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Middlesbrough

Middlesbrough (/ˈmɪdəlzbrə/ MID-əlz-brə) is a town in the Middlesbrough unitary authority borough of North Yorkshire, England. The town lies near the mouth of the River Tees and north of the North York Moors National Park. The built-up area had a population of 148,215 at the 2021 UK census.[1] It is the largest town of the wider Teesside area, which had a population of 376,633 in 2011.[2]

Middlesbrough
Town
Middlesbrough
Location within North Yorkshire
Population 
Borough (2021)143,734
• Built-up area (2021)148,215[1]
OS grid referenceNZ495204
• London217 mi (349 km) S
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Areas of the town
Post townMIDDLESBROUGH
Postcode districtTS1 – TS9
Dialling code01642
PoliceCleveland
FireCleveland
AmbulanceNorth East
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Yorkshire
54°34′36″N 1°14′08″W / 54.5767°N 1.2355°W / 54.5767; -1.2355

Until the early 1800s, the area was rural farmland in the historic county of Yorkshire. The town was a planned development which started in 1830, based around a new port with coal and later ironworks added. Steel production and ship building began in the late 1800s, remaining associated with the town until the post-industrial decline of the late twentieth century. Trade (notably through ports) and digital enterprise sectors contemporarily contribute to the local economy, Teesside University and Middlesbrough College to local education.

Middlesbrough was made a municipal borough in 1853. When elected county councils were created in 1889, Middlesbrough was considered large enough to provide its own county-level services and so it became a county borough, independent from North Riding County Council. The borough of Middlesbrough was abolished in 1968 when the area was absorbed into the larger County Borough of Teesside. Six years later in 1974 Middlesbrough was re-established as a borough within the new county of Cleveland. Cleveland was abolished in 1996, since when Middlesbrough has been a unitary authority within the ceremonial county of North Yorkshire.

History edit

Monks and lords edit

Middlesbrough started as a Benedictine priory on the south bank of the River Tees, its name possibly derived from it being midway between the holy sites of Durham and Whitby. The earliest recorded form of Middlesbrough's name is "Mydilsburgh". Some believe the name means "middle fortress", as it was midway between the two religious houses of Durham and Whitby; others state that it is an Old English personal name (Midele or Myhailf) combined with burgh meaning town.[3][4][5][6]

In 686, a monastic cell was consecrated by St. Cuthbert at the request of St. Hilda, Abbess of Whitby. The cell evolved into Middlesbrough Priory. The manor of Middlesburgh belonged to Whitby Abbey and Gisborough Priory.[7] Robert Bruce, Lord of Cleveland and Annandale, granted and confirmed, in 1119, the church of St. Hilda of Middleburg to Whitby.[8] Up until its closure on the Dissolution of the Monasteries by Henry VIII in 1537, the church was maintained by 12 Benedictine monks, many of whom became vicars, or rectors, of various places in Cleveland.[9]

After the Angles, the area became home to Viking settlers. Names of Viking origin (with the suffix by meaning village[10]) are abundant in the area; for example, Ormesby, Stainsby and Tollesby were once separate villages that belonged to Vikings called Orm, Steinn and Toll that are now areas of Middlesbrough were recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086.

Coal and docks edit

In 1801, Middlesbrough was a small farming township with a population of just 25. From the 1829 onwards it experienced rapid growth. In 1828 the influential Quaker banker, coal mine owner and Stockton and Darlington Railway (S&DR) shareholder Joseph Pease sailed up the River Tees to find a suitable new site downriver of Stockton on which to place new coal staithes. As a result, in 1829 he and a group of Quaker businessmen bought the Middlesbrough farmstead and associated estate, some 527 acres (213 ha) of land, and established the Middlesbrough Estate Company.

Through the company, the investors set about a new coal port development (designed by John Harris) on the southern banks of the Tees.[11][12] The first coal shipping staithes at the port (known as "Port Darlington") were constructed with a settlement to the east established on the site of Middlesbrough farm as labour for the port, taking on the farm's name as it developed into a village.[13][14]

The port was linked to the S&DR on 27 December 1830 via a branch that extended to an area just north of the current Middlesbrough railway station.[15]

The success of the port meant it soon became overwhelmed by the volume of imports and exports, and in 1839 work started on a dock to the east of Middlesbrough.[13] The first water for the dock was let in on 19 March 1842, the formal opening took place on 12 May 1842.

Iron, Steel and ships edit

 
"Where alchemists were born below Cleveland's Hills. A giant blue dragonfly across the Tees reminds us every night. We built the world, every metropolis came from the Ironopolis." A Poem by Ian Horn.

Iron dominated the Tees area since 1841 when Henry Bolckow in partnership with John Vaughan, founded the Vulcan iron foundry and rolling mill. Vaughan introduced the new "Bell Hopper" system of closed blast furnaces developed at the Ebbw Vale works. The new system and nearby abundant supply of Ironstone in the Eston Hills in 1850, made the works a success with the area becoming known as the "Iron-smelting centre of the world" and Bolckow, Vaughan & Co., Ltd the largest company in existence at the time.[16]

By 1851 Middlesbrough's population had grown from 40 people in 1829 to 7,600.[12] Pig iron production rose tenfold between 1851 and 1856 and by the mid-1870s Middlesbrough was producing one third of the entire nations Pig Iron output. It was during this time Middlesbrough earned the nickname "Ironopolis".[17][18]

 
Old Town Hall, Middlesbrough in 2013

On 21 January 1853, Middlesbrough received its Royal Charter of Incorporation,[19] giving the town the right to have a mayor, aldermen and councillors. Henry Bolckow became mayor, in 1853.[7]

In the latter half of the 19th century, Old Middlesbrough was starting to decline and was overshadowed by developments built around the new town hall, south of the original town hall.[20][21]

 
Gibson House (Boho Four)

On 15 August 1867, a Reform Bill was passed, making Middlesbrough a new parliamentary borough, Bolckow was elected member for Middlesbrough the following year. In 1900, Bolckow, Vaughan & Co had become the largest producer of steel in Great Britain.

The town's rapid expansion continued throughout the second half of the 19th century (fuelled by the iron and steel industry), the population reaching 90,000 by the dawn of the 20th century.[12]

Second World War edit

Middlesbrough was the first major British town and industrial target to be bombed during the Second World War. The steel making capacity and railways for carrying steel products were obvious targets. The Luftwaffe first bombed the town on 25 May 1940, when a lone bomber dropped 13 bombs between South Bank Road and the South Steel plant.[22] More bombing occurred throughout the course of the war, with the railway station put out of action for two weeks in 1942.[23]

By the end of the war over 200 buildings had been damaged or destroyed within the Middlesbrough area. Areas of early and mid-Victorian housing were demolished and much of central Middlesbrough was redeveloped. Heavy industry was relocated to areas of land better suited to the needs of modern technology. Middlesbrough itself began to take on a completely different look.[24]

Post-war rebuild edit

 
A66 from a multi-storey car park in 2006 (the road is raised with Wilson Street running adjacent)

Post war industrial to contemporary un-industrial Middlesbrough has changed the town, multiple buildings replaced and roads built. The A66 road was built through the town in the 1980s; Middlesbrough's Royal Exchange building was demolished to make way for the road.

Middlesbrough F.C.'s modern Riverside Stadium opened on 26 August 1995 next to Middlesbrough Dock. The club moved from their previous home in the town for 92 years, Ayresome Park.

The original St.Hilda's area of Middlesbrough, after decades of decline and clearance, was given a new name of Middlehaven in 1986 on investment proposals to build on the land.[25] Middlehaven has since had new buildings built there including Middlesbrough College and Middlesbrough FC's Riverside Stadium amongst others. Also situated at Middlehaven is the "Boho" zone, offering office space to the area's business and to attract new companies, and also "Bohouse", housing.[26][27] Some of the street names from the original grid-iron street plan of the town still exist in the area today.

The expansion of Middlesbrough southwards, eastwards and westwards continued throughout the 20th century absorbing villages such as Linthorpe, Acklam, Ormesby, Marton and Nunthorpe[12] and continues to the present day.

Governance edit

The local authority is Middlesbrough Council, a unitary authority. Middlesbrough also forms part of the Tees Valley Combined Authority.

Administrative history edit

Middlesbrough was historically a township in the ancient parish of West Acklam in the Langbaurgh Wapentake (also known as Cleveland) of the North Riding of Yorkshire.[28] After the dissolution of the monastery in 1539 the former Middlesbrough Priory was used as a chapel of ease to West Acklam for a time, but by about 1660 the building had been demolished. Despite having no church building, a perpetual curacy of Middlesbrough was created in 1744, also covering the neighbouring township of Linthorpe, and the curacy of Middlesbrough gradually came to be treated as a civil parish.[29][30]

After construction of the modern town began in 1830, there was a need for more urban forms of local government. In 1841 a body of improvement commissioners was set up covering the township of Middlesbrough and part of the township of Linthorpe.[31] The commissioners were superseded in 1853 when the same area was made a municipal borough. The borough boundaries were extended in 1858, 1866 and 1887.[32][33] When elected county councils were created in 1889 under the Local Government Act 1888, Middlesbrough was considered large enough to provide its own county-level services and so it became a county borough, independent from the new North Riding County Council, whilst remaining part of the North Riding of Yorkshire for ceremonial purposes.[34]

By this time the borough covered the civil parish of Middlesbrough and parts of the parishes of Linthorpe (where the old township had been made a separate parish in 1866), Marton, Normanby, Ormesby and West Acklam. The Local Government Act 1894 said that parishes could no longer straddle borough boundaries, and so the parish of Middlesbrough was enlarged to cover the whole borough.[35][36]

 
Acklam Hall, built 1680s: Manor house in the parish of West Acklam which historically included Middlesbrough. West Acklam was absorbed into Middlesbrough in 1932.

The borough was further enlarged in 1913, taking in the rest of Linthorpe and the North Ormesby area from the parish of Ormesby.[37] In 1932 it gained West Acklam and smaller parts from other parishes when the Middlesbrough Rural District was abolished.[35]

In the latter half of the 20th century Middlesbrough was affected by three reforms: in 1968, Middlesbrough became part of the Teesside County Borough; in 1974, it became the county town of the Cleveland non-metropolitan county until its abolition and in 1996, the Borough of Middlesbrough became a unitary authority of North Yorkshire. In 2011 a local enterprise partnership was formed from the former Cleveland boroughs and the borough of Darlington called Tees Valley, in 2016 the area appointed a combined authority mayor.

Constituencies edit

The Middlesbrough constituency is represented by Andy McDonald for Labour in the House of Commons. He was elected in a by-election held on 29 November 2012 following the death of previous Member of Parliament Sir Stuart Bell, who was the MP since 1983. Middlesbrough has been a traditionally safe Labour seat. The first Conservative MP for Middlesbrough was Sir Samuel Alexander Sadler, elected in 1900.

The Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland constituency is represented by Simon Clarke of the Conservative Party, who won the seat from Labour in the 2017 general election. Prior to Clarke's election, the seat had always been Labour since it was created in 1997.

