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Doncaster

Doncaster (/ˈdɒŋkəstər/, /-kæs-/[4][5]) is a city in South Yorkshire, England. Named after the River Don, it is the administrative centre of the larger City of Doncaster. It is the second largest settlement in South Yorkshire after Sheffield. Doncaster is situated in the Don Valley on the western edge of the Humberhead Levels and east of the Pennines.[6] The urban subdivision had a population of 113,566 at the 2021 census, whilst the City of Doncaster metropolitan borough had a population of 308,106.[7]

Doncaster
City

Top to bottom, left to right: St George's Minster, Doncaster Market, Cusworth Hall, Yorkshire Wildlife Park, The Dome, Doncaster Racecourse, skyline of the city centre from Cusworth
Doncaster
Location within City of Doncaster
Doncaster
Location within South Yorkshire
Area43.5 km2 (16.8 sq mi)
Population113,566 (2021 census)[1]
• Density2,611/km2 (6,760/sq mi)
Urban population161,326 (2021 census)[2]
Metropolitan borough population308,106 (2021 census)[3]
OS grid referenceSE575032
Metropolitan borough
Metropolitan county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townDONCASTER
Postcode districtDN1-DN12
Dialling code01302
PoliceSouth Yorkshire
FireSouth Yorkshire
AmbulanceYorkshire
UK Parliament
Websitewww.doncaster.gov.uk
List of places
UK
England
Yorkshire
53°31′23″N 1°08′02″W / 53.523120°N 1.133900°W / 53.523120; -1.133900Coordinates: 53°31′23″N 1°08′02″W / 53.523120°N 1.133900°W / 53.523120; -1.133900

Sheffield lies 17 miles (27 km) south-west, Leeds 25 miles (40 km) north-west, York 30 miles (48 km) to the north, Hull 36 miles (58 km) north-east, and Lincoln 32 miles (51 km) south-east. Doncaster's suburbs include Armthorpe, Bessacarr and Sprotbrough. The towns of Bawtry, Mexborough, Conisbrough, Hatfield and Stainforth, among others, are only a short distance away within the metropolitan borough. The towns of Epworth and Haxey are a short distance to the east in Lincolnshire, and directly south is the town of Harworth Bircotes in Nottinghamshire. Also, within the city's vicinity are Barnsley, Wakefield, Pontefract, Selby, Goole, Scunthorpe, Gainsborough, Retford, Worksop and Rotherham, to which Doncaster is linked by road and rail.

As part of the Platinum Jubilee Civic Honours, Doncaster received city status by Letters Patent.[8] A ceremony to confer city status took place at Mansion House on 9 November 2022 as part of a tour of Yorkshire by King Charles III and Queen Camilla.[9][10]

History

 
Ermine Street's alternative route: Eboracum (York) to Lagecium (Castleford), 21 miles, to Danum (Doncaster), 16 miles, to Agelocum (Littleborough), 21 miles, to Lindum (Lincoln), 13 miles. A spur connected Danum with Calcaria (near Tadcaster).

Roman

Possibly inhabited earlier, Doncaster grew up on the site of a Roman fort of the 1st century CE, at a crossing of the River Don. The 2nd-century Antonine Itinerary and early-5th-century Notitia Dignitatum (Register of Dignitaries) called the fort Danum. The first section of road to the Doncaster fort had probably been built since the early 50s, while a route through the north Derbyshire hills was opened in the later 1st century, possibly by Governor Gn. Julius Agricola in the late 70s. Doncaster provided an alternative land route between Lincoln and York, while the main route Ermine Street involved parties breaking up to cross the Humber in boats. As this was not always practical, the Romans saw Doncaster as an important staging post. The Roman road appears on two routes recorded in the Antonine Itinerary. The itinerary includes the same section of road between Lincoln and York and lists three stations between these two coloniae. Routes 7 and 8 (Iter VII & VIII) are entitled "the route from York to London".

Several areas of intense archaeological interest have been identified in the town, although many such as St Sepulchre Gate remain hidden under buildings. The Roman fort is thought to have lain on the site now taken by St George's Minster, beside the River Don. The Doncaster garrison units are named in a Register produced near the end of Roman rule in Britain: it was the home of the Crispinian Horse, presumably named after the tribes living near Crispiana in Pannonia Superior (near present-day Zirc in western Hungary), but possibly after Crispus, son of Constantine the Great, who was headquartered there while his father was based in nearby York. The Register names the unit as under the command of the "Duke of the Britons".

In 1971 the Danum shield, a rectangular Roman shield dating to the 1st or 2nd century CE, was recovered from the site of the Danum fort.[11]

An inscribed altar, dedicated to the Matres by Marcus Nantonius Orbiotalus, was found at St Sepulchre Gate in 1781.[12] This was donated to the Yorkshire Museum in 1856.[13]

 
Map showing the boundary of the fortified Medieval township of Doncaster with four Gates

Medieval

Doncaster is generally identified with Cair Daun[14] listed as one of 28 British cities in the 9th-century History of the Britons traditionally ascribed to Nennius.[15][17][18] It was certainly an Anglo-Saxon burh, and in that period received its present name: "Don-" (Old English: Donne) from the settlement and river and "-caster" (-ceaster) from an Old English version of the Latin castra (military camp; fort). It was mentioned in the 1003 will of Wulfric Spott. Shortly after the Norman Conquest, Nigel Fossard refortified the town and built Conisbrough Castle. By the time of Domesday Book, Hexthorpe in the wapentake of Strafforth was said to have a church and two mills.[19] The historian David Hey says these facilities represent the settlement at Doncaster. He also suggests that the street name Frenchgate indicates that Fossard invited fellow Normans to trade in the town.[20] Doncaster was ceded to Scotland in the Treaty of Durham and never formally returned to England.[21][22]

With the 13th century, Doncaster matured into a busy town. In 1194 King Richard I granted it national recognition with a town charter. It suffered a disastrous fire in 1204, from which it slowly recovered. At the time, buildings were built of wood, and open fireplaces used for cooking and heating.

 
Norman church of St Mary Magdalene, at demolition in 1846

In 1248, a charter was granted for Doncaster Market to be held in the area surrounding the Church of St Mary Magdalene, which was built in Norman times. In the 16th century, the church was adapted for use as the town hall. It was finally demolished in 1846.[20] Some 750 years on, the market continues to operate, with busy traders located under cover, at the 19th-century Corn Exchange building (1873)[23] and in outside stalls. The Corn Exchange was much rebuilt in 1994 after a major fire.

During the 14th century, numerous friars arrived in Doncaster who were known for their religious enthusiasm and preaching. In 1307 the Franciscan friars (Greyfriars) arrived, as did Carmelites (Whitefriars) in the mid-14th century. Other major medieval features included the Hospital of St Nicholas and the leper colony of the Hospital of St James, a moot hall, a grammar school and a five-arched stone town bridge with a chapel dedicated to Our Lady of the Bridge. By 1334, Doncaster was the wealthiest town in southern Yorkshire and the sixth in Yorkshire as a whole, even boasting its own banker. By 1379, it was recovering from the Black Death, which had reduced its population to 1,500. In October 1536, the Pilgrimage of Grace ended in Doncaster. This rebellion led by the lawyer Robert Aske commanded 40,000 Yorkshire people against Henry VIII, in protest at the Dissolution of the Monasteries. Many of Doncaster's streets are named with the suffix "-gate", after the old Danish word gata, meaning street. In medieval times, craftsmen or tradesmen with similar skills tended to live in the same street. Baxter is an ancient word for baker: Baxtergate was the bakers' street. Historians believe that Frenchgate may be named after French-speaking Normans who settled there.

The medieval township is known to have been protected by earthen ramparts and ditches, with four substantial gates as entrances to the town. These were located at Hall Gate, St Mary's Bridge (old), St Sepulchre Gate and Sunny Bar. Today the gates at Sunny Bar are commemorated by huge "Boar Gates"; similarly, the entrance to St Sepulchre Gate is commemorated by white marble "Roman Gates". The boundary of the town mainly extended from the Don along a route known now Market Road, Silver Street, Cleveland Street and Printing Office Street.

Modern

 
Population of Doncaster District taken from census data[24]

Access to the town was restricted and some officeholders secured charters to collect tolls. In 1605, King James I granted to William Levett of Doncaster, brother of York merchant Percival Levett, the right to levy tolls at Friar's and St Mary's bridges.[25] Having served as mayors and aldermen of Doncaster, the Levetts probably believed they could control a monopoly. In 1618 the family began enforcing it, but by 1628 the populace revolted. Capt. Christopher Levett, Percival's son, petitioned Parliament to enforce the tolls, but Parliament disagreed, calling them "a grievance to the subjects, both in creation and execution," and axing the Levett monopoly.[25] Doncaster's Levet Road is named after the family, as are nearby hamlets of Hooton Levitt and the largely extinct Levitt Hagg, where much of the town's early limestone was quarried.

During the 16th and 17th centuries, Doncaster continued to expand, but it suffered several outbreaks of plague between 1562 and 1606. Each struck down significant numbers of victims.

During the First English Civil War, King Charles I marched by Bridgnorth, Lichfield and Ashbourne to Doncaster, where on 18 August 1645 he was met by numbers of Yorkshire gentlemen who had rallied to his cause. On 2 May 1664, Doncaster was rewarded with the title of Free Borough as a way for the King (Charles I's son, King Charles II) to express gratitude for the allegiance.

Doncaster was connected to the rail network in 1848 and a plant and carriage works for Great Northern Railway was constructed in the town in 1853.[26]: 2562 The Doncaster Carr rail depot was opened in 1876.[27]

The area to the east of Doncaster started developing settlements where coal miners lived from the 1850s onwards, exploiting coal near Barnsley. One such settment is Deneby.[26]

Doncaster and surrounding settlements became part of the West Riding of Yorkshire in 1899. Under the Local Government Act 1972 it was drawn into a new metropolitan borough in 1974 and became part of the new county of South Yorkshire.

