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Fairford

Fairford is a market town in Gloucestershire, England. The town lies in the Cotswold hills on the River Coln, 6 miles (9.7 km) east of Cirencester, 4 miles (6.4 km) west of Lechlade and 9 miles (14 km) north of Swindon. Nearby are RAF Fairford and the Cotswold Water Park.

Fairford
River Coln, Fairford
Fairford
Location within Gloucestershire
Population3,236 (2011 census)[1]
OS grid referenceSP149010
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townFairford
Postcode districtGL7
Dialling code01285
PoliceGloucestershire
FireGloucestershire
AmbulanceSouth Western
UK Parliament
WebsiteWelcome to Fairford Town Council
List of places
UK
England
Gloucestershire
51°42′29″N 1°47′06″W / 51.708°N 1.785°W / 51.708; -1.785

History edit

Iron Ages edit

There was a major roundhouse settlement in Horcott (on the south side of the town),[2] and the Welsh Way, which passed through Fairford, was used during this period as a trade route.

Middle Ages edit

Evidence of settlement in Fairford dates back to the 9th century and it received a royal market grant in the 12th century.[3] An estate in Fairford, which seemingly belonging to Gloucester Abbey, was bequeathed to Burgred of Mercia in the mid 9th century.[3] At the time of the Norman conquest, Brictric, a large landowner in the West Country, held a manor in Fairford.[3] Matilda of Flanders came to own the land which became property of the Crown.[3] In 1100, Robert Fitzhamon, the first Norman feudal baron of Gloucester, is recorded as owning the land which would be passed down to subsequent barons of Gloucester for the next 200 years,[3] along with the manor of Tewkesbury.

In the Domesday Book, Fairford was listed as Fareforde.[4] In 1066 there were three mills in the town, one of which was still used in the wool trade by the 13th century. The mill that survives today was built in the 17th century.[3]

Both Edward I and Henry VIII were royal visitors to the town in 1276 and 1520 respectively.[3]

Fairford is recorded as having a prison in 1248. Hundred courts were held by the lord of the manor and borough.[3]

By the 15th century the land of Fairford was managed by wool merchants John Twynyho and John Tame after George Plantagenet, Duke of Clarence was forced to give up his lands after being tried for treason.[3]

17th and 18th century edit

In 1608, the inhabitants of Fairford were mostly agricultural labourers or artisans.[5]

Fairford Park, to the north of the town, was made part of the manor house grounds, built by Andrew Barker in the 1660s.[3][6] It would later be turned into a deer park by James Lambe, with an obelisk built to mark the edge of the grounds.[3][7] The park remained in the Barker family until it was sold to Earnest Cook in 1945.

In 1755, seven innkeepers were licensed in Fairford. The first recording of an inn had been in 1419 and this grew over the centuries owing to Fairford's location as a connecting town between larger metropolitan areas. Stagecoach routes often called at Fairford before travelling on to Gloucester, Cirencester, Bristol, Oxford and London.[3]

19th and 20th century edit

 
Plaque commemorating the Polish camp on Leafield Road

The first outbreak of the 1830-1831 Swing Riots withinin Gloucestershire, happened in Fairford on 26th November 1830.[8] Farming machinery which was being manufactured in the town was destroyed by protestors who then joined forces with those from the surrounding villages of Quenington, Hatherop, Coln and Southrop.[3][8]

By this time there were pounds in the town as well as a village lock-up that had been around since at least 1809.[3]

RAF Fairford was constructed in 1944 as a joint British and American base.[9]

From 1947 to 1959, Fairford housed 1,200 Poles in The Displaced Persons Camp who had been displaced due to the Second World War.[10] The site had originally been an American Air Force hospital that was built during the war. The buildings were then repurposed for the camp before being demolished in 1977.[3]

21st century edit

Iraq War edit

In March 2003 'Flowers to Fairford' was held as a protest against the use of RAF Fairford as the base for the 14 B-52 bombers aircraft which were used to bomb Iraq as part of Operation Desert Storm. Several thousand people attended and there was a large police presence, but the event passed off peacefully.[11] A coach load of people intending to protest was stopped in Lechlade under Section 44 of the Terrorism Act 2000 and searched by police and sent back to London.[12][13] Ninety of the detained demonstrators formed Fairford Coach Action and sought legal recourse against Gloucestershire constabulary.[14] The group stated that:

"On 22 March 2003, the police used surprisingly extreme tactics to prevent more than 120 activists from reaching [the] legally sanctioned anti-war demonstration in Fairford, (Gloucestershire, UK). The demonstration outside a US Airforce Base in Fairford was well attended with estimates of up to 5,000 activists attending. Among the scheduled speakers on the day were writer George Monbiot and Caroline Lucas (MEP). The people who police prevented from attending were a diverse group with a broad range of affiliations. The main thing that they had in common was the desire to travel from London by coach and the intention of joining the legal protest in Fairford. Two of the four main scheduled speakers for the Fairford demonstration were travelling on these coaches from London. After the coaches had travelled two and a half hours from London, the coaches were stopped by police just miles from the demonstration. Using section 60 powers (of the Public Order and Criminal Justice Act 1994) police searched the coaches for weapons for one and a half hours. The passengers cooperated with this search, and they were invited to reboard the coaches when the search concluded. No arrests were made and no items found. After all the passengers boarded, the coaches were escorted immediately back to London under a continuous 9–12 vehicle police escort."