Different constituencies have historically covered the town:

Geography edit

Middlesbrough is south of the River Tees with nature reserves and heavy industry on the opposite bank. Some open spaces in the town are off the B1380 road (Ladgate Lane): Sandy Flatts, Middlesbrough Municipal Golf Course, Stewart Park and Ormesby Hall's grounds. It is one of the Tree Cities of the World.[38]

Distance to other places edit

Place Distance Direction Relation
London 217 miles (349 km)[39] South England and the UK's capital city
Edinburgh 158 miles (254 km)[40] North Scotland's capital city
York 43 miles (69 km)[41] South Historic county town of Yorkshire
Durham 19 miles (31 km)[42] North Closest city
Darlington 13 miles (21 km)[43] West Teesdale
Hartlepool 8 miles (13 km)[44] North Teesdale
Stockton 3 miles (4.8 km)[45] West Teesdale

The town centre is approximately 6 miles (9.7 km) from the coast, 7 miles (11 km) from Roseberry Topping in the North York Moors National Park and 25 miles (40 km) from the Yorkshire Dales National Park.

Areas edit

Middlesbrough is within the Teesside, which is centred around the River Tees; it includes nearby towns such as Stockton and Redcar. The following list shows the wards that correspond to the Middlesbrough built-up area ; those in bold have civil parishes.

 
The 2011 Teesside Built-up Area with subdivisions and local authority boundaries, Middlesbrough is light red.

Climate edit

Middlesbrough has an oceanic climate typical for the United Kingdom. Being sheltered from prevailing south-westerly winds by the Lake District and Pennines to the west, and the Cleveland Hills to the south, Middlesbrough is in one of the relatively dry parts of the country, receiving on average 574 millimetres (22.6 inches) of rain a year. Temperatures range from mild summer highs in July and August typically around 21 °C (70 °F), to winter lows in December and January falling to around 0 °C (32 °F).

Seasonal variations are small and both the mild summers and cool winters are far removed from the average climates of the latitude (54.5°N). This is mainly due to the British Isles being a relatively small land mass surrounded by water, the mild south-westerly Gulf Stream air that dominates the British Isles, and the propensity for cloud cover to limit temperature extremes. In nearby Scandinavia, more than ten latitudes farther north, there are coastal Bothnian climates with warmer summers than Middlesbrough; and winters in Middlesbrough can be less cold than those at lower latitudes in mainland Europe.

Climate data for Middlesbrough, England (1991–2010, Stockton-on-Tees Climate Station)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 7.0
(44.6)
7.9
(46.2)
10.0
(50.0)
12.8
(55.0)
15.5
(59.9)
18.2
(64.8)
20.6
(69.1)
20.4
(68.7)
17.7
(63.9)
13.9
(57.0)
9.9
(49.8)
7.3
(45.1)
13.5
(56.3)
Daily mean °C (°F) 4.1
(39.4)
4.6
(40.3)
6.1
(43.0)
8.4
(47.1)
10.8
(51.4)
13.6
(56.5)
15.8
(60.4)
15.7
(60.3)
13.3
(55.9)
10.2
(50.4)
6.7
(44.1)
4.2
(39.6)
9.5
(49.0)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 1.1
(34.0)
1.2
(34.2)
2.1
(35.8)
3.9
(39.0)
6.1
(43.0)
8.9
(48.0)
10.9
(51.6)
10.9
(51.6)
8.8
(47.8)
6.5
(43.7)
3.5
(38.3)
1.0
(33.8)
5.4
(41.7)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 40.2
(1.58)
36.1
(1.42)
34.0
(1.34)
39.2
(1.54)
42.0
(1.65)
55.7
(2.19)
59.1
(2.33)
63.3
(2.49)
52.3
(2.06)
59.3
(2.33)
62.8
(2.47)
52.2
(2.06)
596.2
(23.46)
Mean monthly sunshine hours 56.1 76.2 109.6 138.9 180.7 171.2 174.3 161.4 125.9 91.1 59.5 50.4 1,395.3
Source: UK Met Office[46]

Economy edit

 
Captain Cook Square

Middlesbrough has four shopping centres accessible from Linthorpe road: Cleveland Centre, Hill Street, Captain Cook Square and Dundas. Gateway Retail Park is near the Riverside Stadium[47] and the Parkway Centre is in Coulby Newham. Cleveland retail park (South Bank) and the retail part of Teesside Park (between Thornaby and Middlesbrough) are on the council's outskirts.

The leisure part of Teesside Park is in the council area, including a cinema and bowling alley. Middlesbrough Leisure Park is located at the eastern edge of the town centre: it has restaurants, a cinema, a golf shop and a gym.[48] Captain Cook Square, with the Future High Streets Fund, transitioned from majority retail sector to having a hospitality sector; mini-golf, indoor go-kart track, e-sport venue and bowling alley.[49]

Industry edit

Industry in the town was once dominated by steelmaking, shipbuilding and chemical industries. Since the late 20th century and into the 21st century,[50][51] demise of much of the heavy industry in the area, newer technologies (such as the digital sector) have emerged.[52]

Engineering edit

Middlesbrough also remains a stronghold for engineering based manufacturing and engineering contract service businesses. To help support this, the new TeesAMP advanced manufacturing park is designed to accommodate businesses associated with advanced manufacturing and emerging technologies.[53] Announced in September 2020, TeesAMP will be the location of the UK's first hydrogen transport centre.[54]

Port edit

 
PD Ports's offices on Queen's Square

Teesport, owned by PD Ports, is a major contributor to the economy of Middlesbrough and the port owners have their offices in the town. The port is 1 mile (2 km) from the North Sea and 4 miles (6 km) east of Middlesbrough, on the River Tees. In 2019 it handled over 4,350 vessels each year and around 27 million tonnes of cargo with the estate covering approximately 779 acres.[55] Steel, petrochemical, agribulks, manufacturing, engineering and high street commerce operations are all supported through Teesport, in addition to the renewable energy sector, in both production and assembly facilities.

Former edit

In 1875, Bolckow, Vaughan & Co opened the Cleveland Steelworks in Middlesbrough, beginning the transition from iron production to steel and, by the turn of the century, the area had become one of the major steel centres in the country and possibly the world. In 1900, Bolckow, Vaughan & Co had become the largest producer of steel in Great Britain. In 1914, Dorman Long, another major steel producer from Middlesbrough, became the largest company in Britain, employing a workforce of over 20,000, and by 1929 it was the dominant steel producer on Teesside after taking over Bolckow, Vaughan & Co and acquiring its assets. It was possibly the largest steel producer in Britain at the time.[56]

The steel components of the Sydney Harbour Bridge (1932) were engineered and fabricated by Dorman Long of Middlesbrough. The company was also responsible for the New Tyne Bridge in Newcastle.[57]

Several large shipyards also lined the Tees, including the Sir Raylton Dixon & Company, which produced hundreds of steam freighters including the infamous SS Mont-Blanc, the steamship which caused the 1917 Halifax Explosion in Canada.

The area is still home to the nearby large Wilton International industrial site which until 1995 was largely owned by Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI). The fragmentation of that company led to smaller manufacturing units being owned by multinational organisations. The last part of ICI itself completely left the area in 2006 and the remaining companies are now members of the Northeast of England Process Industry Cluster (NEPIC).

Culture edit

Festivals and fairs edit

 
Wilkinson Lake

The Middlesbrough Mela is an annual, multi-cultural festival attracting an audience of up to 40,000 to enjoy a mix of live music, food, craft and fashion stalls. It began in Middlesbrough's Central Gardens, now Centre Square, and is either held there or in Albert Park.[58]

Theatres and music venues edit

Middlesbrough also has a healthy musical heritage. A number of bands and musicians hail from the area, including Paul Rodgers, Chris Rea, and Micky Moody.

Middlesbrough Town Hall is the pre-eminent theatre venue in Middlesbrough. It has two concert halls: the first is a classic Victorian concert hall with a proscenium stage and seating 1,190; the second, under the main hall, is called the Middlesbrough Crypt and has a capacity of up to 600. The venue is run by Middlesbrough Council and is funded, in part, by Arts Council England as a National Portfolio Organisation specialising in music.[59] It was refurbished with the assistance of the National Lottery Heritage Fund and reopened in 2018.[60]

The Middlesbrough Theatre (formerly the Little Theatre) is in the suburb of Linthorpe. It was designed by architects Elder & De Pierro[61] and was the first purpose designed theatre to be erected in post-war England when it was opened on 22 October 1957 by Sir John Gielgud.[62][63]

Art and galleries edit

 
MIMA Gallery

The town has three art galleries. Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art, known locally as mima, is a purpose built contemporary art gallery which opened in January 2007. It replaced the Cleveland Gallery (closed 1999), and Cleveland Crafts Centre (closed 2003).

The Middlesbrough Art Weekender is a contemporary art festival organised by the Auxiliary that has been held in central Middlesbrough since 2017.[64] In 2019, it was held over the weekend of 26–29 September and included the works of artists such as Emily Hesse and Karina Smigla-Bobinski.[65] The Auxiliary Warehouse space, which was opened also as part of the 2019 Middlesbrough Art Weekender, is a recent addition to the contemporary art community.[66]

The Platform A Gallery is a contemporary art space at the end of platform 1 of Middlesbrough Railway Station.[67]

Cuisine edit

 
Parmo with chips and salad

The Parmo originated in Middlesbrough. It consists of a breaded cutlet of meat with cheese and white sauce toppings. The parmo is widely available at takeaways in Middlesbrough.

Public services edit

Healthcare edit

 
James Cook University Hospital

The South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust has the James Cook University Hospital in the town. It adds to the economy through innovative projects; such as South Tees bio-incubator which acts as a launch-pad for research, innovation and collaboration between health, technology and science. It is a facility used by GlycoSeLect (UK) Ltd. as a client of the trust in strategic partnership with The Northern Health Science Alliance which has contributed £10.8 billion to the UK economy.[68]

Roseberry Park Hospital, operated by Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys NHS Foundation Trust (TWEV), is north of James Cook Hospital. The hospital is psychiatric orientated and replaced St Luke's Hospital.[69] Acklam Road Hospital is operated by Cumbria, Northumberland, Tyne and Wear NHS Foundation Trust which took over from TWEV. During the transition it was renamed from West Lane to its current name.[70]

There is also the Middlesbrough One Life Medical Centre and North Ormesby Health Village in town. Ramsey Health operate the private Tees Valley Hospital in Acklam.[71]

Police edit

 
Cleveland Police Middlesbrough Headquarters

Cleveland Police serve Middlesbrough out of their headquarters on Bridge Street West. The British Transport Police also maintain a presence at Middlesbrough Station.

Facilities edit

Parks edit

 
Albert Park

Albert Park was donated to the town by Henry Bolckow in 1866. It was formally opened by Prince Arthur on 11 August 1868, and consists of a 30-hectare (74-acre) site. The park underwent a considerable period of restoration from 2001 to 2004, during which a number of the park's landmarks saw either restoration or revival.

Stewart Park was donated to the people of Middlesbrough in 1928 by Councillor Thomas Dormand Stewart and encompasses Victorian stable buildings, lakes and animal pens. It is also home to the Captain Cook Birthplace Museum. During 2011 and 2012, the park underwent major refurbishment. It hosted the BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend in the summer of 2019.[72]

Newham Grange Leisure farm in the suburb of Coulby Newham has operated continuously in this spot since the 17th century, becoming a farm park and conservation centre farm with the first residential development of the suburb in the 1970s.

