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Bishop's Stortford

Bishop's Stortford is a historic market town in Hertfordshire, England, just west of the M11 motorway on the county boundary with Essex, 27 miles (43 km) north-east of central London, and 35 miles (56 km) by rail from Liverpool Street station. Stortford had an estimated population of 41,088 in 2020.[2] The district of East Hertfordshire, where the town is located, has been ranked as the best place to live in the UK by the Halifax Quality of Life annual survey in 2020.[3] The town is commonly known as “Stortford” by locals.

Bishop's Stortford

Looking down Windhill towards the town Centre
Bishop's Stortford
Location within Hertfordshire
Population41,088 (2020)[1]
OS grid referenceTL495215
Civil parish
  • Bishop's Stortford
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townBishop's Stortford
Postcode districtCM22, CM23
Dialling code01279
PoliceHertfordshire
FireHertfordshire
AmbulanceEast of England
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Hertfordshire
51°52′19″N 0°10′21″E / 51.8720°N 0.1725°E / 51.8720; 0.1725Coordinates: 51°52′19″N 0°10′21″E / 51.8720°N 0.1725°E / 51.8720; 0.1725

History

Etymology

The origins of the town's name are uncertain. One possibility is that the Saxon settlement derives its name from 'Steorta's ford' or 'tail ford', in the sense of a 'tail', or tongue, of land.[4][5] The town became known as Bishop's Stortford due to the acquisition in 1060 by the Bishop of London.[6]

The River Stort is named after the town, and not the town after the river. When cartographers visited the town in the 16th century, they reasoned that the town must have been named after the ford over the river and assumed the river was called the Stort.[7]

First settlements: pre-Roman and Roman Stortford

Little is known of Bishop's Stortford until the Roman era, with the evidence being small archaeological finds. Limited evidence of ancient Mesolithic and Microlithic peoples in the form of flakes, cores and an axe have been found on the Meads and Silverleys respectively. Most Bronze Age evidence is from the neighbouring parish of Thorley to the south as opposed to Stortford proper, but a 3,000 year old socketed spearhead has been found at Haymeads Lane within the town. Evidence of settlement has been found on Dunmow Road dating from the Middle Bronze Age through to Romano-British times. In Bishop's Stortford: A History, Jacqueline Cooper concludes "existing evidence suggests that the Stortford area was settled only sparsely in prehistoric times, and nearby places like Braughing and Little Hallingbury were of more importance."[8]

Stortford was on the line of the Roman Road, Stane Street, which ran from St Albans to Colchester via Braughing. Construction started around 50AD on the road. Little evidence from the period survives except for excavations showing a section of the road, evidence of a cremation facility and a burial site.[9] None of the excavations has shown evidence of the Roman fort which likely existed in Stortford.[10] The settlement was probably abandoned in the 5th century after the break-up of the Roman Empire.[11]

Refoundation: post-Roman and medieval Stortford

Following the end of the Roman era, a new Anglo-Saxon settlement grew up on the site.

However, little is known about Stortford until the 1060s with the evidence becoming much stronger after the Norman Conquest.[12] In 1060 when William, Bishop of London, bought Stortford manor and estate for £8, leading to the town's modern name. By 1086, the motte-and-bailey Waytemore Castle had been built[6] as a local strongpoint for the area. It acted as a centre for defence and civil administration for roughly 125 years before it was dismantled but not destroyed by King John in 1211. Rebuilding of the castle started the following year at John's expense, and John stayed the night in the castle in 1216.[13] By the 15th century, the castle had fallen into disrepair, and the Bishop's Court (one of the administrative structures for the area) moved to Hockerill, to the east of the town.[6]

At the time of the Domesday Book in 1086 the village had a population of around 120,[14] and grew to around 700 by the 13th century.[12]

In terms of governance, early medieval Bishop's Stortford was part of the Braughing Hundred, but acquired burgesses and between 1306 and 1336 was taxed as a borough. No charter survives however, and civil authority passed to two local manor courts at the Castle and the Rectory.[15] Stortford briefly sent two members to parliament in the reigns of Edward II and Edward III, with writs being issued to the town in the 1311–1315, 1318, 1320, 1322 and 1340.[16][17]

Plague and growth: early modern Stortford

At the start of the early modern period in the mid 15th century, Stortford was a primarily agricultural community, but had also acquired a tanning industry.[14] By the 16th century, Stortford had become an important centre of the malting industry. Not only were the local soils well suited for grains, but the fact that the town was just 35 miles to London provided an impetus to its development.[18] The economic draw of the maltings and the town's market supported a large number of inns and public houses by the middle of the 16th century pointing to its prosperity.[19]

Over the following hundred years, Stortford grew markedly. The population of Bishop's Stortford reached 1,500 by 1660 as a result of a positive net birth rate and migration to the town.[20] This was despite a series of a dozen plagues between the 1560s and 1660s.[21] The town also enjoyed a series of royal visits in the 17th century, with Charles I visiting the town in 1625, 1629 and 1642.[22]

The years following the last of Charles' visits were to prove somewhat turbulent for the town. During the English Civil War Stortford backed the Parliamentarians, with the Manor of Stortford being sequestered from the Bishop of London and sold off for £2,845. It was returned to the Bishop at the Restoration.[22] The Great Plague of 1666-7, and its lasting effects, reduced the population to only around 600 by 1700. The effects of the plague were so severe that the town had to appeal to the Hertfordshire magistrates, who levied a rate on every parish in the county for the relief of Bishop's Stortford, Hoddesdon and Cheshunt.[20]

Despite the demographic impact of the Great Plague, perhaps the turning point in Stortford's fortunes was the creation of the 'Hockerill by-pass' in 1670.[23] King Charles II had in the 1660s been increasingly travelling from London to Newmarket for the races and disliked the noise and congestion of Stortford, with its oderous market, maltings and tanneries. Moreover, the route was not always passable as noted by diarist Samuel Pepys who in made the following entry in his diary on 23 May 1668: ‘and so to Bishop's Stafford [sic]. The ways mighty full of water so as hardly to be passed’. As a result, the road from London to Newmarket was diverted to the east of the centre of Stortford, and instead ran through the outlying settlement of Hockerill.[24] The inns of Hockerill become an important overnight location for stop overs for overnight coaches to East Anglia.[25] Further demands for improved roads led to the creation of the Essex and Hertfordshire Turnpike Trust (later Hockerill Turnpike Trust) in 1744 to repair the road between Harlow Bush Common and Stump Cross in Great Chesterford. Later Acts of Parliament extended the term of the Trust and allowed new road construction.[26] From March 1785 the mail coaches ran from London to Norwich via Stortford.[27] Thus, the improved highways marked the first of the phases of Stortford's growth driven by emergent transport technology.

The second major transport development to provide a significant boost to the town was the construction of the Stort Navigation, which canalised the River Stort, and opened in 1769. The improvements to the navigation of the Stort were driven by the inability of the malting industry to use the Stort for river transport, which caused significant to the local roads and handed a competitive advantage to neighbouring malting areas like Ware who were linked to London by the River Lea. The work on the canal undertaken by George Jackson (later Sir George Duckett) had the added benefit of alleviating the flooding risk in the town.[28]

 
The Corn Exchange

Industrial revolution to World War II

With the roads and Stort navigation providing easy access to London markets, industrialisation came to Stortford. The advent of the Stort navigation brought new industries to the town, with bargemen, lock-keepers, wharfingers, coal and timber merchants all appearing. The malting industry also saw output significantly increase, with brown malt production doubling between 1788 and 1811. Together with national trends in the brewing industry, the 40 malthouses in Stortford in early 1800s Stortford also helped to stimulate the local brewing trade. At the turn of the 19th century, there were 18 brewers in town which in turn boosted the inn trade.[29] The boom in the town in turn boosted the metal working and bricklaying trades, and also aided the general retail trade. In 1791 there were 30 principal traders according to a contemporary directory.[30]

The vibrancy of the local economy - especially the agricultural trade sector - was demonstrated in 1828 when a consortium of local businessmen built the Bishop's Stortford Corn Exchange, which provided trading accommodation for 65 dealers.[31] By this point, the town directory was listing 200 commercial entries, and 350 by the turn of the century.[32]

The third major transport innovation to have a significant impact upon Stortford was the arrival of the railway in 1842. The line initially ran from London Liverpool Street to Stortford, but by 1845 the line was linked to Norwich. The new rail link brought an almost immediate end to the coaching industry, and the Stort Navigation entered terminal decline. The town, though boomed. Massive new residential estates grew up in the New Town (to the south and west of the historic core) and Hockerill (across the river to the east of the historic core) in the decades following the building of the railway.[33] A Bishop's Stortford–Braintree branch line was built to Braintree to bring goods into Stortford from the surrounding more rural areas, with the first section to Great Dunmow opening in 1864.[34] The single track line struggled to gain traction, and by 1922 had only seven eastbound and six westbound trains per day.[35] The bus service which started between Stortford and Dunmow in 1920[36] contributed to the demise of the line which closed to passengers in 1952 and freight in 1972.[37]

 
King Edward VII driving through Bishop's Stortford, October 1905

The mid-19th century onwards also saw the rapid growth in public utilities, public services and governance in the town. The first gas street lights were installed in the town in the 1830s,[38] in 1855 the New Cemetery was opened,[39] in the 1870s a sewage farm and an isolation hospital were built,[40] while in 1895 the town's first proper hospital was opened.[41] By 1911, the Encyclopædia Britannica referred to the town as having strong educational pedigree: "The high school, formerly the grammar school, was founded in the time of Elizabeth.... There are a Nonconformist grammar school, a diocesan training college for mistresses, and other educational establishments."[42]

During World War II, Bishop's Stortford was the evacuation centre for many Britons, including Clapton Girls Technology College.

The modern service-industry town

In the post-war era the town centre underwent changes with the demolition of a multi-storey car park and surrounding area to make way for a new town centre area and city-type apartments and penthouses on the riverside and elsewhere. Jackson Square (a modern shopping complex) was rebuilt and an extension added.

Stortford continued to grow as a commuter town from the second half of the 20th century onwards, spurred by the construction of the M11 motorway and Stansted Airport, as well as rail links to London and Cambridge. This contributed to its rise in population to almost 38,000 at the time of the 2011 census.[1]

Of the seven suburbs of Thorley, Thorley Park, Havers, Snowley, Bishop's Park, St Michael's Mead and Hockerill, the last is a separate ecclesiastical parish east of the River Stort, centred around the old coaching inns, All Saints in Stansted Road and the railway station. Postwar development has enlarged the town's area further.

