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A30 road

The A30 is a major road in England, running 284 miles (457 km) WSW from London to Land's End.

A30
Route information
Length284 mi (457 km)
Major junctions
East endHounslow, London (51°28′30″N 0°23′46″W / 51.475°N 0.396°W / 51.475; -0.396)
Major intersections A4

A312
M25 Junction 13
A303
A34
A338
A36
A350
A303
A35
M5 Junctions 29 and 31
A38

A39
West endLand's End (50°03′58″N 5°42′04″W / 50.066°N 5.701°W / 50.066; -5.701)
Location
CountryUnited Kingdom
Primary
destinations
Heathrow Airport
Staines-upon-Thames
Basingstoke
Salisbury
Shaftesbury
Yeovil
Honiton
Exeter
Okehampton
Launceston
Bodmin
Newquay
Truro
Redruth
Penzance
Road network
A29 A31

The road has been a principal axis in Britain from the 17th century to early 19th century, as a major coaching route. It used to provide the fastest route from London to the South West by land until a century before roads were numbered; nowadays much of this function is performed by the M3 (including A316) and A303 roads. The road has kept its principal status in the west from Honiton, Devon to Land's End where it is mainly dual carriageway and retains trunk road status.

Route Edit

London to Honiton Edit

The A30 begins at Henlys Roundabout, where the route stems from the A4 near Hounslow. It crosses the A312 before running south of the Southern Perimeter Road, Heathrow Airport and north of Ashford and Staines-upon-Thames, before reaching the M25 motorway orbital motorway. This first section is entirely dual carriageway. Taken with the A4, its natural continuation which nearby becomes non-dualled towards the M25, the section constitutes one of five routes into the southern half of London which reach Inner London with at least a dual-carriageway, the others being the A3, the M3, the M20 and A2, however approximately one mile before reaching Inner London it is combined with the London variants of the M3 and M4 approaches.

After running astride the M25 to cross the Thames on a bridge designed by Lutyens, the Runnymede Bridge, the A30 runs parallel to but distant from the M3 until southwest of Basingstoke, bypassing Egham and passing through heathland and Sunningdale, Bagshot bypass, and Camberley where the route almost mirrors the Devil's Highway, a stone (stane) street to Calleva Atrebatum (Silchester Roman town), believed to be older still, then passes close to Hook town centre and in the surrounding country the soil is arable.

After the 1930s Basingstoke bypass, the M3 changes direction (between North Waltham and Popham, at the Popham Interchange) the A303 takes over for 2 miles (3.2 km) the A30 losing continuity. [a] From Sutton Scotney village the A30 runs parallel to the latter road as-the-crow-flies 85 miles (137 km) to north-east of Honiton, Devon passing through towns Stockbridge (where it meets its first substantive river since the Thames, the Test) and its trout fishing centres, Shaftesbury, Sherborne, Yeovil, Crewkerne and Chard. Between Stockbridge and Shaftesbury it enters the cathedral city of Salisbury.

Between the M25 and Honiton, the A30 is mostly single carriageway, carrying local traffic with short stretches of dual carriageway from Camberley to Basingstoke, which has a dualled inner ring road, two between Stockbridge and Salisbury (an alike ring road shared with the A36), and between Sherborne and Yeovil.

Exeter to Penzance Edit

 
Approaching Chiverton Cross from the east

This section is a trunk road as far as Penzance.[1] It is mostly dual carriageway, but there are some short sections of single carriageway.

To pass Exeter, through traffic can join the M5 motorway for three miles. West of Exeter, the A30 is dual carriageway through Devon and into Cornwall, bypassing Whiddon Down, Okehampton and Launceston. The dual carriageway continues through Cornwall to Carland Cross, after which there is a single carriageway stretch to Chiverton Cross. Highways England are currently progressing plans to dual this section of carriageway. A Preferred Route Announcement was made July 2017 and a Development Consent Order was made in February 2020 by Secretary of State for Transport. Construction started in March 2020, with the road due to open to traffic by the end of 2029.

From Chiverton Cross, the dual carriageway bypasses Redruth and Camborne. The A30 returns to single carriageway west of Camborne, and a mid-1980s bypass takes the road around Hayle. Between Hayle and Penzance, the A30 returns to the original route and it passes through several villages. Approaching Penzance, the A30 briefly becomes a dual carriageway once again. Once west of Penzance, the A30 becomes a more rural road running through or past several villages, before terminating at Land's End.

History Edit

17th – 18th centuries Edit

 
The Road from LONDON to the LANDS END (1675), John Ogilby

The bulk of the A30 follows the historic London – Land's End coaching road. The road appeared on John Ogilby's map of Britain in 1675,[2] specifically "The Road from London to The Land's End in Cornwall". The coaching route started at Hyde Park Corner, closer to the centre of London than the modern A30, closely mirroring the modern route as far as Exeter, except for three sections from Knightsbridge to Bedfont, Basingstoke to Salisbury via Andover and Exeter to Penzance via Ashburton, Plymouth and following the Cornish south coast via St Austell.[3] Ogilby described it as "The Post-Office making this one of their Principal Roads" and thought the section through Surrey and Hampshire was "in general a very good Road with suitable Entertainment".[4] The road was known to attract significant postal and coach traffic along its length by 1686.[5]

The route is described as the "Great Road to Land's End" in the Magna Britannia, published in the early 19th century.[6] As the coaching road to Land's End was a major route, it was a popular place for highwaymen. William Davies, also known as the Golden Farmer, robbed several coaches travelling across Bagshot Heath. He was hanged in 1689 at a gallows at the local gibbet hill between Bagshot and Camberley. The Jolly Farmer pub was built near the site of the gallows (gibbet), a junction.[7]

19th century Edit

 
The A30 crossing the River Yarty. The road was built by the Chard Turnpike Trust in the mid 19th century to compete with the New Direct Road, later the A303.