Libraries edit

 
Middlesbrough Central (Public) Library
 
Inside the public Library reference room

There are multiple libraries serving Middlesbrough. A notable library is the Middlesbrough Central Carnegie library which dates from 1912.[73]

Landmarks edit

As of 2022 there are 129 listed buildings in the council area. Acklam Hall is the only one at grade I,[74] and 11 are at grade II*,[75] including the town hall[75] and the Transporter Bridge.[76]

Buildings edit

Buildings of Middlesbrough
 
 
 
 
Landmarks from top left to bottom right:
Acklam Hall, Grey Towers, Webb House/ The Dorman Long Office and The Middlesbrough Empire

The terraced Victorian streets surrounding the town centre are elements of Middlesbrough's social and historical identity, and the vast streets surrounding Parliament Road and Abingdon Road a reminder of the area's wealth and rapid growth during industrialisation.

The outer areas of the town have multiple country halls, most are of Victorian origin. Former halls include Marton Hall (on the grounds of Stewart Park), Gunnergate Hall (Coulby Newham), Tollesby Hall and Park End House.[77] They are multiple halls that are still in existence such as Newham Hall,[78] Nunthorpe Hall,[79] Grey Towers,[80] and Coulby Manor.[81] The oldest domestic building is Acklam Hall of 1678. Built by Sir William Hustler, it is also the only Grade I listed building in Midddlesbrough.[74][82] Within a mile of the council area there are Normanby Hall,[83] Upsall Hall[84] and the Grade I listed Ormesby Hall.[85]

Middlesbrough Town Hall, designed by George Gordon Hoskins and built between 1883 and 1889 is a Grade II* listed building[75] used for municipal purposes and as an entertainment venue. The Middlesbrough Empire, built in 1897 as a theatre, is a nightclub (since 1993) designed by Ernest Runtz. The first artist to perform in building as a Music Hall was Lillie Langtry.[86] It became an early nightclub (1950s), then a bingo hall and is now once again a nightclub. In Linthorpe, is the Middlesbrough Theatre opened by Sir John Gielgud in 1957; it was one of the first new theatres built in England after the Second World War.

The Dorman Long office on Zetland Road, constructed between 1881 and 1891, is the only commercial building ever designed by Philip Webb, the architect who worked for Sir Isaac Lowthian Bell.

Bridges edit

Bridges of Middlesbrough
 
 
Left: Tees Transporter Bridge, built in 1911
Right: Tees Newport Bridge

Via a 1907 Act of Parliament, Sir William Arrol & Co. of Glasgow built the Tees Transporter Bridge (1911) which spans the river between Middlesbrough and Port Clarence. It is a Grade II* listed building.[76] Some of the film Billy Elliot was filmed on the bridge.[87] At 850 feet (260 m) long and 225 feet (69 m) high, it is one of the largest of its type in the world. Since reopening after restoration and flood protection work in 2013 and 2015[88][89] the bridge has been closed for long periods due to safety concerns.[90] In August 2022, the Mayor of Middlesbrough announced that one of the legs is sinking, and that the estimated costs of repairs have been increasing: the bridge's future remains under consideration.[91]

The Tees Newport Bridge opened further up the river in 1934. Newport bridge still stands and is passable by traffic: it formerly lifted vertically in the centre.

Artworks edit

 
 
 
Sculptures: 40,000 Years of Modern Art, Bottle O' Notes and Temenos

The Temenos sculpture, designed by sculptor Anish Kapoor and designer Cecil Balmond, is a steel structure near to the north west side of the Riverside Stadium. The steel structure, consisting of a pole, a circular ring and an oval ring, stands approximately 110 m long and 50 m high and is held together by steel wire. It was unveiled in 2010 at a cost of £2.7 million.

Near the town hall is the "Bottle of Notes", it was unveiled in 1993 and is the UK's only public sculpture by Claes Oldenburg, it is inspired by Captain James Cook.[92]

Transport edit

Road edit

 
A66 from a multi-storey car park in 2006 (the road is raised with Wilson Street running adjacent)

Middlesbrough is served by public transport. Locally, Arriva North East and Stagecoach provide the majority of bus services, with National Express and Megabus operating long-distance coach travel from Middlesbrough bus station.

Middlesbrough is served by a number of major roads. The A19 (north–south) lies to the west of the town, the A66 (east–west) runs through the northern part of the town centre and the A171, A172 and A174 are other main routes linking the town. The A19 / A66 major interchange lies just to the west of the town.

Rail edit

 
Middlesbrough station from Albert Road

Middlesbrough railway station is the fourth busiest in the North East England region, according to an Office of Rail and Road statistics during the 2019–20 period.[93] It opened in 1877, at its current site, and is in the Gothic architectural style.[94] It is the Esk Valley line's northern terminus, the Durham Coast line's southern terminus and is on the Tees Valley line. There are three train services operators for the station: LNER operates limited rail services to Thornaby, York and London Kings Cross;[95] Northern operates rail services to Newcastle, Sunderland, Darlington, Redcar Central and Whitby while TransPennine Express provides direct rail services to Leeds, York, Liverpool Lime Street and Manchester.

There are also Nunthorpe, Gypsy Lane, Marton and James Cook (the latter operates near James Cook University Hospital) stations in Middlesbrough on the Esk Valley line. South Bank station is in the Middlesbrough subdivision on the Tees Valley Line.

Middlesbrough has no direct services south, without going through or changing at York, to Harrogate and Scarborough as well as North Yorkshire's neighbouring counties of West Yorkshire, East Riding of Yorkshire, Lancashire and South Yorkshire.

The town formerly had electric tramway services, the Middlesbrough Corporation Tramways operated the tramways between 1921 and 1934.[96]

Paths edit

A trial e-scooter hire system is operating in Middlesbrough during 2020.[97]

Education edit

Museums edit

 
Dorman Museum

The Dorman Memorial Museum, which was founded by Sir Arthur Dorman and specialises in social and local history.

The Captain Cook Birthplace Museum, which was opened on 28 October 1978 in celebration of the 250th anniversary of Captain James Cook's birth in nearby Marton.

 
Ormesby Hall

Though just outside the boundary of Middlesbrough, within a joint preservation area with Redcar and Cleveland, Ormesby Hall is an 18th-century palladian mansion, once owned by the Pennyman family; it is now a National Trust property

In July 2000 the Transporter Bridge Visitor Centre was opened to commemorate the building of the Middlesbrough Transporter Bridge.[98]

University edit

Teesside University traces back to 1930 at the opening of Constantine Technical College, located on Borough Road, in the town centre. The then college expanded through acquiring adjacent buildings, such as Middlesbrough High School, and by building Middlesbrough Tower. It became Teesside Polytechnic in 1969.[99]

In 1992, the polytechnic gained university status, becoming the University of Teesside. Extramural classes had previously been provided by the University of Leeds Adult Education Centre on Harrow Road, from 1958 to 2001.[100] It was rebranded, in 2009, to Teesside University. It further expanded in size and courses available, until, student numbers increased to approximately 20,000 studying at the university.[101]

 
Teesside University Library

The university is a major presence in the town.[102] It has a growing reputation for developing digital businesses particularly in the field of digital animation and for hosting the Animex festival.[103] The Boho zone in the town now houses a large number of these start-up digital businesses.[104] The university has 18,000 students, 2,400 staff and operates a £250,000,000 campus in Middlesbrough town-centre. The university campus has benefited from approx £250 million of investment in recent years, including the £30 million Campus Heart scheme.

Teesside University supports a total of 2,570 full-time jobs across the Tees Valley, North East and UK economies per annum. The university contributes additional wealth to the local, regional and national economies as measured by Gross Value Added (GVA). It is estimated this contributes a total of £124 million GVA per annum. The total direct, indirect and induced spending impacts associated with full-time international students and UK students from outside of the North East is approximately £18.9 million per annum. It is estimated this spending supports 158 full-time jobs per annum in Tees Valley and contributes additional wealth of £9.3 million per annum to the local economy.[105]

Current university departments include: business, arts-and-media, computing, health-and-life-sciences, Science-and-Engineering and Social-Sciences-and-Law. In addition to teaching computer animation and games design, it co-hosts the annual Animex International Festival of Animation and Computer Games. The university has links with James Cook University Hospital in the town.

Other institutions edit

 
Middlesbrough College

The town's largest college is Middlesbrough College, with 16,000 students. Others include Trinity Catholic College in Saltersgill,[106] Macmillan Academy on Stockton Road and Askham Bryan College which has a site in Stewart Park.

The Northern School of Art (established in 1870) is also based in Middlesbrough, it has another site in Hartlepool. It is one of only four specialist art and design further education colleges in the United Kingdom.

Religion edit

Christianity edit

 
St Columba's Church CoE
 
St Mary's Cathedral RC
 
The former Park Methodist Church on Linthorpe Road, currently apartments
Hierarchy
Denomination Top tier 2nd 3rd 4th
Church of England Province of York Diocese of York Archdeaconry of Cleveland Deanery of Middlesbrough
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Liverpool Diocese of Middlesbrough Northern Vicariate
Methodist District of Darlington Circuit of Middlesbrough and Eston

The Church of England Middlesbrough deanery is in the Archdeaconry of Cleveland with Stokesley (west), Guisborough (east), Whitby (south east) and Northern Ryedale (south) and Mowbray (south west). It is in the Diocese of York and Province of York.

Middlesbrough is the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Middlesbrough, created on 20 December 1878 from the Diocese of Beverley. St. Mary's Cathedral is the diocese's mother church, it is in Coulby Newham as a replacement to the original St Mary's in the town centre. The present bishop is the Right Reverend Terence Patrick Drainey, 7th Bishop of Middlesbrough, who was ordained on Friday 25 January 2008. Churches of the Sacred Heart, St Bernadette's and St Clare of Assisi are also in the town.

Judaism edit

 
The synagogue in Park Road South, which opened in 1938 and closed in 1998

Ashkenazi Jews started to settle in Middlesbrough from 1862 and formed Middlesbrough Hebrew Congregation in 1870 with a synagogue in Hill Street. The synagogue moved to Brentnall Street in 1874 and then to a new building in Park Road South in 1938.[107]

Editions of the Jewish Year Book record the growth and decline of Middlesbrough's Jewish population. It was about 100 in 1896–97 and peaked at 750 in 1935. It then declined to 30 in 1998, in which year the synagogue in Park Road South was ceremonially closed.[107]

Islam edit

 
Jamia Mosque, Waterloo Road

The Islamic community is represented in several mosques in Middlesbrough. Muslim sailors visited Middlesbrough from about 1890.[108] and, in 1961, Azzam and Younis Din opened the first Halal butcher shop.[108] The first mosque was a house in Grange Road in 1962.[108] The Al-Madina Jamia Mosque, on Waterloo Road, the Dar ul Islam Central Mosque, on Southfield Road, and the Abu Bakr Mosque & Community Centre,[109] which is on Park Road North.