Demography

Population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1801 2,305—    
1811 2,630+1.33%
1821 3,358+2.47%
1831 3,958+1.66%
1841 4,681+1.69%
1851 5,280+1.21%
1861 5,390+0.21%
1871 6,250+1.49%
1881 6,704+0.70%
1891 6,595−0.16%
1901 7,143+0.80%
1911 8,721+2.02%
YearPop.±% p.a.
1921 8,858+0.16%
1931 9,510+0.71%
1939 13,374+4.35%
1951 12,772−0.38%
1961 18,342+3.69%
1971 22,121+1.89%
1981 22,535+0.19%
1991 27,874+2.15%
2001 34,857+2.26%
2011 37,374+0.70%
2020 41,088+1.06%
Source: 1801-1961 & 1939 Register Census via Vision of Britain, 1971-1991 Hertfordshire Populations 1801-1991 (Hertfordshire County Council, undated), 2001-2020 ONS Mid-Year Population Estimates

Demographic history

The earliest reliable population figure for Bishop's Stortford was 120 at the publication of the Domesday Book in 1086.[14] Over the successive centuries the population waxed and waned as a result of economic growth and plagues, and generally only rough population estimates exist.[20][21] By the time of the first nationwide census in 1801 Stortford's population had reached 2,305[43] spurred by the town's position on the Hockerill Turnpike[26] and the canalisation of the River Stort.[28] Steady growth continued over the coming decades as the railways spurred industrialisation.[33] Population growth averaged 1.12% per annum through to 1911 and the advent of World War I. Inter-war growth averaged 1.54% per annum. Stortford's population exceeded the county town of Hertford in the 1961 census,[44] even though Stortford's average population growth slowed to 1.39% between World War II and 2020. Sources of population growth have been predominantly natural growth and in-migration, but on a number of occasions the boundaries of Bishop's Stortford parish have been expanded. Most recently this occurred in 1992 when some neighbouring parts of Essex were moved into the town[45] and in 2018 when homes were moved into Stortford from neighbouring Thorley Parish.[46] In 2020 Bishop's Stortford was the largest town in East Hertfordshire.[47]

Ethnicity and nationality

At the 2011 census, 93.6% of the population of Bishop's Stortford described themselves as white,[48] which was lower than the 96.2% recorded in the 2001 census.[49] The number of people describing themselves as having a white background in 2011 was significantly higher than the England aggregate of 85.4%, but slightly lower than the overall East Hertfordshire figure.[48]

Ethnic group, 2011 census[48]
Bishop's Stortford, % East Hertfordshire, % England, %
White 93.6 95.5 85.4
Mixed/multiple ethnic groups 2.2 1.6 2.3
Asian/Asian British 2.9 1.9 7.8
Black/African/Caribbean/Black British 1.0 0.7 3.5
Other ethnic group 0.4 0.3 1.0

The proportion of Bishop's Stortford residents reporting having been born in the United Kingdom was 87.8%, and was only slightly higher than the English average of 86.2%. Stortford recorded a significantly higher proportion of European Union-born residents than either East Hertfordshire or England.[48] The number of UK-born residents in 2011 was down from the 92.4% recorded in 2001.[48][49]

Country of birth, 2011 census[48]
Bishop's Stortford, % East Hertfordshire, % England, %
United Kingdom 87.8 92.0 86.2
Ireland 1.1 0.8 0.7
Other EU 5.3 3.0 3.7
Other countries 5.8 4.3 9.4

Housing

The number of occupied dwellings in Bishop's Stortford rose from 13,733 in 2001 to 14,920. In Stortford 3.0% of properties were recorded as empty in 2011, compared with 4.3% across England. Overall, the dominant type of housing are detached and semi-detached housing, although the proportion of flats has grown from 13.0% in 2001 to 17.6% in 2011. The proportion of flats is well below the English average of 22.1%[48][49]

Dwellings By Type, Census 2011[48]
Bishop's Stortford East Hertfordshire England
Number % Number % Number %
All Dwellings 15,377 100 58,356 100 23,044,097 100
Occupied Dwellings 14,920 97.0 56,577 97.0 22,063,368 95.7
Empty Dwellings 457 3.0 1,779 3.0 980,729 4.3
Detached Houses 5,198 33.8 16,294 27.9 5,128,552 22.3
Semi-Detached Houses 4,528 29.4 17,459 29.9 7,076,395 30.7
Terraced Houses 2,940 19.1 13,397 23.0 5,642,969 24.5
Flats (Purpose Built) 2,368 15.4 9,615 16.5 3,854,451 16.7
Flats (Converted) 219 1.4 912 1.6 984,284 4.3
Flats (In Commercial Buildings) 122 0.8 562 1.0 257,218 1.1
Caravan or other mobile or temporary structure 2 0.0 117 0.2 100,228 0.4

Home ownership is high in Bishop's Stortford at 72.3% of households, which is above both the East Hertfordshire and English averages. The proportion of properties available for social rent has risen from 9.8% in 2001 to 10.1% in 2011.[48][49]

Dwellings By Tenure, Census 2011[48]
Bishop's Stortford East Hertfordshire England
Number % Number % Number %
All households 14,920 100.0 56,577 100.0 22,063,368 100.0
Owned 10,781 72.3 40,665 71.9 13,975,024 63.3
Owned outright 4,594 30.8 18,186 32.1 6,745,584 30.6
Owned with a mortgage or loan 6,187 41.5 22,479 39.7 7,229,440 32.8
Shared ownership (part owned and part rented) 226 1.5 508 0.9 173,760 0.8
Social rented 1,510 10.1 7,185 12.7 3,903,550 17.7
Private rented 2,261 15.2 7,446 13.2 3,715,924 16.8
Living rent free 142 1.0 773 1.4 295,110 1.3

Government

Bishop's Stortford has three tiers of local government at parish (town), district, and county level: Bishop's Stortford Town Council, East Hertfordshire District Council, and Hertfordshire County Council.

Bishop's Stortford
Local Government District (1866–1894)
Urban District (1894–1974)
 
Coat of arms
Population
 • 18916,595[50]
 • 197121,000[51]
History
 • Created25 December 1866
 • Abolished31 March 1974
 • Succeeded byEast Hertfordshire
 • HQBishop's Stortford
Contained within
 • County CouncilHertfordshire

Historical Development

Historically, Bishop's Stortford was administered by its parish vestry, in the same way as most small towns and rural areas; no borough corporation was established for the town, despite some limited moves in that direction in the fourteenth century.[52] Bishop's Stortford was included in the hundred of Braughing. The Bishop's Stortford Poor Law Union was established in 1835, covering the town and surrounding parishes in both Hertfordshire and Essex.[53]

On 25 October 1866 a public meeting at the town's corn exchange voted to establish a local board, the Bishop's Stortford Local Board. The parish of Bishop's Stortford was declared to be a local government district with effect from 25 December 1866, and the local board held its first meeting at the corn exchange on 23 February 1867. Jones Gifford Nash was chosen as the first chairman of the local board.[54] The Local Board later established offices at 7 North Street.[55][56][57]

Under the Local Government Act 1894, the Bishop's Stortford Local Board became the Bishop's Stortford Urban District Council with effect from 31 December 1894.[citation needed] The new council held its first meeting on 5 January 1895. The last chairman of the local board, John Slater, was appointed the first chairman of the urban district council.[58] The council continued to be based at 7 North Street until the First World War.[59] In 1914 the council bought a large old house called Wharf House at 4 The Causeway.[60] The house had been built by George Jackson, who had also built the adjoining Stort Navigation. Wharf House was renamed the Council House, and served as the council's offices until October 1972, when the council moved to purpose-built offices at 1 The Causeway. The Council House was demolished shortly afterwards to make way for the Jackson Square shopping centre.[61][62]

Bishop's Stortford Urban District Council was granted a coat of arms on 20 August 1952.[63]

 
2 Hockerill Street: offices of the Town Council, 1974–1994

Bishop's Stortford Urban District was abolished under the Local Government Act 1972, becoming part of East Hertfordshire on 1 April 1974. Bishop's Stortford Town Council was established as a successor parish to the old urban district.[64] The former urban district council's offices at 1 The Causeway were taken over by East Hertfordshire District Council, whilst the new town council was based at the former offices of the Braughing Rural District Council at 2 Hockerill Street. The town council moved to the Old Monastery on Windhill in 1994.[65] East Hertfordshire District Council vacated 1 The Causeway in 2013, having consolidated most of its functions at its main offices in Hertford. The district council set up a smaller Bishop's Stortford office in Charringtons House, adjoining 1 The Causeway. The vacated office at 1 The Causeway was demolished in 2017.[66]

Parliamentary Elections

Bishop's Stortford is the largest town within the Hertford and Stortford County Constituency for elections to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom. The constituency covers Stortford, Hertford, Ware, Sawbridgeworth and the surrounding rural areas.[67] Since the creation of the seat in 1983, it has been represented by Conservative MPs.

Electoral Wards

For elections to East Herts District Council, Bishop's Stortford is currently divided into five wards: All Saints, Central, Meads, Silverleys and South. However, as a result of a boundary review by the Local Government Boundary Commission for England, the town will be split into six wards from the May 2023 local elections: All Saints, Central, North, Parsonage, South and Thorley Manor. At present, Bishop's Stortford residents elect 13 of the 50 councillors on East Herts Council, but this will rise to 14 out of 50 in May 2023.[68]

For elections to Hertfordshire County Council, out of the 78 electoral divisions in total, three divisions cover Bishop's Stortford: Bishop's Stortford East (comprising the areas covered by the All Saints and Meads District Council Wards), Bishop's Stortford Rural (Bishop's Stortford South, Little Hadham and Much Hadham Wards) and Bishop's Stortford West (Central and Silverleys District Council Wards).[69]

Sister cities

After 46 years of being twinned with the German town of Friedberg and Villiers-sur-Marne in France, the town council ended links in 2011. [70]

Economy and business

Bishop's Stortford is a prosperous town.[71] The key drivers of its growth according to the Town Wide Employment Study for Bishop's Stortford are "Stansted Airport, an excellent rail service into central London and good road links via the M11 to London, the M25 northern sub-region and Cambridge. Bishop's Stortford is well positioned in relation to the UK's most dynamic economies."[71] This study also highlights Stortford's skilled population, as well as the importance of "quality of life" as an important economic asset.[71] In addition to East Hertfordshire topping the Halifax Quality of Life survey in 2020,[72] Stortford has been highlighted as a popular commuter town in articles in The Times,[73] The Evening Standard,[74] and the Metro newspaper London.[75]

Like the UK as a whole, Bishop's Stortford has a highly service-based economy. In the 2011 census, 84.5% of Stortford residents in employment stated that they worked in a service industry, which was higher than East Hertfordshire (81.2%) and England (81.2%). Of particular note is that 7.9% of local workers are employed in Transportation and Storage which is well above the English average of 5.0%.[48] The most significant employer in this industry is Stansted Airport, which was estimated in 2013 to employ at least 1,000 people who live in Stortford.[76]

Employment By Industry of Bishop's Stortford Residents, UK SIC Classifications (2011 census)[48]
Bishop's Stortford East Hertfordshire England
Number % Number % Number %
Primary Industries (A-B) 25 0.1 459 0.6 203789 0.8
Manufacturing (C) 1468 7.4 6161 8.5 2226247 8.8
Utilities (D-E) 139 0.7 566 0.8 315362 1.3
Construction (F) 1,446 7.3 6,355 8.8 1,931,936 7.7
Services (G-U) 16,851 84.5 58,635 81.2 20,442,085 81.2
Wholesale and Retail Trade (G) 3,327 16.7 11,268 15.6 4,007,570 15.9
Transportation and Storage (H) 1,581 7.9 3,553 4.9 1,260,094 5.0
Accommodation and Food Service (I) 893 4.5 3,058 4.2 1,399,931 5.6
Other Services (J-U) 11,050 55.4 40,756 56.4 13,774,490 54.7
All usual resident 16–74 in employment 19,941 100 72,225 100 25,162,721 100

Commuters represent a sizeable proportion of the local working age population. The Town Wide Employment Study estimated in 2013 around 3,000 people (round 15% of those in employment) commute from Stortford by rail, with the largest proportion "in all probability" travelling into Central London.[77] This is reflected in Stortford in the 2011 census having a much higher proportion of workers in managerial and professional occupations than the national average,[48] as shown in the table below.