In 2013, after appeal, Gloucestershire police's actions were found to be unlawful, and included breaching "protesters' rights to freedom of expression and freedom of peaceful assembly."[15] Some of the demonstrators involved were awarded upwards of £4,000 in compensation by a judge after taking their claim to court.[16]

Flooding edit

In July 2007 Fairford suffered unseasonably high rainfall which led to major flooding of 64 homes on Milton Street and London Street as well as in some other surrounding areas. This meant that many of the annual events had to be cancelled.[citation needed]

Archaeological find edit

In 2013, a female skeleton was found in the River Coln and was later discovered to be of Sub-Saharan origin. The remains were estimated to be around 1000 years old and it is thought that the woman was around 18-24 when she died.[17][18]

Churches edit

St Mary's Church edit

The Church of England parish church of Saint Mary is renowned for its complete set of medieval stained glass, stone carvings and misericords. Rebuilt in the early 1490s by the wool merchant John Tame (d.1500), the church is an example of late Perpendicular Gothic architecture that is characterised by slim stone window mullions and light but strong buttresses. The style enabled larger windows than previously, allowing much more light into the building. Grade 1 listed by English Heritage, its structure and details remains unaltered since built.[19]

Stained glass, St Mary's Church edit

St. Mary's is of national historical and architectural importance because it houses the most complete set of mediaeval stained glass windows in the country, attributed to Barnard Flower. The glass survived the Reformation when many images in English churches were destroyed. In 1642, during the Civil War, they narrowly avoided destruction[20] when the Roundhead army was marching on the nearby town of Cirencester.

Some of the panes were damaged during a storm in November 1703 and those were repaired and modified or replaced. A conservation and restoration programme began in 1988 and finished in 2010. Clear glass now protects the old glass.[21]

Churchyard, St Mary's Church edit

The churchyard includes a stone memorial to Tiddles, the church cat who fell off the church roof. There is also a stone grotesque to commemorate a young boy who climbed up the walls of the church and jumped, falling to his death. The churchyard contains eight Commonwealth war graves; three British Army soldiers, a Royal Navy seaman and a Royal Air Force airman of World War I and two British soldiers and a Home Guardsman of World War II.[22]

St Thomas' of Canterbury edit

Fairford has a 19th-century Catholic church of St Thomas of Canterbury. Following the closure of the recusant chapel at Hatherop Castle in 1844, a church was built at Horcott the following year at a cost of £700. The first Mass was celebrated in 1845, five years before the Restoration of the Hierarchy in England and before the creation of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Clifton. The stained glass window behind the altar depicts St. Thomas of Canterbury in the centre panel, showing the date 1845. The adjoining Presbytery was built 20 years later to designs by Benjamin Bucknall,[25] the architect of Woodchester Mansion. The church contains an organ by Hill and stained glass by William Wailes, Hardman and Geoffrey Robinson. The two windows in the porch were added to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the first Mass. The left window depicts the crest of the de Mauley family; that on the right depicts the Eucharist.

Fairford United Church edit

In 1981 a group of local Methodists approached the local Congregational Church to use the chapel for their services as there was no Methodist Church in Fairford. They were officially united into one congregation in 1986 and the present church follows the traditions of both the Methodist Church and the Congregational Federation.

The churches in and around Fairford are represented by the organisation Churches Together Around Fairford (CTAF) which has meetings and organises services of unity.

Governance edit

Fairford was part of the Cirencester Rural District until the Local Government Act 1972, when it became part of the Cotswold District.[3]

Fairford has a Parish Council with 13 members. The mayor is James Nicholls.

After a boundary review implemented for the 2015 local elections, Fairford was split into two District Council electoral wards called Fairford North Ward (single member) and Lechlade, Kempsford and Fairford South Ward (two member). On Cotswold District Council Fairford North Ward is represented by Liberal Democrat Andrew Doherty and Lechlade, Kempsford and Fairford South Ward is as of May 2023 represented by Liberal Democrats Councillors Clare Muir and Helene Mansilla.

As of 2021, the town is represented on Gloucestershire County Council by Conservative Councillor Dom Morris who represents the Fairford and Lechlade on Thames Division.

