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Kendal

Kendal, once Kirkby in Kendal or Kirkby Kendal, is a market town and civil parish in Westmorland and Furness, Cumbria, England. It lies within the River Kent's dale, from which its name is derived from.

Kendal
Town
View of Kendal, with the clock tower of the Town Hall (centre)
Kendal
Location in South Lakeland
Kendal
Location within Cumbria
Population29,593 (2021 Census)[1]
OS grid referenceSD5192
• London223 miles (358.9 km) SSE
Civil parish
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townKENDAL
Postcode districtLA8, LA9
Dialling code01539
PoliceCumbria
FireCumbria
AmbulanceNorth West
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Cumbria
54°19′34″N 2°44′42″W / 54.326°N 2.745°W / 54.326; -2.745Coordinates: 54°19′34″N 2°44′42″W / 54.326°N 2.745°W / 54.326; -2.745

In the Domesday Book of 1086, the area was collected under Yorkshire. The area came under the Honour of Lancaster before the barony split. The town became the Barony of Kendal's seat, in 1226/7 this barony merged with the Barony of Westmorland to form the historic county of Westmorland with Appleby as the historic county town.[3] From 1889–1974, it became the county town. Under the 1974 reforms, it became the administrative centre of the South Lakeland district. The town became Westmorland and Furness district's administrative centre in a 2023 reform.

It is 8 miles (13 km) south-east of Windermere and 19 miles (31 km) north of Lancaster. At the 2011 Census, the town had a population of 28,586,[4] making it the second largest town in Westmorland and Furness after Barrow-in-Furness. It is renowned today mainly as a centre for shopping,[5] for its festivals[6] and historic sights, including Kendal Castle, and as the home of Kendal Mint Cake. The town's grey limestone buildings have earned it the sobriquet "Auld Grey Town".[7]

Name

Kendal takes its name from the River Kent (the etymology of whose name is uncertain but thought to be Celtic) and the Old Norse word dalr ("valley"). Kendal is listed in the Domesday Book as part of Yorkshire with the name Cherchebi (from Old Norse kirkju-bý, "church-village"). For many centuries it was called Kirkby Kendal: "village with a church in the valley of the River Kent".[8][9]

History

A chartered market town, the centre of Kendal has formed round a high street with fortified alleyways, known locally as yards, off to either side, which allowed local people to shelter from the Anglo-Scottish raiders known as Border Reivers. The main industry in those times was the manufacture of woollen goods, whose importance is reflected in the town's coat of arms and in its Latin motto Pannus mihi panis (Cloth is my bread.) "Kendal Green" was a hard-wearing, wool-based fabric specific to the local manufacturing process. It was supposedly sported by the Kendalian archers instrumental in the English victory over the French at the Battle of Agincourt. Kendal Green was also worn by slaves in the Americas and appears in songs and literature from that time. Shakespeare notes it as the colour of clothing worn by foresters (Henry IV, Part 1).

Kendal Castle has a long history as a stronghold, built on the site of several successive castles. The earliest was a Norman motte and bailey (now located on the west side of the town), when the settlement went under the name of Kirkbie Strickland.[citation needed] The most recent is from the late 12th century, as the castle of the Barony of Kendal, the part of Westmorland ruled from here. The castle is best known as the home of the Parr family, as heirs of these barons. They inherited it through marriage in the reign of Edward III of England. Rumours still circulate that King Henry VIII's sixth wife Catherine Parr was born at Kendal Castle, but the evidence available leaves this unlikely: by her time the castle was beyond repair and her father was already based in Blackfriars, London, at the court of King Henry VIII.[10]

 
The site of the Roman fort at Watercrook across the River Kent

Roman fort

A Roman fort stood about 2 miles south of today's town centre, at a site later known as Watercrook.[11] It was built about AD 90, originally in timber, rebuilt with stone about 130, in the reign of Hadrian. The fort was abandoned for about 20 years during the Antonine re-occupation of Scotland. It was rebuilt in the reign of Marcus Aurelius and occupied until about 270 – probably the last time it served military purposes.[12] What remains of the stone structure is now buried under a field. Many Roman artefacts from the site may be found in the Kendal Museum. The Roman site was built on a pre-existing Iron Age fort.

Transport

Early travellers to Kendal complained of eight miles of "nothing but a confused mixture of Rockes and Boggs."[13] Riding horseback was the fastest form of travel, as the road was "no better than the roughest fell tracks on high ground and spongy, miry tracks in the vallies."

