near Peterborough, some 30 miles down-river. This part of the town is known these days as 'Croyland'.

In Elizabethan times the Lord of the Manor, Sir Christopher Hatton was a sponsor of Sir Francis Drake's expeditions, which is why Drake renamed one of his ships the Golden Hind. A modern connection with this is that the main hotel in the centre of town is still named the Hind Hotel.

In the Civil War there was little of note (the largest substantial battle in the area was Naseby in 1645), although a minor skirmish in the town resulted in the carrying off to Northampton of the parish priest, Thomas Jones, by a group of Roundheads. However, after the Civil War Wellingborough was home to a substantial colony of Diggers. Little information about this period is available, which causes some local historians to suspect deliberate suppression.

The twentieth century Church of St Mary is a masterpiece of Ninian Comper.[1]

More recent history has been undistinguished save by economic changes, many of which are more widely shared with the eastern end of the county of Northamptonshire.

From 1920-1950 Wellingborough grew into an attractive rural market town and by the late 1950s boasted all the amenities a small town could wish for including several dance halls and four cinemas.

In 1992 The Castle Theatre was opened bringing new exciting shows to the local people. The Castle is much more than a theatre it brings the local people of Wellingborough together.

The town no longer has a cinema. The nearest two cinemas are the Odeon in Kettering and Vue in Northampton. The last cinema to close was The Palace which has now been made into a new Bar named 'The Cutting Room'.

The Castle Theatre was opened in 1995 on the site of Wellingborough's old cattle market. The Castle is much more than a theatre it includes.

  • Main House ( 501 seats ) ( Can change to the round and can have a music pit )
  • Studio Theatre
  • The DB Studio
  • The Drama Room
  • Cinema
  • Bar/Resteront
  • Art Gallery
  • Meating room.

Every room mosted days are being used as the whole of the local commity use the theatre in many different ways. These include Castle Youth Theatre, Youth Dance, Youth Music and the all NEW !!!! Castle Youth Company

Follow the post war 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 well over 10% of the total town population. More recent arrivals include the Polish community, who are often found working in the low paid service sector jobs. They are estimated to represent as much as 4% of the population in Wellingborough.

Agrarian hinterland.

Boot & Shoe industry. Iron & Steel smelting (1920s - 1990s).

Light manufacturing (Scott Bader chemical plant - xref to industrial relations; British Leyland plant at the foot of Sidegate Lane.).

Wellingborough station building
Wellingborough station building

Wellingborough boasts excellent communication links, with the A45 dual carrage way skirting the south of the town linking the town with the A14 and M1. Which allows links not just north and south, but also to the east and west of the country. The main county town of Northampton is located 9 miles to the west of the town.

The town has a good local bus network, with nearly all them provided by Stagecoach Northants, with buses departing every 10 mins for Northampton during the day. A half hourly X4 service also links the town with Milton Keynes, Kettering, Corby and Peterborough.

Midland Mainline operates direct trains to London St Pancras from Wellingborough railway station, departing every 30 mins, and an average train time of 55 mins. The railway line also connects Wellingborough with Kettering, Leicester, Nottingham, Derby, Sheffield and Leeds. St Pancras will become the home of Eurostar international services in November 2007.

Several major UK airports are only within 2 hours drive of the town, including Luton, East Midlands, Birmingham and Stansted. Luton can reached directly and Stansted can be reached easily by train with one change at Leicester. East Midlands parkway will make East Midlands more accessible by train also. Birmingham is two changes away.

As a small town, Wellingborough boasts few major high street chains, with most located in the town centre and its main shopping centre called the Swansgate Shopping Centrebuilt in the 1960/70's. Including the likes of: Argos, Boots, Game, HMV, WH Smiths, Woolworths, Wilkinsons

Stores located outside the shopping centre include Woolworths, Matalan and menswear retailer Burton.

The town has a local market twice a week.

Much of the town centre was developed during the 1970's, when the town grew dramatically, based on London "overspill". In recent years this has started to look a little tired and weary and plans are currently on display and being discussed for future regeneration of the centre of Wellingborough.

There are also several out-of-town retail parks boasting the usual household-name DIY and Motor stores.

The town boasts several large supermarkets including Sainsburys, Morrisons and recently extended stores of Tesco and Aldi. With the town seeing a large influx of Polish immigrants in recent years, a number of specialist stores have opened to cater for these markets.

  • Wellingborough School - a private day school, was founded in 1595 and is one of the oldest schools in the country.
  • Sir Christopher Hatton School (formed by the amalgamation of Breezehill Girls School and Westfield Boys School on the Breezehill site).
  • Weavers School, Weavers Road and adjoining Weavers Sports Centre where it shares facilities.
  • St. Columbus' School
  • Wrenn School formerly Wellingborough Grammar School
  • Park Junior School on Great Park Street. Park Junior was founded in 1873,and the infants school was founded 1903.
  • The Avenue Infants School on the Avenue.
  • Our Lady's Infant and Primary school - Located on Croyland road
  • Wilby Primary School, in Wilby a neighbouring village.

The last three are primary schools which are state schools.

  • Prior to 1998, John Lea School existed, demolished in 2001 is now a housing estate

The geology of the area has had only relatively minor influences on the development of Wellingborough. As noted above, the town is sited on the hills adjoining the flood plain of the River Nene. 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. 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 pretty minor.

Undoubtedly though 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.

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 (visit Irchester Country Park to see a much overgrown abandoned quarry redeveloped as a leisure site). 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.

This regional dip spelt the ultimate death knell of the iron and steel industry in the area - ultimately it was going to become uneconomic to extract such ores. For a time the Corby smelters continued using ore imported through Humberside, but they finally closed in the late-1980s.

You can still find pieces of iron ore on the Ladywell allotments.

Wellingborough is twinned with:

  1. ^ http://wellingboroughgrammarschool.co.uk/


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