 
Cusworth Hall front

Doncaster has traditionally been prosperous within the wapentake of Stafford and Tickhill.[28][29] The borough was known for rich landowners and huge stately homes such as Brodsworth Hall, Cantley Hall, Cusworth Hall, Hickleton Hall, Nether Hall and Wheatley Hall (demolished 1934). This wealth appears in the luxurious, historic gilded 18th-century Mansion House in High Street. This land ownership developed over what is an ancient market place and large buildings were erected in the 19th century, including the Market Hall and Corn Exchange. The old Doncaster Guildhall in Frenchgate was designed by John Butterfield with a tetrastyle portico and completed in 1847: it was demolished in the redevelopment of the 1960s.[30]

 
St George's Minster is a grade I listed building and was designed by Sir George Gilbert Scott in the 1850s.[31]

Perhaps the most striking building to survive is St George's Minster, built in the 19th century and promoted from a parish church in 2004.[32] Doncaster was already a communication centre by this time. It straddled the Great North Road or A1, gaining strategic importance, as this was the main route for traffic between London and Edinburgh.

Governance and politics

National politics

Doncaster is represented in the House of Commons by three Members of Parliament (MPs); two from Labour and one from the Conservatives. Rosie Winterton represents Doncaster Central, as a former Labour Party leader, Ed Miliband represents Doncaster North, and Nick Fletcher the Don Valley.

In September 2014, UKIP held an annual party conference at Doncaster Racecourse. UKIP party leader Nigel Farage claimed that by holding the conference in Doncaster, UKIP were "now parking our tanks on the Labour Party's lawn", referring to Labour leader Ed Miliband's Doncaster North constituency. Shortly afterwards in the seat, at the 2015 general election, UKIP won 8,928 votes to Labour's 20,708. In the 2016 EU Referendum, however, Doncaster voted 69 per cent to leave the European Union.[33][34]

Local politics

Doncaster forms part of the South Yorkshire Combined Authority, which elects a mayor every four years.

Additionally, the Metropolitan Borough of Doncaster is one of twelve districts in the United Kingdom to have a directly elected mayor, currently Ros Jones, who was re-elected in 2021.

City status

The town applied several times, unsuccessfully, for city status. Its borough population greater than 300,000 is larger than many cities' such as Hull, Southampton and Newcastle. Its town centre alone, with over 109,000 population, is larger than 25 cities across the UK. On 28 October 2021, Doncaster Metropolitan Borough Council announced its bid for Doncaster City for the Queen's Platinum Jubilee. This has been supported by the Doncaster Labour Group and the Doncaster Conservative Association. All three MPs for Doncaster expressed support for city status, with Don Valley's Nick Fletcher speaking for it in Parliament.[35]

Alongside seven other towns, Doncaster was announced to have succeeded in its bid to gain city status on 20 May 2022 as part of the Platinum Jubilee of Elizabeth II. It formally received the letters patent and became a city when a ceremony took place on 9 November 2022 as part of a royal visit.[10][36][37]

Geography

 
St Sepulchre Gate and Printing Office Street

Human geography

Doncaster is the second largest settlement in South Yorkshire and the largest metropolitan district in England by area. It expanded dramatically in population with the development of coal mining. Closure of coal mines in the 1970s and early 1980s caused economic difficulties; the town then developed its service industry, drawing on the good communication links with the rest of the UK.

 
Doncaster skyline with St George's Minster in the foreground

The Doncaster skyline is dominated by the minster in the middle of the town. The Frenchgate Shopping Centre holds an important position in the skyline, along with the Doncaster College Hub building.

After the old Doncaster College and surrounding buildings were demolished, a new Doncaster Civic Office designed by Cartwright Pickard was built for Doncaster Council at a cost of £20 million and completed in 2012.[38]

Topography

Doncaster lies in a lowland valley in southern Yorkshire. To the west are low rolling hills eventually reaching the Pennines. To the east are the low-lying Isle of Axholme and Humberhead Levels. The south is relatively low-lying, with a large forested area including Sherwood Forest in Nottinghamshire. The Vale of York lies to the north. The floodplains of the River Don lie to Doncaster's north-east; this area is regularly flooded, notably in 2007 and 2019.

Conservation

Nature reserves

Thorne and Hatfield Moors, east of Doncaster, is the largest area of low-lying peat bog in the United Kingdom. It is protected as a national nature reserve.

Potteric Carr, including Potteric Carr Nature Reserve, lies to the south.

Green belt

Doncaster is within a green belt that extends into the surrounding counties. First defined in 1966,[39] the policy is controlled throughout the town by the local planning authority, Doncaster Council. It reduces urban sprawl, prevent areas in the conurbation from further convergence, protects outlying communities, encourages brownfield reuse, and protects nearby countryside by restricting development in the designated areas and imposing stricter conditions on permitted building.[39]

It surrounds the side of the urban area west of the East Coast Line, preventing suburbs such as Sprotbrough, New Edlington, Old Edlington, Scawsby and New Rossington merging. As a result, open rural land can be very close to the town centre at some points (for example the wide undeveloped valley of the River Don is adjacent to the town centre), while at other points the urban sprawl rolls on for up to five miles. Another aim of the green belt is to encourage recreation and leisure interests,[39] with rural landscape features, greenfield areas and facilities including the River Don and valley west of Hexthorpe; Hexthorpe Park; Cusworth Hall, museum and country park; Potteric Carr and Huxter Well Marsh; and the Trans Pennine Trail.

Climate

Doncaster has a maritime climate lacking extreme temperatures, like much of the British Isles. Its low elevation in the Don Valley, in the lee of the Pennines, and inland from the North Sea, mean daytime summer temperatures are no lower than parts of South East England, despite the more northerly location. The nearest weather station is RAF Finningley, now known as Doncaster Sheffield Airport, about 5.5 mi (8.9 km) to the south-east of Doncaster town centre and at a similar elevation.

The Doncaster area is about as far north as the 21.5 °C (70.7 °F) average July/August maximum temperature isotherm reaches – Indeed, the August 1990 record high of 35.5 °C (95.9 °F)[40] is the most northerly temperature above 35 °C (95 °F) in the British Isles. The nearby town of Bawtry, slightly further south, still holds the UK's September monthly record high temperature of 35.6 °C (96.1 °F),[41] set in 1906. Typically, the warmest day of the year reaches 29.1 °C (84.4 °F)[42] and 12 or 13 days report a daytime maximum of 25.1 °C (77.2 °F) or above.

The absolute minimum temperature stands at −13.5 °C (7.7 °F),[43] set during December 1981. However, online records only relate to the period 1960–2000, so that lower temperatures may have been recorded earlier. During the 1971–2000 period, an average of 51.9 nights of the year recorded an air frost.

Typically 106.9 days[44] of the year report 1 mm or more of rainfall. Total annual precipitation is slightly below 560 mm (22 in),[45] which is comparable to the driest parts of the UK, due to Doncaster's location in the rain shadow of the Pennines.

Climate data for Doncaster (DSA)[a], elevation: 12 m (39 ft), 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1960–2000
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 14.5
(58.1)
17.9
(64.2)
23.6
(74.5)
22.7
(72.9)
28.4
(83.1)
32.1
(89.8)
32.2
(90.0)
35.5
(95.9)
27.3
(81.1)
27.7
(81.9)
18.5
(65.3)
15.5
(59.9)
35.5
(95.9)
Average high °C (°F) 7.6
(45.7)
8.4
(47.1)
10.9
(51.6)
13.7
(56.7)
16.9
(62.4)
19.8
(67.6)
22.3
(72.1)
21.9
(71.4)
18.9
(66.0)
14.6
(58.3)
10.4
(50.7)
7.8
(46.0)
14.4
(58.0)
Daily mean °C (°F) 4.5
(40.1)
5.0
(41.0)
6.9
(44.4)
9.2
(48.6)
12.0
(53.6)
15.0
(59.0)
17.2
(63.0)
16.9
(62.4)
14.4
(57.9)
11.0
(51.8)
7.2
(45.0)
4.7
(40.5)
10.3
(50.6)
Average low °C (°F) 1.4
(34.5)
1.5
(34.7)
2.8
(37.0)
4.6
(40.3)
7.1
(44.8)
10.2
(50.4)
12.1
(53.8)
11.8
(53.2)
9.9
(49.8)
7.3
(45.1)
3.9
(39.0)
1.6
(34.9)
6.2
(43.1)
Record low °C (°F) −13.3
(8.1)
−10.3
(13.5)
−9.3
(15.3)
−5.4
(22.3)
−3.5
(25.7)
−0.6
(30.9)
3.2
(37.8)
3.7
(38.7)
−1.1
(30.0)
−3.6
(25.5)
−7.5
(18.5)
−13.5
(7.7)
−13.5
(7.7)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 42.3
(1.67)
35.5
(1.40)
32.0
(1.26)
42.5
(1.67)
40.9
(1.61)
64.6
(2.54)
55.6
(2.19)
54.3
(2.14)
51.8
(2.04)
56.7
(2.23)
56.5
(2.22)
49.6
(1.95)
582.3
(22.92)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 10.0 8.9 8.4 8.4 8.6 9.8 9.8 9.4 8.6 10.1 11.3 10.4 113.7
Mean monthly sunshine hours 59.8 80.9 117.6 158.5 195.6 176.8 192.5 178.8 137.7 99.9 64.6 53.9 1,516.6
Source 1: Met Office[46]
Source 2: KNMI[47]
  1. ^ Weather station is located 6 miles (10 km) from the Doncaster town centre.

Demography

 
Tower blocks in Doncaster

In the 2011 census the town of Doncaster (identified as the "built-up area subdivision") had a population of 109,805,[48] while the wider "Built-up area" had a population of 158,141.[49] The Metropolitan Borough of Doncaster had a 2011 population of 302,402,[50] while a mid-2019 estimate was 310,000.[citation needed]

The 2011 census figure makes Doncaster's population very slightly larger than that of Rotherham (pop 109,691).[51][52]

Doncaster compared 2011 Doncaster Metropolitan Borough of Doncaster
White British 84.9% 91.8%
Asian 5.3% 2.5%
Black 1.3% 0.8%

Economy

 
Doncaster Market Place Panoramic
 
The High Street in Doncaster city centre.

Doncaster emerged as an industrial centre in the late 18th to 20th centuries. Its communications, particularly its waterways, meant that it became extremely busy and experienced migration to its centre. Underneath Doncaster lies a huge natural resource by way of deep seam coal.

