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Chelmsford

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Chelmsford is the county town of Essex, England. It lies 31 miles (50 km) northeast of London, approximately halfway between there and Colchester. It is almost exactly in the centre of the county and it has been the county town of Essex since the early 13th century. It is also the seat of the Borough of Chelmsford, which covers a wider area than the town, including the new (ca. 1970s) settlement of South Woodham Ferrers on the banks of the River Crouch. The Borough Council celebrated its centenary in 1988, and the town its 800th anniversary in 1999. Chelmsford is home to the Diocese of Chelmsford, and Chelmsford Cathedral is the smallest cathedral in England, built in the 15th and early 16th centuries when it was the parish church of the prosperous medieval town. The Diocese (established in 1914) covers all of Essex and much of East London. John Dee — responsible for the English translation of Euclid — was educated at the Chantry School (later re-founded as the Grammar School) in the sixteenth century. Chelmsford is also home to part of the Anglia Ruskin University and to the grammar schools of Chelmsford County High School and King Edward VI Grammar School founded in 1551 by charter of King Edward VI on the site on an earlier educational foundation.

Population

The total population of the area covered by the Borough council is 157,748 (ONS 2004 estimate). Approximately 60,000 live in the town itself, and over 42,400 in the surrounding suburban and semi-rural parishes. Around 16,600 live in South Woodham Ferrers. The remainder of the population live in the surrounding rural areas, including the villages of Bicknacre, East, West and South Hanningfield, Boreham, Ford End, Pleshey, Highwood, Good and High Easter, Chignal St James, Chignal Smealy, Howe Green, Roxwell, Great and Little Leighs, Broomfield, Great and Little Waltham, Little Baddow, Danbury, Sandon, Rettendon, Runwell, Margaretting, Stock and Writtle. (Source: population derived from 2001 census).

Transport

It is served by Chelmsford railway station. About 10,000 commuters travel to London daily by rail, making Chelmsford the busiest through railway station in England (the busiest overall being Clapham Junction).

The A12 road from London, originally built by the Romans to connect London and Colchester, used to pass through the town, but is now diverted around the east. The A414 is the main east-west route through the Borough, and the A130 and A131 run approximately north-south.

Chelmsford is around 25 minutes' drive from London Stansted Airport (via A130/A120), and London Heathrow, London Gatwick, London City, Luton and Southend airports are all within easy reach.

Industry

Originally an agricultural and market town, Chelmsford has been an important centre for industry since the 19th century. Following the opening of the Chelmer and Blackwater Navigation in 1797, cheaper transportation and raw materials made milling and malting the main industries until the 1850s, when increasing prosperity created a local market for agricultural machinery.

Foundries and engineering works followed, opened notably by Fell Christy (1858), Coleman and Moreton, and Eddington and Steevenson (makers of traction engines).

Chelmsford became home to the United Kingdom's first electrical engineering works (established by Colonel R E B Crompton in 1878). Crompton was a pioneer of electric street lighting, and installed electric street lights to celebrate the incorporation of the Borough of Chelmsford in 1888. Although this made Chelmsford one of the earliest towns to receive electric street lighting, the Council later decided to have it removed — because gas was cheaper!

The United Kingdom's first ball bearing factory was established in 1898. The Hoffmann Manufacturing Company achieved worldwide fame for their precision-made bearings — boasting an accuracy better than 1/10,000 of an inch (2.5 micrometres) for all their products. Hoffmann bearings were later used in the first transatlantic flights.

In 1898, Guglielmo Marconi, the "father of radio" opened the World's first "wireless" factory in Hall Street, employing around 50 people. For this reason, Chelmsford is credited as the "birthplace of radio", and this phrase can be seen on administrative signs on major roads entering the town. In 1920 the factory was also the location of the first officially publicised sound broadcasts in the United Kingdom, one of them featuring Dame Nellie Melba. In 1922 the World's first regular wireless broadcasts for entertainment commenced from the Marconi Research Centre at Writtle near Chelmsford; station '2LO'.

Chelmsford is also the home of Britvic Soft drinks, which began life as the British Vitamin Company in 1948. However, the origins of the company can be traced back to a chemist's in the town's Tindal Street, where flavoured waters were on sale as early as the mid-19th century.

As well as the headquarters of Essex County and Chelmsford Borough Councils, the modern town is home to a range of national and international companies including M&G Group, E2V Technologies, Alenia Marconi Systems Limited and EBM Papst (UK) Ltd. The continuing importance of Chelmsford as an employment centre is demonstrated by the fact that the number of "in" commuters (mostly from other parts of Essex) almost exactly balance the number of workers commuting into London.

Chelmsford is recognised as Essex's leading town centre retail location. As well as the leading High Street names, there is also a wide variety of specialist retailers, especially in Baddow Road and Moulsham Street, just off the pedestrianised High Street.

Founded as the "Chelmsford Chronicle" in 1764, the weekly "Essex Chronicle" newspaper is said to be the longest in continuous publication in the country. Until the closure of the printing plant in 2002, the paper was also printed in the town. It is now printed on other presses owned by the Northcliffe Group which now owns the paper.