The ward population at the 2011 census was 4,031.[26]

2023 Cotswold district Council Election Results edit

Fairford North Ward
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Democrats Michael Vann 406 51.5 -17.7
Conservative Tom Dutton 316 40.1 +9.8
Heritage James Nicholls 67 8.5 N/A
Majority 90 11.4
Turnout 789
Liberal Democrats hold Swing
Lechlade, Kempsford and Fairford South Ward (2 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Democrats Clare Muir 1,150 56.5 +26.2
Liberal Democrats Helene Mansilla 976 48.0 N/A
Conservative Stephen Andrews* 785 38.6 -13.4
Conservative Steve Trotter* 776 38.2 -13.6
Labour Esme Barlow Hall 131 6.4 N/A
Labour Trevor Smith 114 5.6 -9.1
Majority 191
Turnout 2034 9.4
Liberal Democrats gain from Conservative
Liberal Democrats gain from Conservative

2017 Cotswold district Council by-election results edit

Fairford North Ward

Fairford North Ward by-election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Democrats Andrew Doherty 610 68.1 +40.2
Conservative Dominic Morris 270 30.1 -20.9
Green Xanthe Messenger 15 1.8 +1.8
Majority 270 38.0
Turnout 897 46.57
Liberal Democrats gain from Conservative Swing 30.6%

2021 Gloucestershire County Council election results edit

Fairford and Lechlade on Thames
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Conservative Dom Morris 2,326 59 +4
Liberal Democrats Tony Dale 1,344 34 +2
Labour Sharon Aldrick 261 7 +1
Majority 982 25 +2
Turnout 3,931 45.20 +5.40
Conservative hold Swing

Education edit

The town's secondary school is Farmor's School, an 11-18 co-educational academy. The school was judged to be of outstanding standard, having achieved Grade 1 in its Ofsted inspection in 2010.[27] After becoming an academy it achieved lower grades from the board over the years: "Good", "Requires Improvement" and "Good" again in 2013, 2017 and 2021 respectively.[28]

There is also a primary school (Fairford Primary),[29] and a playgroup. Coln House School was a 9-16, residential/day, state special school. After being put into special measures following a 2016 Ofsted report, the school closed in March 2017.[30] Built in 1822 by Alexander Iles as a private asylum called The Retreat, it closed in 1944 before becoming a school in 1949.[31]

Transport edit

Fairford was formerly linked to Oxford by the Witney Railway and its extension the East Gloucestershire Railway. The route was active between 1873 and 1962.[3] There have been reports that part of the old track could be cleared of accumulated mountains of detritus and overgrown trees to be re-opened as a cycle path.[citation needed] There is a bus service to Cirencester and Lechlade, from where travellers can transfer to another bus and travel onwards to Swindon.

Media edit

Local news and television programmes is provided by BBC South and ITV Meridian. Television signals are received from the Oxford TV transmitter. [32]

The town is served by both BBC Radio Wiltshire and BBC Radio Gloucestershire. Other radio stations including Heart West, Greatest Hits Radio South West, Cotswolds Radio, community based radio station [33] and Air Tattoo Live, a RSL station which broadcast coverage during the Royal International Air Tattoo.

Fairford is served by the weekly local newspaper, Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard. [34]

Events edit

Air Tattoo edit

For three days every year RAF Fairford hosts one of the world's largest military air show – the Royal International Air Tattoo. The event brings a boost to the economy of the town and surrounding areas.[citation needed]

Ploughing Championship edit

The Fairford, Faringdon, Filkins and Burford Championship and Country Show held every year since 1948.[35]

Steam Rally edit

The Ernest Cook Trust used to host the annual Fairford Steam Rally and Show. The Show closed in 2015 after running for 46 years.[36]

Sport and leisure edit

Fairford has a non-league football team Fairford Town F.C. who play and train at Cinder Lane. Fairford have their own rugby team FRFC, playing in green and black strip. The town also has the Walnut Tree Field: a large playing field and park, a cricket club (dating back to the early 1900s),[3] a bowling, sailing and water skiing club.[37][38][39] Fairford had a leisure centre until 2019 which had been managed by Farmor's School since 2013.[40]

Fairford also has a youth football club, based at Horcott Road which caters for children between the ages of 5 and 15 years old. The club, established in 1976, is a FA Chartered Club, run by volunteers for the benefit of local children from Fairford and surrounding villages. Teams from U8 and above play in the North Wiltshire Youth Football Leagues.

Literature edit

The Secret Diary of Sarah Thomas, 1860 – 1865, is a published journal by a Victorian diarist living in Fairford. It features local landmarks.[41]