Distribution centres

Doncaster's proximity to major urban centres and motorway/rail infrastructure gives it a number of major distribution centres, including the 420-acre Doncaster International Railport, which dispatches goods to Europe. It also has large warehousing and logistic capabilities for retailers such as Next, Tesco, IKEA, Amazon.com, Lidl and Faberge. A marked proportion of fresh and frozen goods for northern supermarkets is dispatched by road from Doncaster.

Regeneration initiatives

 
Frenchgate shopping centre

On 5 March 2004, Doncaster was granted Fairtrade Town status. Over the last few years the Doncaster Lakeside, as home to the Doncaster Rovers ground, has undergone modernisation. Doncaster has a bowling alley and a cinema near Lakeside. The Dome, opened in 1989 by Princess Diana, contains a swimming pool, gym, ice rink and café.

The Frenchgate Centre is a shopping centre and transport interchange. Opened in June 2006,[53] it connects with the railway and bus stations. Lakeside Village, a retail outlet with some 45 retail shops and restaurants lies along the A6182 dual carriageway. The Waterdale area of the town centre is currently undergoing rejuvenation, with a new theatre (known as CAST), new civic offices and a new public square having been completed on the site of the Waterdale car park. The old council house and civic theatre have been demolished and new housing is being built in the town itself, opposite Doncaster Racecourse, and in out-of-town suburbs.

Confectionery

During the 19th and 20th centuries, confectioners based in Doncaster included Parkinson's[54] the Butterscotch inventors, Nuttalls Mintoes[55] and Murray Mints. In August 2011, Parkinson's put its 190-year-old trademark up for sale on eBay.[56]

Coal and industrial expansion

The waterways, River Don and Don Navigation were used to transport coal from Doncaster to the steel production centres at Rotherham, Scunthorpe and Sheffield.

A large number of mining jobs were lost in the late 1980s. Today coal mining has ceased.

Rockware Glass is a specialist glass manufacturer. A production facility for chemical polymers was built in Wheatley Hall Road. It changed hands during its existence, until DuPont closed it in the mid-1990s.

Steel foundries, rolling mills and wire mills were built close to the railways that brought steel from Rotherham and Sheffield. Bridon Ropes produces wire rope, including the ropes used at coal mines to haul coal and miners. It is claimed to be the largest wire rope manufacturing plant in Europe. Bridon supplied wire rope for the Olympic Stadium for the 2012 Olympic Games.[57]

During the First and Second World Wars, the town became involved in munitions manufacture.

The railways and locomotive works

During the Industrial Revolution, the Great Northern Railway established the Doncaster Locomotive and Carriage Building Works to meet Doncaster's communication needs, the necessity to transport coal quickly and efficiently, and Doncaster's expertise in specialist metal products. An extensive housing programme was undertaken for the increased population. The Chairman of the Great Northern, anxious about the workers and their families' spiritual welfare, persuaded the directors to contribute towards the building of St James's Church, which became known as the "Plant Church". The railway also built St James's School. The Doncaster Plant became famous for building LNER locomotives Flying Scotsman and Mallard, as well as many thousands more locomotives.[58] By August 2008, the whole Plant complex had been razed to make way for a very large housing development. The current[when?] plant owner Wabtec continues to do refurbishment in Doncaster.[citation needed]

Today, Doncaster railway station, on the East Coast Main Line, is linked to towns and cities across the UK such as Wakefield, Leeds, Hull, Sheffield, Manchester, Birmingham, London, York, Darlington, Newcastle upon Tyne, Berwick-upon-Tweed, Edinburgh, Motherwell, Glasgow, and Lincoln. Doncaster PSB is one of the largest signalling centres on the UK network, controlling hundreds of route-miles of railway. Doncaster International Railport and Doncaster iPort are important road-rail intermodal terminals.

The rail freight company DB Cargo UK has its headquarters in Doncaster.[59]

Also nearby is one of the two National College for Advance Transport and Infrastructure Campuses that specialises in courses relating to the railways and transport systems.[60]

Aviation

In 1909, Doncaster Racecourse was chosen as the venue for an airshow, after the world's first international air display in Reims, France in 1909. Around a dozen aviators were present, the most famous being Léon Delagrange and Roger Sommer. Samuel Cody (no relation to William F. Cody) in an attempt to win a prize offered by the Daily Mail for the first British pilot in a British aeroplane to fly a circular mile signed British naturalisation papers in front of the crowd with the band playing both God Save the King and the Star Spangled Banner. Unfortunately, he crashed his aeroplane on the first day of the meeting and made no significant flights.

During the First World War, fighters based first on the racecourse, then at a temporary airstrip near Finningley (later RAF Finningley and now Doncaster Sheffield Airport) and finally, in 1916, on a newly built airfield alongside the racecourse, were deployed to defend the east coast against Zeppelins. On several occasions fighters took off to search for intruders but none were ever seen. The Royal Flying Corps station trained pilots for the war in France. Within months of the war ending the station was put up for sale and two of its three Belfast hangars, the same type that now forms the basis for the Royal Air Force Museum at Hendon, were sold to a Sheffield motor manufacturing company for storage and assembly at Finningley. The third of the hangars stayed in place, mainly housing buses, until the 1970s, when it was knocked down and replaced with modern buildings.

In 1920, the government asked local authorities to assist in forming a chain of airfields for civil air services. Doncaster, with expert advice from Alan Cobham, opened its aviation centre on 26 May 1934. Development of the airfield continued and on 1 July 1936 an international service was opened to Amsterdam. On 1 November 1938, after discussions with the Air Ministry, 616 (South Yorkshire) Squadron of the Royal Auxiliary Air Force was formed. Shortly after the outbreak of war in 1939 the squadron went to its battle station and played a part in the Battle of Britain. After the departure of 616 squadron, its place was taken by the formation of 271 (Transport) Squadron composed mainly of requisitioned civilian aircraft and obsolescent twin-engined bombers. 616 squadron was the first Allied jet fighter squadron, equipped with the Gloster Meteor, famed for using their wingtips to throw German V-1 flying bombs off course. In 1944, after being equipped with American-made Douglas DC-3 Dakotas, the squadron moved south to take part in Operation Overlord and later in the airborne invasion at Arnhem, where Flight Lieutenant David Lord was awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross.

After the war the airfield reverted to civilian flying, and finally closed in 1992.

Tractor production

 
Ploughing by tractor

In 1930, International Harvester (IH) started the production of agricultural implements at a factory on Wheatley Hall Road and later at another in the Carr Hill area of Doncaster. The first tractor built at the factory was a Farmall M, which came off the production line on 13 September 1949.[61] Tractors were initially built from parts shipped from the US. The Wheatley Hall Road factory was extended after the war with a new foundry to make the heavy castings. The factory started Crawler tractor production in 1953. By 1960, the factory was making a range of tractors from scratch, designed specifically for British and European markets and sold under the 'McCormick International' name. Assembly moved in 1965 to the Carr Hill plant. In 1983, tractor production was moved to IH's other Doncaster factory at Wheatley Hall. In 1985, International Harvester sold its agricultural division to Tenneco, Inc. which then merged it with its subsidiary J.I. Case to form Case IH, which continued to design and build its European tractor range in Doncaster, but shutting the David Brown Ltd. tractor factory near Huddersfield. The 350,000th tractor came off the production line in 1999.

In 2000, the factory was purchased by ARGO SpA, an Italian-based agricultural equipment builder. Doncaster was the sole production site of the McCormick Tractors brand, and the factory employed around 380 people (although about 1,100 people are employed in the worldwide McCormick group). In December 2006, the parent company, ARGO Spa, announced that the Doncaster facility would close in 2007, with the loss of around 325 jobs. The announcement was made only a week before Christmas. Sixty-one years of tractor production in Doncaster ended in 2007.

Culture and tourism

 
The Mansion House and New Betting Room, Doncaster, engraved by John Rogers after a drawing by Nathaniel Whittock, published by Isaac Taylor Hinton,[62] London, 1829. The architect was James Paine, 1746–1748.

Doncaster Museum and Art Gallery opened as the town's main museum in 1964. It covers natural history, archaeology, local history and fine and decorative art.[63] It has a major exhibition of silverware and trophies won at Doncaster Racecourse. It also houses the Regimental Museum of the King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry.

Doncaster is home to Yorkshire Wildlife Park, which has over 400 animals and over 70 different species, including the only polar bears in England .

The South Yorkshire Aircraft Museum (formerly AeroVenture) is based on the old site of RAF Doncaster at Doncaster Lakeside. The Trolleybus Museum in the nearby village of Sandtoft specialises in preserving trolleybuses, and claims to have the largest collection of them in Europe, with over 60 examples. Markham Grange Steam Museum, in a garden centre in the nearby village of Brodsworth, has a private collection of steam engines. Ashworth Barracks Museum is a military museum in Balby telling the story of the men awarded the Victoria Cross. It also houses a First World War exhibit including a "Weekers Helmet", one of only two known that exist in the UK.

Since 1973, Doncaster has been the home of the Doncaster Youth Jazz Association (DYJA). Founded by John Ellis, DYJA has been a training ground for generations of amateur and professional jazz musicians including, Andy Cato (of Groove Armada), Denis Rollins, John Escreet, Nadim Teimoori and Reuben Fowler.

In 1956, Tish the goldfish was won at a funfair in Doncaster. Tish lived till the age of 43 becoming the world's oldest known goldfish.[64]

Theatre and cinemas

  • Cast is a £22 million venue opened officially on Monday 2 September 2013. Cast includes a 620-seat auditorium, a flexible studio space, drama studio, dance studio, education and ancillary space, and a large foyer with a café. Its director was Kully Thiarai, formerly of the Contact Theatre, Manchester.[65]
  • The Doncaster Little Theatre is a 99-seat community theatre which puts on 12 of its own in-house shows including a pantomime, along with two Afternoon Cabarets a month during the day. Hire companies also use the theatre space for their own shows.
  • The town has an 11-screen multiplex Vue which was expanded as part of a £5 million upgrade.[66]
  • Events and concerts take place at Doncaster Racecourse and The Dome Leisure Centre.