At the turn of the 19th century, William Hanning created the "New Direct Road", a fast coaching route between London and Exeter. The road deviated from Ogilby's route running via Amesbury and Ilminster, rejoining the older road at Honiton. It became popular with postal services such as The Subscription. In 1831, a race was held between London and Exeter via the New Direct Road, which resulted in a dead heat. 170 miles (270 km) were covered in 13 hours, compared to a typical early 18th century time of four days.[8] In response to the competition of routes, a new turnpike road was built west of Chard, avoiding the historic route to Honiton via Stockland, with several steep hills. This road met the New Direct Road near Upottery.[9][b]

Historically, the route between London and Land's End was also called the "Great South-West Road". In the 21st century, the name only refers to a small section of the road near Heathrow.[10]

Redruth to Penzance Edit

In 1825 an Act of Parliament established the Hayle Bridge Causeway and Turnpike Trust which was required to construct a bridge, causeway and turnpike over the Hayle River from Griggs Quay (grid reference SW545363) in the west to Phillack in the east. The turnpike was needed to ease the transport of copper ore to the port at Hayle for export. A second Act was passed in 1837 to establish the Griggs Quay to Penzance Turnpike and in 1839 an Act formed a third trust, the Hayle and Redruth Turnpike to complete the turnpike to Redruth.[11] The running of the Causeway turnpike was overseen by the winner of a public auction and for the year 1880, the winning bid was £591 10s.[12] In 1885 the management of the causeway by the turnpike came to an end, and the White house (tollhouse) on the eastern end of the Hayle causeway, along with the garden and three granite posts was put up for auction on 30 October 1885. A second tollhouse at Long Rock was also for auction as well as a number of posts and gates.[13]

20th century Edit

 
The Great South West Road section of the A30 borders Heathrow Airport.

The A30 was one of the first roads to be classified by the Ministry of Transport for funding in 1921. It followed Ogilby's route up to Exeter, then the basic route of the modern A30 through Okehampton, Launceston and Bodmin to the Greenmarket in Penzance, where it ended.[14] It was extended to Land's End in 1925.[15]

The Great South West Road section of the A30 around Heathrow had been planned as the western end of the Great West Road project, one of the first bypasses built for motor traffic. Construction began in 1914 but was quickly halted because of World War I. It resumed construction in 1919.[16] The full route from Chiswick to Ashford was opened by King George V on 30 May 1925.[17]

Following the construction of a bypass around Basingstoke, the route of the A30 was changed on 1 April 1933 to run by Sutton Scotney and Stockbridge, rejoining the original route at Lopcombe Corner east of Salisbury. An alternative route, the A303 was created out of existing roads at the same time between Micheldever Station and the Blackdown Hills, that followed the basic course of Hanning's New Direct Road.[10] The A30 remained the principal route between London and Exeter, until the A303 became a trunk road in 1958, receiving central Government funding and relegating the parallel A30 to a local road.[18]

By the mid-20th century, large sections of the A30 were struggling to cope with the increasing demands of road traffic. In the mid-1960s, numerous councils complained that the Secretary of State for Transport, Barbara Castle, decided that improvements to the A38 from Exeter to Plymouth were of higher priority for funding than any work on the A30. Cornwall County Council complained that the A30 through the county was narrow and twisted, and known as the "stage coach trail".[19]

Following World War II, the Ministry of Transport planned a large-scale upgrade of the A30 across south-west England, with the eventual intention that most of the route would be at least dual-carriageway.[20] The M3 motorway was planned as a replacement for the A30 between London and Popham. Following a public enquiry in 1966, the line was fixed the following year.[21] The work was completed as far as Bagshot in 1971, then to Sunbury-on-Thames in 1974.[22] In 1971, the Secretary of State for the Environment, Peter Walker announced many upgrades of the A30 across Devon and Cornwall, identifying the section from Okehampton to Bodmin as a key area of improvement.[23]

The 2.2-mile (3.5 km) Honiton dual-carriageway bypass opened in early December 1966 at a cost of £984,000.[24] The Hayle bypass was first proposed in the late 1970s. It was controversial, and Dora Russell protested against its construction.[25] It was completed in 1985.[26]

 
Carland Cross roundabout

The Okehampton bypass, which opened on 19 July 1988, goes to the south of the town, cutting through the northern edge of Dartmoor National Park in Devon. In the 1980s, the route of the bypass was the subject of a prolonged campaign from conservationists, including Sylvia Sayer, who preferred a route to the north of the town through agricultural land.[27]