Employment By Industry, UK SIC Classifications (2011 census)[48]
Bishop's Stortford East Hertfordshire England
Occupations Number % Number % Number %
All usual resident 16–74 in employment 19,941 100.0 72,225 100.0 25,162,721 100.0
Managers, directors and senior officials 2,682 13.4 10,639 14.7 2,734,900 10.9
Professional 4,058 20.4 14,636 20.3 4,400,375 17.5
Associate professional and technical 3,056 15.3 11,160 15.5 3,219,067 12.8
Administrative and secretarial 2,377 11.9 8,968 12.4 2,883,230 11.5
Skilled trades 1,776 8.9 7,589 10.5 2,858,680 11.4
Caring, leisure and other service 1,839 9.2 5,740 7.9 2,348,650 9.3
Sales and customer service 1,546 7.8 4,345 6.0 2,117,477 8.4
Process plant and machine operatives 979 4.9 3,573 4.9 1,808,024 7.2
Elementary 1,628 8.2 5,575 7.7 2,792,318 11.1

Bishop's Stortford itself has a strong internal economy, with an estimated 16,985 people employed within the town boundaries.[78] There are 329 businesses established in the town centre (as of 2018)[79] represented by the Bishop's Stortford Business Improvement District (BID).[80] There is also a Bishop's Stortford Chamber of Commerce.[81]

Stortford is considered the Principal Town Centre in East Hertfordshire by East Hertfordshire District Council's District Plan, serving as a destination for visitors from beyond the town.[82] There is both an indoor shopping centre, Jackson Square,[83] and a traditional high street running along the axis of South Street, Potter Street and North Street, as well as the adjoining streets.[84] The town has a twice weekly market and a monthly farmers market run by Bishop's Stortford Town Council.[85]

Estimated Employment in Bishop's Stortford (Usual Place of Work), UK SIC Classifications[78]
Industry 2020 %
Agriculture, forestry & fishing (A) 0 0
Mining, quarrying & utilities (B,D and E) 35 0.2
Manufacturing (C) 800 4.7
Construction (F) 1000 5.9
Motor trades (Part G) 700 4.1
Wholesale (Part G) 700 4.1
Retail (Part G) 2500 14.7
Transport & storage (inc postal) (H) 350 2.1
Accommodation & food services (I) 1250 7.4
Information & communication (J) 800 4.7
Financial & insurance (K) 600 3.5
Property (L) 350 2.1
Professional, scientific & technical (M) 1750 10.3
Business administration & support services (N) 1750 10.3
Public administration & defence (O) 100 0.6
Education (P) 1750 10.3
Health (Q) 1750 10.3
Arts, entertainment, recreation & other services (R, S,T and U) 800 4.7
Total 16,985 100

Local media

The Bishop's Stortford Independent newspaper covers Stortford, along with the neighbouring towns of Sawbridgeworth and Stansted Mountfitchet.[86] The newspaper was founded in October 2017[87] following the closure of the Stortford office of the Herts and Essex Observer newspaper in 2016.[88]

The town is also covered by a number of print magazines including the Bishop's Stortford Flyer,[89] CM23 Connection,[90] Axis Magazine,[91] and The BISH.[92]

Stortford is covered along with the rest of Hertfordshire on BBC Three Counties Radio.[93]

Transport

Rail

Bishop's Stortford railway station is on the West Anglia Main Line, and was first opened in 1842. There were 2.00 million passenger entries and exits at Bishop's Stortford in 2020/21.[94] All trains are run by Greater Anglia.[95]

Greater Anglia trains provide Bishop's Stortford with a direct link southbound to Harlow, Tottenham Hale and London Liverpool Street, with many services calling at intermediate stations. A direct service to Stratford in East London also operates, which calls at most intermediate stations.

Northbound services link Bishop's Stortford to Cambridge North railway station and Stansted Airport railway station and at certain times, to Ely.

Epping tube station on the London Underground Central line is about 12 miles (19 km) away from Bishop's Stortford.

Road

The M11 motorway passes to the east of Bishop's Stortford. Junction 8 links the motorway to the town, and the M11 carries traffic from Bishop's Stortford directly to Cambridge, Harlow and London. As the road passes the town, Bishop's Stortford falls in the M11 corridor for innovation.[96]

The A120 runs east–west along the northern edge of the town. To the west, the A120 meets the A10 at Puckeridge (for Hertford or Royston). To the east, the A120 passes Stansted Airport en route to Braintree, Colchester, the A12 and Harwich.

Other key routes in the town include:

Air pollution

East Hertfordshire District Council monitors nitrogen dioxide (NO2) levels at Hockerill Junction in the town centre.[97] There are four diffusion tubes around the junction for air quality monitoring. In 2017, three out of four tubes failed to meet the UK National Objective of 40μg/m3 (micrograms per cubic metre):[98]

NO2 levels at
Hockerill Junction
(2017 average)[98]
Location NO2 concentration
(μg/m3)
Stansted Road 36.0
Hockerill Street 41.3
Dunmow Road 45.6
London Road 56.3

Air

Stansted Airport is to the east of the town, with rail and bus links to Bishop's Stortford. Stansted serves over 200 destinations globally.[99]

Bus and coach

The town is on the Arriva Shires & Essex bus network. Buses 309, 508, 509 and 510 connect the town to Stansted Airport. Buses 508, 509 and 510 all terminate to the south in Harlow.[100]

Other key routes include the 301 to Saffron Walden, the 351 to Hertford, and the 386 to Stevenage (via Letchworth). There are further routes to rural destinations in Hertfordshire and Essex.[101][102]

Cycling

Bishop's Stortford is served by cycle routes on regional networks and the National Cycle Network.

National Cycle Route 11 is an incomplete cycle route which will run through the town centre. Completed sections of the route currently pass through Harlow, Sawbridgeworth, Stansted Mountfitchet and Cambridge. The section between Sawbridgeworth and Bishop's Stortford is in development, but when completed, the route will provide a direct, non-stop connection from Bishop's Stortford to the Lea Valley (southbound) and King's Lynn (northbound).[103][104]

National Cycle Route 16 passes just to the northeast of Bishop's Stortford. The route is segregated from traffic, running non-stop to Great Dunmow. The route continues east on on-road and off-road routes to Braintree and Witham.[104][105]

The Bishop's Stortford Circular Ride is a recreational cycle route on country lanes to the north of the town. The route begins and ends on Northgate End in the town centre. It passes through Patmore Heath, Stocking Pelham, Brent Pelham, Little Hormead, Braughing and Albury.[106]

The River Stort towpath is a shared-use path which begins in Bishop's Stortford. Running parallel to the river, the path links the town directly to Sawbridgeworth and Harlow, and eventually to the River Lea towpath towards Hertford, or Tottenham and London's East End. Parts of the towpath carry NCR 11. The route is maintained by the Canal and River Trust.[107][108]

Landmarks

The historic core of Bishop's Stortford is covered by a Conservation Area, which roughly aligns with the boundaries of the town in 1874-1894.[109] As of the last formal Appraisal of the Conservation Area in 2014, there were 105 listed buildings in Stortford, including 71 within the Conservation Area. Two of the buildings are Grade 1 listed: Waytemore Castle and St Michael's Church. Grade II* listed buildings include 10 Bridge Street (the Black Lion pub), 30 High Street (the Boar's Head restaurant) and 8-10 High Street. Much of the Conservation Area is also an Area of Archaeological Significance.[110]

Castle mound

Waytemore began as a motte and bailey castle in the time of William the Conqueror. A rectangular great tower was added to the motte in the 12th century. It was improved in the 13th century under King John and a licence for crenellation was granted in the mid-14th century. It lost significance after the Civil War and was used as a prison in the 17th century.

Only earthworks, the large motte, and the foundations of a square tower can now be seen.

All Saints' Church

In 1935 All Saints' Church, Hockerill was destroyed by fire, and in 1937 a new church, to a spacious, light, and airy design by the architect Stephen Dykes Bower, was erected in its place. This is a Grade II listed building and the tower dominates the eastern skyline of the town. The church contains a notable rose window designed by Hugh Ray Easton and a two-manual Henry Willis II organ. Concerts are also held there.

Notable people

 
Cecil Rhodes

Education

Stortford schools regularly appear with rankings of the best schools in the country, with Hockerill Anglo-European College, The Hertfordshire and Essex High School, and The Bishop's Stortford High School frequently being top performers in The Sunday Times Schools Guide[115][116] Hertfordshire County Council is the education authority for the state schools in Bishop's Stortford, and is responsible for admissions.[117]

All of the state primary schools in Stortford have nurseries attached, while all of the state secondaries have sixth forms.[118] Bishop's Stortford High School[119] and Herts and Essex High School[120] are a single sex boys and girls school, respectively, from years 7-11 but both have mixed-sex sixth forms. There is also an independent school, the Bishop's Stortford College, which covers the whole educational spectrum from ages 4 to 18.[121]

There are no further education or higher educational institutions in Stortford. However, nearby educational options include Stansted Airport College,[122] Harlow College,[123] Hertford Regional College,[124] and Cambridge Regional College.[125]

Schools
State Nursey and Primary Schools[118] All Saints C of E Primary and Nursery School, Avanti Meadows Primary School, Hillmead Primary School, Manor Fields Primary School, Northgate Primary School, St Joseph's Catholic Primary, St Michael's C of E VA Primary, Summercroft Primary School, The Richard Whittington Primary School, Thorley Hill Primary School, Thorn Grove Primary School, Windhill21
State Secondary Schools[118] Avanti Grange (opening September 2023),[126] Birchwood High School, The Bishop's Stortford High School, The Hertfordshire and Essex High School, Hockerill Anglo-European College, St Mary's Catholic School
Private Schools Bishop's Stortford College[121]

Sports

Football

Semi-professional football team Bishop's Stortford F.C. were formed in 1874, and play at Woodside Park in the town. Currently members of the Isthmian Football League Premier Division, the seventh tier of the English football pyramid, the club have won two national titles – the 1973–74 FA Amateur Cup and the 1980-81 FA Trophy. It is the first club to win both competitions. [127] Bishop's Stortford Community Football Club are one of the largest clubs of their type in the country, with over 80 teams and nearly 1,000 members as of the 2020–21 season.[128]

Hockey

Bishop's Stortford Hockey Club was formed in 1948 and is based at The Hertfordshire and Essex High School with a clubhouse and state of the art pitch.[129] They have fourteen senior sides – six men's and eight ladies'[130] playing in the East Hockey Leagues.[131] The Men's 1st XI play in the East Men's Division 1 South and the Ladies 1st XI play in the Vitality Women's Conference East.[132] – along with a thriving junior section with over 500 members.

The club has a number of current and former international players still involved with coaching or playing, including Rob Clift (gold medallist), Bernie Cotton, Pippa Bull, Vernon Brown, Ronnie Stott, in addition to a number of senior members who still represent their country at Masters level.[133]

Cricket

Bishop's Stortford Cricket Club play their home matches at Cricket Field Lane, which is also a home venue for Hertfordshire County Cricket Club.[134] Thorley Cricket Club play in Bishop's Stortford, and as of 2021 had 40 adult members and over 100 children in their summer coaching programme.[135] Hockerill Cricket Club play at their ground on Beldams Lane[136] which they share with Bishop's Stortford Running Club. BSRC supports road running and cross-country running.[137]

Rugby

Bishop's Stortford Rugby Football Club play in National League 1, the third tier of English rugby. In total the club has around 700 male players across its Mini, Youth and Senior teams, as well as over 80 female players, as of 2021.[138]

Other Sports

Public sports facilities include the Grange Paddocks swimming pool and gym, a tennis club, a squash club, and a golf club. A concrete skateboard park plaza featuring a back-and-forth run with a quarter-pipe and flat bank either side of several ledges and a rail is located in the town park.[139] Bishop's Stortford Town Council is investing in the facility to create a broader "teenage recreation space".[140]

Culture

South Mill Arts

 
South Mill Arts theatre and museum

The South Mill Arts complex (formerly the Rhodes Arts Complex) incorporates a theatre, cinema, dance studio and conference facilities. Situated within the complex, in the house where Cecil Rhodes was born, is the Bishop's Stortford Museum. It has a local history collection, a unique collection relating to Rhodes and the British Empire in Africa, as well as a temporary exhibition gallery.[141]

South Mill Arts is the town's largest live music venue. In the 1960s, the Rhodes Theatre had a string of concerts by now very high-profile musicians, who were then at the start of their careers. Performers included David Bowie, Stevie Wonder and Lulu as well as iconic bands such as The Who, The Animals, The Moody Blues, Small Faces and Wayne Fontana and The Mindbenders.[142]

Other

Located in the town centre is the Complex, Anchor Street Entertainment, a multiplex which contains a cinema, health club, a bowling alley and a number of food outlets.

The town is home to two amateur dramatics groups, The Water Lane Theatre Group and Bishop's Stortford Musical Theatre Company.

The town is home to various youth organisations and youth groups, including an Army Cadet Force detachment, an Air Training Corps squadron, Scout troops,[143] and a GAP youth group affiliated to the Church of St James the Great in Thorley

Fairs

There is an annual Christmas Fayre in December, with over 100 stalls and family-friendly entertainment.[144] There is also a summer Carnival, involving a procession with over 100 community groups taking part, bands, fairground rides, entertainers and stalls.[145]

Pubs

 
The Black Lion

Being a market town and major coach stop between London and Cambridge, Bishop's Stortford has many large public houses within the town centre. In 1636 The Star in Bridge Street was run by John Ward. The Inn was acquired by Hawkes and Co. and bought in 1808. In the early 20th century The Star catered for cyclists, providing cycle sheds that attracted people from local villages. John Kynnersley Kirby (1894–1962), painted local scenes and portraits of local characters, painted the interior of The Star for a painting entitled 'The Slate Club Secretary'.[146]

Other public houses included the 15th-century Boars Head, 16th-century Black Lion, and the Curriers Arms was in Market Square from the 1700s until 1904. in the building which until recently was a Zizzi restaurant. Between 1644 and 1810, the Reindeer operated on the present site of the Tourist Information Centre.[147]

Geography

Stortford has grown around the River Stort valley, with the town centre lying about 60 metres above sea level, rising to over 100 metres above sea level on the eastern and western margins of the town.