Nightlife

The Silver Street, Cleveland Street and High Street areas have over 40 bars and clubs within a 2–3-minute walk of each other and other bars can be found on Priory Walk, Lazarus Court, Bradford Row and around the Market Place. Various restaurants serving food from around the world can also be found in the town centre, especially in the Netherhall and Copley Road areas.

Transport

Road

Doncaster sits on the European route E15 and is the starting point of European route E13. The E13 connects Doncaster, Sheffield and Nottingham to London. In the United Kingdom, European route designators are not displayed on road signs. The intended motorway design is evidenced in road maps. The M1 was extended northward to Leeds, which is why the E13 starts at Doncaster and follows the path of the M18 and the M1.

Doncaster is situated on the A1(M) and M18 motorways, within 20 minutes of the key M1 and M62 motorways. The 15 mi (24 km) A1(M) motorway bypass cost £6 million and was opened by Ernest Marples in 1961. The former route is now the A638 and partly the A614 to Blyth.

Air

Until 2022, Doncaster was a European hub with n international airport. Doncaster Sheffield Airport opened in 2005, closing in November 2022 after the Peel Group cited it was unlikely to return to profitability.[67]

Rail

Doncaster is also an important railway town with a station on the East Coast Main Line. Doncaster International Railport facilities link to the Channel Tunnel.

Bus

New developments include campus facilities for Doncaster College and the Frenchgate Interchange (a unification of bus and railway stations with the Frenchgate Centre). The extension to the shopping centre and the new bus station opened on 8 June 2006, when all Doncaster bus routes started to use the station.

Cycling

Cycling in Doncaster is increasingly more popular. Its situation on the Trans Pennine Trail means it is connected to other surrounding towns. Additionally, cycle lanes are being installed across the borough allowing for safer road commuter cycling.

Media

Television

Doncaster is served by BBC Yorkshire from Leeds which broadcasts the flagship nightly news programme Look North. ITV Yorkshire is the local ITV franchise.

Radio

Doncaster is served by several commercial and community radio stations. For 22 years, Trax FM was arguably the most popular station based in the city. It was rebranded as Greatest Hits Radio Yorkshire in 2020, along with numerous other stations in the region. TX1 Radio was set up following the closure of Trax FM and broadcasts exclusively on DAB radio to Doncaster and Bassetlaw.

Additionally, BBC Radio Sheffield and Hallam FM broadcast to South Yorkshire from Sheffield.

Sine FM is a community radio station broadcasting to Doncaster's central business district and inner suburbs on FM. TMCR 95.3 is a community radio station based in Thorne serving North East Doncaster on FM.

Station Frequency Transmitter
BBC Radio 2 89.3 FM Holme Moss
BBC Radio 3 91.5 FM Holme Moss
BBC Radio 4 93.7 FM Holme Moss
TMCR 95.3 95.3 FM Thorne
Viking FM 96.9 FM High Hunsley
BBC Radio 1 98.9 FM Holme Moss
Classic FM 101.1 FM Holme Moss
Sine FM 102.6 FM Doncaster
Hallam FM 103.4 FM Clifton
BBC Radio Sheffield 104.1 FM Holme Moss
Capital Yorkshire 105.1 FM Emley Moor
Capital Yorkshire 105.8 FM High Hunsley
Heart Yorkshire 106.2 FM Emley Moor
Greatest Hits Radio Yorkshire 107.1 FM Doncaster
Great Yorkshire Radio DAB Various
TX1 Radio DAB Various

Print media

The Doncaster Free Press is a weekly newspaper distributed across the greater Doncaster region. Doncaster has its own edition of the Sheffield Star printed daily. The Yorkshire Post is the local daily broadsheet newspaper from Leeds. The Dearne Valley Weekender is a weekly newspaper targeted towards the Dearne Valley, which includes some parts of South West Doncaster, although it is widely available across the town.

Sport

Racecourse

 
Doncaster Racecourse

From around the 16th century, Doncaster embraced the wealthy stagecoach trade. This led to horse breeding in Doncaster, which in turn led to the start of horseraces there. The earliest important race in Doncaster's history was the Doncaster Gold Cup, first run over Cantley Common in 1766. The Doncaster Cup is the oldest continuing regulated horserace in the world.

Rugby football

Founded in 1951, Doncaster (formerly known as Doncaster Dragons RLFC and Doncaster Lakers) have played consistently in rugby league's National League One and its successor the RFL Championship, with its home at the Keepmoat Stadium.

Doncaster Knights currently play in rugby union's RFU Championship, with their home at Castle Park.

Football

 
Doncaster Rovers vs Bristol Rovers in the 2007 Football League Trophy Final

Doncaster Rovers F.C., and one of the most successful women's football clubs in the country, Doncaster Rovers Belles, play at the Keepmoat Stadium. It is also the home of the British professional wrestling promotion One Pro Wrestling.

Others

Speedway racing was staged at Doncaster Greyhound Stadium in 1969 and 1970. The team was known as the Stallions and then the Dragons. The team raced in the British League Second Division.

Doncaster has a men's basketball team called the Doncaster Danum Eagles who compete in National League Division 2. Doncaster additionally has an American football team called the Doncaster Mustangs, who are in Division 1 of the British American Football League.

The town also has regular involvement in the Tour de Yorkshire cycling event, having the finish line of stage two, of the 2016 Tour de Yorkshire hosted in Doncaster, as well as the finish line of stage one of the 2018 Tour de Yorkshire hosted in the town as well.

International links

Doncaster is twinned with:

Several roads in the Lakeside area are named after Doncaster's twin towns, such as Gliwice Way, Herten Way, Wilmington Drive and Carolina Way, named after the state where Wilmington lies.

Former

Notable people

 
John McLaughlin

See also

Notes

References

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External links

  •   Doncaster travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • The Doncaster Council website
  • Doncaster in Yorkshire.com website