The section between Honiton and Exeter in East Devon was upgraded in 1999 to dual carriageway, giving quicker access to Exeter International Airport. This road was built under the Design Build Finance Operate (DBFO) scheme by the private consortium Connect A30, who receive a shadow toll from the Government for each vehicle travelling along the road.[28] Archaeological investigations during the work found a Roman cavalry garrison and later settlement at Pomeroy Wood.[29] There were several protests by environmentalists during construction and the particular nature of the DBFO scheme, with a long-lasting occupation of sites on the planned route, focused around Fairmile. Swampy received press attention for his part in this protest. In 2016, President of The Automobile Association, Edmund King, claimed that the action had led to a slowdown in road construction throughout Britain.[30][31]

21st century Edit

 
British Airways Flight 38 which crash landed between the runway and the A30.

During 2006 one of the main bottlenecks on the road was removed when the Merrymeet roundabout between Okehampton and Exeter near Whiddon Down was replaced with a grade-separated junction and dual carriageway.[32]

Since the Bodmin to Indian Queens project was completed in late 2007, the new dual carriageway runs to the north of Goss Moor. The previous road has been converted to a cycle lane.[33] In December 2012 it was announced that 2.8 miles (4.5 km) from Temple to Higher Carblake would be upgraded to a dual carriageway.[34] Building started in early 2015, and was completed in summer 2017. This work made the A30 continuous dual carriageway between the M5 at Exeter and Carland Cross in Cornwall.[35]

On 17 January 2008, British Airways Flight 38 crash-landed near the Great South West Road southeast of Heathrow Airport.[36] Shortly before the crash landing, the captain of the Boeing 777 involved was able to clear the A30 by raising the flaps, saving the lives of motorists on the ground.[37]

In 2014, the A30 was identified as one of several key routes in the Government's Road Investment Strategy, turning it into a strategic corridor for southwest England. This includes further dual carriageway improvements east of Honiton towards the Blackdown Hills and between Chiverton Cross and Carland Cross.[38][39]

In 2022, the casket of Queen Elizabeth II was driven partially on this road en route to Windsor Castle, her final resting place. [40]

Future proposals Edit

Carland Cross to Chiverton Cross Edit

Dualling of the stretch between Carland Cross and Chiverton Cross would establish a continuous dual carriageway from Exeter right through to Camborne. Although this was shelved in 2006 as it was not considered a regional priority,[41] it was included within the government's Road Investment Strategy in 2014.[42] The preferred route was announced in July 2017,[43] and on 6 February 2020, the Secretary of State for Transport approved Highways England's application for a Development Consent Order for the scheme to be constructed. Work began in March 2020 with anticipated completion in 2023 for an estimated cost of £330 million, with a total of £20 million being provided by the European Regional Development Fund.[44][45] The scheme is included as a case study in the Department for Transport's document Road Investment Strategy 2: 2020–2025. The current route of the road passes near a World Heritage Site, a Registered Park and Gardens and a number of Sites of Special Scientific Interest. The proposed scheme includes a 20-metre-wide 'green bridge' over the new road to promote connectivity and biodiversity.[46]

Cultural references Edit

John Betjeman referred to the A30 in his poem "Meditation on the A30".[47] Arthur Boyt, focus of BBC documentary The Man Who Eats Badgers, described the A30 near Bodmin Moor as a good road for finding roadkill.[48]

In Monty Python's Flying Circus, episode 34: The Cycling Tour, Mr Pither laments "As I lay down to the sound of the Russian gentlemen practising their shooting, I realised I was in a bit of a pickle. My heart sank as I realised I should never see the Okehampton by-pass again...", just before his impending execution in Russia.[49]

Rick Beato, interviewing Brian May of the band Queen in 2021, asked him (about the band), "How often would you tune?" to which May replied, "Not often enough, some people would say. We used to say we tuned to the A30."[50]

References Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ From North Waltham, Hampshire to nearby Micheldever Station, the A30 is subsumed into the A303 and one version remains so until Sutton Scotney/Bullington, the intersection with the Oxford (etc)—Southampton road, the A34, from where the A30 revives running south along Bullington Lane almost alongside the A34 before resuming a direct west south-westerly route to Salisbury and beyond; however along this combined A303-A30 section at Coxford Hill above Micheldever railway station an original version branches off linking more directly Sutton Scotney village from that point and enabling a cycle route to avoid Popham and the dual carriageway, taking a detour through North Waltham village.
  2. ^ This junction explains why the A30 turns off at Upottery to become a minor road towards Yarcombe, while the road immediately ahead becomes the A303