 
Aerial view of Bishop's Stortford and vicinity, on takeoff from Stansted Airport

Being in the south-east, the town enjoys a warmer climate than most of Britain and summer temperatures may sometimes reach the mid-30s C/ it is also one of the driest places in the country. Snow is often seen in the winter months because the town is near the east coast, where cold, moist air is brought in from the North Sea and cold fronts from northern Europe. In recent years there has been up to three inches of snow early in the year, which has resulted in minor disruption to transport and caused some schools to close for several days. However, the snow tends not to persist in any noticeable quantity.

Water for the town is supplied by Affinity Water. The water is classed as very hard with over 345 mg/L of minerals and 0.225 mg/L of fluoride.

Climate

Stortford, along with the rest of Britain, has a temperate maritime climate, with cool summers and mild winters. The nearest weather station for which averages and extremes are available is Stansted Airport, about 2+12 miles (4 kilometres) due east of Stortford's town centre. Located at an elevation of over 100 m, the weather station, and parts of Stortford in general are marginally cooler throughout the year than the Cambridgeshire area to the north or the London area to the south. Nonetheless, Stortford is still warmer than the English average.

 
Climate graph of Bishop's Stortford

The highest temperature recorded at Stansted was 35.0 °C (95.0 °F)[148] during the August 2003 heatwave. In an average year the hottest day should reach 28.8 °C (83.8 °F),[149] and 12.3 days[150] will record a temperature of 25.1 °C (77.2 °F) or more. The lowest temperature recorded at Stansted was −14.7 °C (5.5 °F)[151] during December 1981. Notably cold minimum temperatures tend not to occur due to the lack of higher terrain meaning little cold air drainage occurs. The average annual coldest night should fall to −7.6 °C (18.3 °F),[152] with 47.3[153] air frosts being recorded in an average year.

Typically, the Stortford area will receive an average of 622 mm of rain during the course of the year.[148][154] 1 mm or more of rain will be recorded on 114.7 days[155] of the year.

Temperature averages refer to the period 1971–2000, rainfall averages to 1961–1990.

Climate data for Stansted, elevation 101m, 1971–2000, Rainfall 1961–1990
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 6.5
(43.7)
6.9
(44.4)
9.8
(49.6)
12.2
(54.0)
16.1
(61.0)
19.0
(66.2)
21.7
(71.1)
21.8
(71.2)
18.4
(65.1)
14.1
(57.4)
9.6
(49.3)
7.4
(45.3)
13.5
(56.3)
Average low °C (°F) 0.9
(33.6)
0.7
(33.3)
2.4
(36.3)
3.8
(38.8)
6.8
(44.2)
9.7
(49.5)
12.0
(53.6)
12.0
(53.6)
9.9
(49.8)
7.0
(44.6)
3.4
(38.1)
1.9
(35.4)
5.9
(42.6)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 53.97
(2.12)
39.54
(1.56)
49.31
(1.94)
46.53
(1.83)
45.95
(1.81)
50.20
(1.98)
53.37
(2.10)
56.54
(2.23)
52.66
(2.07)
55.01
(2.17)
59.50
(2.34)
59.51
(2.34)
622.09
(24.49)
Source 1: YR.NO[156]
Source 2: KNMI[157]

Arms

Coat of arms of Bishop's Stortford
Notes
Originally granted to Bishop's Stortford Urban District Council on 20 August 1952.
Crest
On a wreath of the colours on a mount Vert the battlements of a tower Proper issuant therefrom a cross pommelled Gules.
Escutcheon
Vert on a pale Argent surmounted by a fess wavy of the last charged with a bar wavy Azure counterchanged on the pale a mitre and garb Proper.
Motto
Pro Deo Et Populo (For God And The People).[158]

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External links

  •   Media related to Bishop's Stortford at Wikimedia Commons
  • Bishop's Stortford Town Council
  • Bishop's Stortford and Thorley: A History and Guide – comprehensive history