It became clear it was unjust and beyond the power of a thinly scattered rural population to maintain a road used for through traffic. "Whereas the road is very ruinous, and some parts thereof almost impassable and could not, by the ordinary course appointed by the Laws then in being for repairing the highways, be amended and kept in good repair, unless some further provision was made." In 1703, by Order of the Quarter Sessions of the Barony of Kendall, the surveyors of highways were to make the roads good and sufficient for the passage of coaches, carts and carriages. In 1753 the Keighley and Kendal Turnpike brought a stage coach service from Yorkshire as far as Kendal.[14]

Mint cake

 
Kendal mint cake

Kendal is known for Kendal mint cake, a glucose-based confectionery reputedly discovered accidentally by Joseph Wiper during a search for a clear glacier mint.

Used on numerous expeditions to mountaintops (including Mount Everest and K2) and both poles of the Earth, its popularity is mainly due to the very astute decision of the original manufacturer's great-nephew to market it as an energy food and supply it to Ernest Shackleton's 1914–1917 Trans-Antarctic Expedition.

By the time the business was sold to a competitor, Romney's, in 1987 there were several rival mint-cake producers, some still in business.

Tobacco and snuff

Snuff manufacture in Kendal dates from 1792, when Kendalian Thomas Harrison returned from learning its production in Glasgow, Scotland. He brought with him 50 tons of second-hand equipment, all carried on horseback. Pipe tobacco and other tobacco products were added later to the firm's production. Ownership of the firm passed to a son-in-law, Samuel Gawith, whose eponymic firm Samuel Gawith & Co. remains in business. After Gawith's death in 1865, the firm passed to his two eldest sons, being administered initially by trustees, including Henry Hoggarth, and John Thomas Illingworth.

Illingworth left the firm in 1867 to start his own firm, which remained in business until the 1980s. The youngest son of Samuel Gawith subsequently teamed with Henry Hoggarth to form Gawith Hoggarth TT, Ltd. Both firms continue in business in Kendal, producing snuffs and tobacco products used around the world. Samuel Gawith and Company holds the distinction of employing the oldest piece of industrial equipment still in use in the world: a device manufactured in the 1750s.[citation needed]

The Kendal Bank

The Maude, Wilson & Crewdsons Bank was established in "Farrers House", Stramongate in 1788. Joseph Maude, Christopher Wilson and Thomas Crewdson were the original partners. In 1792 they moved into a specially constructed premises at No 69, Highgate. The Wilson family, who lived at Abbot Hall, withdrew in 1826 at a time of the paper panic of 1825 caused by a run on the banks. Under the style of W D Crewdson & Sons, the remaining family continued until the amalgamation in 1840 with John Wakefield & Sons founded by John Wakefield. The bank was eventually bought out by Barclays.[15]

Governance

 
Kendal Town Hall. First stage completed in 1827, clock tower later in the 19th century

Civic history

The municipal borough of Kendal was created in 1835; until 1894 it was also an urban sanitary district. The borough boundaries were altered in 1935 under a County Review Order to include a patch of South Westmorland Rural District. The civil parishes of Kirkland and Nether Graveship became in 1908 part of Kendal Civil Parish, whose boundaries thereafter were the same as the borough's. From 1888 to 1974, Kendal was the centre of the administrative county of Westmorland, although Appleby was the traditional county town.

The borough was abolished in 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972, becoming part of the South Lakeland district of Cumbria. Kendal as a successor parish kept its own town council.

In April 2023, Kendal became the seat of the new Westmorland and Furness council area. The councils of Cumbria and South Lakeland were abolished at the same time.

Parliament

Kendal is part of the Westmorland and Lonsdale parliamentary constituency, of which Tim Farron is the current MP, representing the Liberal Democrats.[16]

Geography

Kendal stands on the River Kent, surrounded by low hills and near the Lake District National Park formed in 1951, but not in it.[17] which was laid out to exclude the town.[citation needed] Kendal's rural location makes it an important commercial centre for a wide area. It has been dubbed "The Gateway to The Lakes".[18]

Climate

Kendal has a marine west-coast climate, category Cfb on the Köppen Climate Classification. It has moderately warm summers and mild winters with precipitation at all times of year. In July and August the average daily maximum and minimum are 19 and 11 °C (66 and 52 °F) respectively. The corresponding ones in January and February are 6 and 1 °C (43 and 34 °F).[19][20]

Economy

Kendal's early prosperity was based largely on cloth manufacture. In the 19th century it became a centre for the manufacture of snuff and shoes – the K Shoes company remained a major employer in the town until its factory closed in 2003.[21] There are still several industries based in the town, such as Gilbert Gilkes & Gordon (manufacturers of pumps and turbines), James Cropper paper makers (based in Burneside, who make, at no profit, the paper for the Remembrance poppies for The Royal British Legion[22]), Mardix (switchgear), Lakeland, and Kendal Nutricare, which has a facility for making baby milk in the north of the town. Tourism is now a major employer, but there is also a significant IT and design sector, enabled by increased broadband availability.