Citations Edit

  1. ^ . Highways Agency. Archived from the original on 21 September 2011. Retrieved 22 December 2011.
  2. ^ Crittall, Elizabeth, ed. (1959). "Roads". A History of the County of Wiltshire. Vol. 4. London: Victoria County History. pp. 254–271. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  3. ^ Ogilby, John (1699). The Traveller's Guide: Or, A Most Exact Description of the Roads of England. pp. 202–203.
  4. ^ "Old Hampshire Mapped : Ogilby Routes". Geography Department, Portsmouth University. 2003. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  5. ^ Identifying the Trunk Roads of Early Modern England and Wales (PDF) (Report). The Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure. May 2017. p. 6. Retrieved 28 March 2020.
  6. ^ Lysons, Daniel; Lysons, Samuel (1814). "Geography and geology". Cornwall. Magna Britannia. Vol. 3. London. pp. clxxxi–cxciii. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  7. ^ Simpson, Jacqueline (2011). Green Men & White Swans: The Folklore of British Pub Names. Random House. ISBN 978-0-099-52017-7.
  8. ^ Fort, Tom (2012). The A303: Highway to the Sun. Simon and Schuster. pp. 259, 262–263. ISBN 978-0-857-20327-4.
  9. ^ "CHARD TURNPIKE TRUST Records". Somerset Heritage Centre.
  10. ^ a b "CLASSIFICATION: Re-numbering of classified routes". The National Archives. 1933–1942.
  11. ^ Historic England & 1405965
  12. ^ Cornish, Thomas (23 September 1880). "Hayle Bridge Causeway and Turnpike Road". The Cornishman. No. 115. p. 1.
  13. ^ "Hayle Bridge Causeway and Turnpike Trust". The Cornishman. No. 379. 22 October 1885. p. 1.
  14. ^ "Half Inch Ministry of Transport Road Map". Ordnance Survey. Retrieved 22 December 2011.
  15. ^ "CLASSIFICATION: Road numbering". The National Archives. 1921–1949.
  16. ^ "The Great West Road". The Times. 24 February 1919. p. 7. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
  17. ^ "London to the West". The Times. 12 May 1925. p. 17. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
  18. ^ "A.30 and A.303". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 5 November 1958. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
  19. ^ "Road to the West : Ministry's Choice Dismays Cornwall". The Times. 20 June 1966. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  20. ^ "A.30 and A.303". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 12 November 1958. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  21. ^ "M3 London to Southampton". The Motorway Archive. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
  22. ^ "M3. London to Southampton Statistics and options". The Motorway Archive. 16 August 2016.
  23. ^ "1,000 more miles of motorway will bring growth to less prosperous areas". The Times. 24 June 1971. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  24. ^ "Honiton Bypass". Autocar. 125 (3696): 1287. 16 December 1966.
  25. ^ "Over 80, she still battles on". The Times. 28 April 1977. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  26. ^ "Road Works (Compensation)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 2 May 1985. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  27. ^ Kelly, Matthew (2015). Quartz and Feldspar – Dartmoor: A British Landscape in Modern Times. London: Jonathan Cape. pp. 10–16. ISBN 978-0-22409-113-8.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 April 2012. Retrieved 8 April 2012.
  29. ^ . Roads to the Past: Trunk Roads and Archaeology – 1999 report. Highways Agency. 1999. Archived from the original on 5 June 2009. Retrieved 17 October 2009.
  30. ^ Hunt, Barry (14 June 2016). "Revealed: Road-building records of Prime Ministers, including David Cameron". The Comet. Retrieved 21 December 2022.
  31. ^ Smith, Colleen (1 February 2020) [30 January 2020]. "Remembering when Swampy emerged from his long tunnel protest under Devon's A30". Devon Live. Retrieved 21 December 2022.
  32. ^ . Archived from the original on 26 September 2006. Retrieved 29 August 2006.
  33. ^ "Moor dualling plans get go-ahead". BBC News. 29 November 2004. Retrieved 23 April 2010.
  34. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 December 2012. Retrieved 5 December 2012.
  35. ^ "A30 Temple to Higher Carblake Improvement – Cornwall Council". Highways England. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  36. ^ "Report on the accident to Boeing 777-236ER, G-YMMM, at London Heathrow Airport on 17 January 2008". AAIB. Retrieved 9 February 2010.
  37. ^ "BA crash inquiry reveals heroics". 20 May 2008. Retrieved 3 October 2022.
  38. ^ A303/A358/A30 Corridor improvement package (Report). Somerset County Council. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
  39. ^ "A30/A303/A358 Improvement Project". Somerset County Council. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
  40. ^ "Map shows where you can watch the Queen on her final journey to Windsor Castle". 19 September 2022.
  41. ^ "Winners and losers in roads plan". BBC News. 6 July 2006. Retrieved 23 April 2010.
  42. ^ "Road Investment Strategy : for the 2015/16 – 2019/20 Road Period" (PDF). Gov.uk. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
  43. ^ "A30 Chiverton to Carland Cross Improvement Scheme : Preferred route announcement" (PDF). Highwaysengland.citizenspace.com. Retrieved 3 November 2021.
  44. ^ "Main Cornwall route gets 'vital' £290m upgrade". BBC News. 7 February 2020. Retrieved 8 February 2020.
  45. ^ "A30 Chiverton to Carland Cross". www.highwaysengland.co.uk. Highways England. 18 May 2020. Retrieved 1 October 2020.
  46. ^ (PDF). Department for Transport. 11 March 2020. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 March 2020. Retrieved 11 March 2020.
  47. ^ "Meditation on the A30 – A poem by John Betjeman". Poetry Connection. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  48. ^ "Arthur Boyt". from the original on 22 June 2022. Retrieved 5 December 2012.
  49. ^ "Monty Python's Flying Circus: Just the Words – Episode 34". ibras.dk. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  50. ^ "Brian May Interview - Queen's Songs, Stories and Guitar Style". YouTube. Archived from the original on 11 December 2021. Retrieved 24 September 2021.