Notable residents edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 23 March 2015.
  2. ^ Biddulph, Edward. "Oxford Archaeology - Latest news". oxfordarchaeology.com. Retrieved 22 April 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Herbet, N. M. (1981). "'Fairford', in A History of the County of Gloucester: Volume 7". www.british-history.ac.uk. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
  4. ^ "The Domesday Book Online - Gloucestershire A-F". www.domesdaybook.co.uk.
  5. ^ Warmington, Andrew (1989). "FROGS, TOADS AND THE RESTORATION IN A GLOUCESTERSHIRE VILLAGE". Midland History. 14 (1): 30–42. doi:10.1179/mdh.1989.14.1.30. ISSN 0047-729X.
  6. ^ "Andrew Barker ca.1630-1700 - Book Owners Online". bookowners.online. Retrieved 8 January 2023.
  7. ^ The Gentleman's House in the British Atlantic World 1680-1780. doi:10.1057/9781137378385.
  8. ^ a b Hobsbawm, Eric J.; Rudé, George (1969). Captain Swing. Lawrence and Wishart.
  9. ^ Morgan, William (13 December 2022). "US Air Force moving HQ to RAF Fairford". GloucestershireLive. Retrieved 8 January 2023.
  10. ^ "Memorial marks 50th anniversary of Polish camp". Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard. Retrieved 8 January 2023.
  11. ^ "Flowers to Fairford - 22 March 2003". www.fairford.org. Archived from the original on 29 July 2012.
  12. ^ . 31 December 2005. Archived from the original on 31 December 2005. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
  13. ^ Dent, Jackie (14 October 2004). "'Coach-napped' activists protest outside court". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 16 April 2023.
  14. ^ Staff (23 October 2006). "Anti-war protesters' rights breached, court told". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 16 April 2023.
  15. ^ "RAF Fairford protesters win legal battle against police". BBC News. 8 February 2013.
  16. ^ Bowcott, Owen; correspondent, legal affairs (8 February 2013). "Iraq war activists to get £4,000 compensation over 2003 protest". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 16 April 2023.
  17. ^ Gover, Dominic (18 September 2013). "The First Black Briton? 1,000 Year Old Skeleton of African Woman Discovered by Schoolboys in Gloucestershire River". International Business Times UK. Retrieved 17 April 2023.
  18. ^ "Schoolboys amazed that skeleton is 1,000 year old African woman". Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard. Retrieved 17 April 2023.
  19. ^ Historic England. "Church of St Mary, Fairford (1089998)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 12 July 2011.
  20. ^ Don Cobbett (8 August 2011). . Fairford & District U3A. Archived from the original on 12 September 2016. Retrieved 6 December 2018.
  21. ^ Andrew Russel (8 June 2012). "The History of St Mary's Church". St. Mary's Church Fairford. Retrieved 6 December 2018.
  22. ^ http://www.cwgc.org/find-a-cemetery/cemetery/38552/FAIRFORD%20(ST.%20MARY)%20CHURCHYARD CWGC Cemetery Report, details from casualty record.
  23. ^ Keble, Rev. Edward, St. Mary's Church, Fairford. 6th. ed., Much Wenlock, 2010, p.27
  24. ^ MacLean, Sir John (ed.), Visitation of Gloucestershire 1623, London, 1885, p.260 Tame, p.51 Dennis
  25. ^ "St Thomas Catholic Church Fairford". www.stthomasparish.plus.com.
  26. ^ "Ward population 2011". Retrieved 23 March 2015.
  27. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 July 2010.
  28. ^ Ofsted Communications Team (25 September 2021). "Find an inspection report and registered childcare". reports.ofsted.gov.uk. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
  29. ^ "Fairford C of E Primary School".
  30. ^ "Establishment Coln House School". Gov.uk. Retrieved 29 June 2021.
  31. ^ "Coln House School". Historic England. Retrieved 29 June 2021.
  32. ^ "Full Freeview on the Oxford (Oxfordshire, England) transmitter". UK Free TV. 1 May 2004. Retrieved 25 September 2023.
  33. ^ "Cotswolds Radio". Retrieved 26 September 2023.
  34. ^ "Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard". British Papers. 25 October 2013. Retrieved 26 September 2023.
  35. ^ FFF&B. "F.F.F.& B Ploughing Match". F.F.F.& B Ploughing Match. Retrieved 18 April 2023.
  36. ^ "Breaking: Fairford Steam Show to close after running for 46 years".
  37. ^ "Walnut Tree Field - playing field & park". 18 August 2018.
  38. ^ "Fairford CC".
  39. ^ "Leisure Centre". 16 December 2000.
  40. ^ "Row over report looking into closure of Tetbury and Fairford leisure centres". Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard. Retrieved 8 January 2023.
  41. ^ "The secret diary of Sarah Thomas : 1860-1865 | WorldCat.org". www.worldcat.org.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Fairford community website
  • Fairford Town CCouncil website
  • Fairford United Church 23 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • Fairford Youth FC
  • St. Mary's Church in Fairford – Sacred Destinations
  • St Thomas' Catholic Church website Includes history, pictures and details of services.
  • BBC archive film of Fairford from 1986