bishop, stortford, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, septembe. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bishop s Stortford news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bishop s Stortford is a historic market town in Hertfordshire England just west of the M11 motorway on the county boundary with Essex 27 miles 43 km north east of central London and 35 miles 56 km by rail from Liverpool Street station Stortford had an estimated population of 41 088 in 2020 2 The district of East Hertfordshire where the town is located has been ranked as the best place to live in the UK by the Halifax Quality of Life annual survey in 2020 3 The town is commonly known as Stortford by locals Bishop s StortfordLooking down Windhill towards the town CentreBishop s StortfordLocation within HertfordshirePopulation41 088 2020 1 OS grid referenceTL495215Civil parishBishop s StortfordDistrictEast HertfordshireShire countyHertfordshireRegionEastCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townBishop s StortfordPostcode districtCM22 CM23Dialling code01279PoliceHertfordshireFireHertfordshireAmbulanceEast of EnglandUK ParliamentHertford and StortfordList of places UK England Hertfordshire 51 52 19 N 0 10 21 E 51 8720 N 0 1725 E 51 8720 0 1725 Coordinates 51 52 19 N 0 10 21 E 51 8720 N 0 1725 E 51 8720 0 1725 Contents 1 History 1 1 Etymology 1 2 First settlements pre Roman and Roman Stortford 1 3 Refoundation post Roman and medieval Stortford 1 4 Plague and growth early modern Stortford 1 5 Industrial revolution to World War II 1 6 The modern service industry town 2 Demography 2 1 Demographic history 2 2 Ethnicity and nationality 2 3 Housing 3 Government 3 1 Historical Development 3 2 Parliamentary Elections 3 3 Electoral Wards 3 4 Sister cities 4 Economy and business 5 Local media 6 Transport 6 1 Rail 6 2 Road 6 2 1 Air pollution 6 3 Air 6 4 Bus and coach 6 5 Cycling 7 Landmarks 7 1 Castle mound 7 2 All Saints Church 8 Notable people 9 Education 10 Sports 10 1 Football 10 2 Hockey 10 3 Cricket 10 4 Rugby 10 5 Other Sports 11 Culture 11 1 South Mill Arts 11 2 Other 11 3 Fairs 12 Pubs 13 Geography 13 1 Climate 14 Arms 15 References 16 External linksHistory EditEtymology Edit The origins of the town s name are uncertain One possibility is that the Saxon settlement derives its name from Steorta s ford or tail ford in the sense of a tail or tongue of land 4 5 The town became known as Bishop s Stortford due to the acquisition in 1060 by the Bishop of London 6 The River Stort is named after the town and not the town after the river When cartographers visited the town in the 16th century they reasoned that the town must have been named after the ford over the river and assumed the river was called the Stort 7 First settlements pre Roman and Roman Stortford Edit Little is known of Bishop s Stortford until the Roman era with the evidence being small archaeological finds Limited evidence of ancient Mesolithic and Microlithic peoples in the form of flakes cores and an axe have been found on the Meads and Silverleys respectively Most Bronze Age evidence is from the neighbouring parish of Thorley to the south as opposed to Stortford proper but a 3 000 year old socketed spearhead has been found at Haymeads Lane within the town Evidence of settlement has been found on Dunmow Road dating from the Middle Bronze Age through to Romano British times In Bishop s Stortford A History Jacqueline Cooper concludes existing evidence suggests that the Stortford area was settled only sparsely in prehistoric times and nearby places like Braughing and Little Hallingbury were of more importance 8 Stortford was on the line of the Roman Road Stane Street which ran from St Albans to Colchester via Braughing Construction started around 50AD on the road Little evidence from the period survives except for excavations showing a section of the road evidence of a cremation facility and a burial site 9 None of the excavations has shown evidence of the Roman fort which likely existed in Stortford 10 The settlement was probably abandoned in the 5th century after the break up of the Roman Empire 11 Refoundation post Roman and medieval Stortford Edit Following the end of the Roman era a new Anglo Saxon settlement grew up on the site However little is known about Stortford until the 1060s with the evidence becoming much stronger after the Norman Conquest 12 In 1060 when William Bishop of London bought Stortford manor and estate for 8 leading to the town s modern name By 1086 the motte and bailey Waytemore Castle had been built 6 as a local strongpoint for the area It acted as a centre for defence and civil administration for roughly 125 years before it was dismantled but not destroyed by King John in 1211 Rebuilding of the castle started the following year at John s expense and John stayed the night in the castle in 1216 13 By the 15th century the castle had fallen into disrepair and the Bishop s Court one of the administrative structures for the area moved to Hockerill to the east of the town 6 At the time of the Domesday Book in 1086 the village had a population of around 120 14 and grew to around 700 by the 13th century 12 In terms of governance early medieval Bishop s Stortford was part of the Braughing Hundred but acquired burgesses and between 1306 and 1336 was taxed as a borough No charter survives however and civil authority passed to two local manor courts at the Castle and the Rectory 15 Stortford briefly sent two members to parliament in the reigns of Edward II and Edward III with writs being issued to the town in the 1311 1315 1318 1320 1322 and 1340 16 17 Plague and growth early modern Stortford Edit At the start of the early modern period in the mid 15th century Stortford was a primarily agricultural community but had also acquired a tanning industry 14 By the 16th century Stortford had become an important centre of the malting industry Not only were the local soils well suited for grains but the fact that the town was just 35 miles to London provided an impetus to its development 18 The economic draw of the maltings and the town s market supported a large number of inns and public houses by the middle of the 16th century pointing to its prosperity 19 Over the following hundred years Stortford grew markedly The population of Bishop s Stortford reached 1 500 by 1660 as a result of a positive net birth rate and migration to the town 20 This was despite a series of a dozen plagues between the 1560s and 1660s 21 The town also enjoyed a series of royal visits in the 17th century with Charles I visiting the town in 1625 1629 and 1642 22 The years following the last of Charles visits were to prove somewhat turbulent for the town During the English Civil War Stortford backed the Parliamentarians with the Manor of Stortford being sequestered from the Bishop of London and sold off for 2 845 It was returned to the Bishop at the Restoration 22 The Great Plague of 1666 7 and its lasting effects reduced the population to only around 600 by 1700 The effects of the plague were so severe that the town had to appeal to the Hertfordshire magistrates who levied a rate on every parish in the county for the relief of Bishop s Stortford Hoddesdon and Cheshunt 20 Despite the demographic impact of the Great Plague perhaps the turning point in Stortford s fortunes was the creation of the Hockerill by pass in 1670 23 King Charles II had in the 1660s been increasingly travelling from London to Newmarket for the races and disliked the noise and congestion of Stortford with its oderous market maltings and tanneries Moreover the route was not always passable as noted by diarist Samuel Pepys who in made the following entry in his diary on 23 May 1668 and so to Bishop s Stafford sic The ways mighty full of water so as hardly to be passed As a result the road from London to Newmarket was diverted to the east of the centre of Stortford and instead ran through the outlying settlement of Hockerill 24 The inns of Hockerill become an important overnight location for stop overs for overnight coaches to East Anglia 25 Further demands for improved roads led to the creation of the Essex and Hertfordshire Turnpike Trust later Hockerill Turnpike Trust in 1744 to repair the road between Harlow Bush Common and Stump Cross in Great Chesterford Later Acts of Parliament extended the term of the Trust and allowed new road construction 26 From March 1785 the mail coaches ran from London to Norwich via Stortford 27 Thus the improved highways marked the first of the phases of Stortford s growth driven by emergent transport technology The second major transport development to provide a significant boost to the town was the construction of the Stort Navigation which canalised the River Stort and opened in 1769 The improvements to the navigation of the Stort were driven by the inability of the malting industry to use the Stort for river transport which caused significant to the local roads and handed a competitive advantage to neighbouring malting areas like Ware who were linked to London by the River Lea The work on the canal undertaken by George Jackson later Sir George Duckett had the added benefit of alleviating the flooding risk in the town 28 The Corn Exchange Industrial revolution to World War II Edit With the roads and Stort navigation providing easy access to London markets industrialisation came to Stortford The advent of the Stort navigation brought new industries to the town with bargemen lock keepers wharfingers coal and timber merchants all appearing The malting industry also saw output significantly increase with brown malt production doubling between 1788 and 1811 Together with national trends in the brewing industry the 40 malthouses in Stortford in early 1800s Stortford also helped to stimulate the local brewing trade At the turn of the 19th century there were 18 brewers in town which in turn boosted the inn trade 29 The boom in the town in turn boosted the metal working and bricklaying trades and also aided the general retail trade In 1791 there were 30 principal traders according to a contemporary directory 30 The vibrancy of the local economy especially the agricultural trade sector was demonstrated in 1828 when a consortium of local businessmen built the Bishop s Stortford Corn Exchange which provided trading accommodation for 65 dealers 31 By this point the town directory was listing 200 commercial entries and 350 by the turn of the century 32 The third major transport innovation to have a significant impact upon Stortford was the arrival of the railway in 1842 The line initially ran from London Liverpool Street to Stortford but by 1845 the line was linked to Norwich The new rail link brought an almost immediate end to the coaching industry and the Stort Navigation entered terminal decline The town though boomed Massive new residential estates grew up in the New Town to the south and west of the historic core and Hockerill across the river to the east of the historic core in the decades following the building of the railway 33 A Bishop s Stortford Braintree branch line was built to Braintree to bring goods into Stortford from the surrounding more rural areas with the first section to Great Dunmow opening in 1864 34 The single track line struggled to gain traction and by 1922 had only seven eastbound and six westbound trains per day 35 The bus service which started between Stortford and Dunmow in 1920 36 contributed to the demise of the line which closed to passengers in 1952 and freight in 1972 37 King Edward VII driving through Bishop s Stortford October 1905The mid 19th century onwards also saw the rapid growth in public utilities public services and governance in the town The first gas street lights were installed in the town in the 1830s 38 in 1855 the New Cemetery was opened 39 in the 1870s a sewage farm and an isolation hospital were built 40 while in 1895 the town s first proper hospital was opened 41 By 1911 the Encyclopaedia Britannica referred to the town as having strong educational pedigree The high school formerly the grammar school was founded in the time of Elizabeth There are a Nonconformist grammar school a diocesan training college for mistresses and other educational establishments 42 During World War II Bishop s Stortford was the evacuation centre for many Britons including Clapton Girls Technology College The modern service industry town Edit In the post war era the town centre underwent changes with the demolition of a multi storey car park and surrounding area to make way for a new town centre area and city type apartments and penthouses on the riverside and elsewhere Jackson Square a modern shopping complex was rebuilt and an extension added Stortford continued to grow as a commuter town from the second half of the 20th century onwards spurred by the construction of the M11 motorway and Stansted Airport as well as rail links to London and Cambridge This contributed to its rise in population to almost 38 000 at the time of the 2011 census 1 Of the seven suburbs of Thorley Thorley Park Havers Snowley Bishop s Park St Michael s Mead and Hockerill the last is a separate ecclesiastical parish east of the River Stort centred around the old coaching inns All Saints in Stansted Road and the railway station Postwar development has enlarged the town s area further Demography EditPopulationYearPop p a 18012 305 18112 630 1 33 18213 358 2 47 18313 958 1 66 18414 681 1 69 18515 280 1 21 18615 390 0 21 18716 250 1 49 18816 704 0 70 18916 595 0 16 19017 143 0 80 19118 721 2 02 YearPop p a 19218 858 0 16 19319 510 0 71 193913 374 4 35 195112 772 0 38 196118 342 3 69 197122 121 1 89 198122 535 0 19 199127 874 2 15 200134 857 2 26 201137 374 0 70 202041 088 1 06 Source 1801 1961 amp 1939 Register Census via Vision of Britain 1971 1991 Hertfordshire Populations 1801 1991 Hertfordshire County Council undated 2001 2020 ONS Mid Year Population EstimatesDemographic history Edit The earliest reliable population figure for Bishop s Stortford was 120 at the publication of the Domesday Book in 1086 14 Over the successive centuries the population waxed and waned as a result of economic growth and plagues and generally only rough population estimates exist 20 21 By the time of the first nationwide census in 1801 Stortford s population had reached 2 305 43 spurred by the town s position on the Hockerill Turnpike 26 and the canalisation of the River Stort 28 Steady growth continued over the coming decades as the railways spurred industrialisation 33 Population growth averaged 1 12 per annum through to 1911 and the advent of World War I Inter war growth averaged 1 54 per annum Stortford s population exceeded the county town of Hertford in the 1961 census 44 even though Stortford s average population growth slowed to 1 39 between World War II and 2020 Sources of population growth have been predominantly natural growth and in migration but on a number of occasions the boundaries of Bishop s Stortford parish have been expanded Most recently this occurred in 1992 when some neighbouring parts of Essex were moved into the town 45 and in 2018 when homes were moved into Stortford from neighbouring Thorley Parish 46 In 2020 Bishop s Stortford was the largest town in East Hertfordshire 47 Ethnicity and nationality Edit At the 2011 census 93 6 of the population of Bishop s Stortford described themselves as white 48 which was lower than the 96 2 recorded in the 2001 census 49 The number of people describing themselves as having a white background in 2011 