Sources Edit

road, other, roads, designated, disambiguation, major, road, england, running, miles, from, london, land, a30route, informationlength284, major, junctionseast, endhounslow, london, major, intersectionsa4a312, junction, a303, a338, a350, a303, junctions, a39wes. For other roads designated A30 see A30 disambiguation The A30 is a major road in England running 284 miles 457 km WSW from London to Land s End A30Route informationLength284 mi 457 km Major junctionsEast endHounslow London 51 28 30 N 0 23 46 W 51 475 N 0 396 W 51 475 0 396 Major intersectionsA4A312 M25 Junction 13 A303 A34 A338 A36 A350 A303 A35 M5 Junctions 29 and 31 A38 A39West endLand s End 50 03 58 N 5 42 04 W 50 066 N 5 701 W 50 066 5 701 LocationCountryUnited KingdomPrimarydestinationsHeathrow AirportStaines upon ThamesBasingstokeSalisburyShaftesburyYeovilHonitonExeterOkehamptonLauncestonBodminNewquayTruroRedruthPenzanceRoad networkRoads in the United KingdomMotorways A and B road zones A29 A31The road has been a principal axis in Britain from the 17th century to early 19th century as a major coaching route It used to provide the fastest route from London to the South West by land until a century before roads were numbered nowadays much of this function is performed by the M3 including A316 and A303 roads The road has kept its principal status in the west from Honiton Devon to Land s End where it is mainly dual carriageway and retains trunk road status Contents 1 Route 1 1 London to Honiton 1 2 Exeter to Penzance 2 History 2 1 17th 18th centuries 2 2 19th century 2 2 1 Redruth to Penzance 2 3 20th century 2 4 21st century 2 5 Future proposals 2 5 1 Carland Cross to Chiverton Cross 3 Cultural references 4 References 4 1 Notes 4 2 Citations 4 3 SourcesRoute EditLondon to Honiton Edit The A30 begins at Henlys Roundabout where the route stems from the A4 near Hounslow It crosses the A312 before running south of the Southern Perimeter Road Heathrow Airport and north of Ashford and Staines upon Thames before reaching the M25 motorway orbital motorway This first section is entirely dual carriageway Taken with the A4 its natural continuation which nearby becomes non dualled towards the M25 the section constitutes one of five routes into the southern half of London which reach Inner London with at least a dual carriageway the others being the A3 the M3 the M20 and A2 however approximately one mile before reaching Inner London it is combined with the London variants of the M3 and M4 approaches After running astride the M25 to cross the Thames on a bridge designed by Lutyens the Runnymede Bridge the A30 runs parallel to but distant from the M3 until southwest of Basingstoke bypassing Egham and passing through heathland and Sunningdale Bagshot bypass and Camberley where the route almost mirrors the Devil s Highway a stone stane street to Calleva Atrebatum Silchester Roman town believed to be older still then passes close to Hook town centre and in the surrounding country the soil is arable After the 1930s Basingstoke bypass the M3 changes direction between North Waltham and Popham at the Popham Interchange the A303 takes over for 2 miles 3 2 km the A30 losing continuity a From Sutton Scotney village the A30 runs parallel to the latter road as the crow flies 85 miles 137 km to north east of Honiton Devon passing through towns Stockbridge where it meets its first substantive river since the Thames the Test and its trout fishing centres Shaftesbury Sherborne Yeovil Crewkerne and Chard Between Stockbridge and Shaftesbury it enters the cathedral city of Salisbury Between the M25 and Honiton the A30 is mostly single carriageway carrying local traffic with short stretches of dual carriageway from Camberley to Basingstoke which has a dualled inner ring road two between Stockbridge and Salisbury an alike ring road shared with the A36 and between Sherborne and Yeovil Exeter to Penzance Edit nbsp Approaching Chiverton Cross from the eastThis section is a trunk road as far as Penzance 1 It is mostly dual carriageway but there are some short sections of single carriageway To pass Exeter through traffic can join the M5 motorway for three miles West of Exeter the A30 is dual carriageway through Devon and into Cornwall bypassing Whiddon Down Okehampton and Launceston The dual carriageway continues through Cornwall to Carland Cross after which there is a single carriageway stretch to Chiverton Cross Highways England are currently progressing plans to dual this section of carriageway A Preferred Route Announcement was made July 2017 and a Development Consent Order was made in February 2020 by Secretary of State for Transport Construction started in March 2020 with the road due to open to traffic by the end of 2029 From Chiverton Cross the dual carriageway bypasses Redruth and Camborne The A30 returns to single carriageway west of Camborne and a mid 1980s bypass takes the road around Hayle Between Hayle and Penzance the A30 returns to the original route and it passes through several villages Approaching Penzance the A30 briefly becomes a dual carriageway once again Once west of Penzance the A30 becomes a more rural road running through or past several villages before terminating at Land s End History Edit17th 18th centuries Edit nbsp The Road from LONDON to the LANDS END 1675 John OgilbyThe bulk of the A30 follows the historic London Land s End coaching road The road appeared on John Ogilby s map of Britain in 1675 2 specifically The Road from London to The Land s End in Cornwall The coaching route started at Hyde Park Corner closer to the centre of London than the modern A30 closely