Sikhism edit

The Sikh community established its first gurdwara in Milton Street in 1967.[108] After a time in Southfield Road, the centre is now in Lorne Street and was opened in 1990.[108]

Hinduism edit

There is a Hindu Cultural Centre in Westbourne Grove, North Ormesby, which was opened in 1990.[108]

Television and filmography edit

Middlesbrough has featured in many television programmes, including The Fast Show, Inspector George Gently, Steel River Blues, Spender, Play for Today (The Black Stuff; latterly the drama Boys from the Blackstuff) and Auf Wiedersehen, Pet.[87]

Film director Ridley Scott is from the North East and based the opening shot of Blade Runner on the view of the old ICI plant at Wilton. He said: "There's a walk from Redcar … I'd cross a bridge at night, and walk above the steel works. So that's probably where the opening of Blade Runner comes from. It always seemed to be rather gloomy and raining, and I'd just think "God, this is beautiful." You can find beauty in everything, and so I think I found the beauty in that darkness." It has been claimed that the site was also considered as a shooting location for one of the films in Scott's Alien franchise.[110]

In the 2009 action thriller The Tournament Middlesbrough is that year's location where the assassins' competition is being held. In November 2009, the mima art gallery was used by the presenters of Top Gear as part of a challenge. The challenge was to see if car exhibits would be more popular than normal art.[111]

In 2010, filmmaker John Walsh made the satirical documentary ToryBoy The Movie about the 2010 general election in the Middlesbrough constituency and sitting MP Stuart Bell's alleged laziness as an MP.[112][113][114]

In March 2013, Middlesbrough was used as a stand in for Newcastle 1969 in BBC's Inspector George Gently starring Martin Shaw and Lee Ingleby; the footage appeared in the episode "Gently Between The Lines" (episode 1 of series 6).[115]

Sport edit

Football and rugby union edit

 
Riverside Stadium

Middlesbrough FC is a Championship football team, owned by local haulage entrepreneur Steve Gibson and managed by Michael Carrick. The 34,000 capacity[116][117] Riverside Stadium is owned and host to home games by the club since 1995, when they left Ayresome Park. Founder members of the Premier League in 1992, Middlesbrough won the Football League Cup in 2004,[118] and were beaten finalists in the 2005-06 UEFA Cup.[119] In 1905, they made Britain's first £1,000 transfer when they signed Alf Common from local rivals Sunderland.[120] Middlesbrough Ironopolis FC was briefly based in the town during the late 19th century, it later dissolved. These days, Middlesbrough have players such as Darragh Lenihan, Hayden Hackney and Morgan Rogers.

Middlesbrough RUFC, founded in 1872 having have played their home games at Acklam Park since 1929, and Acklam RUFC are in Durham/ Northumberland Division One. Both are members of Yorkshire Rugby Football Union.

Racing edit

Middlesbrough hosts multiple road races through the year, including the annual Middlesbrough 10k (formerly Tees Pride 10k) road race. First held in 2005, the one-lap circuit event and associated fun runs were held in the Acklam area of the town before being moved to the town centre in 2021.[121][122]

On 1 May 2016, Middlesbrough hosted the start of Stage 3 to the 2016 Tour de Yorkshire. The stage and race ended in Scarborough.[123]

Other edit

 
Middlesbrough Golf Club

Middlesbrough Cricket Club have played at Acklam Park since 1930 and play in North Yorkshire and South Durham Cricket League. Yorkshire have played 45 County Championship games in Middlesbrough. The most recent being in 1996.

Speedway racing was staged at Cleveland Park Stadium from 1928 until the 1990s, with the Middlesbrough Bears.

Tees Valley Mohawks and Teesside Lions basketball teams play in the NBL Division 3. Athletics has two local clubs serving Middlesbrough and the surrounding area, Middlesbrough-and-Cleveland Harriers and Middlesbrough AC (Mandale). Training facilities at the Middlesbrough Sports Village opened in 2015, replacing Clairville Stadium.[124] Notable athletes to train at both facilities are World and European Indoor Sprint Champion Richard Kilty, British Indoor Long Jump record holder Chris Tomlinson. The sports village includes a running track with grandstand, an indoor gym and café, football pitches, as well as a cycle circuit and velodrome. Next to the sports village is a skateboard park and Middlesbrough Tennis World.[125]

Notable people edit

Twinned towns edit

Middlesbrough is twinned with:

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Bell, Lady Florence. At the Works, a Study of a Manufacturing Town (1907) online.
  • Briggs, Asa. Victorian Cities (1965) pp 245–82.
  • Doyle, Barry. "Labour and hospitals in urban Yorkshire: Middlesbrough, Leeds and Sheffield, 1919–1938." Social history of medicine (2010): hkq007.
  • Glass, Ruth. The social background of a plan: a study of Middlesbrough (1948)
  • Warwick, Tosh. Central Middlesbrough through time (2013).

External links edit

  •   Middlesbrough travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • Official Middlesbrough Council Website