fairford, other, uses, disambiguation, market, town, gloucestershire, england, town, lies, cotswold, hills, river, coln, miles, east, cirencester, miles, west, lechlade, miles, north, swindon, nearby, cotswold, water, park, river, coln, location, within, glouc. For other uses see Fairford disambiguation Fairford is a market town in Gloucestershire England The town lies in the Cotswold hills on the River Coln 6 miles 9 7 km east of Cirencester 4 miles 6 4 km west of Lechlade and 9 miles 14 km north of Swindon Nearby are RAF Fairford and the Cotswold Water Park FairfordRiver Coln FairfordFairfordLocation within GloucestershirePopulation3 236 2011 census 1 OS grid referenceSP149010DistrictCotswoldShire countyGloucestershireRegionSouth WestCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townFairfordPostcode districtGL7Dialling code01285PoliceGloucestershireFireGloucestershireAmbulanceSouth WesternUK ParliamentThe CotswoldsWebsiteWelcome to Fairford Town CouncilList of places UK England Gloucestershire 51 42 29 N 1 47 06 W 51 708 N 1 785 W 51 708 1 785 Contents 1 History 1 1 Iron Ages 1 2 Middle Ages 1 3 17th and 18th century 1 4 19th and 20th century 1 5 21st century 1 5 1 Iraq War 1 5 2 Flooding 1 5 3 Archaeological find 2 Churches 2 1 St Mary s Church 2 1 1 Stained glass St Mary s Church 2 1 2 Churchyard St Mary s Church 2 2 St Thomas of Canterbury 2 3 Fairford United Church 3 Governance 3 1 2023 Cotswold district Council Election Results 3 2 2017 Cotswold district Council by election results 3 3 2021 Gloucestershire County Council election results 4 Education 5 Transport 6 Media 7 Events 7 1 Air Tattoo 7 2 Ploughing Championship 7 3 Steam Rally 8 Sport and leisure 9 Literature 10 Notable residents 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory editIron Ages edit There was a major roundhouse settlement in Horcott on the south side of the town 2 and the Welsh Way which passed through Fairford was used during this period as a trade route Middle Ages edit Evidence of settlement in Fairford dates back to the 9th century and it received a royal market grant in the 12th century 3 An estate in Fairford which seemingly belonging to Gloucester Abbey was bequeathed to Burgred of Mercia in the mid 9th century 3 At the time of the Norman conquest Brictric a large landowner in the West Country held a manor in Fairford 3 Matilda of Flanders came to own the land which became property of the Crown 3 In 1100 Robert Fitzhamon the first Norman feudal baron of Gloucester is recorded as owning the land which would be passed down to subsequent barons of Gloucester for the next 200 years 3 along with the manor of Tewkesbury In the Domesday Book Fairford was listed as Fareforde 4 In 1066 there were three mills in the town one of which was still used in the wool trade by the 13th century The mill that survives today was built in the 17th century 3 Both Edward I and Henry VIII were royal visitors to the town in 1276 and 1520 respectively 3 Fairford is recorded as having a prison in 1248 Hundred courts were held by the lord of the manor and borough 3 By the 15th century the land of Fairford was managed by wool merchants John Twynyho and John Tame after George Plantagenet Duke of Clarence was forced to give up his lands after being tried for treason 3 17th and 18th century edit In 1608 the inhabitants of Fairford were mostly agricultural labourers or artisans 5 Fairford Park to the north of the town was made part of the manor house grounds built by Andrew Barker in the 1660s 3 6 It would later be turned into a deer park by James Lambe with an obelisk built to mark the edge of the grounds 3 7 The park remained in the Barker family until it was sold to Earnest Cook in 1945 In 1755 seven innkeepers were licensed in Fairford The first recording of an inn had been in 1419 and this grew over the centuries owing to Fairford s location as a connecting town between larger metropolitan areas Stagecoach routes often called at Fairford before travelling on to Gloucester Cirencester Bristol Oxford and London 3 19th and 20th century edit See also Poles in the United Kingdom Polish Resettlement Act 1947 nbsp Plaque commemorating the Polish camp on Leafield RoadThe first outbreak of the 1830 1831 Swing Riots withinin Gloucestershire happened in Fairford on 26th November 1830 8 Farming machinery which was being manufactured in the town was destroyed by protestors who then joined forces with those from the surrounding villages of Quenington Hatherop Coln and Southrop 3 8 By this time there were pounds in the town as well as a village lock up that had been around since at least 1809 3 RAF Fairford was constructed in 1944 as a joint British and American base 9 From 1947 to 1959 Fairford housed 1 200 Poles in The Displaced Persons Camp who had been displaced due to the Second World War 10 The site had originally been an American Air Force hospital that was built during the war The buildings were then repurposed for the camp before being demolished in 1977 3 21st century edit Iraq War edit See also Fairford FiveIn March 2003 Flowers to Fairford was held as a protest against the use of RAF Fairford as the base for the 14 B 52 bombers aircraft which were used to bomb Iraq as part of Operation Desert Storm Several thousand people attended and there was a large police presence but the event passed off peacefully 11 A coach load of people intending to protest was stopped in Lechlade under Section 44 of the Terrorism Act 2000 and searched by police and sent back to London 12 13 Ninety of the detained demonstrators formed Fairford Coach Action and sought legal recourse against Gloucestershire constabulary 14 The group stated