mirroring the modern route as far as Exeter except for three sections from Knightsbridge to Bedfont Basingstoke to Salisbury via Andover and Exeter to Penzance via Ashburton Plymouth and following the Cornish south coast via St Austell 3 Ogilby described it as The Post Office making this one of their Principal Roads and thought the section through Surrey and Hampshire was in general a very good Road with suitable Entertainment 4 The road was known to attract significant postal and coach traffic along its length by 1686 5 The route is described as the Great Road to Land s End in the Magna Britannia published in the early 19th century 6 As the coaching road to Land s End was a major route it was a popular place for highwaymen William Davies also known as the Golden Farmer robbed several coaches travelling across Bagshot Heath He was hanged in 1689 at a gallows at the local gibbet hill between Bagshot and Camberley The Jolly Farmer pub was built near the site of the gallows gibbet a junction 7 19th century Edit nbsp The A30 crossing the River Yarty The road was built by the Chard Turnpike Trust in the mid 19th century to compete with the New Direct Road later the A303 At the turn of the 19th century William Hanning created the New Direct Road a fast coaching route between London and Exeter The road deviated from Ogilby s route running via Amesbury and Ilminster rejoining the older road at Honiton It became popular with postal services such as The Subscription In 1831 a race was held between London and Exeter via the New Direct Road which resulted in a dead heat 170 miles 270 km were covered in 13 hours compared to a typical early 18th century time of four days 8 In response to the competition of routes a new turnpike road was built west of Chard avoiding the historic route to Honiton via Stockland with several steep hills This road met the New Direct Road near Upottery 9 b Historically the route between London and Land s End was also called the Great South West Road In the 21st century the name only refers to a small section of the road near Heathrow 10 Redruth to Penzance Edit In 1825 an Act of Parliament established the Hayle Bridge Causeway and Turnpike Trust which was required to construct a bridge causeway and turnpike over the Hayle River from Griggs Quay grid reference SW545363 in the west to Phillack in the east The turnpike was needed to ease the transport of copper ore to the port at Hayle for export A second Act was passed in 1837 to establish the Griggs Quay to Penzance Turnpike and in 1839 an Act formed a third trust the Hayle and Redruth Turnpike to complete the turnpike to Redruth 11 The running of the Causeway turnpike was overseen by the winner of a public auction and for the year 1880 the winning bid was 591 10s 12 In 1885 the management of the causeway by the turnpike came to an end and the White house tollhouse on the eastern end of the Hayle causeway along with the garden and three granite posts was put up for auction on 30 October 1885 A second tollhouse at Long Rock was also for auction as well as a number of posts and gates 13 20th century Edit nbsp The Great South West Road section of the A30 borders Heathrow Airport The A30 was one of the first roads to be classified by the Ministry of Transport for funding in 1921 It followed Ogilby s route up to Exeter then the basic route of the modern A30 through Okehampton Launceston and Bodmin to the Greenmarket in Penzance where it ended 14 It was extended to Land s End in 1925 15 The Great South West Road section of the A30 around Heathrow had been planned as the western end of the Great West Road project one of the first bypasses built for motor traffic Construction began in 1914 but was quickly halted because of World War I It resumed construction in 1919 16 The full route from Chiswick to Ashford was opened by King George V on 30 May 1925 17 Following the construction of a bypass around Basingstoke the route of the A30 was changed on 1 April 1933 to run by Sutton Scotney and Stockbridge rejoining the original route at Lopcombe Corner east of Salisbury An alternative route the A303 was created out of existing roads at the same time between Micheldever Station and the Blackdown Hills that followed the basic course of Hanning s New Direct Road 10 The A30 remained the principal route between London and Exeter until the A303 became a trunk road in 1958 receiving central Government funding and relegating the parallel A30 to a local road 18 By the mid 20th century large sections of the A30 were struggling to cope with the increasing demands of road traffic In the mid 1960s numerous councils complained that the Secretary of State for Transport Barbara Castle decided that improvements to the A38 from Exeter to Plymouth were of higher priority for funding than any work on the A30 Cornwall County Council complained that the A30 through the county was narrow and twisted and known as the stage coach trail 19 Following World War II the Ministry of Transport planned a large scale upgrade of the A30 across south west England with the eventual intention that most of the route would be at least dual carriageway 20 The M3 motorway was planned as a replacement for the A30 between London and Popham Following a public enquiry in 1966 the line was fixed the following year 21 The work was completed as far as Bagshot in 1971 then to Sunbury on Thames in 1974 22 In 1971 the Secretary of State for the Environment Peter Walker announced many upgrades of the A30 across Devon and Cornwall identifying the section from Okehampton to Bodmin as a key area of improvement 23 The 2 2 mile 3 5 km