middlesbrough, this, article, about, town, england, other, uses, disambiguation, əlz, brə, town, unitary, authority, borough, north, yorkshire, england, town, lies, near, mouth, river, tees, north, north, york, moors, national, park, built, area, population, 2. This article is about the town in England For other uses see Middlesbrough disambiguation Middlesbrough ˈ m ɪ d el z b r e MID elz bre is a town in the Middlesbrough unitary authority borough of North Yorkshire England The town lies near the mouth of the River Tees and north of the North York Moors National Park The built up area had a population of 148 215 at the 2021 UK census 1 It is the largest town of the wider Teesside area which had a population of 376 633 in 2011 2 MiddlesbroughTownFrom the top left Tops the skyline and town hallMiddles Newport Bridge Transporter Bridge and Dock Clock TowerBottom Riverside StadiumMiddlesbroughLocation within North YorkshirePopulation Borough 2021 143 734 Built up area 2021 148 215 1 OS grid referenceNZ495204 London217 mi 349 km SUnitary authorityMiddlesbroughCeremonial countyNorth YorkshireRegionNorth EastCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomAreas of the townList AcklamAyresomeBerwick HillsBrambles FarmCoulby NewhamEastersideGrove HillHemlingtonLinthorpeMartonMiddlehavenOrmesby part Nunthorpe parished PallisterStainton parished SaltersgillThornton parished ThorntreeTollesbyWhinney BanksPost townMIDDLESBROUGHPostcode districtTS1 TS9Dialling code01642PoliceClevelandFireClevelandAmbulanceNorth EastUK ParliamentMiddlesbroughMiddlesbrough South amp East ClevelandList of places UK England Yorkshire 54 34 36 N 1 14 08 W 54 5767 N 1 2355 W 54 5767 1 2355Until the early 1800s the area was rural farmland in the historic county of Yorkshire The town was a planned development which started in 1830 based around a new port with coal and later ironworks added Steel production and ship building began in the late 1800s remaining associated with the town until the post industrial decline of the late twentieth century Trade notably through ports and digital enterprise sectors contemporarily contribute to the local economy Teesside University and Middlesbrough College to local education Middlesbrough was made a municipal borough in 1853 When elected county councils were created in 1889 Middlesbrough was considered large enough to provide its own county level services and so it became a county borough independent from North Riding County Council The borough of Middlesbrough was abolished in 1968 when the area was absorbed into the larger County Borough of Teesside Six years later in 1974 Middlesbrough was re established as a borough within the new county of Cleveland Cleveland was abolished in 1996 since when Middlesbrough has been a unitary authority within the ceremonial county of North Yorkshire Contents 1 History 1 1 Monks and lords 1 2 Coal and docks 1 3 Iron Steel and ships 1 4 Second World War 1 5 Post war rebuild 2 Governance 2 1 Administrative history 2 2 Constituencies 3 Geography 3 1 Distance to other places 3 2 Areas 3 3 Climate 4 Economy 5 Industry 5 1 Engineering 5 2 Port 5 3 Former 6 Culture 6 1 Festivals and fairs 6 2 Theatres and music venues 6 3 Art and galleries 6 4 Cuisine 7 Public services 7 1 Healthcare 7 2 Police 8 Facilities 8 1 Parks 8 2 Libraries 9 Landmarks 9 1 Buildings 9 2 Bridges 9 3 Artworks 10 Transport 10 1 Road 10 2 Rail 10 3 Paths 11 Education 11 1 Museums 11 2 University 11 3 Other institutions 12 Religion 12 1 Christianity 12 2 Judaism 12 3 Islam 12 4 Sikhism 12 5 Hinduism 13 Television and filmography 14 Sport 14 1 Football and rugby union 14 2 Racing 14 3 Other 15 Notable people 16 Twinned towns 17 See also 18 Notes 19 References 20 Further reading 21 External linksHistory editFurther information History of Middlesbrough Monks and lords edit Middlesbrough started as a Benedictine priory on the south bank of the River Tees its name possibly derived from it being midway between the holy sites of Durham and Whitby The earliest recorded form of Middlesbrough s name is Mydilsburgh Some believe the name means middle fortress as it was midway between the two religious houses of Durham and Whitby others state that it is an Old English personal name Midele or Myhailf combined with burgh meaning town 3 4 5 6 In 686 a monastic cell was consecrated by St Cuthbert at the request of St Hilda Abbess of Whitby The cell evolved into Middlesbrough Priory The manor of Middlesburgh belonged to Whitby Abbey and Gisborough Priory 7 Robert Bruce Lord of Cleveland and Annandale granted and confirmed in 1119 the church of St Hilda of Middleburg to Whitby 8 Up until its closure on the Dissolution of the Monasteries by Henry VIII in 1537 the church was maintained by 12 Benedictine monks many of whom became vicars or rectors of various places in Cleveland 9 After the Angles the area became home to Viking settlers Names of Viking origin with the suffix by meaning village 10 are abundant in the area for example Ormesby Stainsby and Tollesby were once separate villages that belonged to Vikings called Orm Steinn and Toll that are now areas of Middlesbrough were recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 Coal and docks edit In 1801 Middlesbrough was a small farming township with a population of just 25 From the 1829 onwards it experienced rapid growth In 1828 the influential Quaker banker coal mine owner and Stockton and Darlington Railway S amp DR shareholder Joseph Pease sailed up the River Tees to find a suitable new site downriver of Stockton on which to place new coal staithes As a result in 1829 he and a group of Quaker businessmen bought the Middlesbrough farmstead and associated estate some 527 acres 213 ha of land and established the Middlesbrough Estate Company Through the company the investors set about a new coal port development designed by John Harris on the southern banks of the Tees 11 12 The first coal shipping staithes at the port known as Port Darlington were constructed with a settlement to the east established on the site of Middlesbrough farm as labour for the port taking on the farm s name as it developed into a village 13 14 The port was linked to the S amp DR on 27 December 1830 via a branch that extended to an area just north of the current Middlesbrough railway station 15 The success of the port meant it soon became overwhelmed by the volume of imports and exports and in 1839 work started on a dock to the east of Middlesbrough 13 The first water for the dock was let in on 19 March 1842 the formal opening took place on 12 May 1842 Iron Steel and ships edit Further information Bolckow Vaughan Teesside Steelworks and Dorman Long nbsp Where alchemists were born below Cleveland s Hills A giant blue dragonfly across the Tees reminds us every night We built the world every metropolis came from the Ironopolis A Poem by Ian Horn Iron dominated the Tees area since 1841 when Henry Bolckow in partnership with John Vaughan founded the Vulcan iron foundry and rolling mill Vaughan introduced the new Bell Hopper system of closed blast furnaces developed at the Ebbw Vale works The new system and nearby abundant supply of Ironstone in the Eston Hills in 1850 made the works a success with the area becoming known as the Iron smelting centre of the world and Bolckow Vaughan amp Co Ltd the largest company in existence at the time 16 By 1851 Middlesbrough s population had grown from 40 people in 1829 to 7 600 12 Pig iron production rose tenfold between 1851 and 1856 and by the mid 1870s Middlesbrough was producing one third of the entire nations Pig Iron output It was during this time Middlesbrough earned the nickname Ironopolis 17 18 nbsp Old Town Hall Middlesbrough in 2013On 21 January 1853 Middlesbrough received its Royal Charter of Incorporation 19 giving the town the right to have a mayor aldermen and councillors Henry Bolckow became mayor in 1853 7 In the latter half of the 19th century Old Middlesbrough was starting to decline and was overshadowed by developments built around the new town hall south of the original town hall 20 21 nbsp Gibson House Boho Four On 15 August 1867 a Reform Bill was passed making Middlesbrough a new parliamentary borough Bolckow was elected member for Middlesbrough the following year In 1900 Bolckow Vaughan amp Co had become the largest producer of steel in Great Britain The town s rapid expansion continued throughout the second half of the 19th century fuelled by the iron and steel industry the population reaching 90 000 by the dawn of the 20th century 12 Second World War edit Middlesbrough was the first major British town and industrial target to be bombed during the Second World War The steel making capacity and railways for carrying steel products were obvious targets The Luftwaffe first bombed the town on 25 May 1940 when a lone bomber dropped 13 bombs between South Bank Road and the South Steel plant 22 More bombing occurred throughout the course of the war with the railway station put out of action for two weeks in 1942 23 By the end of the war over 200 buildings had been damaged or destroyed within the Middlesbrough area Areas of early and mid Victorian housing were demolished and much of central Middlesbrough was redeveloped Heavy industry was relocated to areas of land better suited to the needs of modern technology Middlesbrough itself began to take on a completely different look 24 Post war rebuild edit nbsp A66 from a multi storey car park in 2006 the road is raised with Wilson Street running adjacent Post war industrial to contemporary un industrial Middlesbrough has changed the town multiple buildings replaced and roads built The A66 road was built through the town in the 1980s Middlesbrough s Royal Exchange building was demolished to make way for the road Middlesbrough F C s modern Riverside Stadium opened on 26 August 1995 next to Middlesbrough Dock The club moved from their previous home in the town for 92 years Ayresome Park The original St Hilda s area of Middlesbrough after decades of decline and clearance was given a new name of Middlehaven in 1986 on investment proposals to build on the land 25 Middlehaven has since had new buildings built there including Middlesbrough College and Middlesbrough FC s Riverside Stadium amongst others Also situated at Middlehaven is the Boho zone offering office space to the area s business and to attract new companies and also Bohouse housing 26 27 Some of the street names from the original grid iron street plan of the town still exist in the area today The expansion of Middlesbrough southwards eastwards and westwards continued throughout the 20th century absorbing villages such as Linthorpe Acklam Ormesby Marton and Nunthorpe 12 and continues to the present day Governance editSee also Middlesbrough Council Borough of Middlesbrough and History of local government in Yorkshire The local authority is Middlesbrough Council a unitary authority Middlesbrough also forms part of the Tees Valley Combined Authority Administrative history edit Middlesbrough was historically a township in the ancient parish of West Acklam in the Langbaurgh Wapentake also known as Cleveland of the North Riding of Yorkshire 28 After the dissolution of the monastery in 1539 the former Middlesbrough Priory was used as a chapel of ease to West Acklam for a time but by about 1660 the building had been demolished Despite having no church building a perpetual curacy of Middlesbrough was created in 1744 also covering the neighbouring township of Linthorpe and the curacy of Middlesbrough gradually came to be treated as a civil parish 29 30 After construction of the modern town began in 1830 there was a need for more urban forms of local government In 1841 a body of improvement commissioners was set up covering the township of Middlesbrough and part of the township of Linthorpe 31 The commissioners were superseded in 1853 when the same area was made a municipal borough The borough boundaries were extended in 1858 1866 and 1887 32 33 When elected county councils were created in 1889 under the Local Government Act 1888 Middlesbrough was considered large enough to provide its own county level services and so it became a county borough independent from the new North Riding County Council whilst remaining part of the North Riding of Yorkshire for ceremonial purposes 34 By this time the borough covered the civil parish of Middlesbrough and parts of the parishes of Linthorpe where the old township had been made a separate parish in 1866 Marton Normanby Ormesby and West Acklam The Local Government Act 1894 said that parishes could no longer straddle borough boundaries and so the parish of Middlesbrough was enlarged to cover the whole borough 35 36 nbsp Acklam Hall built 1680s Manor house in the parish of West Acklam which historically included Middlesbrough West Acklam was absorbed into Middlesbrough in 1932 The borough was further enlarged in 1913 taking in the rest of Linthorpe and the North Ormesby area from the parish of Ormesby 37 In 1932 it gained West Acklam and smaller parts from other parishes when the Middlesbrough Rural District was abolished 35 In the latter half of the 20th century Middlesbrough was affected by three reforms in 1968 Middlesbrough became part of the Teesside County Borough in 1974 it became the county town of the Cleveland non metropolitan county until its abolition and in 1996 the Borough of Middlesbrough became a unitary authority of North Yorkshire In 2011 a local enterprise partnership was formed from the former Cleveland boroughs and the borough of Darlington called Tees Valley in 2016 the area appointed a combined authority mayor Constituencies edit The Middlesbrough constituency is represented by Andy McDonald for Labour in the House of Commons He was elected in a by election held on 29 November 2012 following the death of previous Member of Parliament Sir Stuart Bell who was the MP since 1983 Middlesbrough has been a traditionally safe Labour seat The first Conservative MP for Middlesbrough was Sir Samuel Alexander Sadler elected in 1900 The Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland constituency is represented by Simon Clarke of the Conservative Party who won the seat from Labour in the 2017 general election Prior to Clarke s