On 26 February 2003 Kendal was granted Fairtrade Town status.

Transport

 
A bridge over the old course of the Lancaster Canal, now used as a footpath

Kendal railway station lies on the Windermere Branch Line, with connections to Windermere to the north, and to Oxenholme Lake District station (on the West Coast Main Line) and Lancaster railway station to the south.

Kendal is about 13 kilometres (8 mi) from the M6 motorway. It is bypassed on the west side by the A591 road, linking it to Windermere and Keswick, and by the A590 leading to Barrow. It is also the end point of the A65 road to Kirkby Lonsdale, Skipton and Yorkshire, and a destination on the A6 road to Penrith. Kendal is signposted off the M6 at Junctions 36 (A65, A590), 37 (A684 road), 38 (A685 road) and 39 (A6). A three-mile, £1.9m A591 bypass opened on 29 August 1971.

The Lancaster Canal was built as far as Kendal in 1819, but the northern section was rendered unnavigable by the construction of the M6. Part of this section was drained and filled in to prevent leakage, and the course of the canal through Kendal has now been built over. The canal towpath, however, remains as a footpath through Kendal. A campaign is underway to restore the canal as far as Kendal.

Kendal has a daily coach service to London. Local buses from the bus station serve destinations such as Ambleside, Barrow-in-Furness and Lancaster, with long-distance National Express coaches to Preston and Birmingham.[23]

Education

The Queen Katherine School, on Appleby Road, is a secondary school with academy status. The school also has a sixth form.[24]

Kirkbie Kendal School, formerly Kendal Grammar School, is a secondary school Business and Enterprise College serving the area. It operates as a foundation school with academy status. Its former pupils include the historian David Starkey.[25]

Kendal College provides further and higher education courses and the training for employers.[26]

Sport

Kendal Town Football Club plays in the North West Division one, with home games at Parkside Road Stadium.

Kendal RUFC plays in the 6th tier of the English rugby union system, with home games at Mint Bridge Stadium, which has a capacity of 3,500.

Places of interest

 
Holy Trinity Church, which includes the Parr Chapel and prayers written by the hand of Queen Catherine Parr
 
Kendal Castle

Notable people

Local dialect

Kendal speech, known as Kendalian, is an example of the Cumbrian dialect spoken in the surrounding area.

Search and rescue

Kendal has long maintained a locally active, voluntary mountain search and rescue team based at Busher Walk. Along with nearby teams, it helped at the Grayrigg derailment in February 2007. Kendal Mountain Rescue Team is one of ten current teams that joined with Lake District Mountain Rescue Search Dogs and Cumbria Ore Mines Rescue Unit to form a Cumbrian umbrella organization, the Lake District Search and Mountain Rescue Association.[29][30]

Twin towns

Kendal is twinned with:[31]

Freedom

The following people and military units have received the Freedom of the Town of Kendal:

Individuals

Military units

See also

References

  1. ^ "Kendal". City population. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
  2. ^ "Kendal Village Council – Home – Old Market Village, Lake District – Kendal, Cumbria, UK". Kendal Town Council. from the original on 13 April 2018. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  3. ^ F.A. Youngs, Guide to the Local Administrative units of England, Vol.II, Northern England, London, 1991
  4. ^ UK Census (2011). "Local Area Report – Kendal Parish (E04002617)". Nomis. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  5. ^ "Shop". Kendal Town.
  6. ^ "Events and Festivals - Visit Kendal | Kendal | Cumbria". Kendal Town.
  7. ^ Cumbria Tourist Guides. Retrieved 4 August 2020.
  8. ^ A. D. Mills, Dictionary of English Place Names, Oxford: OUP, 1998.
  9. ^ The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names Based on the Collections of the English Place-Name Society, ed. by Victor Watts, Cambridge: CUP, (2004), under River KENT and KENDAL.
  10. ^ Linda Porter. Katherine, the Queen, MacMillan, 2010. p. 21.
  11. ^ Esmonde Cleary, A., R. Warner, R. Talbert, T. Elliott, S. Gillies. "Places: 89102 (Alone?/Alauna?)". Pleiades. from the original on 7 October 2014. Retrieved 12 February 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. ^ David Shotter. "The Roman fort at Watercrook (Kendal)" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 23 September 2015.
  13. ^ Being a Relation of a Short Survey of 26 Counties, briefly describing the Citties and their Scytuations, and the Corporate Towns and Castles Herein. By a Captaine, a Lieuten[a]nt. and an Ancient, All three of the Military Company at Norwich. British Museum MSS. 34754, pp. 19–20.
  14. ^ Introduction To The Main Roads of Kendale 7 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine British History. Accessed 30 September 2012.
  15. ^ "Banking History: Kendal Bank".
  16. ^ "Tim Farron". theyworkforyou.com. from the original on 1 June 2013.
  17. ^ "Lake District National Park area map and South extension area" (PDF). Lake District National Park Authority. 2016. p. 2. (PDF) from the original on 13 January 2017. Retrieved 11 January 2017.
  18. ^ "Kendal - A Gateway to the English Lakes". London & North Western Railway. 1910.
  19. ^ "marine west coast climate – climatology". Encyclopædia Britannica. from the original on 3 June 2013.
  20. ^ "Kendal Climate Guide". worldclimateguide.co.uk. from the original on 21 February 2013.
  21. ^ "Industries of Cumbria – Footwear". Cumbria-industries.org.uk. 2 May 2003. from the original on 14 October 2013. Retrieved 31 May 2013.
  22. ^ White, Anna (24 May 2014). "Meet the company behind our Remembrance poppies". The Daily Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 17 August 2018.
  23. ^ "Where to Catch Your Bus" (PDF). www.cumbria.gov.uk/. Retrieved 10 September 2020.
  24. ^ . Queen Katherine School. Archived from the original on 10 March 2014. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  25. ^ "David Starkey: Laughing all the way to the library". 8 March 2002. Retrieved 17 August 2018.
  26. ^ "New principal appointed at Kendal College". The Westmorland Gazette. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  27. ^ "Kendal – Castle Howe – Visit Cumbria". www.visitcumbria.com. from the original on 15 March 2012. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
  28. ^ "Kendal". The Drill Hall Project. from the original on 2 September 2017. Retrieved 1 September 2017.
  29. ^ https://www.mountain.rescue.org.uk/assets/files/downloads/MREWAnnualReview2018.pdf.[dead link]
  30. ^ "LDSAMRA - Home page". www.ldsamra.org.uk. Retrieved 17 August 2018.
  31. ^ "Town Twinning". Kendal Town Council. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
  32. ^ . Kendal Town Council. Archived from the original on 29 May 2019.

External links

  • Cumbria County History Trust: Kendal (formerly Kirkby Kendal) (nb: provisional research only – see Talk page)
  • Kendal Town Council
  • —Restoration of the canal to Kendal
  • Kendal Leisure Centre