was significantly higher than the England aggregate of 85 4 but slightly lower than the overall East Hertfordshire figure 48 Ethnic group 2011 census 48 Bishop s Stortford East Hertfordshire England White 93 6 95 5 85 4Mixed multiple ethnic groups 2 2 1 6 2 3Asian Asian British 2 9 1 9 7 8Black African Caribbean Black British 1 0 0 7 3 5Other ethnic group 0 4 0 3 1 0The proportion of Bishop s Stortford residents reporting having been born in the United Kingdom was 87 8 and was only slightly higher than the English average of 86 2 Stortford recorded a significantly higher proportion of European Union born residents than either East Hertfordshire or England 48 The number of UK born residents in 2011 was down from the 92 4 recorded in 2001 48 49 Country of birth 2011 census 48 Bishop s Stortford East Hertfordshire England United Kingdom 87 8 92 0 86 2Ireland 1 1 0 8 0 7Other EU 5 3 3 0 3 7Other countries 5 8 4 3 9 4Housing Edit The number of occupied dwellings in Bishop s Stortford rose from 13 733 in 2001 to 14 920 In Stortford 3 0 of properties were recorded as empty in 2011 compared with 4 3 across England Overall the dominant type of housing are detached and semi detached housing although the proportion of flats has grown from 13 0 in 2001 to 17 6 in 2011 The proportion of flats is well below the English average of 22 1 48 49 Dwellings By Type Census 2011 48 Bishop s Stortford East Hertfordshire EnglandNumber Number Number All Dwellings 15 377 100 58 356 100 23 044 097 100Occupied Dwellings 14 920 97 0 56 577 97 0 22 063 368 95 7Empty Dwellings 457 3 0 1 779 3 0 980 729 4 3Detached Houses 5 198 33 8 16 294 27 9 5 128 552 22 3Semi Detached Houses 4 528 29 4 17 459 29 9 7 076 395 30 7Terraced Houses 2 940 19 1 13 397 23 0 5 642 969 24 5Flats Purpose Built 2 368 15 4 9 615 16 5 3 854 451 16 7Flats Converted 219 1 4 912 1 6 984 284 4 3Flats In Commercial Buildings 122 0 8 562 1 0 257 218 1 1Caravan or other mobile or temporary structure 2 0 0 117 0 2 100 228 0 4Home ownership is high in Bishop s Stortford at 72 3 of households which is above both the East Hertfordshire and English averages The proportion of properties available for social rent has risen from 9 8 in 2001 to 10 1 in 2011 48 49 Dwellings By Tenure Census 2011 48 Bishop s Stortford East Hertfordshire EnglandNumber Number Number All households 14 920 100 0 56 577 100 0 22 063 368 100 0Owned 10 781 72 3 40 665 71 9 13 975 024 63 3Owned outright 4 594 30 8 18 186 32 1 6 745 584 30 6Owned with a mortgage or loan 6 187 41 5 22 479 39 7 7 229 440 32 8Shared ownership part owned and part rented 226 1 5 508 0 9 173 760 0 8Social rented 1 510 10 1 7 185 12 7 3 903 550 17 7Private rented 2 261 15 2 7 446 13 2 3 715 924 16 8Living rent free 142 1 0 773 1 4 295 110 1 3Government EditBishop s Stortford has three tiers of local government at parish town district and county level Bishop s Stortford Town Council East Hertfordshire District Council and Hertfordshire County Council Bishop s StortfordLocal Government District 1866 1894 Urban District 1894 1974 Coat of armsPopulation 18916 595 50 197121 000 51 History Created25 December 1866 Abolished31 March 1974 Succeeded byEast Hertfordshire HQBishop s StortfordContained within County CouncilHertfordshireHistorical Development Edit Historically Bishop s Stortford was administered by its parish vestry in the same way as most small towns and rural areas no borough corporation was established for the town despite some limited moves in that direction in the fourteenth century 52 Bishop s Stortford was included in the hundred of Braughing The Bishop s Stortford Poor Law Union was established in 1835 covering the town and surrounding parishes in both Hertfordshire and Essex 53 On 25 October 1866 a public meeting at the town s corn exchange voted to establish a local board the Bishop s Stortford Local Board The parish of Bishop s Stortford was declared to be a local government district with effect from 25 December 1866 and the local board held its first meeting at the corn exchange on 23 February 1867 Jones Gifford Nash was chosen as the first chairman of the local board 54 The Local Board later established offices at 7 North Street 55 56 57 Under the Local Government Act 1894 the Bishop s Stortford Local Board became the Bishop s Stortford Urban District Council with effect from 31 December 1894 citation needed The new council held its first meeting on 5 January 1895 The last chairman of the local board John Slater was appointed the first chairman of the urban district council 58 The council continued to be based at 7 North Street until the First World War 59 In 1914 the council bought a large old house called Wharf House at 4 The Causeway 60 The house had been built by George Jackson who had also built the adjoining Stort Navigation Wharf House was renamed the Council House and served as the council s offices until October 1972 when the council moved to purpose built offices at 1 The Causeway The Council House was demolished shortly afterwards to make way for the Jackson Square shopping centre 61 62 Bishop s Stortford Urban District Council was granted a coat of arms on 20 August 1952 63 2 Hockerill Street offices of the Town Council 1974 1994 Bishop s Stortford Urban District was abolished under the Local Government Act 1972 becoming part of East Hertfordshire on 1 April 1974 Bishop s Stortford Town Council was established as a successor parish to the old urban district 64 The former urban district council s offices at 1 The Causeway were taken over by East Hertfordshire District Council whilst the new town council was based at the former offices of the Braughing Rural District Council at 2 Hockerill Street The town council moved to the Old Monastery on Windhill in 1994 65 East Hertfordshire District Council vacated 1 The Causeway in 2013 having consolidated most of its functions at its main offices in Hertford The district council set up a smaller Bishop s Stortford office in Charringtons House adjoining 1 The Causeway The vacated office at 1 The Causeway was demolished in 2017 66 Parliamentary Elections Edit See also Hertford and Stortford UK Parliament constituency Bishop s Stortford is the largest town within the Hertford and Stortford County Constituency for elections to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom The constituency covers Stortford Hertford Ware Sawbridgeworth and the surrounding rural areas 67 Since the creation of the seat in 1983 it has been represented by Conservative MPs Electoral Wards Edit For elections to East Herts District Council Bishop s Stortford is currently divided into five wards All Saints Central Meads Silverleys and South However as a result of a boundary review by the Local Government Boundary Commission for England the town will be split into six wards from the May 2023 local elections All Saints Central North Parsonage South and Thorley Manor At present Bishop s Stortford residents elect 13 of the 50 councillors on East Herts Council but this will rise to 14 out of 50 in May 2023 68 For elections to Hertfordshire County Council out of the 78 electoral divisions in total three divisions cover Bishop s Stortford Bishop s Stortford East comprising the areas covered by the All Saints and Meads District Council Wards Bishop s Stortford Rural Bishop s Stortford South Little Hadham and Much Hadham Wards and Bishop s Stortford West Central and Silverleys District Council Wards 69 Sister cities Edit After 46 years of being twinned with the German town of Friedberg and Villiers sur Marne in France the town council ended links in 2011 70 Economy and business EditBishop s Stortford is a prosperous town 71 The key drivers of its growth according to the Town Wide Employment Study for Bishop s Stortford are Stansted Airport an excellent rail service into central London and good road links via the M11 to London the M25 northern sub region and Cambridge Bishop s Stortford is well positioned in relation to the UK s most dynamic economies 71 This study also highlights Stortford s skilled population as well as the importance of quality of life as an important economic asset 71 In addition to East Hertfordshire topping the Halifax Quality of Life survey in 2020 72 Stortford has been highlighted as a popular commuter town in articles in The Times 73 The Evening Standard 74 and the Metro newspaper London 75 Like the UK as a whole Bishop s Stortford has a highly service based economy In the 2011 census 84 5 of Stortford residents in employment stated that they worked in a service industry which was higher than East Hertfordshire 81 2 and England 81 2 Of particular note is that 7 9 of local workers are employed in Transportation and Storage which is well above the English average of 5 0 48 The most significant employer in this industry is Stansted Airport which was estimated in 2013 to employ at least 1 000 people who live in Stortford 76 Employment By Industry of Bishop s Stortford Residents UK SIC Classifications 2011 census 48 Bishop s Stortford East Hertfordshire EnglandNumber Number Number Primary Industries A B 25 0 1 459 0 6 203789 0 8Manufacturing C 1468 7 4 6161 8 5 2226247 8 8Utilities D E 139 0 7 566 0 8 315362 1 3Construction F 1 446 7 3 6 355 8 8 1 931 936 7 7Services G U 16 851 84 5 58 635 81 2 20 442 085 81 2Wholesale and Retail Trade G 3 327 16 7 11 268 15 6 4 007 570 15 9Transportation and Storage H 1 581 7 9 3 553 4 9 1 260 094 5 0Accommodation and Food Service I 893 4 5 3 058 4 2 1 399 931 5 6Other Services J U 11 050 55 4 40 756 56 4 13 774 490 54 7All usual resident 16 74 in employment 19 941 100 72 225 100 25 162 721 100Commuters represent a sizeable proportion of the local working age population The Town Wide Employment Study estimated in 2013 around 3 000 people round 15 of those in employment commute from Stortford by rail with the largest proportion in all probability travelling into Central London 77 This is reflected in Stortford in the 2011 census having a much higher proportion of workers in managerial and professional occupations than the national average 48 as shown in the table below Employment By Industry UK SIC Classifications 2011 census 48 Bishop s Stortford East Hertfordshire EnglandOccupations Number Number Number All usual resident 16 74 in employment 19 941 100 0 72 225 100 0 25 162 721 100 0Managers directors and senior officials 2 682 13 4 10 639 14 7 2 734 900 10 9Professional 4 058 20 4 14 636 20 3 4 400 375 17 5Associate professional and technical 3 056 15 3 11 160 15 5 3 219 067 12 8Administrative and secretarial 2 377 11 9 8 968 12 4 2 883 230 11 5Skilled trades 1 776 8 9 7 589 10 5 2 858 680 11 4Caring leisure and other service 1 839 9 2 5 740 7 9 2 348 650 9 3Sales and customer service 1 546 7 8 4 345 6 0 2 117 477 8 4Process plant and machine operatives 979 4 9 3 573 4 9 1 808 024 7 2Elementary 1 628 8 2 5 575 7 7 2 792 318 11 1Bishop s Stortford itself has a strong internal economy with an estimated 16 985 people employed within the town boundaries 78 There are 329 businesses established in the town centre as of 2018 79 represented by the Bishop s Stortford Business Improvement District BID 80 There is also a Bishop s Stortford Chamber of Commerce 81 Stortford is considered the Principal Town Centre in East Hertfordshire by East Hertfordshire District Council s District Plan serving as a destination for visitors from beyond the town 82 There is both an indoor shopping centre Jackson Square 83 and a traditional high street running along the axis of South Street Potter Street and North Street as well as the adjoining streets 84 The town has a twice weekly market and a monthly farmers market run by Bishop s Stortford Town Council 85 Estimated Employment in Bishop s Stortford Usual Place of Work UK SIC Classifications 78 Industry 2020 Agriculture forestry amp fishing A 0 0Mining quarrying amp utilities B D and E 35 0 2Manufacturing C 800 4 7Construction F 1000 5 9Motor trades Part G 700 4 1Wholesale Part G 700 4 1Retail Part G 2500 14 7Transport amp storage inc postal H 350 2 1Accommodation amp food services I 1250 7 4Information amp communication J 800 4 7Financial amp insurance K 600 3 5Property L 350 2 1Professional scientific amp technical M 1750 10 3Business administration amp support services N 1750 10 3Public administration amp defence O 100 0 6Education P 1750 10 3Health Q 1750 10 3Arts entertainment recreation amp other services R S T and U 800 4 7Total 16 985 100Local media EditThe Bishop s Stortford Independent newspaper covers Stortford along with the neighbouring towns of Sawbridgeworth and Stansted Mountfitchet 86 The newspaper was founded in October 2017 87 following the closure of the Stortford office of the Herts and Essex Observer newspaper in 2016 88 The town is also covered by a number of print magazines including the Bishop s Stortford Flyer 89 CM23 Connection 90 Axis Magazine 91 and The BISH 92 Stortford is covered along with the rest of Hertfordshire on BBC Three Counties Radio 93 Transport Edit Bishop s Stortford railway station Rail Edit Main article Bishop s Stortford railway station Bishop s Stortford railway station is on the West Anglia Main Line and was first opened in 1842 There were 2 00 million passenger entries and exits at Bishop s Stortford in 2020 21 94 All trains are run by Greater Anglia 95 Greater Anglia trains provide Bishop s Stortford with a direct link southbound to Harlow Tottenham Hale and London Liverpool Street with many services calling at intermediate stations A direct service to Stratford in East London also operates which calls at most intermediate stations Northbound services link Bishop s Stortford to Cambridge North railway station and Stansted Airport railway station and at certain times to Ely Epping tube station on the London Underground Central line is about 12 miles 19 km away from Bishop s Stortford Road Edit The M11 motorway passes to the east of Bishop s Stortford Junction 8 links the motorway to the town and the M11 carries traffic from Bishop s Stortford directly to Cambridge Harlow and London As the road passes the town Bishop s Stortford falls in the M11 corridor for innovation 96 The A120 runs east west along the northern edge of the town To the west the A120 meets the A10 at Puckeridge for Hertford or Royston To the east the A120 passes Stansted Airport en route to Braintree Colchester the A12 and Harwich Other key routes in the town include A1060 to the Hatfield Heath the Rodings and Chelmsford A1184 to Sawbridgeworth and Harlow A1250 east west route through the town centre B1383 to Stansted Mountfitchet and Saffron WaldenAir pollution Edit East Hertfordshire District Council monitors nitrogen dioxide NO2 levels at Hockerill Junction in the town centre 97 There are four diffusion tubes around the junction for air quality monitoring In 2017 three out of four tubes failed to meet the UK National Objective of 40mg m3 micrograms per cubic metre 98 NO2 levels atHockerill Junction 2017 average 98 Location NO2 concentration mg m3 Stansted Road 36 0Hockerill Street 41 3Dunmow Road 45 6London Road 56 3Air Edit Main article London Stansted Airport Stansted Airport is to the east of the town with rail and bus links to Bishop s Stortford Stansted serves over 200 destinations globally 99 Bus and coach Edit The town is on the Arriva Shires amp Essex bus network Buses 309 508 509 and 510 connect the town to Stansted Airport Buses 508 509 and 510 all terminate to the south in Harlow 100 Other key routes include the 301 to Saffron Walden the 351 to Hertford and the 386 to