election the seat had always been Labour since it was created in 1997 Different constituencies have historically covered the town Yorkshire 1290 1832 North Riding of Yorkshire 1832 1885 Middlesbrough 1868 1918 Cleveland 1885 1918 1918 1974 Cleveland Middlesbrough East Middlesbrough West From 1974 Cleveland and Whitby until 1983 Langbaurgh until 1997 Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland current Middlesbrough currentGeography editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Middlesbrough news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Middlesbrough is south of the River Tees with nature reserves and heavy industry on the opposite bank Some open spaces in the town are off the B1380 road Ladgate Lane Sandy Flatts Middlesbrough Municipal Golf Course Stewart Park and Ormesby Hall s grounds It is one of the Tree Cities of the World 38 Distance to other places edit Place Distance Direction RelationLondon 217 miles 349 km 39 South England and the UK s capital cityEdinburgh 158 miles 254 km 40 North Scotland s capital cityYork 43 miles 69 km 41 South Historic county town of YorkshireDurham 19 miles 31 km 42 North Closest cityDarlington 13 miles 21 km 43 West TeesdaleHartlepool 8 miles 13 km 44 North TeesdaleStockton 3 miles 4 8 km 45 West TeesdaleThe town centre is approximately 6 miles 9 7 km from the coast 7 miles 11 km from Roseberry Topping in the North York Moors National Park and 25 miles 40 km from the Yorkshire Dales National Park Areas edit Further information List of electoral wards in North Yorkshire Middlesbrough is within the Teesside which is centred around the River Tees it includes nearby towns such as Stockton and Redcar The following list shows the wards that correspond to the Middlesbrough built up area those in bold have civil parishes nbsp The 2011 Teesside Built up Area with subdivisions and local authority boundaries Middlesbrough is light red Borough of MiddlesbroughAcklam and Kader Ayresome also includes Whinney Banks Berwick Hills and PallisterBrambles and Thorntree Central Coulby NewhamHemlington Ladgate Easterside Saltersgill and Tollesby LinthorpeLonglands and Beechwood Marton east and west wards NewportNorth Ormesby Nunthorpe Park includes Albert Park Park End and Beckfield includes Netherfields Stainton and Thornton TrimdonClimate edit Middlesbrough has an oceanic climate typical for the United Kingdom Being sheltered from prevailing south westerly winds by the Lake District and Pennines to the west and the Cleveland Hills to the south Middlesbrough is in one of the relatively dry parts of the country receiving on average 574 millimetres 22 6 inches of rain a year Temperatures range from mild summer highs in July and August typically around 21 C 70 F to winter lows in December and January falling to around 0 C 32 F Seasonal variations are small and both the mild summers and cool winters are far removed from the average climates of the latitude 54 5 N This is mainly due to the British Isles being a relatively small land mass surrounded by water the mild south westerly Gulf Stream air that dominates the British Isles and the propensity for cloud cover to limit temperature extremes In nearby Scandinavia more than ten latitudes farther north there are coastal Bothnian climates with warmer summers than Middlesbrough and winters in Middlesbrough can be less cold than those at lower latitudes in mainland Europe Climate data for Middlesbrough England 1991 2010 Stockton on Tees Climate Station Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearMean daily maximum C F 7 0 44 6 7 9 46 2 10 0 50 0 12 8 55 0 15 5 59 9 18 2 64 8 20 6 69 1 20 4 68 7 17 7 63 9 13 9 57 0 9 9 49 8 7 3 45 1 13 5 56 3 Daily mean C F 4 1 39 4 4 6 40 3 6 1 43 0 8 4 47 1 10 8 51 4 13 6 56 5 15 8 60 4 15 7 60 3 13 3 55 9 10 2 50 4 6 7 44 1 4 2 39 6 9 5 49 0 Mean daily minimum C F 1 1 34 0 1 2 34 2 2 1 35 8 3 9 39 0 6 1 43 0 8 9 48 0 10 9 51 6 10 9 51 6 8 8 47 8 6 5 43 7 3 5 38 3 1 0 33 8 5 4 41 7 Average precipitation mm inches 40 2 1 58 36 1 1 42 34 0 1 34 39 2 1 54 42 0 1 65 55 7 2 19 59 1 2 33 63 3 2 49 52 3 2 06 59 3 2 33 62 8 2 47 52 2 2 06 596 2 23 46 Mean monthly sunshine hours 56 1 76 2 109 6 138 9 180 7 171 2 174 3 161 4 125 9 91 1 59 5 50 4 1 395 3Source UK Met Office 46 Economy editSee also Double Eleven company SockMonkey Studios and Atomic Planet Entertainment nbsp Captain Cook SquareMiddlesbrough has four shopping centres accessible from Linthorpe road Cleveland Centre Hill Street Captain Cook Square and Dundas Gateway Retail Park is near the Riverside Stadium 47 and the Parkway Centre is in Coulby Newham Cleveland retail park South Bank and the retail part of Teesside Park between Thornaby and Middlesbrough are on the council s outskirts The leisure part of Teesside Park is in the council area including a cinema and bowling alley Middlesbrough Leisure Park is located at the eastern edge of the town centre it has restaurants a cinema a golf shop and a gym 48 Captain Cook Square with the Future High Streets Fund transitioned from majority retail sector to having a hospitality sector mini golf indoor go kart track e sport venue and bowling alley 49 Industry editIndustry in the town was once dominated by steelmaking shipbuilding and chemical industries Since the late 20th century and into the 21st century 50 51 demise of much of the heavy industry in the area newer technologies such as the digital sector have emerged 52 Engineering edit Middlesbrough also remains a stronghold for engineering based manufacturing and engineering contract service businesses To help support this the new TeesAMP advanced manufacturing park is designed to accommodate businesses associated with advanced manufacturing and emerging technologies 53 Announced in September 2020 TeesAMP will be the location of the UK s first hydrogen transport centre 54 Port edit nbsp PD Ports s offices on Queen s SquareTeesport owned by PD Ports is a major contributor to the economy of Middlesbrough and the port owners have their offices in the town The port is 1 mile 2 km from the North Sea and 4 miles 6 km east of Middlesbrough on the River Tees In 2019 it handled over 4 350 vessels each year and around 27 million tonnes of cargo with the estate covering approximately 779 acres 55 Steel petrochemical agribulks manufacturing engineering and high street commerce operations are all supported through Teesport in addition to the renewable energy sector in both production and assembly facilities Former edit In 1875 Bolckow Vaughan amp Co opened the Cleveland Steelworks in Middlesbrough beginning the transition from iron production to steel and by the turn of the century the area had become one of the major steel centres in the country and possibly the world In 1900 Bolckow Vaughan amp Co had become the largest producer of steel in Great Britain In 1914 Dorman Long another major steel producer from Middlesbrough became the largest company in Britain employing a workforce of over 20 000 and by 1929 it was the dominant steel producer on Teesside after taking over Bolckow Vaughan amp Co and acquiring its assets It was possibly the largest steel producer in Britain at the time 56 The steel components of the Sydney Harbour Bridge 1932 were engineered and fabricated by Dorman Long of Middlesbrough The company was also responsible for the New Tyne Bridge in Newcastle 57 Several large shipyards also lined the Tees including the Sir Raylton Dixon amp Company which produced hundreds of steam freighters including the infamous SS Mont Blanc the steamship which caused the 1917 Halifax Explosion in Canada The area is still home to the nearby large Wilton International industrial site which until 1995 was largely owned by Imperial Chemical Industries ICI The fragmentation of that company led to smaller manufacturing units being owned by multinational organisations The last part of ICI itself completely left the area in 2006 and the remaining companies are now members of the Northeast of England Process Industry Cluster NEPIC Culture editSee also Smoggie Festivals and fairs edit nbsp Wilkinson LakeThe Middlesbrough Mela is an annual multi cultural festival attracting an audience of up to 40 000 to enjoy a mix of live music food craft and fashion stalls It began in Middlesbrough s Central Gardens now Centre Square and is either held there or in Albert Park 58 Theatres and music venues edit Middlesbrough also has a healthy musical heritage A number of bands and musicians hail from the area including Paul Rodgers Chris Rea and Micky Moody Middlesbrough Town Hall is the pre eminent theatre venue in Middlesbrough It has two concert halls the first is a classic Victorian concert hall with a proscenium stage and seating 1 190 the second under the main hall is called the Middlesbrough Crypt and has a capacity of up to 600 The venue is run by Middlesbrough Council and is funded in part by Arts Council England as a National Portfolio Organisation specialising in music 59 It was refurbished with the assistance of the National Lottery Heritage Fund and reopened in 2018 60 The Middlesbrough Theatre formerly the Little Theatre is in the suburb of Linthorpe It was designed by architects Elder amp De Pierro 61 and was the first purpose designed theatre to be erected in post war England when it was opened on 22 October 1957 by Sir John Gielgud 62 63 Art and galleries edit nbsp MIMA GalleryThe town has three art galleries Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art known locally as mima is a purpose built contemporary art gallery which opened in January 2007 It replaced the Cleveland Gallery closed 1999 and Cleveland Crafts Centre closed 2003 The Middlesbrough Art Weekender is a contemporary art festival organised by the Auxiliary that has been held in central Middlesbrough since 2017 64 In 2019 it was held over the weekend of 26 29 September and included the works of artists such as Emily Hesse and Karina Smigla Bobinski 65 The Auxiliary Warehouse space which was opened also as part of the 2019 Middlesbrough Art Weekender is a recent addition to the contemporary art community 66 The Platform A Gallery is a contemporary art space at the end of platform 1 of Middlesbrough Railway Station 67 Cuisine edit Main article Parmo nbsp Parmo with chips and saladThe Parmo originated in Middlesbrough It consists of a breaded cutlet of meat with cheese and white sauce toppings The parmo is widely available at takeaways in Middlesbrough Public services editHealthcare edit nbsp James Cook University HospitalThe South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust has the James Cook University Hospital in the town It adds to the economy through innovative projects such as South Tees bio incubator which acts as a launch pad for research innovation and collaboration between health technology and science It is a facility used by GlycoSeLect UK Ltd as a client of the trust in strategic partnership with The Northern Health Science Alliance which has contributed 10 8 billion to the UK economy 68 Roseberry Park Hospital operated by Tees Esk and Wear Valleys NHS Foundation Trust TWEV is north of James Cook Hospital The hospital is psychiatric orientated and replaced St Luke s Hospital 69 Acklam Road Hospital is operated by Cumbria Northumberland Tyne and Wear NHS Foundation Trust which took over from TWEV During the transition it was renamed from West Lane to its current name 70 There is also the Middlesbrough One Life Medical Centre and North Ormesby Health Village in town Ramsey Health operate the private Tees Valley Hospital in Acklam 71 Police edit nbsp Cleveland Police Middlesbrough HeadquartersCleveland Police serve Middlesbrough out of their headquarters on Bridge Street West The British Transport Police also maintain a presence at Middlesbrough Station Facilities editParks edit nbsp Albert ParkAlbert Park was donated to the town by Henry Bolckow in 1866 It was formally opened by Prince Arthur on 11 August 1868 and consists of a 30 hectare 74 acre site The park underwent a considerable period of restoration from 2001 to 2004 during which a number of the park s landmarks saw either restoration or revival Stewart Park was donated to the people of Middlesbrough in 1928 by Councillor Thomas Dormand Stewart and encompasses Victorian stable buildings lakes and animal pens It is also home to the Captain Cook Birthplace Museum During 2011 and 2012 the park underwent major refurbishment It hosted the BBC Radio 1 s Big Weekend in the summer of 2019 72 Newham Grange Leisure farm in the suburb of Coulby Newham has operated continuously in this spot since the 17th century becoming a farm park and conservation centre farm with the first residential development of the suburb in the 1970s Libraries edit nbsp Middlesbrough Central Public Library nbsp Inside the public Library reference roomThere are multiple libraries serving Middlesbrough A notable library is the Middlesbrough Central Carnegie library which dates from 1912 73 Landmarks editAs of 2022 update there are 129 listed buildings in the council area Acklam Hall is the only one at grade I 74 and 11 are at grade II 75 including the town hall 75 and the Transporter Bridge 76 Buildings edit Buildings of Middlesbrough nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Landmarks from top left to bottom right Acklam Hall Grey Towers Webb House The Dorman Long Office and The Middlesbrough Empire The terraced Victorian streets surrounding the town centre are elements of Middlesbrough s social and historical identity and the vast streets surrounding Parliament Road and Abingdon Road a reminder of the area s wealth and rapid growth during industrialisation The outer areas of the town have multiple country halls most are of Victorian origin Former halls include Marton Hall on the grounds of Stewart Park Gunnergate Hall Coulby Newham Tollesby Hall and Park End House 77 They are multiple halls that are still in existence such as Newham Hall 78 Nunthorpe Hall 79 Grey Towers 80 and Coulby Manor 81 The oldest domestic building is Acklam Hall of 1678 Built by Sir William Hustler it is also the only Grade I listed building in Midddlesbrough 74 82 Within a mile of the council area there are Normanby Hall 83 Upsall Hall 84 and the Grade I listed Ormesby Hall 85 