kendal, other, uses, disambiguation, once, kirkby, kirkby, market, town, civil, parish, westmorland, furness, cumbria, england, lies, within, river, kent, dale, from, which, name, derived, from, townview, with, clock, tower, town, hall, centre, location, south. For other uses see Kendal disambiguation Kendal once Kirkby in Kendal or Kirkby Kendal is a market town and civil parish in Westmorland and Furness Cumbria England It lies within the River Kent s dale from which its name is derived from KendalTownView of Kendal with the clock tower of the Town Hall centre KendalLocation in South LakelandShow map of the former South Lakeland districtKendalLocation within CumbriaShow map of CumbriaPopulation29 593 2021 Census 1 OS grid referenceSD5192 London223 miles 358 9 km SSECivil parishKendal 2 Unitary authorityWestmorland and FurnessCeremonial countyCumbriaRegionNorth WestCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townKENDALPostcode districtLA8 LA9Dialling code01539PoliceCumbriaFireCumbriaAmbulanceNorth WestUK ParliamentWestmorland and LonsdaleList of places UK England Cumbria 54 19 34 N 2 44 42 W 54 326 N 2 745 W 54 326 2 745 Coordinates 54 19 34 N 2 44 42 W 54 326 N 2 745 W 54 326 2 745In the Domesday Book of 1086 the area was collected under Yorkshire The area came under the Honour of Lancaster before the barony split The town became the Barony of Kendal s seat in 1226 7 this barony merged with the Barony of Westmorland to form the historic county of Westmorland with Appleby as the historic county town 3 From 1889 1974 it became the county town Under the 1974 reforms it became the administrative centre of the South Lakeland district The town became Westmorland and Furness district s administrative centre in a 2023 reform It is 8 miles 13 km south east of Windermere and 19 miles 31 km north of Lancaster At the 2011 Census the town had a population of 28 586 4 making it the second largest town in Westmorland and Furness after Barrow in Furness It is renowned today mainly as a centre for shopping 5 for its festivals 6 and historic sights including Kendal Castle and as the home of Kendal Mint Cake The town s grey limestone buildings have earned it the sobriquet Auld Grey Town 7 Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Roman fort 2 2 Transport 2 3 Mint cake 2 4 Tobacco and snuff 2 5 The Kendal Bank 3 Governance 3 1 Civic history 3 2 Parliament 4 Geography 4 1 Climate 5 Economy 6 Transport 7 Education 8 Sport 9 Places of interest 10 Notable people 11 Local dialect 12 Search and rescue 13 Twin towns 14 Freedom 14 1 Individuals 14 2 Military units 15 See also 16 References 17 External linksName EditKendal takes its name from the River Kent the etymology of whose name is uncertain but thought to be Celtic and the Old Norse word dalr valley Kendal is listed in the Domesday Book as part of Yorkshire with the name Cherchebi from Old Norse kirkju by church village For many centuries it was called Kirkby Kendal village with a church in the valley of the River Kent 8 9 History EditA chartered market town the centre of Kendal has formed round a high street with fortified alleyways known locally as yards off to either side which allowed local people to shelter from the Anglo Scottish raiders known as Border Reivers The main industry in those times was the manufacture of woollen goods whose importance is reflected in the town s coat of arms and in its Latin motto Pannus mihi panis Cloth is my bread Kendal Green was a hard wearing wool based fabric specific to the local manufacturing process It was supposedly sported by the Kendalian archers instrumental in the English victory over the French at the Battle of Agincourt Kendal Green was also worn by slaves in the Americas and appears in songs and literature from that time Shakespeare notes it as the colour of clothing worn by foresters Henry IV Part 1 Kendal Castle has a long history as a stronghold built on the site of several successive castles The earliest was a Norman motte and bailey now located on the west side of the town when the settlement went under the name of Kirkbie Strickland citation needed The most recent is from the late 12th century as the castle of the Barony of Kendal the part of Westmorland ruled from here The castle is best known as the home of the Parr family as heirs of these barons They inherited it through marriage in the reign of Edward III of England Rumours still circulate that King Henry VIII s sixth wife Catherine Parr was born at Kendal Castle but the evidence available leaves this unlikely by her time the castle was beyond repair and her father was already based in Blackfriars London at the court of King Henry VIII 10 The site of the Roman fort at Watercrook across the River Kent Roman fort Edit Main article Alavana A Roman fort stood about 2 miles south of today s town centre at a site later known as Watercrook 11 It was built about AD 90 originally in timber rebuilt with stone about 130 in the reign of Hadrian The fort was abandoned for about 20 years during the Antonine re occupation of Scotland It was rebuilt in the reign of Marcus Aurelius and occupied until about 270 probably the last time it served military purposes 12 What remains of the stone structure is now buried under a field Many Roman artefacts from the site may be found in the Kendal Museum The Roman site was built on a pre existing Iron Age fort Transport Edit Early travellers to Kendal complained of eight miles of nothing but a confused mixture of