Honiton dual carriageway bypass opened in early December 1966 at a cost of 984 000 24 The Hayle bypass was first proposed in the late 1970s It was controversial and Dora Russell protested against its construction 25 It was completed in 1985 26 nbsp Carland Cross roundaboutThe Okehampton bypass which opened on 19 July 1988 goes to the south of the town cutting through the northern edge of Dartmoor National Park in Devon In the 1980s the route of the bypass was the subject of a prolonged campaign from conservationists including Sylvia Sayer who preferred a route to the north of the town through agricultural land 27 The section between Honiton and Exeter in East Devon was upgraded in 1999 to dual carriageway giving quicker access to Exeter International Airport This road was built under the Design Build Finance Operate DBFO scheme by the private consortium Connect A30 who receive a shadow toll from the Government for each vehicle travelling along the road 28 Archaeological investigations during the work found a Roman cavalry garrison and later settlement at Pomeroy Wood 29 There were several protests by environmentalists during construction and the particular nature of the DBFO scheme with a long lasting occupation of sites on the planned route focused around Fairmile Swampy received press attention for his part in this protest In 2016 President of The Automobile Association Edmund King claimed that the action had led to a slowdown in road construction throughout Britain 30 31 21st century Edit nbsp British Airways Flight 38 which crash landed between the runway and the A30 During 2006 one of the main bottlenecks on the road was removed when the Merrymeet roundabout between Okehampton and Exeter near Whiddon Down was replaced with a grade separated junction and dual carriageway 32 Since the Bodmin to Indian Queens project was completed in late 2007 the new dual carriageway runs to the north of Goss Moor The previous road has been converted to a cycle lane 33 In December 2012 it was announced that 2 8 miles 4 5 km from Temple to Higher Carblake would be upgraded to a dual carriageway 34 Building started in early 2015 and was completed in summer 2017 This work made the A30 continuous dual carriageway between the M5 at Exeter and Carland Cross in Cornwall 35 On 17 January 2008 British Airways Flight 38 crash landed near the Great South West Road southeast of Heathrow Airport 36 Shortly before the crash landing the captain of the Boeing 777 involved was able to clear the A30 by raising the flaps saving the lives of motorists on the ground 37 In 2014 the A30 was identified as one of several key routes in the Government s Road Investment Strategy turning it into a strategic corridor for southwest England This includes further dual carriageway improvements east of Honiton towards the Blackdown Hills and between Chiverton Cross and Carland Cross 38 39 In 2022 the casket of Queen Elizabeth II was driven partially on this road en route to Windsor Castle her final resting place 40 Future proposals Edit Carland Cross to Chiverton Cross Edit Dualling of the stretch between Carland Cross and Chiverton Cross would establish a continuous dual carriageway from Exeter right through to Camborne Although this was shelved in 2006 as it was not considered a regional priority 41 it was included within the government s Road Investment Strategy in 2014 42 The preferred route was announced in July 2017 43 and on 6 February 2020 the Secretary of State for Transport approved Highways England s application for a Development Consent Order for the scheme to be constructed Work began in March 2020 with anticipated completion in 2023 for an estimated cost of 330 million with a total of 20 million being provided by the European Regional Development Fund 44 45 The scheme is included as a case study in the Department for Transport s document Road Investment Strategy 2 2020 2025 The current route of the road passes near a World Heritage Site a Registered Park and Gardens and a number of Sites of Special Scientific Interest The proposed scheme includes a 20 metre wide green bridge over the new road to promote connectivity and biodiversity 46 Cultural references EditJohn Betjeman referred to the A30 in his poem Meditation on the A30 47 Arthur Boyt focus of BBC documentary The Man Who Eats Badgers described the A30 near Bodmin Moor as a good road for finding roadkill 48 In Monty Python s Flying Circus episode 34 The Cycling Tour Mr Pither laments As I lay down to the sound of the Russian gentlemen practising their shooting I realised I was in a bit of a pickle My heart sank as I realised I should never see the Okehampton by pass again just before his impending execution in Russia 49 Rick Beato interviewing Brian May of the band Queen in 2021 asked him about the band How often would you tune to which May replied Not often enough some people would say We used to say we tuned to the A30 50 References EditNotes Edit From North Waltham Hampshire to nearby Micheldever Station the A30 is subsumed into the A303 and one version remains so until Sutton Scotney Bullington the intersection with the Oxford etc Southampton road the A34 from where the A30 revives running south along Bullington Lane almost alongside the A34 before resuming a direct west south westerly route to Salisbury and beyond however along this combined A303 A30 section at Coxford Hill above Micheldever railway station an original version branches off linking more directly Sutton Scotney village from that point and enabling a cycle route to avoid Popham and the dual carriageway taking a detour through North Waltham