Middlesbrough Town Hall designed by George Gordon Hoskins and built between 1883 and 1889 is a Grade II listed building 75 used for municipal purposes and as an entertainment venue The Middlesbrough Empire built in 1897 as a theatre is a nightclub since 1993 designed by Ernest Runtz The first artist to perform in building as a Music Hall was Lillie Langtry 86 It became an early nightclub 1950s then a bingo hall and is now once again a nightclub In Linthorpe is the Middlesbrough Theatre opened by Sir John Gielgud in 1957 it was one of the first new theatres built in England after the Second World War The Dorman Long office on Zetland Road constructed between 1881 and 1891 is the only commercial building ever designed by Philip Webb the architect who worked for Sir Isaac Lowthian Bell Bridges edit Bridges of Middlesbrough nbsp nbsp Left Tees Transporter Bridge built in 1911Right Tees Newport Bridge Via a 1907 Act of Parliament Sir William Arrol amp Co of Glasgow built the Tees Transporter Bridge 1911 which spans the river between Middlesbrough and Port Clarence It is a Grade II listed building 76 Some of the film Billy Elliot was filmed on the bridge 87 At 850 feet 260 m long and 225 feet 69 m high it is one of the largest of its type in the world Since reopening after restoration and flood protection work in 2013 and 2015 88 89 the bridge has been closed for long periods due to safety concerns 90 In August 2022 the Mayor of Middlesbrough announced that one of the legs is sinking and that the estimated costs of repairs have been increasing the bridge s future remains under consideration 91 The Tees Newport Bridge opened further up the river in 1934 Newport bridge still stands and is passable by traffic it formerly lifted vertically in the centre Artworks edit nbsp nbsp nbsp Sculptures 40 000 Years of Modern Art Bottle O Notes and Temenos Further information Tees Valley Giants The Temenos sculpture designed by sculptor Anish Kapoor and designer Cecil Balmond is a steel structure near to the north west side of the Riverside Stadium The steel structure consisting of a pole a circular ring and an oval ring stands approximately 110 m long and 50 m high and is held together by steel wire It was unveiled in 2010 at a cost of 2 7 million Near the town hall is the Bottle of Notes it was unveiled in 1993 and is the UK s only public sculpture by Claes Oldenburg it is inspired by Captain James Cook 92 Transport editRoad edit nbsp A66 from a multi storey car park in 2006 the road is raised with Wilson Street running adjacent Middlesbrough is served by public transport Locally Arriva North East and Stagecoach provide the majority of bus services with National Express and Megabus operating long distance coach travel from Middlesbrough bus station Middlesbrough is served by a number of major roads The A19 north south lies to the west of the town the A66 east west runs through the northern part of the town centre and the A171 A172 and A174 are other main routes linking the town The A19 A66 major interchange lies just to the west of the town Rail edit nbsp Middlesbrough station from Albert RoadMiddlesbrough railway station is the fourth busiest in the North East England region according to an Office of Rail and Road statistics during the 2019 20 period 93 It opened in 1877 at its current site and is in the Gothic architectural style 94 It is the Esk Valley line s northern terminus the Durham Coast line s southern terminus and is on the Tees Valley line There are three train services operators for the station LNER operates limited rail services to Thornaby York and London Kings Cross 95 Northern operates rail services to Newcastle Sunderland Darlington Redcar Central and Whitby while TransPennine Express provides direct rail services to Leeds York Liverpool Lime Street and Manchester There are also Nunthorpe Gypsy Lane Marton and James Cook the latter operates near James Cook University Hospital stations in Middlesbrough on the Esk Valley line South Bank station is in the Middlesbrough subdivision on the Tees Valley Line Middlesbrough has no direct services south without going through or changing at York to Harrogate and Scarborough as well as North Yorkshire s neighbouring counties of West Yorkshire East Riding of Yorkshire Lancashire and South Yorkshire The town formerly had electric tramway services the Middlesbrough Corporation Tramways operated the tramways between 1921 and 1934 96 Paths edit A trial e scooter hire system is operating in Middlesbrough during 2020 97 Education editMuseums edit nbsp Dorman MuseumThe Dorman Memorial Museum which was founded by Sir Arthur Dorman and specialises in social and local history The Captain Cook Birthplace Museum which was opened on 28 October 1978 in celebration of the 250th anniversary of Captain James Cook s birth in nearby Marton nbsp Ormesby HallThough just outside the boundary of Middlesbrough within a joint preservation area with Redcar and Cleveland Ormesby Hall is an 18th century palladian mansion once owned by the Pennyman family it is now a National Trust propertyIn July 2000 the Transporter Bridge Visitor Centre was opened to commemorate the building of the Middlesbrough Transporter Bridge 98 University edit Teesside University traces back to 1930 at the opening of Constantine Technical College located on Borough Road in the town centre The then college expanded through acquiring adjacent buildings such as Middlesbrough High School and by building Middlesbrough Tower It became Teesside Polytechnic in 1969 99 In 1992 the polytechnic gained university status becoming the University of Teesside Extramural classes had previously been provided by the University of Leeds Adult Education Centre on Harrow Road from 1958 to 2001 100 It was rebranded in 2009 to Teesside University It further expanded in size and courses available until student numbers increased to approximately 20 000 studying at the university 101 nbsp Teesside University LibraryThe university is a major presence in the town 102 It has a growing reputation for developing digital businesses particularly in the field of digital animation and for hosting the Animex festival 103 The Boho zone in the town now houses a large number of these start up digital businesses 104 The university has 18 000 students 2 400 staff and operates a 250 000 000 campus in Middlesbrough town centre The university campus has benefited from approx 250 million of investment in recent years including the 30 million Campus Heart scheme Teesside University supports a total of 2 570 full time jobs across the Tees Valley North East and UK economies per annum The university contributes additional wealth to the local regional and national economies as measured by Gross Value Added GVA It is estimated this contributes a total of 124 million GVA per annum The total direct indirect and induced spending impacts associated with full time international students and UK students from outside of the North East is approximately 18 9 million per annum It is estimated this spending supports 158 full time jobs per annum in Tees Valley and contributes additional wealth of 9 3 million per annum to the local economy 105 Current university departments include business arts and media computing health and life sciences Science and Engineering and Social Sciences and Law In addition to teaching computer animation and games design it co hosts the annual Animex International Festival of Animation and Computer Games The university has links with James Cook University Hospital in the town Other institutions edit See also List of schools in Middlesbrough nbsp Middlesbrough CollegeThe town s largest college is Middlesbrough College with 16 000 students Others include Trinity Catholic College in Saltersgill 106 Macmillan Academy on Stockton Road and Askham Bryan College which has a site in Stewart Park The Northern School of Art established in 1870 is also based in Middlesbrough it has another site in Hartlepool It is one of only four specialist art and design further education colleges in the United Kingdom Religion editChristianity edit nbsp St Columba s Church CoE nbsp St John s Church CoE nbsp St Mary s Cathedral RC nbsp The former Park Methodist Church on Linthorpe Road currently apartments Hierarchy Denomination Top tier 2nd 3rd 4thChurch of England Province of York Diocese of York Archdeaconry of Cleveland Deanery of MiddlesbroughRoman Catholic Archdiocese of Liverpool Diocese of Middlesbrough Northern VicariateMethodist District of Darlington Circuit of Middlesbrough and EstonThe Church of England Middlesbrough deanery is in the Archdeaconry of Cleveland with Stokesley west Guisborough east Whitby south east and Northern Ryedale south and Mowbray south west It is in the Diocese of York and Province of York Middlesbrough is the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Middlesbrough created on 20 December 1878 from the Diocese of Beverley St Mary s Cathedral is the diocese s mother church it is in Coulby Newham as a replacement to the original St Mary s in the town centre The present bishop is the Right Reverend Terence Patrick Drainey 7th Bishop of Middlesbrough who was ordained on Friday 25 January 2008 Churches of the Sacred Heart St Bernadette s and St Clare of Assisi are also in the town Judaism edit nbsp The synagogue in Park Road South which opened in 1938 and closed in 1998Ashkenazi Jews started to settle in Middlesbrough from 1862 and formed Middlesbrough Hebrew Congregation in 1870 with a synagogue in Hill Street The synagogue moved to Brentnall Street in 1874 and then to a new building in Park Road South in 1938 107 Editions of the Jewish Year Book record the growth and decline of Middlesbrough s Jewish population It was about 100 in 1896 97 and peaked at 750 in 1935 It then declined to 30 in 1998 in which year the synagogue in Park Road South was ceremonially closed 107 Islam edit nbsp Jamia Mosque Waterloo RoadThe Islamic community is represented in several mosques in Middlesbrough Muslim sailors visited Middlesbrough from about 1890 108 and in 1961 Azzam and Younis Din opened the first Halal butcher shop 108 The first mosque was a house in Grange Road in 1962 108 The Al Madina Jamia Mosque on Waterloo Road the Dar ul Islam Central Mosque on Southfield Road and the Abu Bakr Mosque amp Community Centre 109 which is on Park Road North Sikhism edit The Sikh community established its first gurdwara in Milton Street in 1967 108 After a time in Southfield Road the centre is now in Lorne Street and was opened in 1990 108 Hinduism edit There is a Hindu Cultural Centre in Westbourne Grove North Ormesby which was opened in 1990 108 Television and filmography editMiddlesbrough has featured in many television programmes including The Fast Show Inspector George Gently Steel River Blues Spender Play for Today The Black Stuff latterly the drama Boys from the Blackstuff and Auf Wiedersehen Pet 87 Film director Ridley Scott is from the North East and based the opening shot of Blade Runner on the view of the old ICI plant at Wilton He said There s a walk from Redcar I d cross a bridge at night and walk above the steel works So that s probably where the opening of Blade Runner comes from It always seemed to be rather gloomy and raining and I d just think God this is beautiful You can find beauty in everything and so I think I found the beauty in that darkness It has been claimed that the site was also considered as a shooting location for one of the films in Scott s Alien franchise 110 In the 2009 action thriller The Tournament Middlesbrough is that year s location where the assassins competition is being held In November 2009 the mima art gallery was used by the presenters of Top Gear as part of a challenge The challenge was to see if car exhibits would be more popular than normal art 111 In 2010 filmmaker John Walsh made the satirical documentary ToryBoy The Movie about the 2010 general election in the Middlesbrough constituency and sitting MP Stuart Bell s alleged laziness as an MP 112 113 114 In March 2013 Middlesbrough was used as a stand in for Newcastle 1969 in BBC s Inspector George Gently starring Martin Shaw and Lee Ingleby the footage appeared in the episode Gently Between The Lines episode 1 of series 6 115 Sport editFootball and rugby union edit nbsp Riverside StadiumMiddlesbrough FC is a Championship football team owned by local haulage entrepreneur Steve Gibson and managed by Michael Carrick The 34 000 capacity 116 117 Riverside Stadium is owned and host to home games by the club since 1995 when they left Ayresome Park Founder members of the Premier League in 1992 Middlesbrough won the Football League Cup in 2004 118 and were beaten finalists in the 2005 06 UEFA Cup 119 In 1905 they made Britain s first 1 000 transfer when they signed Alf Common from local rivals Sunderland 120 Middlesbrough Ironopolis FC was briefly based in the town during the late 19th century it later dissolved These days Middlesbrough have players such as Darragh Lenihan Hayden Hackney and Morgan Rogers Middlesbrough RUFC founded in 1872 having have played their home games at Acklam Park since 1929 and Acklam RUFC are in Durham Northumberland Division One Both are members of Yorkshire Rugby Football Union Racing edit Middlesbrough hosts multiple road races through the year including the annual Middlesbrough 10k formerly Tees Pride 10k road race First held in 2005 the one lap circuit event and associated fun runs were held in the Acklam area of the town before being moved to the town centre in 2021 121 122 On 1 May 2016 Middlesbrough hosted the start of Stage 3 to the 2016 Tour de Yorkshire The stage and race ended in Scarborough 123 Other edit nbsp Middlesbrough Golf ClubMiddlesbrough Cricket Club have played at Acklam Park since 1930 and play in North Yorkshire and South Durham Cricket League Yorkshire have played 45 County Championship games in Middlesbrough The most recent being in 1996 Speedway racing was staged at Cleveland Park Stadium from 1928 until the 1990s with the Middlesbrough Bears Tees Valley Mohawks and Teesside Lions basketball teams play in the NBL Division 3 Athletics has two local clubs serving Middlesbrough and the surrounding area Middlesbrough and Cleveland Harriers and Middlesbrough AC Mandale