doncaster, other, places, with, same, name, disambiguation, city, south, yorkshire, england, named, after, river, administrative, centre, larger, city, second, largest, settlement, south, yorkshire, after, sheffield, situated, valley, western, edge, humberhead. For other places with the same name see Doncaster disambiguation Doncaster ˈ d ɒ ŋ k e s t er k ae s 4 5 is a city in South Yorkshire England Named after the River Don it is the administrative centre of the larger City of Doncaster It is the second largest settlement in South Yorkshire after Sheffield Doncaster is situated in the Don Valley on the western edge of the Humberhead Levels and east of the Pennines 6 The urban subdivision had a population of 113 566 at the 2021 census whilst the City of Doncaster metropolitan borough had a population of 308 106 7 DoncasterCityTop to bottom left to right St George s Minster Doncaster Market Cusworth Hall Yorkshire Wildlife Park The Dome Doncaster Racecourse skyline of the city centre from CusworthDoncasterLocation within City of DoncasterShow map of the City of Doncaster districtDoncasterLocation within South YorkshireShow map of South YorkshireArea43 5 km2 16 8 sq mi Population113 566 2021 census 1 Density2 611 km2 6 760 sq mi Urban population161 326 2021 census 2 Metropolitan borough population308 106 2021 census 3 OS grid referenceSE575032Metropolitan boroughCity of DoncasterMetropolitan countySouth YorkshireRegionYorkshire and the HumberCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townDONCASTERPostcode districtDN1 DN12Dialling code01302PoliceSouth YorkshireFireSouth YorkshireAmbulanceYorkshireUK ParliamentConstituency MapDoncaster CentralDoncaster NorthDon ValleyWebsitewww wbr doncaster wbr gov wbr ukList of places UK England Yorkshire 53 31 23 N 1 08 02 W 53 523120 N 1 133900 W 53 523120 1 133900 Coordinates 53 31 23 N 1 08 02 W 53 523120 N 1 133900 W 53 523120 1 133900Sheffield lies 17 miles 27 km south west Leeds 25 miles 40 km north west York 30 miles 48 km to the north Hull 36 miles 58 km north east and Lincoln 32 miles 51 km south east Doncaster s suburbs include Armthorpe Bessacarr and Sprotbrough The towns of Bawtry Mexborough Conisbrough Hatfield and Stainforth among others are only a short distance away within the metropolitan borough The towns of Epworth and Haxey are a short distance to the east in Lincolnshire and directly south is the town of Harworth Bircotes in Nottinghamshire Also within the city s vicinity are Barnsley Wakefield Pontefract Selby Goole Scunthorpe Gainsborough Retford Worksop and Rotherham to which Doncaster is linked by road and rail As part of the Platinum Jubilee Civic Honours Doncaster received city status by Letters Patent 8 A ceremony to confer city status took place at Mansion House on 9 November 2022 as part of a tour of Yorkshire by King Charles III and Queen Camilla 9 10 Contents 1 History 1 1 Roman 1 2 Medieval 1 3 Modern 2 Governance and politics 2 1 National politics 2 2 Local politics 2 3 City status 3 Geography 3 1 Human geography 3 2 Topography 3 3 Conservation 3 3 1 Nature reserves 3 3 2 Green belt 3 4 Climate 4 Demography 5 Economy 5 1 Distribution centres 5 2 Regeneration initiatives 5 3 Confectionery 5 4 Coal and industrial expansion 5 5 The railways and locomotive works 5 6 Aviation 5 7 Tractor production 6 Culture and tourism 6 1 Theatre and cinemas 6 2 Nightlife 7 Transport 7 1 Road 7 2 Air 7 3 Rail 7 4 Bus 7 5 Cycling 8 Media 8 1 Television 8 2 Radio 8 3 Print media 9 Sport 9 1 Racecourse 9 2 Rugby football 9 3 Football 9 4 Others 10 International links 10 1 Former 11 Notable people 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 External linksHistory Edit Ermine Street s alternative route Eboracum York to Lagecium Castleford 21 miles to Danum Doncaster 16 miles to Agelocum Littleborough 21 miles to Lindum Lincoln 13 miles A spur connected Danum with Calcaria near Tadcaster Roman Edit Possibly inhabited earlier Doncaster grew up on the site of a Roman fort of the 1st century CE at a crossing of the River Don The 2nd century Antonine Itinerary and early 5th century Notitia Dignitatum Register of Dignitaries called the fort Danum The first section of road to the Doncaster fort had probably been built since the early 50s while a route through the north Derbyshire hills was opened in the later 1st century possibly by Governor Gn Julius Agricola in the late 70s Doncaster provided an alternative land route between Lincoln and York while the main route Ermine Street involved parties breaking up to cross the Humber in boats As this was not always practical the Romans saw Doncaster as an important staging post The Roman road appears on two routes recorded in the Antonine Itinerary The itinerary includes the same section of road between Lincoln and York and lists three stations between these two coloniae Routes 7 and 8 Iter VII amp VIII are entitled the route from York to London Several areas of intense archaeological interest have been identified in the town although many such as St Sepulchre Gate remain hidden under buildings The Roman fort is thought to have lain on the site now taken by St George s Minster beside the River Don The Doncaster garrison units are named in a Register produced near the end of Roman rule in Britain it was the home of the Crispinian Horse presumably named after the tribes living near Crispiana in Pannonia Superior near present day Zirc in western Hungary but possibly after Crispus son of Constantine the Great who was headquartered there while his father was based in nearby York The Register names the unit as under the command of the Duke of the Britons In 1971 the Danum shield a rectangular Roman shield dating to the 1st or 2nd century CE was recovered from the site of the Danum fort 11 An inscribed altar dedicated to the Matres by Marcus Nantonius Orbiotalus was found at St Sepulchre Gate in 1781 12 This was donated to the Yorkshire Museum in 1856 13 Map showing the boundary of the fortified Medieval township of Doncaster with four Gates Medieval Edit Doncaster is generally identified with Cair Daun 14 listed as one of 28 British cities in the 9th century History of the Britons traditionally ascribed to Nennius 15 17 18 It was certainly an Anglo Saxon burh and in that period received its present name Don Old English Donne from the settlement and river and caster ceaster from an Old English version of the Latin castra military camp fort It was mentioned in the 1003 will of Wulfric Spott Shortly after the Norman Conquest Nigel Fossard refortified the town and built Conisbrough Castle By the time of Domesday Book Hexthorpe in the wapentake of Strafforth was said to have a church and two mills 19 The historian David Hey says these facilities represent the settlement at Doncaster He also suggests that the street name Frenchgate indicates that Fossard invited fellow Normans to trade in the town 20 Doncaster was ceded to Scotland in the Treaty of Durham and never formally returned to England 21 22 With the 13th century Doncaster matured into a busy town In 1194 King Richard I granted it national recognition with a town charter It suffered a disastrous fire in 1204 from which it slowly recovered At the time buildings were built of wood and open fireplaces used for cooking and heating Norman church of St Mary Magdalene at demolition in 1846 In 1248 a charter was granted for Doncaster Market to be held in the area surrounding the Church of St Mary Magdalene which was built in Norman times In the 16th century the church was adapted for use as the town hall It was finally demolished in 1846 20 Some 750 years on the market continues to operate with busy traders located under cover at the 19th century Corn Exchange building 1873 23 and in outside stalls The Corn Exchange was much rebuilt in 1994 after a major fire During the 14th century numerous friars arrived in Doncaster who were known for their religious enthusiasm and preaching In 1307 the Franciscan friars Greyfriars arrived as did Carmelites Whitefriars in the mid 14th century Other major medieval features included the Hospital of St Nicholas and the leper colony of the Hospital of St James a moot hall a grammar school and a five arched stone town bridge with a chapel dedicated to Our Lady of the Bridge By 1334 Doncaster was the wealthiest town in southern Yorkshire and the sixth in Yorkshire as a whole even boasting its own banker By 1379 it was recovering from the Black Death which had reduced its population to 1 500 In October 1536 the Pilgrimage of Grace ended in Doncaster This rebellion led by the lawyer Robert Aske commanded 40 000 Yorkshire people against Henry VIII in protest at the Dissolution of the Monasteries Many of Doncaster s streets are named with the suffix gate after the old Danish word gata meaning street In medieval times craftsmen or tradesmen with similar skills tended to live in the same street Baxter is an ancient word for baker Baxtergate was the bakers street Historians believe that Frenchgate may be named after French speaking Normans who settled there The medieval township is known to have been protected by earthen ramparts and ditches with four substantial gates as entrances to the town These were located at Hall Gate St Mary s Bridge old St Sepulchre Gate and Sunny Bar Today the gates at Sunny Bar are commemorated by huge Boar Gates similarly the entrance to St Sepulchre Gate is commemorated by white marble Roman Gates The boundary of the town mainly extended from the Don along a route known now Market Road Silver Street Cleveland Street and Printing Office Street Modern Edit Population of Doncaster District taken from census data 24 Access to the town was restricted and some officeholders secured charters to collect tolls In 1605 King James I granted to William Levett of Doncaster brother of York merchant Percival Levett the right to levy tolls at Friar s and St Mary s bridges 25 Having served as mayors and aldermen of Doncaster the Levetts probably believed they could control a monopoly In 1618 the family began enforcing it but by 1628 the populace revolted Capt Christopher Levett Percival s son petitioned Parliament to enforce the tolls but Parliament disagreed calling them a grievance to the subjects both in creation and execution and axing the Levett monopoly 25 Doncaster s Levet Road is named after the family as are nearby hamlets of Hooton Levitt and the largely extinct Levitt Hagg where much of the town s early limestone was quarried During the 16th and 17th centuries Doncaster continued to expand but it suffered several outbreaks of plague between 1562 and 1606 Each struck down significant numbers of victims During the First English Civil War King Charles I marched by Bridgnorth Lichfield and Ashbourne to Doncaster where on 18 August 1645 he was met by numbers of Yorkshire gentlemen who had rallied to his cause On 2 May 1664 Doncaster was rewarded with the title of Free Borough as a way for the King Charles I s son King Charles II to express gratitude for the allegiance Doncaster was connected to the rail network in 1848 and a plant and carriage works for Great Northern Railway was constructed in the town in 1853 26 2562 The Doncaster Carr rail depot was opened in 1876 27 The area to the east of Doncaster started developing settlements where coal miners lived from the 1850s onwards exploiting coal near Barnsley One such settment is Deneby 26 Doncaster and surrounding settlements became part of the West Riding of Yorkshire in 1899 Under the Local Government Act 1972 it was drawn into a new metropolitan borough in 1974 and became part of the new county of South Yorkshire Cusworth Hall front Doncaster has traditionally been prosperous within the wapentake of Stafford and Tickhill 28 29 The borough was known for rich landowners and huge stately homes such as Brodsworth Hall Cantley Hall Cusworth Hall Hickleton Hall Nether Hall and Wheatley Hall demolished 1934 This wealth appears in the luxurious historic gilded 18th century Mansion House in High Street This land ownership developed over what is an ancient market place and large buildings were erected in the 19th century including the Market Hall and Corn Exchange The old Doncaster Guildhall in Frenchgate was designed by John Butterfield with a tetrastyle portico and completed in 1847 it was demolished in