village This junction explains why the A30 turns off at Upottery to become a minor road towards Yarcombe while the road immediately ahead becomes the A303 Citations Edit Area 1 map Highways Agency Archived from the original on 21 September 2011 Retrieved 22 December 2011 Crittall Elizabeth ed 1959 Roads A History of the County of Wiltshire Vol 4 London Victoria County History pp 254 271 Retrieved 11 August 2016 Ogilby John 1699 The Traveller s Guide Or A Most Exact Description of the Roads of England pp 202 203 Old Hampshire Mapped Ogilby Routes Geography Department Portsmouth University 2003 Retrieved 11 August 2016 Identifying the Trunk Roads of Early Modern England and Wales PDF Report The Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure May 2017 p 6 Retrieved 28 March 2020 Lysons Daniel Lysons Samuel 1814 Geography and geology Cornwall Magna Britannia Vol 3 London pp clxxxi cxciii Retrieved 11 August 2016 Simpson Jacqueline 2011 Green Men amp White Swans The Folklore of British Pub Names Random House ISBN 978 0 099 52017 7 Fort Tom 2012 The A303 Highway to the Sun Simon and Schuster pp 259 262 263 ISBN 978 0 857 20327 4 CHARD TURNPIKE TRUST Records Somerset Heritage Centre a b CLASSIFICATION Re numbering of classified routes The National Archives 1933 1942 Historic England amp 1405965 Cornish Thomas 23 September 1880 Hayle Bridge Causeway and Turnpike Road The Cornishman No 115 p 1 Hayle Bridge Causeway and Turnpike Trust The Cornishman No 379 22 October 1885 p 1 Half Inch Ministry of Transport Road Map Ordnance Survey Retrieved 22 December 2011 CLASSIFICATION Road numbering The National Archives 1921 1949 The Great West Road The Times 24 February 1919 p 7 Retrieved 16 August 2016 London to the West The Times 12 May 1925 p 17 Retrieved 16 August 2016 A 30 and A 303 Parliamentary Debates Hansard 5 November 1958 Retrieved 16 August 2016 Road to the West Ministry s Choice Dismays Cornwall The Times 20 June 1966 Retrieved 11 August 2016 A 30 and A 303 Parliamentary Debates Hansard 12 November 1958 Retrieved 11 August 2016 M3 London to Southampton The Motorway Archive Retrieved 16 August 2016 M3 London to Southampton Statistics and options The Motorway Archive 16 August 2016 1 000 more miles of motorway will bring growth to less prosperous areas The Times 24 June 1971 Retrieved 11 August 2016 Honiton Bypass Autocar 125 3696 1287 16 December 1966 Over 80 she still battles on The Times 28 April 1977 Retrieved 11 August 2016 Road Works Compensation Parliamentary Debates Hansard 2 May 1985 Retrieved 11 August 2016 Kelly Matthew 2015 Quartz and Feldspar Dartmoor A British Landscape in Modern Times London Jonathan Cape pp 10 16 ISBN 978 0 22409 113 8 Highways Agency A30 Exeter to Bere Regis Archived from the original on 8 April 2012 Retrieved 8 April 2012 A30 Honiton to Exeter Horse Power Roman Style Roads to the Past Trunk Roads and Archaeology 1999 report Highways Agency 1999 Archived from the original on 5 June 2009 Retrieved 17 October 2009 Hunt Barry 14 June 2016 Revealed Road building records of Prime Ministers including David Cameron The Comet Retrieved 21 December 2022 Smith Colleen 1 February 2020 30 January 2020 Remembering when Swampy emerged from his long tunnel protest under Devon s A30 Devon Live Retrieved 21 December 2022 Highways Agency A30 Merrymeet Junction Archived from the original on 26 September 2006 Retrieved 29 August 2006 Moor dualling plans get go ahead BBC News 29 November 2004 Retrieved 23 April 2010 AUTUMN STATEMENT 2012 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 24 December 2012 Retrieved 5 December 2012 A30 Temple to Higher Carblake Improvement Cornwall Council Highways England Retrieved 17 June 2016 Report on the accident to Boeing 777 236ER G YMMM at London Heathrow Airport on 17 January 2008 AAIB Retrieved 9 February 2010 BA crash inquiry reveals heroics 20 May 2008 Retrieved 3 October 2022 A303 A358 A30 Corridor improvement package Report Somerset County Council Retrieved 16 August 2016 A30 A303 A358 Improvement Project Somerset County Council Retrieved 16 August 2016 Map shows where you can watch the Queen on her final journey to Windsor Castle 19 September 2022 Winners and losers in roads plan BBC News 6 July 2006 Retrieved 23 April 2010 Road Investment Strategy for the 2015 16 2019 20 Road Period PDF Gov uk Retrieved 13 November 2021 A30 Chiverton to Carland Cross Improvement Scheme Preferred route announcement PDF Highwaysengland citizenspace com Retrieved 3 November 2021 Main Cornwall route gets vital 290m upgrade BBC News 7 February 2020 Retrieved 8 February 2020 A30 Chiverton to Carland Cross www highwaysengland co uk Highways England 18 May 2020 Retrieved 1 October 2020 Road Investment Strategy 2 2020 2025 PDF Department for Transport 11 March 2020 Archived from the original PDF on 12 March 2020 Retrieved 11 March 2020 Meditation on the A30 A poem by John Betjeman Poetry Connection Retrieved 17 June 2016 Arthur Boyt Archived from the original on 22 June 2022 Retrieved 5 December 2012 Monty Python s Flying Circus Just the Words Episode 34 ibras dk Retrieved 17 June 2016 Brian May Interview Queen s Songs Stories and Guitar Style YouTube Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 Retrieved 24 September 2021 Sources Edit Historic England Milestone standing at the entrance to the depot of Mounts Bay Coaches at NGR SW4851231161 1405965 National Heritage List for England retrieved 12 October 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A30 road amp oldid 1179398501, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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