Rockes and Boggs 13 Riding horseback was the fastest form of travel as the road was no better than the roughest fell tracks on high ground and spongy miry tracks in the vallies It became clear it was unjust and beyond the power of a thinly scattered rural population to maintain a road used for through traffic Whereas the road is very ruinous and some parts thereof almost impassable and could not by the ordinary course appointed by the Laws then in being for repairing the highways be amended and kept in good repair unless some further provision was made In 1703 by Order of the Quarter Sessions of the Barony of Kendall the surveyors of highways were to make the roads good and sufficient for the passage of coaches carts and carriages In 1753 the Keighley and Kendal Turnpike brought a stage coach service from Yorkshire as far as Kendal 14 Mint cake Edit Main article Kendal Mint Cake Kendal mint cake Kendal is known for Kendal mint cake a glucose based confectionery reputedly discovered accidentally by Joseph Wiper during a search for a clear glacier mint Used on numerous expeditions to mountaintops including Mount Everest and K2 and both poles of the Earth its popularity is mainly due to the very astute decision of the original manufacturer s great nephew to market it as an energy food and supply it to Ernest Shackleton s 1914 1917 Trans Antarctic Expedition By the time the business was sold to a competitor Romney s in 1987 there were several rival mint cake producers some still in business Tobacco and snuff Edit Snuff manufacture in Kendal dates from 1792 when Kendalian Thomas Harrison returned from learning its production in Glasgow Scotland He brought with him 50 tons of second hand equipment all carried on horseback Pipe tobacco and other tobacco products were added later to the firm s production Ownership of the firm passed to a son in law Samuel Gawith whose eponymic firm Samuel Gawith amp Co remains in business After Gawith s death in 1865 the firm passed to his two eldest sons being administered initially by trustees including Henry Hoggarth and John Thomas Illingworth Illingworth left the firm in 1867 to start his own firm which remained in business until the 1980s The youngest son of Samuel Gawith subsequently teamed with Henry Hoggarth to form Gawith Hoggarth TT Ltd Both firms continue in business in Kendal producing snuffs and tobacco products used around the world Samuel Gawith and Company holds the distinction of employing the oldest piece of industrial equipment still in use in the world a device manufactured in the 1750s citation needed The Kendal Bank Edit The Maude Wilson amp Crewdsons Bank was established in Farrers House Stramongate in 1788 Joseph Maude Christopher Wilson and Thomas Crewdson were the original partners In 1792 they moved into a specially constructed premises at No 69 Highgate The Wilson family who lived at Abbot Hall withdrew in 1826 at a time of the paper panic of 1825 caused by a run on the banks Under the style of W D Crewdson amp Sons the remaining family continued until the amalgamation in 1840 with John Wakefield amp Sons founded by John Wakefield The bank was eventually bought out by Barclays 15 Governance Edit Kendal Town Hall First stage completed in 1827 clock tower later in the 19th century Civic history Edit The municipal borough of Kendal was created in 1835 until 1894 it was also an urban sanitary district The borough boundaries were altered in 1935 under a County Review Order to include a patch of South Westmorland Rural District The civil parishes of Kirkland and Nether Graveship became in 1908 part of Kendal Civil Parish whose boundaries thereafter were the same as the borough s From 1888 to 1974 Kendal was the centre of the administrative county of Westmorland although Appleby was the traditional county town The borough was abolished in 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972 becoming part of the South Lakeland district of Cumbria Kendal as a successor parish kept its own town council In April 2023 Kendal became the seat of the new Westmorland and Furness council area The councils of Cumbria and South Lakeland were abolished at the same time Parliament Edit Kendal is part of the Westmorland and Lonsdale parliamentary constituency of which Tim Farron is the current MP representing the Liberal Democrats 16 Geography EditKendal stands on the River Kent surrounded by low hills and near the Lake District National Park formed in 1951 but not in it 17 which was laid out to exclude the town citation needed Kendal s rural location makes it an important commercial centre for a wide area It has been dubbed The Gateway to The Lakes 18 Climate Edit Kendal has a marine west coast climate category Cfb on the Koppen Climate Classification It has moderately warm summers and mild winters with precipitation at all times of year In July and August the average daily maximum and minimum are 19 and 11 C 66 and 52 F respectively The corresponding ones in January and February are 6 and 1 C 43 and 34 F 19 20 Economy EditKendal s early prosperity was based largely on cloth manufacture In the 19th century it became a centre for the manufacture of snuff and shoes the K Shoes company remained a major employer in the town until its factory closed in 2003 21 There are still several industries based in the town such as Gilbert Gilkes amp Gordon manufacturers of pumps and turbines James Cropper paper makers based in Burneside who make at no profit the paper for the