the redevelopment of the 1960s 30 St George s Minster is a grade I listed building and was designed by Sir George Gilbert Scott in the 1850s 31 Perhaps the most striking building to survive is St George s Minster built in the 19th century and promoted from a parish church in 2004 32 Doncaster was already a communication centre by this time It straddled the Great North Road or A1 gaining strategic importance as this was the main route for traffic between London and Edinburgh Governance and politics EditNational politics Edit Doncaster is represented in the House of Commons by three Members of Parliament MPs two from Labour and one from the Conservatives Rosie Winterton represents Doncaster Central as a former Labour Party leader Ed Miliband represents Doncaster North and Nick Fletcher the Don Valley In September 2014 UKIP held an annual party conference at Doncaster Racecourse UKIP party leader Nigel Farage claimed that by holding the conference in Doncaster UKIP were now parking our tanks on the Labour Party s lawn referring to Labour leader Ed Miliband s Doncaster North constituency Shortly afterwards in the seat at the 2015 general election UKIP won 8 928 votes to Labour s 20 708 In the 2016 EU Referendum however Doncaster voted 69 per cent to leave the European Union 33 34 Doncaster Civic Office Local politics Edit Doncaster forms part of the South Yorkshire Combined Authority which elects a mayor every four years Additionally the Metropolitan Borough of Doncaster is one of twelve districts in the United Kingdom to have a directly elected mayor currently Ros Jones who was re elected in 2021 City status Edit The town applied several times unsuccessfully for city status Its borough population greater than 300 000 is larger than many cities such as Hull Southampton and Newcastle Its town centre alone with over 109 000 population is larger than 25 cities across the UK On 28 October 2021 Doncaster Metropolitan Borough Council announced its bid for Doncaster City for the Queen s Platinum Jubilee This has been supported by the Doncaster Labour Group and the Doncaster Conservative Association All three MPs for Doncaster expressed support for city status with Don Valley s Nick Fletcher speaking for it in Parliament 35 Alongside seven other towns Doncaster was announced to have succeeded in its bid to gain city status on 20 May 2022 as part of the Platinum Jubilee of Elizabeth II It formally received the letters patent and became a city when a ceremony took place on 9 November 2022 as part of a royal visit 10 36 37 Geography Edit St Sepulchre Gate and Printing Office Street Human geography Edit Doncaster is the second largest settlement in South Yorkshire and the largest metropolitan district in England by area It expanded dramatically in population with the development of coal mining Closure of coal mines in the 1970s and early 1980s caused economic difficulties the town then developed its service industry drawing on the good communication links with the rest of the UK Doncaster skyline with St George s Minster in the foreground The Doncaster skyline is dominated by the minster in the middle of the town The Frenchgate Shopping Centre holds an important position in the skyline along with the Doncaster College Hub building After the old Doncaster College and surrounding buildings were demolished a new Doncaster Civic Office designed by Cartwright Pickard was built for Doncaster Council at a cost of 20 million and completed in 2012 38 Topography Edit Doncaster lies in a lowland valley in southern Yorkshire To the west are low rolling hills eventually reaching the Pennines To the east are the low lying Isle of Axholme and Humberhead Levels The south is relatively low lying with a large forested area including Sherwood Forest in Nottinghamshire The Vale of York lies to the north The floodplains of the River Don lie to Doncaster s north east this area is regularly flooded notably in 2007 and 2019 Conservation Edit Nature reserves Edit Thorne and Hatfield Moors east of Doncaster is the largest area of low lying peat bog in the United Kingdom It is protected as a national nature reserve Potteric Carr including Potteric Carr Nature Reserve lies to the south Green belt Edit Further information South and West Yorkshire Green Belt Doncaster is within a green belt that extends into the surrounding counties First defined in 1966 39 the policy is controlled throughout the town by the local planning authority Doncaster Council It reduces urban sprawl prevent areas in the conurbation from further convergence protects outlying communities encourages brownfield reuse and protects nearby countryside by restricting development in the designated areas and imposing stricter conditions on permitted building 39 It surrounds the side of the urban area west of the East Coast Line preventing suburbs such as Sprotbrough New Edlington Old Edlington Scawsby and New Rossington merging As a result open rural land can be very close to the town centre at some points for example the wide undeveloped valley of the River Don is adjacent to the town centre while at other points the urban sprawl rolls on for up to five miles Another aim of the green belt is to encourage recreation and leisure interests 39 with rural landscape features greenfield areas and facilities including the River Don and valley west of Hexthorpe Hexthorpe Park Cusworth Hall museum and country park Potteric Carr and Huxter Well Marsh and the Trans Pennine Trail Climate Edit Doncaster has a maritime climate lacking extreme temperatures like much of the British Isles Its low elevation in the Don Valley in the lee of the Pennines and inland from the North Sea mean daytime summer temperatures are no lower than parts of South East England despite the more northerly location The nearest weather station is RAF Finningley now known as Doncaster Sheffield Airport about 5 5 mi 8 9 km to the south east of Doncaster town centre and at a similar elevation The Doncaster area is about as far north as the 21 5 C 70 7 F average July August maximum temperature isotherm reaches Indeed the August 1990 record high of 35 5 C 95 9 F 40 is the most northerly temperature above 35 C 95 F in the British Isles The nearby town of Bawtry slightly further south still holds the UK s September monthly record high temperature of 35 6 C 96 1 F 41 set in 1906 Typically the warmest day of the year reaches 29 1 C 84 4 F 42 and 12 or 13 days report a daytime maximum of 25 1 C 77 2 F or above The absolute minimum temperature stands at 13 5 C 7 7 F 43 set during December 1981 However online records only relate to the period 1960 2000 so that lower temperatures may have been recorded earlier During the 1971 2000 period an average of 51 9 nights of the year recorded an air frost Typically 106 9 days 44 of the year report 1 mm or more of rainfall Total annual precipitation is slightly below 560 mm 22 in 45 which is comparable to the driest parts of the UK due to Doncaster s location in the rain shadow of the Pennines Climate data for Doncaster DSA a elevation 12 m 39 ft 1991 2020 normals extremes 1960 2000Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 14 5 58 1 17 9 64 2 23 6 74 5 22 7 72 9 28 4 83 1 32 1 89 8 32 2 90 0 35 5 95 9 27 3 81 1 27 7 81 9 18 5 65 3 15 5 59 9 35 5 95 9 Average high C F 7 6 45 7 8 4 47 1 10 9 51 6 13 7 56 7 16 9 62 4 19 8 67 6 22 3 72 1 21 9 71 4 18 9 66 0 14 6 58 3 10 4 50 7 7 8 46 0 14 4 58 0 Daily mean C F 4 5 40 1 5 0 41 0 6 9 44 4 9 2 48 6 12 0 53 6 15 0 59 0 17 2 63 0 16 9 62 4 14 4 57 9 11 0 51 8 7 2 45 0 4 7 40 5 10 3 50 6 Average low C F 1 4 34 5 1 5 34 7 2 8 37 0 4 6 40 3 7 1 44 8 10 2 50 4 12 1 53 8 11 8 53 2 9 9 49 8 7 3 45 1 3 9 39 0 1 6 34 9 6 2 43 1 Record low C F 13 3 8 1 10 3 13 5 9 3 15 3 5 4 22 3 3 5 25 7 0 6 30 9 3 2 37 8 3 7 38 7 1 1 30 0 3 6 25 5 7 5 18 5 13 5 7 7 13 5 7 7 Average precipitation mm inches 42 3 1 67 35 5 1 40 32 0 1 26 42 5 1 67 40 9 1 61 64 6 2 54 55 6 2 19 54 3 2 14 51 8 2 04 56 7 2 23 56 5 2 22 49 6 1 95 582 3 22 92 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 10 0 8 9 8 4 8 4 8 6 9 8 9 8 9 4 8 6 10 1 11 3 10 4 113 7Mean monthly sunshine hours 59 8 80 9 117 6 158 5 195 6 176 8 192 5 178 8 137 7 99 9 64 6 53 9 1 516 6Source 1 Met Office 46 Source 2 KNMI 47 Weather station is located 6 miles 10 km from the Doncaster town centre Demography EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it January 2022 Tower blocks in Doncaster In the 2011 census the town of Doncaster identified as the built up area subdivision had a population of 109 805 48 while the wider Built up area had a population of 158 141 49 The Metropolitan Borough of Doncaster had a 2011 population of 302 402 50 while a mid 2019 estimate was 310 000 citation needed The 2011 census figure makes Doncaster s population very slightly larger than that of Rotherham pop 109 691 51 52 Doncaster compared 2011 Doncaster Metropolitan Borough of DoncasterWhite British 84 9 91 8 Asian 5 3 2 5 Black 1 3 0 8 Economy Edit Doncaster Market Place Panoramic The High Street in Doncaster city centre Doncaster emerged as an industrial centre in the late 18th to 20th centuries Its communications particularly its waterways meant that it became extremely busy and experienced migration to its centre Underneath Doncaster lies a huge natural resource by way of deep seam coal Distribution centres Edit Doncaster s proximity to major urban centres and motorway rail infrastructure gives it a number of major distribution centres including the 420 acre Doncaster International Railport which dispatches goods to Europe It also has large warehousing and logistic capabilities for retailers such as Next Tesco IKEA Amazon com Lidl and Faberge A marked proportion of fresh and frozen goods for northern supermarkets is dispatched by road from Doncaster Regeneration initiatives Edit Frenchgate shopping centre Doncaster College On 5 March 2004 Doncaster was granted Fairtrade Town status Over the last few years the Doncaster Lakeside as home to the Doncaster Rovers ground has undergone modernisation Doncaster has a bowling alley and a cinema near Lakeside The Dome opened in 1989 by Princess Diana contains a swimming pool gym ice rink and cafe The Frenchgate Centre is a shopping centre and transport interchange Opened in June 2006 53 it connects with the railway and bus stations Lakeside Village a retail outlet with some 45 retail shops and restaurants lies along the A6182 dual carriageway The Waterdale area of the town centre is currently undergoing rejuvenation with a new theatre known as CAST new civic offices and a new public square having been completed on the site of the Waterdale car park The old council house and civic theatre have been demolished and new housing is being built in the town itself opposite Doncaster Racecourse and in out of town suburbs Confectionery Edit During the 19th and 20th centuries confectioners based in Doncaster included Parkinson s 54 the Butterscotch inventors Nuttalls Mintoes 55 and Murray Mints In August 2011 Parkinson s put its 190 year old trademark up for sale on eBay 56 Coal and industrial expansion Edit The waterways River Don and Don Navigation were used to transport coal from Doncaster to the steel production centres at Rotherham Scunthorpe and Sheffield A large number of mining jobs were lost in the late 1980s Today coal mining has ceased Rockware Glass is a specialist glass manufacturer A production facility for chemical polymers was built in Wheatley Hall Road It changed hands during its existence until DuPont closed it in the mid 1990s Steel foundries rolling mills and wire mills were built close to the railways that brought steel from Rotherham and Sheffield Bridon Ropes produces wire rope including the ropes used at coal mines to haul coal and miners It is claimed to be the largest wire rope manufacturing plant in Europe Bridon supplied wire rope for the Olympic Stadium for the 2012 Olympic Games 57 During the First and Second World Wars the town became involved in munitions manufacture The railways and locomotive works Edit Main article Doncaster Works During the Industrial Revolution the Great Northern Railway established the Doncaster Locomotive and Carriage Building Works to meet Doncaster s communication needs the necessity to transport coal quickly and efficiently and Doncaster s expertise in