that On 22 March 2003 the police used surprisingly extreme tactics to prevent more than 120 activists from reaching the legally sanctioned anti war demonstration in Fairford Gloucestershire UK The demonstration outside a US Airforce Base in Fairford was well attended with estimates of up to 5 000 activists attending Among the scheduled speakers on the day were writer George Monbiot and Caroline Lucas MEP The people who police prevented from attending were a diverse group with a broad range of affiliations The main thing that they had in common was the desire to travel from London by coach and the intention of joining the legal protest in Fairford Two of the four main scheduled speakers for the Fairford demonstration were travelling on these coaches from London After the coaches had travelled two and a half hours from London the coaches were stopped by police just miles from the demonstration Using section 60 powers of the Public Order and Criminal Justice Act 1994 police searched the coaches for weapons for one and a half hours The passengers cooperated with this search and they were invited to reboard the coaches when the search concluded No arrests were made and no items found After all the passengers boarded the coaches were escorted immediately back to London under a continuous 9 12 vehicle police escort In 2013 after appeal Gloucestershire police s actions were found to be unlawful and included breaching protesters rights to freedom of expression and freedom of peaceful assembly 15 Some of the demonstrators involved were awarded upwards of 4 000 in compensation by a judge after taking their claim to court 16 Flooding edit In July 2007 Fairford suffered unseasonably high rainfall which led to major flooding of 64 homes on Milton Street and London Street as well as in some other surrounding areas This meant that many of the annual events had to be cancelled citation needed Archaeological find edit In 2013 a female skeleton was found in the River Coln and was later discovered to be of Sub Saharan origin The remains were estimated to be around 1000 years old and it is thought that the woman was around 18 24 when she died 17 18 Churches editSt Mary s Church edit Main article St Mary s Church Fairford The Church of England parish church of Saint Mary is renowned for its complete set of medieval stained glass stone carvings and misericords Rebuilt in the early 1490s by the wool merchant John Tame d 1500 the church is an example of late Perpendicular Gothic architecture that is characterised by slim stone window mullions and light but strong buttresses The style enabled larger windows than previously allowing much more light into the building Grade 1 listed by English Heritage its structure and details remains unaltered since built 19 Stained glass St Mary s Church edit Main article Fairford stained glass St Mary s is of national historical and architectural importance because it houses the most complete set of mediaeval stained glass windows in the country attributed to Barnard Flower The glass survived the Reformation when many images in English churches were destroyed In 1642 during the Civil War they narrowly avoided destruction 20 when the Roundhead army was marching on the nearby town of Cirencester Some of the panes were damaged during a storm in November 1703 and those were repaired and modified or replaced A conservation and restoration programme began in 1988 and finished in 2010 Clear glass now protects the old glass 21 Churchyard St Mary s Church edit The churchyard includes a stone memorial to Tiddles the church cat who fell off the church roof There is also a stone grotesque to commemorate a young boy who climbed up the walls of the church and jumped falling to his death The churchyard contains eight Commonwealth war graves three British Army soldiers a Royal Navy seaman and a Royal Air Force airman of World War I and two British soldiers and a Home Guardsman of World War II 22 nbsp Parish church of St Mary consecrated 1497 nbsp The tomb in St Mary s Church of John Tame and his wife Alice Twynyho 23 nbsp Monumental brass for Edward I Tame in the north wall of the Lady chapel nbsp Tomb with effigies of Katherine Denys and her third husband Roger Lygon of Madresfield 24 St Thomas of Canterbury edit Fairford has a 19th century Catholic church of St Thomas of Canterbury Following the closure of the recusant chapel at Hatherop Castle in 1844 a church was built at Horcott the following year at a cost of 700 The first Mass was celebrated in 1845 five years before the Restoration of the Hierarchy in England and before the creation of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Clifton The stained glass window behind the altar depicts St Thomas of Canterbury in the centre panel showing the date 1845 The adjoining Presbytery was built 20 years later to designs by Benjamin Bucknall 25 the architect of Woodchester Mansion The church contains an organ by Hill and stained glass by William Wailes Hardman and Geoffrey Robinson The two windows in the porch were added to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the first Mass The left window depicts the crest of the de Mauley family that on the right depicts the Eucharist Fairford United Church edit In 1981 a group of local Methodists approached the local Congregational Church to use the chapel for their services as there was no Methodist Church in Fairford They were officially united into one congregation in 1986 and the present church follows the traditions of both the Methodist Church and the Congregational Federation The churches in and around Fairford are represented by the organisation Churches Together Around