Stevenage via Letchworth There are further routes to rural destinations in Hertfordshire and Essex 101 102 Cycling Edit Bishop s Stortford is served by cycle routes on regional networks and the National Cycle Network National Cycle Route 11 is an incomplete cycle route which will run through the town centre Completed sections of the route currently pass through Harlow Sawbridgeworth Stansted Mountfitchet and Cambridge The section between Sawbridgeworth and Bishop s Stortford is in development but when completed the route will provide a direct non stop connection from Bishop s Stortford to the Lea Valley southbound and King s Lynn northbound 103 104 National Cycle Route 16 passes just to the northeast of Bishop s Stortford The route is segregated from traffic running non stop to Great Dunmow The route continues east on on road and off road routes to Braintree and Witham 104 105 The Bishop s Stortford Circular Ride is a recreational cycle route on country lanes to the north of the town The route begins and ends on Northgate End in the town centre It passes through Patmore Heath Stocking Pelham Brent Pelham Little Hormead Braughing and Albury 106 The River Stort towpath is a shared use path which begins in Bishop s Stortford Running parallel to the river the path links the town directly to Sawbridgeworth and Harlow and eventually to the River Lea towpath towards Hertford or Tottenham and London s East End Parts of the towpath carry NCR 11 The route is maintained by the Canal and River Trust 107 108 Landmarks EditThe historic core of Bishop s Stortford is covered by a Conservation Area which roughly aligns with the boundaries of the town in 1874 1894 109 As of the last formal Appraisal of the Conservation Area in 2014 there were 105 listed buildings in Stortford including 71 within the Conservation Area Two of the buildings are Grade 1 listed Waytemore Castle and St Michael s Church Grade II listed buildings include 10 Bridge Street the Black Lion pub 30 High Street the Boar s Head restaurant and 8 10 High Street Much of the Conservation Area is also an Area of Archaeological Significance 110 Castle mound Edit Main article Waytemore Castle Waytemore began as a motte and bailey castle in the time of William the Conqueror A rectangular great tower was added to the motte in the 12th century It was improved in the 13th century under King John and a licence for crenellation was granted in the mid 14th century It lost significance after the Civil War and was used as a prison in the 17th century Only earthworks the large motte and the foundations of a square tower can now be seen All Saints Church Edit Main article All Saints Church Hockerill In 1935 All Saints Church Hockerill was destroyed by fire and in 1937 a new church to a spacious light and airy design by the architect Stephen Dykes Bower was erected in its place This is a Grade II listed building and the tower dominates the eastern skyline of the town The church contains a notable rose window designed by Hugh Ray Easton and a two manual Henry Willis II organ Concerts are also held there Notable people Edit Cecil RhodesMain article List of people from Bishop s Stortford Cecil Rhodes 1853 1902 the son of the vicar of St Michael s Church was the founder of the region of Rhodesia now Zambia and Zimbabwe and of the De Beers diamond company and the Rhodes Scholarship 111 Sir Walter Gilbey 1st Baronet businessman wine merchant and philanthropist 112 Caroline Spelman Conservative MP and former cabinet minister was born in Bishop s Stortford and attended the Hertfordshire and Essex High School 113 Paul Epworth born 1974 Grammy BRIT Award and Academy Award Oscar winning record producer Sam Smith born 1992 singer songwriter winner of the 2014 BRIT Critics Choice Award and BBC s Sound of 2014 attended St Mary s Catholic School 114 Education EditStortford schools regularly appear with rankings of the best schools in the country with Hockerill Anglo European College The Hertfordshire and Essex High School and The Bishop s Stortford High School frequently being top performers in The Sunday Times Schools Guide 115 116 Hertfordshire County Council is the education authority for the state schools in Bishop s Stortford and is responsible for admissions 117 All of the state primary schools in Stortford have nurseries attached while all of the state secondaries have sixth forms 118 Bishop s Stortford High School 119 and Herts and Essex High School 120 are a single sex boys and girls school respectively from years 7 11 but both have mixed sex sixth forms There is also an independent school the Bishop s Stortford College which covers the whole educational spectrum from ages 4 to 18 121 There are no further education or higher educational institutions in Stortford However nearby educational options include Stansted Airport College 122 Harlow College 123 Hertford Regional College 124 and Cambridge Regional College 125 SchoolsState Nursey and Primary Schools 118 All Saints C of E Primary and Nursery School Avanti Meadows Primary School Hillmead Primary School Manor Fields Primary School Northgate Primary School St Joseph s Catholic Primary St Michael s C of E VA Primary Summercroft Primary School The Richard Whittington Primary School Thorley Hill Primary School Thorn Grove Primary School Windhill21State Secondary Schools 118 Avanti Grange opening September 2023 126 Birchwood High School The Bishop s Stortford High School The Hertfordshire and Essex High School Hockerill Anglo European College St Mary s Catholic SchoolPrivate Schools Bishop s Stortford College 121 Sports EditFootball Edit Semi professional football team Bishop s Stortford F C were formed in 1874 and play at Woodside Park in the town Currently members of the Isthmian Football League Premier Division the seventh tier of the English football pyramid the club have won two national titles the 1973 74 FA Amateur Cup and the 1980 81 FA Trophy It is the first club to win both competitions 127 Bishop s Stortford Community Football Club are one of the largest clubs of their type in the country with over 80 teams and nearly 1 000 members as of the 2020 21 season 128 Hockey Edit Bishop s Stortford Hockey Club was formed in 1948 and is based at The Hertfordshire and Essex High School with a clubhouse and state of the art pitch 129 They have fourteen senior sides six men s and eight ladies 130 playing in the East Hockey Leagues 131 The Men s 1st XI play in the East Men s Division 1 South and the Ladies 1st XI play in the Vitality Women s Conference East 132 along with a thriving junior section with over 500 members The club has a number of current and former international players still involved with coaching or playing including Rob Clift gold medallist Bernie Cotton Pippa Bull Vernon Brown Ronnie Stott in addition to a number of senior members who still represent their country at Masters level 133 Cricket Edit Bishop s Stortford Cricket Club play their home matches at Cricket Field Lane which is also a home venue for Hertfordshire County Cricket Club 134 Thorley Cricket Club play in Bishop s Stortford and as of 2021 had 40 adult members and over 100 children in their summer coaching programme 135 Hockerill Cricket Club play at their ground on Beldams Lane 136 which they share with Bishop s Stortford Running Club BSRC supports road running and cross country running 137 Rugby Edit Bishop s Stortford Rugby Football Club play in National League 1 the third tier of English rugby In total the club has around 700 male players across its Mini Youth and Senior teams as well as over 80 female players as of 2021 138 Other Sports Edit Public sports facilities include the Grange Paddocks swimming pool and gym a tennis club a squash club and a golf club A concrete skateboard park plaza featuring a back and forth run with a quarter pipe and flat bank either side of several ledges and a rail is located in the town park 139 Bishop s Stortford Town Council is investing in the facility to create a broader teenage recreation space 140 Culture EditSouth Mill Arts Edit South Mill Arts theatre and museum The South Mill Arts complex formerly the Rhodes Arts Complex incorporates a theatre cinema dance studio and conference facilities Situated within the complex in the house where Cecil Rhodes was born is the Bishop s Stortford Museum It has a local history collection a unique collection relating to Rhodes and the British Empire in Africa as well as a temporary exhibition gallery 141 South Mill Arts is the town s largest live music venue In the 1960s the Rhodes Theatre had a string of concerts by now very high profile musicians who were then at the start of their careers Performers included David Bowie Stevie Wonder and Lulu as well as iconic bands such as The Who The Animals The Moody Blues Small Faces and Wayne Fontana and The Mindbenders 142 Other Edit Located in the town centre is the Complex Anchor Street Entertainment a multiplex which contains a cinema health club a bowling alley and a number of food outlets The town is home to two amateur dramatics groups The Water Lane Theatre Group and Bishop s Stortford Musical Theatre Company The town is home to various youth organisations and youth groups including an Army Cadet Force detachment an Air Training Corps squadron Scout troops 143 and a GAP youth group affiliated to the Church of St James the Great in Thorley Fairs Edit There is an annual Christmas Fayre in December with over 100 stalls and family friendly entertainment 144 There is also a summer Carnival involving a procession with over 100 community groups taking part bands fairground rides entertainers and stalls 145 Pubs Edit The Black Lion Being a market town and major coach stop between London and Cambridge Bishop s Stortford has many large public houses within the town centre In 1636 The Star in Bridge Street was run by John Ward The Inn was acquired by Hawkes and Co and bought in 1808 In the early 20th century The Star catered for cyclists providing cycle sheds that attracted people from local villages John Kynnersley Kirby 1894 1962 painted local scenes and portraits of local characters painted the interior of The Star for a painting entitled The Slate Club Secretary 146 Other public houses included the 15th century Boars Head 16th century Black Lion and the Curriers Arms was in Market Square from the 1700s until 1904 in the building which until recently was a Zizzi restaurant Between 1644 and 1810 the Reindeer operated on the present site of the Tourist Information Centre 147 Geography EditStortford has grown around the River Stort valley with the town centre lying about 60 metres above sea level rising to over 100 metres above sea level on the eastern and western margins of the town Aerial view of Bishop s Stortford and vicinity on takeoff from Stansted AirportBeing in the south east the town enjoys a warmer climate than most of Britain and summer temperatures may sometimes reach the mid 30s C it is also one of the driest places in the country Snow is often seen in the winter months because the town is near the east coast where cold moist air is brought in from the North Sea and cold fronts from northern Europe In recent years there has been up to three inches of snow early in the year which has resulted in minor disruption to transport and caused some schools to close for several days However the snow tends not to persist in any noticeable quantity Water for the town is supplied by Affinity Water The water is classed as very hard with over 345 mg L of minerals and 0 225 mg L of fluoride Climate EditStortford along with the rest of Britain has a temperate maritime climate with cool summers and mild winters The nearest weather station for which averages and extremes are available is Stansted Airport about 2 1 2 miles 4 kilometres due east of Stortford s town centre Located at an elevation of over 100 m the weather station and parts of Stortford in general are marginally cooler throughout the year than the Cambridgeshire area to the north or the London area to the south Nonetheless Stortford is still warmer than the English average Climate graph of Bishop s StortfordThe highest temperature recorded at Stansted was 35 0 C 95 0 F 148 during the August 2003 heatwave In an average year the hottest day should reach 28 8 C 83 8 F 149 and 12 3 days 150 will record a temperature of 25 1 C 77 2 F or more The lowest temperature recorded at Stansted was 14 7 C 5 5 F 151 during December 1981 Notably cold minimum temperatures tend not to occur due to the lack of higher terrain meaning little cold air drainage occurs The average annual coldest night should fall to 7 6 C 18 3 F 152 with 47 3 153 air frosts being recorded in an average year Typically the Stortford area will receive an average of 622 mm of rain during the course of the year 148 154 1 mm or more of rain will be recorded on 114 7 days 155 of the year Temperature averages refer to the period 1971 2000 rainfall averages to 1961 1990 Climate data for Stansted elevation 101m 1971 2000 Rainfall 1961 1990Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 6 5 43 7 6 9 44 4 9 8 49 6 12 2 54 0 16 1 61 0 19 0 66 2 21 7 71 1 21 8 71 2 18 4 65 1 14 1 57 4 9 6 49 3 7 4 45 3 13 5 56 3 Average low C F 0 9 33 6 0 7 33 3 2 4 36 3 3 8 38 8 6 8 44 2 9 7 49 5 12 0 53 6 12 0 53 6 9 9 49 8 7 0 44 6 3 4 38 1 1 9 35 4 5 9 42 6 Average precipitation mm inches 53 97 2 12 39 54 1 56 49 31 1 94 46 53 1 83 45 95 1 81 50 20 1 98 53 37 2 10 56 54 2 23 52 66 2 07 55 01 2 17 59 50 2 34 59 51 2 34 622 09 24 49 Source 1 YR NO 156 Source 2 KNMI 157 Arms EditCoat of arms of Bishop s Stortford Notes Originally granted to Bishop s Stortford Urban District Council on 20 August 1952 Crest On a wreath of the colours on a mount Vert the battlements of a tower Proper issuant therefrom a cross pommelled Gules Escutcheon Vert on a pale Argent surmounted by a fess wavy of the last charged with a bar wavy Azure counterchanged on the pale a mitre and garb Proper Motto Pro Deo Et Populo For God And The People 158 References Edit a b Parish Population Estimates ONS Retrieved 23 February 2022 East of England United Kingdom Counties and Unitary Districts amp Settlements Population Statistics Charts and Map www citypopulation de Revealed The best place to live in the UK Sky News Retrieved 11 March 2022 Key to English Place names kepn nottingham ac uk Retrieved 19 February 2022 Hanks Patrick Hodges Flavia Mills David Room Adrian 2002 The Oxford Names Companion Oxford the University Press ISBN 0198605617 a b c Guide 8 Waytemore Castle Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Retrieved 19 February 2022 Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History and Guide Retrieved 27 October 2013 Cooper Jacqueline 2005 Bishop s Stortford a history Chichester West Sussex England Phillimore pp 2 4 ISBN 1 86077 329 X OCLC 63788286 Guide 10 Cannons Close Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Retrieved 19 February 2022 Cooper Jacqueline 2005 Bishop s Stortford a history Chichester West Sussex England Phillimore p 6 ISBN 1 86077 329 X OCLC 63788286 Roman Britain Retrieved 7 February 2018 Archived 9 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine a b Welcome Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Retrieved 19 February 2022 Cooper Jacqueline 2005 Bishop s Stortford a history Chichester West Sussex England Phillimore pp 11 21 ISBN 1 86077 329 X OCLC 63788286 a b c A BRIEF HISTORY OF BISHOP S STORTFORD Local Histories 14 March 2021 Retrieved 19 February 2022 Cooper Jacqueline 2005 Bishop s