specialist metal products An extensive housing programme was undertaken for the increased population The Chairman of the Great Northern anxious about the workers and their families spiritual welfare persuaded the directors to contribute towards the building of St James s Church which became known as the Plant Church The railway also built St James s School The Doncaster Plant became famous for building LNER locomotives Flying Scotsman and Mallard as well as many thousands more locomotives 58 By August 2008 the whole Plant complex had been razed to make way for a very large housing development The current when plant owner Wabtec continues to do refurbishment in Doncaster citation needed Doncaster railway station Today Doncaster railway station on the East Coast Main Line is linked to towns and cities across the UK such as Wakefield Leeds Hull Sheffield Manchester Birmingham London York Darlington Newcastle upon Tyne Berwick upon Tweed Edinburgh Motherwell Glasgow and Lincoln Doncaster PSB is one of the largest signalling centres on the UK network controlling hundreds of route miles of railway Doncaster International Railport and Doncaster iPort are important road rail intermodal terminals The rail freight company DB Cargo UK has its headquarters in Doncaster 59 Also nearby is one of the two National College for Advance Transport and Infrastructure Campuses that specialises in courses relating to the railways and transport systems 60 Aviation Edit Main article RAF Doncaster Doncaster Sheffield Airport In 1909 Doncaster Racecourse was chosen as the venue for an airshow after the world s first international air display in Reims France in 1909 Around a dozen aviators were present the most famous being Leon Delagrange and Roger Sommer Samuel Cody no relation to William F Cody in an attempt to win a prize offered by the Daily Mail for the first British pilot in a British aeroplane to fly a circular mile signed British naturalisation papers in front of the crowd with the band playing both God Save the King and the Star Spangled Banner Unfortunately he crashed his aeroplane on the first day of the meeting and made no significant flights During the First World War fighters based first on the racecourse then at a temporary airstrip near Finningley later RAF Finningley and now Doncaster Sheffield Airport and finally in 1916 on a newly built airfield alongside the racecourse were deployed to defend the east coast against Zeppelins On several occasions fighters took off to search for intruders but none were ever seen The Royal Flying Corps station trained pilots for the war in France Within months of the war ending the station was put up for sale and two of its three Belfast hangars the same type that now forms the basis for the Royal Air Force Museum at Hendon were sold to a Sheffield motor manufacturing company for storage and assembly at Finningley The third of the hangars stayed in place mainly housing buses until the 1970s when it was knocked down and replaced with modern buildings In 1920 the government asked local authorities to assist in forming a chain of airfields for civil air services Doncaster with expert advice from Alan Cobham opened its aviation centre on 26 May 1934 Development of the airfield continued and on 1 July 1936 an international service was opened to Amsterdam On 1 November 1938 after discussions with the Air Ministry 616 South Yorkshire Squadron of the Royal Auxiliary Air Force was formed Shortly after the outbreak of war in 1939 the squadron went to its battle station and played a part in the Battle of Britain After the departure of 616 squadron its place was taken by the formation of 271 Transport Squadron composed mainly of requisitioned civilian aircraft and obsolescent twin engined bombers 616 squadron was the first Allied jet fighter squadron equipped with the Gloster Meteor famed for using their wingtips to throw German V 1 flying bombs off course In 1944 after being equipped with American made Douglas DC 3 Dakotas the squadron moved south to take part in Operation Overlord and later in the airborne invasion at Arnhem where Flight Lieutenant David Lord was awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross After the war the airfield reverted to civilian flying and finally closed in 1992 Tractor production Edit Ploughing by tractor In 1930 International Harvester IH started the production of agricultural implements at a factory on Wheatley Hall Road and later at another in the Carr Hill area of Doncaster The first tractor built at the factory was a Farmall M which came off the production line on 13 September 1949 61 Tractors were initially built from parts shipped from the US The Wheatley Hall Road factory was extended after the war with a new foundry to make the heavy castings The factory started Crawler tractor production in 1953 By 1960 the factory was making a range of tractors from scratch designed specifically for British and European markets and sold under the McCormick International name Assembly moved in 1965 to the Carr Hill plant In 1983 tractor production was moved to IH s other Doncaster factory at Wheatley Hall In 1985 International Harvester sold its agricultural division to Tenneco Inc which then merged it with its subsidiary J I Case to form Case IH which continued to design and build its European tractor range in Doncaster but shutting the David Brown Ltd tractor factory near Huddersfield The 350 000th tractor came off the production line in 1999 In 2000 the factory was purchased by ARGO SpA an Italian based agricultural equipment builder Doncaster was the sole production site of the McCormick Tractors brand and the factory employed around 380 people although about 1 100 people are employed in the worldwide McCormick group In December 2006 the parent company ARGO Spa announced that the Doncaster facility would close in 2007 with the loss of around 325 jobs The announcement was made only a week before Christmas Sixty one years of tractor production in Doncaster ended in 2007 Culture and tourism Edit The Mansion House and New Betting Room Doncaster engraved by John Rogers after a drawing by Nathaniel Whittock published by Isaac Taylor Hinton 62 London 1829 The architect was James Paine 1746 1748 Doncaster Museum and Art Gallery opened as the town s main museum in 1964 It covers natural history archaeology local history and fine and decorative art 63 It has a major exhibition of silverware and trophies won at Doncaster Racecourse It also houses the Regimental Museum of the King s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry Yorkshire Wildlife Park Doncaster is home to Yorkshire Wildlife Park which has over 400 animals and over 70 different species including the only polar bears in England The South Yorkshire Aircraft Museum formerly AeroVenture is based on the old site of RAF Doncaster at Doncaster Lakeside The Trolleybus Museum in the nearby village of Sandtoft specialises in preserving trolleybuses and claims to have the largest collection of them in Europe with over 60 examples Markham Grange Steam Museum in a garden centre in the nearby village of Brodsworth has a private collection of steam engines Ashworth Barracks Museum is a military museum in Balby telling the story of the men awarded the Victoria Cross It also houses a First World War exhibit including a Weekers Helmet one of only two known that exist in the UK Since 1973 Doncaster has been the home of the Doncaster Youth Jazz Association DYJA Founded by John Ellis DYJA has been a training ground for generations of amateur and professional jazz musicians including Andy Cato of Groove Armada Denis Rollins John Escreet Nadim Teimoori and Reuben Fowler In 1956 Tish the goldfish was won at a funfair in Doncaster Tish lived till the age of 43 becoming the world s oldest known goldfish 64 Theatre and cinemas Edit Cast is a 22 million venue opened officially on Monday 2 September 2013 Cast includes a 620 seat auditorium a flexible studio space drama studio dance studio education and ancillary space and a large foyer with a cafe Its director was Kully Thiarai formerly of the Contact Theatre Manchester 65 The Doncaster Little Theatre is a 99 seat community theatre which puts on 12 of its own in house shows including a pantomime along with two Afternoon Cabarets a month during the day Hire companies also use the theatre space for their own shows The town has an 11 screen multiplex Vue which was expanded as part of a 5 million upgrade 66 Events and concerts take place at Doncaster Racecourse and The Dome Leisure Centre Nightlife Edit The Silver Street Cleveland Street and High Street areas have over 40 bars and clubs within a 2 3 minute walk of each other and other bars can be found on Priory Walk Lazarus Court Bradford Row and around the Market Place Various restaurants serving food from around the world can also be found in the town centre especially in the Netherhall and Copley Road areas Transport EditRoad Edit Doncaster sits on the European route E15 and is the starting point of European route E13 The E13 connects Doncaster Sheffield and Nottingham to London In the United Kingdom European route designators are not displayed on road signs The intended motorway design is evidenced in road maps The M1 was extended northward to Leeds which is why the E13 starts at Doncaster and follows the path of the M18 and the M1 Doncaster is situated on the A1 M and M18 motorways within 20 minutes of the key M1 and M62 motorways The 15 mi 24 km A1 M motorway bypass cost 6 million and was opened by Ernest Marples in 1961 The former route is now the A638 and partly the A614 to Blyth Air Edit Until 2022 Doncaster was a European hub with n international airport Doncaster Sheffield Airport opened in 2005 closing in November 2022 after the Peel Group cited it was unlikely to return to profitability 67 Rail Edit Doncaster is also an important railway town with a station on the East Coast Main Line Doncaster International Railport facilities link to the Channel Tunnel Bus Edit New developments include campus facilities for Doncaster College and the Frenchgate Interchange a unification of bus and railway stations with the Frenchgate Centre The extension to the shopping centre and the new bus station opened on 8 June 2006 when all Doncaster bus routes started to use the station Cycling Edit Cycling in Doncaster is increasingly more popular Its situation on the Trans Pennine Trail means it is connected to other surrounding towns Additionally cycle lanes are being installed across the borough allowing for safer road commuter cycling Media EditTelevision Edit Doncaster is served by BBC Yorkshire from Leeds which broadcasts the flagship nightly news programme Look North ITV Yorkshire is the local ITV franchise Radio Edit Doncaster is served by several commercial and community radio stations For 22 years Trax FM was arguably the most popular station based in the city It was rebranded as Greatest Hits Radio Yorkshire in 2020 along with numerous other stations in the region TX1 Radio was set up following the closure of Trax FM and broadcasts exclusively on DAB radio to Doncaster and Bassetlaw Additionally BBC Radio Sheffield and Hallam FM broadcast to South Yorkshire from Sheffield Sine FM is a community radio station broadcasting to Doncaster s central business district and inner suburbs on FM TMCR 95 3 is a community radio station based in Thorne serving North East Doncaster on FM Station Frequency TransmitterBBC Radio 2 89 3 FM Holme MossBBC Radio 3 91 5 FM Holme MossBBC Radio 4 93 7 FM Holme MossTMCR 95 3 95 3 FM ThorneViking FM 96 9 FM High HunsleyBBC Radio 1 98 9 FM Holme MossClassic FM 101 1 FM Holme MossSine FM 102 6 FM DoncasterHallam FM 103 4 FM CliftonBBC Radio Sheffield 104 1 FM Holme MossCapital Yorkshire 105 1 FM Emley MoorCapital Yorkshire 105 8 FM High HunsleyHeart Yorkshire 106 2 FM Emley MoorGreatest Hits Radio Yorkshire 107 1 FM DoncasterGreat Yorkshire Radio DAB VariousTX1 Radio DAB VariousPrint media Edit The Doncaster Free Press is a weekly newspaper distributed across the greater Doncaster region Doncaster has its own edition of the Sheffield Star printed daily The Yorkshire Post is the local daily broadsheet newspaper from Leeds The Dearne Valley Weekender is a weekly newspaper targeted towards the Dearne Valley which includes some