Fairford CTAF which has meetings and organises services of unity Governance editFairford was part of the Cirencester Rural District until the Local Government Act 1972 when it became part of the Cotswold District 3 Fairford has a Parish Council with 13 members The mayor is James Nicholls After a boundary review implemented for the 2015 local elections Fairford was split into two District Council electoral wards called Fairford North Ward single member and Lechlade Kempsford and Fairford South Ward two member On Cotswold District Council Fairford North Ward is represented by Liberal Democrat Andrew Doherty and Lechlade Kempsford and Fairford South Ward is as of May 2023 represented by Liberal Democrats Councillors Clare Muir and Helene Mansilla As of 2021 the town is represented on Gloucestershire County Council by Conservative Councillor Dom Morris who represents the Fairford and Lechlade on Thames Division The ward population at the 2011 census was 4 031 26 2023 Cotswold district Council Election Results edit See also Cotswold District Council elections Council elections Fairford North Ward Party Candidate Votes Liberal Democrats Michael Vann 406 51 5 17 7 Conservative Tom Dutton 316 40 1 9 8 Heritage James Nicholls 67 8 5 N A Majority 90 11 4 Turnout 789 Liberal Democrats hold Swing Lechlade Kempsford and Fairford South Ward 2 seats Party Candidate Votes Liberal Democrats Clare Muir 1 150 56 5 26 2 Liberal Democrats Helene Mansilla 976 48 0 N A Conservative Stephen Andrews 785 38 6 13 4 Conservative Steve Trotter 776 38 2 13 6 Labour Esme Barlow Hall 131 6 4 N A Labour Trevor Smith 114 5 6 9 1 Majority 191 Turnout 2034 9 4 Liberal Democrats gain from Conservative Liberal Democrats gain from Conservative 2017 Cotswold district Council by election results edit Fairford North Ward Fairford North Ward by election Party Candidate Votes Liberal Democrats Andrew Doherty 610 68 1 40 2 Conservative Dominic Morris 270 30 1 20 9 Green Xanthe Messenger 15 1 8 1 8 Majority 270 38 0 Turnout 897 46 57 Liberal Democrats gain from Conservative Swing 30 6 2021 Gloucestershire County Council election results edit See also Gloucestershire County Council elections Council elections Fairford and Lechlade on Thames Party Candidate Votes Conservative Dom Morris 2 326 59 4 Liberal Democrats Tony Dale 1 344 34 2 Labour Sharon Aldrick 261 7 1 Majority 982 25 2 Turnout 3 931 45 20 5 40 Conservative hold SwingEducation editThe town s secondary school is Farmor s School an 11 18 co educational academy The school was judged to be of outstanding standard having achieved Grade 1 in its Ofsted inspection in 2010 27 After becoming an academy it achieved lower grades from the board over the years Good Requires Improvement and Good again in 2013 2017 and 2021 respectively 28 There is also a primary school Fairford Primary 29 and a playgroup Coln House School was a 9 16 residential day state special school After being put into special measures following a 2016 Ofsted report the school closed in March 2017 30 Built in 1822 by Alexander Iles as a private asylum called The Retreat it closed in 1944 before becoming a school in 1949 31 Transport editFairford was formerly linked to Oxford by the Witney Railway and its extension the East Gloucestershire Railway The route was active between 1873 and 1962 3 There have been reports that part of the old track could be cleared of accumulated mountains of detritus and overgrown trees to be re opened as a cycle path citation needed There is a bus service to Cirencester and Lechlade from where travellers can transfer to another bus and travel onwards to Swindon Media editLocal news and television programmes is provided by BBC South and ITV Meridian Television signals are received from the Oxford TV transmitter 32 The town is served by both BBC Radio Wiltshire and BBC Radio Gloucestershire Other radio stations including Heart West Greatest Hits Radio South West Cotswolds Radio community based radio station 33 and Air Tattoo Live a RSL station which broadcast coverage during the Royal International Air Tattoo Fairford is served by the weekly local newspaper Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard 34 Events editAir Tattoo edit For three days every year RAF Fairford hosts one of the world s largest military air show the Royal International Air Tattoo The event brings a boost to the economy of the town and surrounding areas citation needed Ploughing Championship edit The Fairford Faringdon Filkins and Burford Championship and Country Show held every year since 1948 35 Steam Rally edit The Ernest Cook Trust used to host the annual Fairford Steam Rally and Show The Show closed in 2015 after running for 46 years 36 Sport and leisure editFairford has a non league football team Fairford Town F C who play and train at Cinder Lane Fairford have their own rugby team FRFC playing in green and black strip The town also has the Walnut Tree Field a large playing field and park a cricket club dating back to the early 1900s 3 a bowling sailing and water skiing club 37 38 39 Fairford had a leisure centre until 2019 which had been managed by Farmor s School since 2013 40 Fairford also has a youth football club based at Horcott Road which caters for children between the ages of 5 and 15 years old The club established in 1976 is a FA Chartered Club run by volunteers for the benefit of local children from Fairford and surrounding villages Teams from U8 and above play in the North Wiltshire Youth Football Leagues Literature editThe Secret Diary of Sarah Thomas 1860 1865 is a published journal by a Victorian diarist living in Fairford It features local landmarks 41 Notable residents editKenton