Places of interest

Places of interest within the Borough include Writtle, where Robert the Bruce is said to have married his second wife Elizabeth de Burgh in 1302. The village also has English Royal connections, with King John building a hunting lodge there in 1211. Much of the site now lies within the grounds of Writtle College, the internationally famous centre for horticulture and agriculture.

A few miles away is the attractive village of Pleshey, where stand the ruins of a once important castle mentioned in William Shakespeare's play Richard II. The entire circuit of the castle walls can still be traced in the village streets.

Hylands House and Park just to the west of the town is a former country house and parkland saved from dereliction and purchased by the local council in 1966 after the death of the last private owner. Much damaged by fire and vandalism by the time of the sale, the house has now been completely restored by Chelmsford Borough Council. The house dates originally from 1730, and the park (currently 574 acres or 232 ha) was landscaped by Humphry Repton. It is open to the public and used for a wide range of community events. It is also available for weddings and other private hires including conferences etc. The park has in recent years been the site of popular annual music festivals, such as the V Festival and the Chelmsford Spectacular. It has been chosen as the site for the 21st International Scout Jamboree in 2007 and has already hosted [Eurojam] in the summer of 2005. Hylands House also doubled as the US White House in the 2004 film Chasing Liberty.

Chelmsford prison also has a claim to fame as the inside scenes of the film version of the TV show Porridge was filmed there. Filming was allowed in the prison whilst it was being refurbished after a fire. Henry VIII's former Palace of Beaulieu is also nearby, now occupied by the New Hall School.

Other places to visit include the RHS Garden, Hyde Hall at Rettendon, and there are numerous open spaces both in the town and elsewhere in the Borough.

History

Arms of the former Chelmsford Rural District which did not include the town
Enlarge
Arms of the former Chelmsford Rural District which did not include the town

In 1199 the Bishop of London was granted a Royal Charter for the town to hold a market, marking the origin of the modern town. An under-cover market, operating Tuesday to Saturday, is still an important part of the town centre over 800 years later.

Prior to 1199, there were been settlements nearby from ancient times. A Neolithic and a late Bronze Age settlement have both been found in the Springfield suburb, and the town was occupied by the Romans. A Roman Fort was built in AD60, and a civilian town grew up around it. The town was given the name of Caesaromgus (the market place of Caesar), although the reason for it being given the great honour of bearing the imperial prefix are now unclear — possibly as a failed 'planned town' provincial capital to replace Londinium or Camulodunum. The remains of a mansio, a combination post office, civic centre and hotel, lie beneath the streets of modern Moulsham, and the ruins of an octagonal temple are located beneath the Odeon roundabout.

An important Anglo-Saxon burial was discovered at Broomfield, to the north of Chelmsford, and the finds are now in the British Museum.

The town became the seat of the local assize during the early 13th century (though assizes were also held at Brentwood) and by 1218 was recognised as the county town of Essex, a position it has retained to the present day.

Chelmsford was significantly involved in the Peasants' Revolt of 1381, and Richard II moved on to the town after quelling the rebellion in London. Despite remaining a town, the area was technically known as the Capital city of England for a brief period during this time. Many of the ringleaders were executed on the gallows at what is now Primrose Hill.

In the 17th century, many of the victims of Matthew Hopkins (the self-styled "Witchfinder General") spent their last days imprisoned in Chelmsford, before being tried at the Assize and hanged for witchcraft.

During World War II Chelmsford, as an important centre of light engineering war production, was attacked from the air on several occasions, both by aircraft of the Luftwaffe and by missile. The worst single loss of life took place on Tuesday December 19, 1944, when the 367th V2 to hit England fell on a residential area near the Hoffmans' ball bearing factory and not far from the Marconi electronics factory which may also have been the target. Thirty-nine people were killed and 138 injured, 47 of them seriously, while several dwellings were destroyed and hundreds more damaged. A monument to the dead — recently restored — is in the cemetery in Writtle Road.

Since the War, Chelmsford has suffered from a decline in its manufacturing and defence-related industries — especially Marconi. However, the town's location — close to London and at the centre of Essex — has helped it grow in importance as an administrative and distribution centre.

On January 6, 2005, Chelmsford was granted Fairtrade Town status.

Geology

From over 600,000 years ago, during the Pleistocene ice age, until the Anglian glaciation around 475,000 years ago, the early River Thames flowed through the area where Chelmsford now stands, from Harlow to Colchester, before crossing what is now the North Sea to become a tributary of the Rhine. Consequently gravel deposits are frequently found in the area, and current and former gravel pits are relatively common.

There is controversy surrounding the derivation of the town's name. It is almost certain that Chelmsford does not take its name from the river Chelmer as commonly thought. One held view is that the name stems from the term Choelmer's ford. Choelmer being a man who either owned or ran the ford in the centre of the town and the name is a corruption on this. The river later being named after the town. An alternative view is that it is named after Celmere's fort, a Roman fort that was once situated where the town is today.

Twin towns

Chelmsford's twin towns include:

People born in Chelmsford

Nearby places

See also

External links

Bibliography

 


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