parts of South West Doncaster although it is widely available across the town Sport EditRacecourse Edit Main article Doncaster Racecourse Doncaster Racecourse From around the 16th century Doncaster embraced the wealthy stagecoach trade This led to horse breeding in Doncaster which in turn led to the start of horseraces there The earliest important race in Doncaster s history was the Doncaster Gold Cup first run over Cantley Common in 1766 The Doncaster Cup is the oldest continuing regulated horserace in the world Rugby football Edit Keepmoat Stadium Founded in 1951 Doncaster formerly known as Doncaster Dragons RLFC and Doncaster Lakers have played consistently in rugby league s National League One and its successor the RFL Championship with its home at the Keepmoat Stadium Doncaster Knights currently play in rugby union s RFU Championship with their home at Castle Park Football Edit Doncaster Rovers vs Bristol Rovers in the 2007 Football League Trophy Final Doncaster Rovers F C and one of the most successful women s football clubs in the country Doncaster Rovers Belles play at the Keepmoat Stadium It is also the home of the British professional wrestling promotion One Pro Wrestling Others Edit Speedway racing was staged at Doncaster Greyhound Stadium in 1969 and 1970 The team was known as the Stallions and then the Dragons The team raced in the British League Second Division Doncaster has a men s basketball team called the Doncaster Danum Eagles who compete in National League Division 2 Doncaster additionally has an American football team called the Doncaster Mustangs who are in Division 1 of the British American Football League The town also has regular involvement in the Tour de Yorkshire cycling event having the finish line of stage two of the 2016 Tour de Yorkshire hosted in Doncaster as well as the finish line of stage one of the 2018 Tour de Yorkshire hosted in the town as well International links EditDoncaster is twinned with Avion France 68 Herten Germany 69 Camden England United Kingdom Gliwice Poland Wilmington North Carolina United States 70 Several roads in the Lakeside area are named after Doncaster s twin towns such as Gliwice Way Herten Way Wilmington Drive and Carolina Way named after the state where Wilmington lies Former Edit Ozyorsk Chelyabinsk Oblast Russia ceased following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine Doncaster cuts ties with Russian twin town of Ozyorsk as Mansion House lights up for UkraineNotable people Edit John McLaughlin David Firth animator and filmmaker 71 John McLaughlin highly reputed guitarist and frontman of Mahavishnu Orchestra Jeremy Clarkson famous for being the presenter of Top Gear and face of the show The Grand Tour Louis Tomlinson English singer songwriter and model former member of the band One Direction Kevin Keegan football manager and former player Emma Chambers actress famous for her role of Alice Horton in The Vicar of Dibley and Honey Thacker in Notting Hill Yungblud singer songwriter and musician Sarah Stevenson 2011 world champion of Taekwondo James Toseland a former motocyclist currently vocalist in a band with his own name Thomas Howes known for playing the role of William Mason in the famous British TV series Downton Abbey Roy Clarke a writer famous for his Last of the Summer Wine and Keeping Up Appearances Diana Rigg actress Tan France one of the hosts of Queer Eye Andrew White presenter and producer of Walks Around Britain and writer of The Walker Mysteries novels Danny Schofield a professional football coach and a former player 72 See also Edit Yorkshire portalListed buildings in Doncaster Town Ward Doncaster Education City List of people from Doncaster Doncaster Pride gay pride event Trolleybuses in Doncaster Doncaster Caledonian SocietyNotes EditReferences Edit https www citypopulation de en uk cities england cityid 7147 https www citypopulation de en uk cities ua cityid 7147 https www citypopulation de en uk admin south yorkshire E08000017 doncaster BBC Pronouncing Dictionary of British Names Doncaster dictionary com Archived from the original on 11 October 2019 Retrieved 11 October 2019 Humberhead Levels Historic England www historicengland org uk Retrieved 20 November 2022 https www citypopulation de en uk cities england cityid 7147 Platinum Jubilee Eight towns to be made cities for Platinum Jubilee BBC News 19 May 2022 Retrieved 20 May 2022 The King is coming to Doncaster Doncaster Council Archived from the original on 3 November 2022 Retrieved 3 November 2022 a b Where will King Charles III visit during his first trip to Yorkshire as monarch ITV 2 November 2022 Retrieved 3 November 2022 Buckland Paul 1978 A First Century Shield from Doncaster Yorkshire Britannia 9 247 269 doi 10 2307 525941 ISSN 0068 113X JSTOR 525941 S2CID 162342730 RIB 618 Altar dedicated to the Mother Goddesses Roman Inscriptions of Britain Archived from the original on 20 August 2016 Retrieved 17 February 2021 Charles Wellbeloved 1881 Handbook of the Antiquities in the Grounds and Museum of the Yorkshire Philosophical Society Yorkshire Philosophical Society pp 34 35 Nennius attrib Theodor Mommsen ed Historia Brittonum VI Composed after AD 830 in Latin Hosted at Latin Wikisource David Nash Ford The 28 Cities of Britain Archived 15 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine at Britannia 2000 Newman John Henry 1844 Lives of the English Saints St German Bishop of Auxerre London James Toovey p 92 Retrieved 30 August 2018 via archive org Bishop Ussher cited in Newman s life of Saint German 16 John Wainwright 1829 Yorkshire An historical and topographical introduction J Blackwell p 1 Retrieved 1 September 2011 Open Domesday online Hexthorpe at Doncaster Archived from the original on 10 November 2016 Retrieved 9 November 2016 a b Hey David 2003 Medieval South Yorkshire Ashbourne Landmark Pub ISBN 1 84306 080 9 OCLC 54874386 Why an historical anomaly means Bonny Donny could leave the UK too Archived from the original on 28 October 2017 Retrieved 5 April 2018 Doncaster may actually be owned by Scotland Independent co uk 18 September 2014 Archived from the original on 23 September 2017 Retrieved 20 September 2017 http public art shu ac uk pmsa doncaster 00000046 htm Archived 4 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine Corn Exchange Public Art with details of construction date GB Historical GIS University of Portsmouth Doncaster District through time Population Statistics Total Population A Vision of Britain through Time Archived from the original on 5 October 2017 a b Collections of the Maine Historical Society The Society 20 May 1890 via Internet Archive a b Waller Symeon Mark 30 October 2012 Publishing Doncaster History ed The Big Book of Doncaster History Doncaster History Publishing p 1697 Doncaster Carr Sheds LNER Magazine 1927 p 387 1 Archived 10 November 2016 at the Wayback Machine Vision of Britain Doncaster 2 Archived 10 November 2016 at the Wayback Machine Vision of Britain Stafford and Tickhill Wapentake Retro Gallery 9 loved and lost Doncaster landmarks Sheffield Telegraph 6 April 2016 Archived from the original on 14 February 2021 Retrieved 8 February 2021 Historic England Minster Church of St George 1151447 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 15 July 2020 Doncaster Minster website Archived from the original on 21 March 2012 UK backs leaving EU as Doncaster votes two to one to get out Doncaster Free Press Archived from the original on 24 September 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Doncaster Brexit Financial implications of leaving EU that gave Doncaster 133m in funding Doncaster Free Press Archived from the original on 24 September 2016 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Nick Fletcher MP s Speech on Doncaster City Status Nick Fletcher MP Retrieved 25 November 2021 O Connor Mary 20 May 2022 Platinum Jubilee Eight new cities created in Queen s honour BBC News Retrieved 20 May 2022 Doncaster City Status Naming Retrieved 8 September 2022 Doncaster Civic Office AJ Buildings Library Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 9 February 2021 a b c Council Doncaster Green Belt review Doncaster Council Government of the United Kingdom Archived from the original on 22 March 2018 Retrieved 4 April 2018 August 1990 maximum Archived from the original on 31 March 2012 Retrieved 27 February 2011 Bawtry Maximum Archived from the original on 17 January 2011 Retrieved 27 February 2011 Annual average maximum Archived from the original on 31 March 2012 Retrieved 27 February 2011 1981 Minimum Archived from the original on 31 March 2012 Retrieved 27 February 2011 1971 2000 Wetdays Archived from the original on 31 March 2012 Retrieved 27 February 2011 1971 00 Rainfall Archived from the original on 31 March 2012 Retrieved 27 February 2011 Doncaster 1991 2020 averages Met Office Retrieved 4 January 2022 Doncaster extreme values KNMI Retrieved 5 November 2017 UK Census 2011 Local Area Report Doncaster Built up area sub division E35001159 Nomis Office for National Statistics Retrieved 5 September 2019 UK Census 2011 Local Area Report Doncaster Built up area E34004696 Nomis Office for National Statistics Retrieved 5 September 2019 UK Census 2011 Local Area Report Doncaster Local Authoirty E08000017 Nomis Office for National Statistics Doncaster UK Census Data 2011 Archived from the original on 16 March 2016 Retrieved 16 April 2016 KS201EW Ethnic group Nomis Official Labour Market Statistics Archived from the original on 22 October 2016 Retrieved 16 April 2016 Doncaster Transport Interchange www doncaster interchange co uk Retrieved 8 March 2022 Official Website of Parkinson s confectionery The confectioners Traditional Doncaster Butterscotch Toffee Fudge doncasterbutterscotch com Archived from the original on 13 December 2007 Retrieved 23 April 2009 Doncaster Museum townfield doncaster sch uk Archived from the original on 22 August 2010 Retrieved 23 April 2009 Parkinson s Doncaster Butterscotch inc trademark eBay Archived from the original on 28 September 2011 Retrieved 11 August 2011 Bridon helps raise the roof on the 2012 Olympic Stadium Wire Rope Exchange 7 January 2010 Archived from the original on 27 September 2016 Retrieved 23 September 2016 Larkin Edgar J 1988 The Railway Workshops of Britain 1823 1986 London Macmillan ISBN 0 333 39431 3 OCLC 59095511 Our History DB Cargo UK 11 April 2016 Archived from the original on 2 February 2018 Retrieved 1 February 2018 Doncaster Campus NCATI 15 February 2017 Archived from the original on 21 September 2020 Retrieved 23 September 2020 The Roar of Dust and Diesel A story of International Harvester Doncaster by Mike Teanby published by Japonica Press 2004 ISBN 1 904686 06 0 Brother of John Howard Hinton places to visit in Doncaster visitdoncaster co uk Archived from the original on 2 November 2010 Retrieved 23 December 2011 Hoe Danielle 23 May 2020 7 bizarre facts you never knew about Doncaster YorkshireLive Archived from the original on 20 June 2020 Retrieved 21 October 2020 New 22m arts venue opens in Doncaster What s on Stage 2 September 2013 Archived from the original on 6 December 2013 Retrieved 30 November 2013 Herten Triangle Business Doncaster Archived from the original on 16 October 2018 Retrieved 15 October 2018 Bosses confirm closure of Doncaster Sheffield Airport 26 September 2022 British towns twinned with French towns England Archant Community Media Ltd Archived from the original on 5 July 2013 Retrieved 11 July 2013 Stadtepartnerschaften in German Herten Germany Rathaus Stadt Herten Archived from the original on 3 September 2012 Retrieved 30 March 2015 Sister Cities Sister Cities Association of Wilmington Archived from the original on 28 September 2013 Retrieved 25 September 2013 David Firth s Salad Fingers Is Coming To Manchester For A Live Show Secret Manchester 25 February 2020 Retrieved 28 May 2022 Ball Lucy 12 famous people who are all from Doncaster Doncester Free Press Retrieved 5 February 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Doncaster Doncaster travel guide from Wikivoyage The Doncaster Council website Doncaster in Yorkshire com website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Doncaster amp oldid 1132967693, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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