Remembrance poppies for The Royal British Legion 22 Mardix switchgear Lakeland and Kendal Nutricare which has a facility for making baby milk in the north of the town Tourism is now a major employer but there is also a significant IT and design sector enabled by increased broadband availability On 26 February 2003 Kendal was granted Fairtrade Town status Transport Edit Kendal railway station A bridge over the old course of the Lancaster Canal now used as a footpath Kendal railway station lies on the Windermere Branch Line with connections to Windermere to the north and to Oxenholme Lake District station on the West Coast Main Line and Lancaster railway station to the south Kendal is about 13 kilometres 8 mi from the M6 motorway It is bypassed on the west side by the A591 road linking it to Windermere and Keswick and by the A590 leading to Barrow It is also the end point of the A65 road to Kirkby Lonsdale Skipton and Yorkshire and a destination on the A6 road to Penrith Kendal is signposted off the M6 at Junctions 36 A65 A590 37 A684 road 38 A685 road and 39 A6 A three mile 1 9m A591 bypass opened on 29 August 1971 The Lancaster Canal was built as far as Kendal in 1819 but the northern section was rendered unnavigable by the construction of the M6 Part of this section was drained and filled in to prevent leakage and the course of the canal through Kendal has now been built over The canal towpath however remains as a footpath through Kendal A campaign is underway to restore the canal as far as Kendal Kendal has a daily coach service to London Local buses from the bus station serve destinations such as Ambleside Barrow in Furness and Lancaster with long distance National Express coaches to Preston and Birmingham 23 Education EditThe Queen Katherine School on Appleby Road is a secondary school with academy status The school also has a sixth form 24 Kirkbie Kendal School formerly Kendal Grammar School is a secondary school Business and Enterprise College serving the area It operates as a foundation school with academy status Its former pupils include the historian David Starkey 25 Kendal College provides further and higher education courses and the training for employers 26 Sport EditKendal Town Football Club plays in the North West Division one with home games at Parkside Road Stadium Kendal RUFC plays in the 6th tier of the English rugby union system with home games at Mint Bridge Stadium which has a capacity of 3 500 Places of interest Edit Holy Trinity Church which includes the Parr Chapel and prayers written by the hand of Queen Catherine Parr Kendal Castle Kendal Museum one of the oldest in the country includes exhibits on area history culture archaeology geology local and world natural history Roman Britain and Ancient Egypt Abbot Hall Art Gallery housed in a Georgian villa mounts nationally important exhibitions such as David Bomberg Spirit in the Mass 17 July 28 October 2006 The permanent collection covers George Romney J M W Turner John Ruskin Ben Nicholson Paula Rego Lucian Freud Stanley Spencer and Barbara Hepworth The Museum of Lakeland Life in the original stables of Abbot Hall contains exhibits on farming life in the Lake District and a permanent collection of author Arthur Ransome s books and belongings Castle Howe Kendal s first castle 27 Kendal Castle to the east of the earthworks was probably built while Castle Howe was still in use The Friends Meeting House is home to the Quaker Tapestry The Brewery Arts Centre offers theatre dance exhibitions cinema music workshops youth drama dance and food and drink The Queen Katherine Street drill hall was used to mobilize troops in the First World War 28 The Lakes International Comic Art Festival is held in Kendal every year in October Other places of interest are Kendal Leisure Centre Kendal Parish Church Holy Trinity Lakeland Radio Stadium official football ground of Kendal Town F C and Netherfield Cricket Club Ground the home ground of Netherfield Cricket Club and Cumberland County Cricket Club Notable people EditDave Allen born 1955 bass player for post punk band Gang of Four Desmond Bagley 1923 1983 thriller writer Matt Bigland born 1985 guitarist and lead singer for alternative rock band Dinosaur Pile Up Jonathan Dodgson Carr died 1884 founder of Carr s bread makers and social reform campaigner Ephraim Chambers c 1680 1740 encyclopedian Isaac Crewdson 1780 1844 Quaker minister born in Kendal John Cunliffe 1933 2018 children s author creator of Postman Pat John Dalton 1766 1844 chemist and physicist Sir Arthur Eddington 1882 1944 astrophysicist James Ellison born 1980 and Dean Ellison born 1977 motorcycle racers Tim Farron born 1970 current MP for Westmorland and Lonsdale and former leader of the Liberal Democrats Nicholas Freeston 1907 1978 award winning Lancashire poet born in Kendal Daniel Gardner 1750 1805 portrait painter Steven Hall Britain s Got Talent finalist 2011 as a comedy dancer Steve Hogarth born 1959 vocalist of rock band Marillion Francis Nigel Lee 1934 2011 theologian Isabella Lickbarrow 1784 1847 poet Ken Major 1928 2009 architect author and molinologist attended Kendal School Peter McDonnell Footballer Caroline Moir living author James Rogers born 1958 first class cricketer George Romney 1734 1802 portrait painter David R Russell 1935 2018 antique woodworking tool collector Philip Snow 1907 1985 first class cricketer Keith Stainton 1921 2001 politician and Second World War hero in France David Starkey born 1945 constitutional