Cool 1973 Mountaineer Paul Cornell 1967 Writer Frank Cadogan Cowper 1877 1958 Artist Sharron Davies 1962 Competitive swimmer and sports presenter Mary Bathurst Deane 1843 1940 Novelist Barbara Dockar Drysdale 1912 1999 Psychotherapist Wills Hill 1st Marquess of Downshire 1718 1793 Politician Sir Arthr Hirtzel 1870 1937 Civil servant John Keble 1792 1866 Anglican priest and poet Noel Leslie Countess of Rothes 1878 1956 Socialite who survived the Titanic disaster Mike Winters 1926 2013 ComedianReferences edit Parish population 2011 Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 23 March 2015 Biddulph Edward Oxford Archaeology Latest news oxfordarchaeology com Retrieved 22 April 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Herbet N M 1981 Fairford in A History of the County of Gloucester Volume 7 www british history ac uk Retrieved 22 July 2021 The Domesday Book Online Gloucestershire A F www domesdaybook co uk Warmington Andrew 1989 FROGS TOADS AND THE RESTORATION IN A GLOUCESTERSHIRE VILLAGE Midland History 14 1 30 42 doi 10 1179 mdh 1989 14 1 30 ISSN 0047 729X Andrew Barker ca 1630 1700 Book Owners Online bookowners online Retrieved 8 January 2023 The Gentleman s House in the British Atlantic World 1680 1780 doi 10 1057 9781137378385 a b Hobsbawm Eric J Rude George 1969 Captain Swing Lawrence and Wishart Morgan William 13 December 2022 US Air Force moving HQ to RAF Fairford GloucestershireLive Retrieved 8 January 2023 Memorial marks 50th anniversary of Polish camp Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard Retrieved 8 January 2023 Flowers to Fairford 22 March 2003 www fairford org Archived from the original on 29 July 2012 Telegraph Opinion The police must end their abuse of anti terror legislation 31 December 2005 Archived from the original on 31 December 2005 Retrieved 20 April 2023 Dent Jackie 14 October 2004 Coach napped activists protest outside court The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 April 2023 Staff 23 October 2006 Anti war protesters rights breached court told The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 April 2023 RAF Fairford protesters win legal battle against police BBC News 8 February 2013 Bowcott Owen correspondent legal affairs 8 February 2013 Iraq war activists to get 4 000 compensation over 2003 protest The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 April 2023 Gover Dominic 18 September 2013 The First Black Briton 1 000 Year Old Skeleton of African Woman Discovered by Schoolboys in Gloucestershire River International Business Times UK Retrieved 17 April 2023 Schoolboys amazed that skeleton is 1 000 year old African woman Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard Retrieved 17 April 2023 Historic England Church of St Mary Fairford 1089998 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 12 July 2011 Don Cobbett 8 August 2011 Fairford Town History Fairford amp District U3A Archived from the original on 12 September 2016 Retrieved 6 December 2018 Andrew Russel 8 June 2012 The History of St Mary s Church St Mary s Church Fairford Retrieved 6 December 2018 http www cwgc org find a cemetery cemetery 38552 FAIRFORD 20 ST 20MARY 20CHURCHYARD CWGC Cemetery Report details from casualty record Keble Rev Edward St Mary s Church Fairford 6th ed Much Wenlock 2010 p 27 MacLean Sir John ed Visitation of Gloucestershire 1623 London 1885 p 260 Tame p 51 Dennis St Thomas Catholic Church Fairford www stthomasparish plus com Ward population 2011 Retrieved 23 March 2015 OFSTED report PDF Archived from the original PDF on 14 July 2010 Ofsted Communications Team 25 September 2021 Find an inspection report and registered childcare reports ofsted gov uk Retrieved 16 December 2022 Fairford C of E Primary School Establishment Coln House School Gov uk Retrieved 29 June 2021 Coln House School Historic England Retrieved 29 June 2021 Full Freeview on the Oxford Oxfordshire England transmitter UK Free TV 1 May 2004 Retrieved 25 September 2023 Cotswolds Radio Retrieved 26 September 2023 Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard British Papers 25 October 2013 Retrieved 26 September 2023 FFF amp B F F F amp B Ploughing Match F F F amp B Ploughing Match Retrieved 18 April 2023 Breaking Fairford Steam Show to close after running for 46 years Walnut Tree Field playing field amp park 18 August 2018 Fairford CC Leisure Centre 16 December 2000 Row over report looking into closure of Tetbury and Fairford leisure centres Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard Retrieved 8 January 2023 The secret diary of Sarah Thomas 1860 1865 WorldCat org www worldcat org Further reading editVerey David 1970 The Buildings of England Gloucestershire The Cotswolds Harmondsworth Penguin Books pp 243 250 ISBN 0 14 071040 X Farmer Oscar G Fairford Church and its Stained Glass Windows 7th ed 1962 presumably self published printed by Harding and Curtis Ltd Somerset Hall Bath Bigland Ralph 1791 An Account of the Parish of Fairford ed by Richard BiglandExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fairford Gloucestershire Fairford community website Fairford Town CCouncil website Fairford United Church Archived 23 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine Fairford Youth FC St Mary s Church in Fairford Sacred Destinations St Thomas Catholic Church website Includes history pictures and details of services BBC archive film of Fairford from 1986 Local Online website for the Lechlade and Fairford community Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fairford amp oldid 1218303892, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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