Stortford a history Chichester West Sussex England Phillimore p 15 ISBN 1 86077 329 X OCLC 63788286 MCKISACK MAY 2021 PARLIAMENTARY REPRESENTATION OF THE ENGLISH BOROUGHS during the middle ages S l ROUTLEDGE ISBN 978 0 367 14224 7 OCLC 1258780905 Guide 7 Local Government Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Retrieved 20 February 2022 Guide 10 Malting Industry Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Retrieved 19 February 2022 Guide 10 Public Houses Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Retrieved 19 February 2022 a b c Cooper Jacqueline 2005 Bishop s Stortford a history Chichester West Sussex England Phillimore p 31 ISBN 1 86077 329 X OCLC 63788286 a b Cooper Jacqueline 2005 Bishop s Stortford a history Chichester West Sussex England Phillimore p 46 ISBN 1 86077 329 X OCLC 63788286 a b Cooper Jacqueline 2005 Bishop s Stortford a history Chichester West Sussex England Phillimore pp 45 46 ISBN 1 86077 329 X OCLC 63788286 Cooper Jacqueline 2005 Bishop s Stortford a history Chichester West Sussex England Phillimore p 47 ISBN 1 86077 329 X OCLC 63788286 Guide 12 Hockerill Bypass Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Retrieved 19 February 2022 Cooper Jacqueline 2005 Bishop s Stortford a history Chichester West Sussex England Phillimore p 48 ISBN 1 86077 329 X OCLC 63788286 a b HOCKERILL ESSEX and HERTFORDSHIRE TURNPIKE TRUST lt corpname gt Hockerill Turnpike Trust Hertfordshire lt corpname gt a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Guide 9 Mail Coaches Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Retrieved 20 February 2022 a b Guide 11 Stort Navigation Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Retrieved 20 February 2022 Cooper Jacqueline 2005 Bishop s Stortford a history Chichester West Sussex England Phillimore pp 58 59 ISBN 1 86077 329 X OCLC 63788286 Cooper Jacqueline 2005 Bishop s Stortford a history Chichester West Sussex England Phillimore pp 60 61 ISBN 1 86077 329 X OCLC 63788286 Guide 2 Corn Exchange Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Retrieved 20 February 2022 Cooper Jacqueline 2005 Bishop s Stortford a history Chichester West Sussex England Phillimore p 78 ISBN 1 86077 329 X OCLC 63788286 a b Guide 11 Railway Station Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Retrieved 20 February 2022 Gridley David 2016 Lost and Found Journey to a Forgotten Railway London Slowcoach Publishing p 38 ISBN 9780956412812 David Gridley 2016 Lost and Found Journey to a Forgotten Railway London Slowcoach Publishing p 93 ISBN 9780956412812 David Gridley 2016 Lost and Found Journey to a Forgotten Railway London Slowcoach Publishing p 95 ISBN 9780956412812 Gridley David 2016 Lost and Found Journey to a Forgotten Railway London Slowcoach Publishing pp 140 143 ISBN 9780956412812 Guide 6 North Street Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Retrieved 20 February 2022 Guide 14 New Cemetery Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Retrieved 20 February 2022 Guide 10 Union Workhouse Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Retrieved 20 February 2022 Guide 7 Rye Street Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Retrieved 20 February 2022 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Bishop Stortford Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Vision Of Britain Retrieved 21 February 2022 Hertfordshire Populations 1801 1991 Hertfordshire County Council National Archives 1992 The Essex and Hertfordshire County Boundaries Order 1992 legislation gov uk a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link The East Hertfordshire Reorganisation of Community Governance Bishop s Stortford and Thorley Order 2018 PDF East Hertfordshire District Council 2018 Parish Population estimates for mid 2011 to mid 2020 based on best fitting of output areas to parishes Office for National Statistics www ons gov uk Retrieved 24 February 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Custom report Nomis Official Labour Market Statistics www nomisweb co uk Retrieved 23 February 2022 a b c d Custom report Nomis Official Labour Market Statistics www nomisweb co uk Retrieved 23 February 2022 Bishop s Stortford Urban Sanitary District A Vision of Britain through Time GB Historical GIS University of Portsmouth Retrieved 13 December 2021 Bishop s Stortford Urban District A Vision of Britain through Time GB Historical GIS University of Portsmouth Retrieved 13 December 2021 Page William 1912 A History of the County of Hertford Volume 3 London Victoria County History pp 292 306 Retrieved 13 December 2021 Higginbotham Peter Bishop s Stortford Poor Law Union The Workhouse Retrieved 13 December 2021 Bishop Stortford The Local Board Hertford Mercury 23 February 1867 page 3 The Local Government Act at Bishop Stortford Essex Herald Chelmsford 30 October 1866 page 5 Local Government Act 1858 Notice of adoption of Act by Bishop s Stortford Hertfordshire London Gazette 23195 6835 7 December 1866 Retrieved 13 December 2021 Bishop s Stortford Local Board Minutes Hertfordshire Archives and Local Studies Hertfordshire County Council Retrieved 14 December 2021 Bishop Stortford Urban District Council Essex Herald Chelmsford 8 January 1895 page 5 Kelly s Directory of Hertfordshire London 1914 p 62 Retrieved 13 December 2021 Bishop Stortford Herts and Cambs Reporter and Royston Crow 4 September 1914 page 8 Council s New Offices Opened Herts and Essex Observer Bishop s Stortford 3 November 1972 page 1 Jackson Square Herts and Essex Observer Bishop s Stortford 31 May 1974 page 10 Bishop s Stortford Town Council Civic Heraldry Retrieved 13 December 2021 The Local Government Successor Parishes No 2 Order 1973 PDF London Her Majesty s Stationery Office 1973 p 6688 ISBN 0110319397 Retrieved 14 December 2021 The Old Monastery Bishop s Stortford and Thorley A history and guide Retrieved 14 December 2021 Executive minutes 7 June 2016 East Hertfordshire District Council 7 June 2016 Retrieved 14 December 2021 1 The Causeway Bishop s Stortford redevelopment Election Maps www ordnancesurvey co uk Retrieved 27 November 2022 New electoral arrangements for East Herts District Council Final Recommendations PDF The Local Government Boundary Commission For England August 2022 Election Maps www ordnancesurvey co uk Retrieved 27 November 2022 Bishop s Stortford dumps its twin towns in France and Germany www theguardian co uk Retrieved 4 February 2023 a b c Town Wide Employment Study For Bishop s Stortford PDF Wessex Economics 2013 p 3 It s official Stortford is in the district voted the UK s best place to live Bishop s Stortford Independent 31 January 2020 Retrieved 24 February 2022 Times The Sunday Bishop s Stortford Hertfordshire Best Places to Live in the UK 2020 ISSN 0140 0460 Retrieved 22 November 2022 Bloomfield Ruth 17 April 2019 Why these are three of the best towns for London commuters to buy in www standard co uk Retrieved 24 February 2022 Andrea Dean 22 November 2022 Bishop s Stortford could be good for first time buyers with quick links to Londo Metro Retrieved 22 November 2022 Town Wide Employment Study for Bishop s Stortford PDF Wessex Economics 2013 p 5 Town Wide Employment Study For Bishop s Stortford PDF Wessex Ecoomics 2013 p 11 a b Business Register and Employment Survey open access Nomis Official Labour Market Statistics www nomisweb co uk Retrieved 24 February 2022 Business Improvement District for Bishop s Stortford East Herts District Council www eastherts gov uk Retrieved 24 February 2022 About Bishop s Stortford BID Retrieved 24 February 2022 The Bishop s Stortford Chamber of Commerce Bishop s Stortford Chamber of Commerce Retrieved 24 February 2022 East Herts District Plan PDF East Hertfordshire District Plan 2018 p 48 Homepage Jackson Square Shopping Centre Retrieved 24 February 2022 Bishop s Stortford Town Centre Planning Framework PDF Allies and Morrison East Hertfordshire District Council 2017 Market Bishop s Stortford Town Council and Tourist Information www bishopsstortfordtc gov uk Retrieved 24 February 2022 Bishop s Stortford Independent Iliffe Media launches Bishop s Stortford Indepenent newspaper Journalism News from HoldtheFrontPage HoldtheFrontPage Retrieved 4 December 2022 Herts amp Essex Observer s Bishop s Stortford office to close Journalism News from HoldtheFrontPage HoldtheFrontPage Retrieved 4 December 2022 Bishop s Stortford Flyer The CM Connection Axis Magazine www axismagazine co uk Retrieved 4 December 2022 thebishmag co uk Bishop s Stortford and beyond Retrieved 4 December 2022 Three Counties Radio Listen Live BBC Sounds www bbc co uk Retrieved 4 December 2022 Estimates of station usage ORR Data Portal dataportal orr gov uk Retrieved 28 November 2022 Train times tickets amp service information Greater Anglia www greateranglia co uk Retrieved 5 December 2022 Innovation Corridor About Innovation Corridor Archived from the original on 17 April 2019 East Herts District Council Air Quality East Hertfordshire District Council Archived from the original on 20 April 2019 Retrieved 20 April 2019 a b 2018 Air Quality Annual Status for East Herts PDF East Hertfordshire District Council Archived from the original PDF on 20 April 2019 Facts and figures London Stansted Airport Retrieved 17 April 2019 Arriva Bus Our Services in Bishop s Stortford and Stansted PDF Arriva Shires amp Essex Archived from the original PDF on 17 April 2019 Intalink Town Maps Bishop s Stortford Intalink Archived from the original on 20 April 2019 Intalink Network Maps Hertfordshire County Map Intalink Archived from the original on 20 April 2019 Sustrans Route 11 Sustrans Archived from the original on 20 April 2019 Retrieved 20 April 2019 a b Sustrans Map of the National Cycle Network Sustrans Archived from the original on 3 April 2019 Sustrans Route 16 Sustrans Archived from the original on 20 April 2019 Retrieved 20 April 2019 Hertfordshire Cycling Map for Recreation and Community PDF Hertfordshire County Council Archived from the original PDF on 20 April 2019 Retrieved 20 April 2019 Cycling Canal and River Trust Archived from the original on 7 April 2019 River Stort Canal and River Trust Archived from the original on 20 April 2019 Bishop s Stortford Conservative Area Appraisal and Management Plan Plan 1 PDF East Herts District Council December 2014 Bishop s Stortford Conservation Area Appraisal and Management Plan PDF East Herts District Council December 2014 pp 13 16 Guide 13 Cecil Rhodes Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Retrieved 21 February 2022 Guide 2 Sir Walter Gilbey Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Retrieved 21 February 2022 Herts and Essex old girl Dame Caroline Spelman to quit as MP over Brexit abuse Bishop s Stortford Independent 9 September 2019 Retrieved 21 February 2022 Sam Smith s former school drops music GCSE due to lack of interest BBC News 17 May 2016 Retrieved 21 February 2022 Four local schools ranked in top 500 in the country in Sunday Times Schools Guide Bishop s Stortford Independent 7 December 2020 Retrieved 25 February 2022 Clugston Harriet 29 November 2017 Bishop s Stortford school comes top in Sunday Times school rankings HertsLive Retrieved 25 February 2022 Schools and education www hertfordshire gov uk Retrieved 25 February 2022 a b c School directory www hertfordshire gov uk Retrieved 25 February 2022 Bishop s Stortford High School Website Retrieved 24 September 2016 Herts and Essex High School Website Retrieved 24 September 2016 a b Bishop s Stortford College Independent Pre Prep Prep School Senior School amp Sixth Form in Herts www bishopsstortfordcollege org Retrieved 25 February 2022 Stansted Airport College Home www stanstedairportcollege ac uk Retrieved 25 February 2022 Harlow College Home www harlow college ac uk Retrieved 25 February 2022 Hertford Regional College Hertford Regional College Retrieved 25 February 2022 Cambridge Regional College Cambridge I Huntingdon Cambridge Regional College Retrieved 25 February 2022 New schools and additional places www hertfordshire gov uk Retrieved 25 February 2022 Stephens Gareth Lamb Tim 18 September 2007 Your team A Z gt Bishop s Stortford FC BBC London Retrieved 4 October 2016 BSCFC History BSCFC Official Website 25 April 2020 Retrieved 21 February 2022 New Herts and Essex High School sports complex will be pitch perfect for hockey club Bishop s Stortford Independent 3 August 2019 Retrieved 30 August 2022 Welcome to Stortford Hockey Club Bishop s Stortford Hockey Club Retrieved 8 January 2023 East Hockey Home east englandhockey co uk Retrieved 30 August 2022 Competitions East Hockey east englandhockey co uk Retrieved 10 January 2023 Masters Bishop s Stortford Hockey Club Retrieved 1 September 2022 StackPath www bishopsstortfordcc com Retrieved 21 February 2022 Bishop s Stortford Town Council Agenda 20 November 2021 Bishop s Stortford Town Council p 571 Hockerill Cricket Club Bishop s Stortford Town Council and Tourist Information www bishopsstortfordtc gov uk Retrieved 21 February 2022 Allsopp Denise Bishop s Stortford Running Club for runners of all abilities in East Herts and West Essex Retrieved 21 February 2022 Bishop s Stortford Town Council Council Meeting Agenda 20th November 2021 Bishop s Stortford Town Council pp 306 307 Bishop s Stortford Skatepark East Herts District Council www eastherts gov uk Retrieved 25 February 2022 Work set to begin on recreation space for Stortford s teenagers Bishop s Stortford Independent 3 August 2021 Retrieved 25 February 2022 Bishops Stortford Museum Rhodes Arts Complex featuring the stage the screen amp the museum Rhodesbishopsstortford org uk Retrieved 26 October 2017 Remembering sound and vision of classic Rhodes gigs Bishop s Stortford Independent 22 September 2019 Retrieved 21 February 2022 Home bs district scouts Christmas Fayre 2021 Bishop s Stortford Town Council and Tourist Information www bishopsstortfordtc gov uk Retrieved 25 February 2022 Bishop s Stortford Carnival Bishop s Stortford Town Council and Tourist Information www bishopsstortfordtc gov uk Retrieved 25 February 2022 Guide 1 The Star Inn Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Stortfordhistory co uk Retrieved 26 October 2017 Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Bishop s Stortford History amp Thorley History Bishop s Stortford amp Thorley A History amp Guide Retrieved 26 October 2017 a b August 2003 Maximum Eca knmi nl Retrieved 25 February 2011 Mean annual warmest day Eca knmi nl Retrieved 25 February 2011 August gt 25c days Eca knmi nl Retrieved 25 February 2011 1981 minimum Eca knmi nl Retrieved 25 February 2011 Annual average coldest night Eca knmi nl Retrieved 25 February 2011 Annual average air frost Eca knmi nl Retrieved 25 February 2011 Rainfall data Eca knmi nl Retrieved 25 February 2011 Rainfall data Eca knmi nl Retrieved 25 February 2011 Climate Normals 1971 2000 YR NO Retrieved 25 February 2011 Climate Normals 1961 1990 KNMI Retrieved 25 February 2011 East of England Region Civic Heraldry of England Retrieved 9 March 2021 External links Edit Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Bishop s Stortford Media related to Bishop s Stortford at Wikimedia Commons Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Bishop Stortford Bishop s Stortford Town Council Bishop s Stortford and Thorley A History and Guide comprehensive history Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bishop 27s Stortford amp oldid 1142452774, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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