historian Alfred Wainwright 1907 1991 guidebook author and walker Mary Augusta Wakefield 1853 1910 composer and festival organizer William Wakefield 1870 1922 cricketer Wild Beasts indie rock band Keith Wilkinson living ITV television news reporter John Wilson 1741 1793 mathematician and astronomer Mark Wilson born 1989 Newcastle Falcons and England Rugby Union playerLocal dialect EditKendal speech known as Kendalian is an example of the Cumbrian dialect spoken in the surrounding area Search and rescue EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it May 2008 Kendal has long maintained a locally active voluntary mountain search and rescue team based at Busher Walk Along with nearby teams it helped at the Grayrigg derailment in February 2007 Kendal Mountain Rescue Team is one of ten current teams that joined with Lake District Mountain Rescue Search Dogs and Cumbria Ore Mines Rescue Unit to form a Cumbrian umbrella organization the Lake District Search and Mountain Rescue Association 29 30 Twin towns EditKendal is twinned with 31 Killarney Ireland Rinteln GermanyFreedom EditThe following people and military units have received the Freedom of the Town of Kendal This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items May 2019 Individuals Edit Sir Arthur Eddington 1930Military units Edit The Border Regiment 25 October 1947 The King s Own Royal Border Regiment 1 October 1959 The Duke of Lancaster s Regiment 32 1 July 2006See also Edit Cumbria portalKendal Choral Society Listed buildings in Kendal Kendal Mountain Festival Kendal Town F C The Westmorland GazetteReferences Edit Kendal City population Retrieved 25 October 2022 Kendal Village Council Home Old Market Village Lake District Kendal Cumbria UK Kendal Town Council Archived from the original on 13 April 2018 Retrieved 24 April 2018 F A Youngs Guide to the Local Administrative units of England Vol II Northern England London 1991 UK Census 2011 Local Area Report Kendal Parish E04002617 Nomis Office for National Statistics Retrieved 7 May 2021 Shop Kendal Town Events and Festivals Visit Kendal Kendal Cumbria Kendal Town Cumbria Tourist Guides Retrieved 4 August 2020 A D Mills Dictionary of English Place Names Oxford OUP 1998 The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place Names Based on the Collections of the English Place Name Society ed by Victor Watts Cambridge CUP 2004 under River KENT and KENDAL Linda Porter Katherine the Queen MacMillan 2010 p 21 Esmonde Cleary A R Warner R Talbert T Elliott S Gillies Places 89102 Alone Alauna Pleiades Archived from the original on 7 October 2014 Retrieved 12 February 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link David Shotter The Roman fort at Watercrook Kendal PDF Archived PDF from the original on 23 September 2015 Being a Relation of a Short Survey of 26 Counties briefly describing the Citties and their Scytuations and the Corporate Towns and Castles Herein By a Captaine a Lieuten a nt and an Ancient All three of the Military Company at Norwich British Museum MSS 34754 pp 19 20 Introduction To The Main Roads of Kendale Archived 7 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine British History Accessed 30 September 2012 Banking History Kendal Bank Tim Farron theyworkforyou com Archived from the original on 1 June 2013 Lake District National Park area map and South extension area PDF Lake District National Park Authority 2016 p 2 Archived PDF from the original on 13 January 2017 Retrieved 11 January 2017 Kendal A Gateway to the English Lakes London amp North Western Railway 1910 marine west coast climate climatology Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 3 June 2013 Kendal Climate Guide worldclimateguide co uk Archived from the original on 21 February 2013 Industries of Cumbria Footwear Cumbria industries org uk 2 May 2003 Archived from the original on 14 October 2013 Retrieved 31 May 2013 White Anna 24 May 2014 Meet the company behind our Remembrance poppies The Daily Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 17 August 2018 Where to Catch Your Bus PDF www cumbria gov uk Retrieved 10 September 2020 Meet the Head Queen Katherine School Archived from the original on 10 March 2014 Retrieved 10 March 2014 David Starkey Laughing all the way to the library 8 March 2002 Retrieved 17 August 2018 New principal appointed at Kendal College The Westmorland Gazette Retrieved 4 June 2018 Kendal Castle Howe Visit Cumbria www visitcumbria com Archived from the original on 15 March 2012 Retrieved 24 April 2018 Kendal The Drill Hall Project Archived from the original on 2 September 2017 Retrieved 1 September 2017 https www mountain rescue org uk assets files downloads MREWAnnualReview2018 pdf dead link LDSAMRA Home page www ldsamra org uk Retrieved 17 August 2018 Town Twinning Kendal Town Council Retrieved 11 March 2022 Freedom Parade in Honour of The Duke of Lancaster s Regiment Kendal Town Council Archived from the original on 29 May 2019 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kendal Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Kendal Cumbria County History Trust Kendal formerly Kirkby Kendal nb provisional research only see Talk page Kendal Town Council The Northern Reaches Restoration of the canal to Kendal Kendal Museum Kendal Leisure Centre Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kendal amp oldid 1151028299, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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