Training facilities at the Middlesbrough Sports Village opened in 2015 replacing Clairville Stadium 124 Notable athletes to train at both facilities are World and European Indoor Sprint Champion Richard Kilty British Indoor Long Jump record holder Chris Tomlinson The sports village includes a running track with grandstand an indoor gym and cafe football pitches as well as a cycle circuit and velodrome Next to the sports village is a skateboard park and Middlesbrough Tennis World 125 Notable people editSee also List of people from MiddlesbroughTwinned towns editMiddlesbrough is twinned with nbsp Oberhausen North Rhine Westphalia Germany Middlesbrough and Oberhausen entered into a town twinning partnership in 1974 close ties having existed for over 50 years Those ties began in 1953 with youth exchanges the first of which was held in 1953 Both towns continue to be committed to twinning activities today 126 nbsp Dunkirk Nord Hauts de France France 127 Although Middlesbrough is also officially twinned with the town twinning events have ceased 126 nbsp Masvingo Masvingo District Masvingo Province Zimbabwe since 1989 128 See also editParmo Zoe s Place Baby Hospice Demographics of Tees ValleyNotes editReferences edit a b Figure 1 Explore population characteristics of individual BUAs Retrieved 7 August 2021 UK Census 2011 Local Area Report Teesside Built up Area E34004802 Nomis Office for National Statistics Retrieved 14 September 2021 Ekwall Eilert 1960 The concise Oxford dictionary of English place names 4 ed Oxford Oxford University Press p 324 ISBN 0 19 869103 3 Johnston James Brown 1915 The place names of England and Wales London Murray p 368 OCLC 1050761076 Chrystal Paul 2017 The Place Names of Yorkshire Cities Towns Villages Rivers and Dales some Pubs too in Praise of Yorkshire Ales 1 ed Catrine Stenlake p 58 ISBN 9781840337532 Smith A H 1979 1928 The Place Names of the North Riding of Yorkshire English Place Name Society p 160 OCLC 19714705 a b Page William Parishes Middlesborough Pages 268 273 A History of the County of York North Riding Volume 2 Originally published by Victoria County History London 1923 British History Online Archived from the original on 13 July 2020 Retrieved 13 July 2020 Welcome to Middlesbrough Archived from the original on 6 October 2006 Retrieved 12 March 2011 Moorsom Norman 1983 Middlesbrough as it was Hendon Publishing Co Ltd Harbeck James Why does Britain have such bizarre place names BBC Culture Archived from the original on 6 January 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2020 Middlesbrough Billy Scarrow Archived from the original on 5 July 2015 Retrieved 4 July 2015 a b c d Middlesbrough and surrounds The Birth of Middlesbrough englandsnortheast David Simpson Archived from the original on 28 November 2015 Retrieved 19 February 2015 a b Delplanque Paul 17 November 2011 Middlesbrough Dock 1839 1980 Evening Gazette Archived from the original on 9 April 2013 Retrieved 24 March 2013 The Archives History of Middlehaven Middlesbrough College Archived from the original on 20 November 2015 Retrieved 20 November 2015 December 1861 map of Middlesbrough North Riding A Vision of Britain Through Time University of Portsmouth and others Archived from the original on 19 October 2014 Retrieved 18 October 2014 Institution of Civil Engineers Obituary 1869 Middlesbrough has sometimes been designated the Ironopolis of the North The Northern Echo 23 February 1870 Middlesbrough never ceased to be Ironopolis Journal of Social History 37 3 746 Spring 2004 History of Cleveland Police Archived from the original on 25 May 2011 Retrieved 3 April 2011 Woodhouse Robert Middlesbrough A Pictorial History Phillimore amp Co Ltd Publishing 1990 ISBN 0 85033 743 7 illustration no 48 Middlesbrough Town Hall engraving recreated BBC News 26 January 2019 Archived from the original on 17 July 2022 Retrieved 4 February 2021 Remembering the Blitz Evening Gazette September 2010 Archived from the original on 13 April 2014 Retrieved 20 August 2012 Middlesbrough Railway Station bombed 1942 Evening Gazette April 2010 Archived from the original on 19 May 2011 Retrieved 14 May 2011 Middlesbrough 1940s Billmilner 250x com 4 August 1942 Archived from the original on 2 December 2008 Retrieved 4 September 2011 Price Kelley 16 June 2019 Did the Middlehaven dream maker achieve what he set out to do TeessideLive Archived from the original on 24 September 2020 Retrieved 29 November 2020 Boho Zone middlesbrough gov uk 31 August 2016 Archived from the original on 29 November 2020 Retrieved 29 November 2020 Ford Coreena 8 October 2020 Growing digital firm Animmersion expands into landmark Boho Zone Business Live Archived from the original on 31 October 2020 Retrieved 29 November 2020 Middlesbrough North Riding Archived from the original on 18 January 2022 Retrieved 19 September 2021 Tweddell George Markham 1890 Bulmer s History and Directory of North Yorkshire Retrieved 17 September 2023 Youngs Frederic A 1991 Guide to the Local Administrative Units of England Volume II London Royal Historical Society p 582 ISBN 0861931270 Middlesbrough Improvement and Market Act 1841 legislation gov uk The National Archives Retrieved 17 September 2023 Middlesbrough Improvement Act 1858 21 amp 22 Vict c 140 Middlesbrough Extension and Improvement Act 1866 29 amp 30 Vict c 143 Local Government Act 1888 legislation gov uk The National Archives 1888 c 41 retrieved 18 September 2023 a b Middlesbrough Civil Parish A Vision of Britain through Time GB Historical GIS University of Portsmouth Retrieved 18 September 2023 Annual Report of the Local Government Board London 1895 p 287 Retrieved 18 September 2023 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Local Government Board s Provisional Order Confirmation No 18 Act 1913 legislation gov uk The National Archives Retrieved 19 September 2023 Town officially a tree city of the world Northern Echo Archived from the original on 27 May 2022 Retrieved 27 May 2022 Distance from City of London to Middlesbrough Distance Calculator Archived from the original on 20 July 2022 Retrieved 20 July 2022 Distance from Edinburgh to Middlesbrough Distance Calculator Archived from the original on 20 July 2022 Retrieved 20 July 2022 Distance from York to Middlesbrough Distance Calculator Archived from the original on 20 July 2022 Retrieved 20 July 2022 Distance from Durham to Middlesbrough Distance Calculator Archived from the original on 20 August 2022 Retrieved 20 July 2022 Distance from Darlington to Middlesbrough Distance Calculator Archived from the original on 20 July 2022 Retrieved 20 July 2022 Distance from Hartlepool to Middlesbrough Distance Calculator Archived from the original on 20 July 2022 Retrieved 20 July 2022 Distance from Stockton on Tees to Middlesbrough Distance Calculator Archived from the original on 20 July 2022 Retrieved 20 July 2022 Middlesbrough Climate Period 1991 2010 Stockton on Tees Climate Station Met Office Archived from the original on 24 May 2022 Retrieved 11 January 2022 Major update on new retail park set to open inside giant Middlehaven ghost supermarket TeessideLive 8 March 2020 Archived from the original on 4 May 2021 Retrieved 4 May 2021 Love Middlesbrough Middlesbrough Leisure Park Middlesbrough Council Website 22 March 2019 Archived from the original on 22 March 2019 Retrieved 22 March 2019 Middlesbrough Council approves plans to transform Captain Cook Square Gazette Live 5 January 2022 Archived from the original on 11 September 2022 Retrieved 12 May 2022 Employment and Skills in the Tees Valley PDF Tees Valley government 2 March 2018 Archived PDF from the original on 15 December 2019 Retrieved 15 December 2019 From an Infant Hercules to the death of Teesside Steelmaking History and heritage along the Steel River Tosh Warwick 9 January 2017 Archived from the original on 22 March 2019 Retrieved 22 March 2019 Boho Zone Middlesbrough Council 22 March 2019 Archived from the original on 22 March 2019 Retrieved 22 March 2019 TeesAMP Tees Advanced Manufacturing Park TeesAMP Website 22 March 2019 Archived from the original on 22 March 2019 Retrieved 22 March 2019 Teesside to be clean energy leader and home of UK s first hydrogen transport centre The Northern Echo 30 September 2020 Archived from the original on 17 October 2020 Retrieved 16 October 2020 PD Ports Teesport PD Ports 22 March 2019 Archived from the original on 1 March 2019 Retrieved 22 March 2019 Theory why a Spennymoor church includes a flamboyant 17th Century Spanish altar The Northern Echo Archived from the original on 17 August 2021 Retrieved 29 November 2020 Dorman Long Historical Information dormanlongtechnology com Archived from the original on 13 June 2018 Retrieved 14 July 2014 Middlesbrough MELA Teesside Live gazettelive co uk Archived from the original on 18 August 2019 Retrieved 1 February 2020 North Page 16 Arts Council England artscouncil org uk Retrieved 4 January 2020 permanent dead link Lodge Bethany 28 March 2018 See inside revamped Middlesbrough Town Hall after 7m facelift gazettelive Archived from the original on 11 August 2019 Retrieved 4 January 2020 Elder and De Pierro Partnership Architects of Greater Manchester manchestervictorianarchitects org uk Archived from the original on 2 January 2020 Retrieved 2 January 2020 Middlesbrough Theatre turns 50 BBC Archived from the original on 2 January 2020 Retrieved 2 January 2020 Middlesbrough Theatres and Halls arthurlloyd co uk Archived from the original on 4 November 2019 Retrieved 2 January 2020 Middlesbrough Art Weekender 2019 Love Middlesbrough Archived from the original on 4 August 2020 Retrieved 5 March 2020 Middlesbrough Art Weekender 2019 Issuu Retrieved 5 March 2020 permanent dead link The Auxiliary Tees Valley enjoyteesvalley com Archived from the original on 20 March 2020 Retrieved 5 March 2020 Platform A Gallery Tees Valley enjoyteesvalley com Archived from the original on 20 March 2020 Retrieved 5 March 2020 Innovation South Tees bio incubator South Tees Hospitals 11 February 2018 Archived from the original on 14 December 2019 Retrieved 14 December 2019 Mental health trust told keep patients safe and make urgent improvements after serious incident 26 March 2021 Archived from the original on 9 July 2021 Retrieved 5 July 2021 West Lane Hospital reopens with new name Archived from the original on 9 July 2021 Retrieved 5 July 2021 23m Tees Valley hospital opens on historic Middlesbrough site Archived from the original on 9 July 2021 Retrieved 5 July 2021 Corrigan Naomi McNeal Ian Glover Andrew Brown Mike Huntley David Lunn Katie Cooper Ian Robert Jones Samuel 27 May 2019 Big Weekend live The full story of an amazing weekend gazettelive Archived from the original on 23 May 2019 Retrieved 28 December 2019 Central Library middlesbrough gov uk 9 November 2016 Archived from the original on 24 August 2021 Retrieved 25 August 2021 a b Middlesbrough Council Listed Buildings Overview Archived from the original on 25 November 2010 Retrieved 6 April 2011 a b c Historic England Town Hall and municipal buildings 1136659 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 11 May 2022 a b Historic England Transporter bridge 1139267 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 11 May 2022 A Lost World The Country Houses Of South Middlesbrough Archived from the original on 24 September 2022 Retrieved 10 May 2022 Historic England Newham Hall 1136584 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 10 May 2022 Historic England Nunthorpe Hall 1139809 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 10 May 2022 Historic England Grey Towers 1139813 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 10 May 2022 Historic England Coulby Manor 1139870 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 10 May 2022 Middlesbrough Council PDF of Listed Buildings Archived from the original on 28 September 2011 Retrieved 6 April 2011 Historic England Normanby Hall 1159489 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 10 May 2022 Historic England Upsall Hall 1139758 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 10 May 2022 Historic England Ormesby Hall Adjoining Outbuildings and Screen Walls 1311002 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 11 May 2022 The palace of varieties gazettelive 18 November 2005 Archived from the original on 11 July 2019 Retrieved 12 July 2019 a b Tees Transporter Bridge And Visitor Centre Love Middlesbrough Archived from the original on 30 June 2017 Retrieved 11 March 2015 Revamped bridge set to reopen BBC News Archived from the original on 16 August 2022 Retrieved 16 August 2022 Middlesbrough Transporter Bridge reopens after flood work BBC News 26 July 2015 Archived from the original on 16 August 2022 Retrieved 16 August 2022 Death risk Tees Transporter Bridge repair fund approved BBC News 23 December 2020 Archived from the original on 16 August 2022 Retrieved 16 August 2022 Middlesbrough Transporter Bridge is sinking says mayor BBC News 5 August 2022 Archived from the original on 16 August 2022 Retrieved 16 August 2022 Middlesbrough Bottle of Notes anniversary exhibition opens BBC News Website 2 October 2013 Archived from the original on 26 March 2019 Retrieved 22 March 2019 Estimates of station usage Office of Rail and Road Website Archived from the original on 25 June 2017 Retrieved 14 January 2020 Railway Architecture of North East England Middlesbrough Station W Fawcett 2011 Archived from the original on 7 April 2014 Retrieved 31 March 2014 LNER launches first direct train between Middlesbrough and London ITV News 13 December 2021 Archived from the original on 16 December 2021 Retrieved 16 December 2021 The Golden Age of Tramways Published by Taylor and Francis UK s first ever e scooter trial gets rolling in Teesside Northern Echo 13 July 2020 Archived from the original on 13 July 2020 Retrieved 14 July 2020 Allan Dave 2011 The Transporter 100 Years of the Tees Transporter Bridge Middlesbrough Council p 111 ISBN 978 0860830894 History of the University University of Teesside Archived from the original on 27 February 2009 Retrieved 14 June 2021 Chase Malcolm Spring 2007 Leeds in Linthorpe Cleveland History Bulletin of the Cleveland and Teesside Local History Society 92 5 University statistics 2018 19 HESA student record Teesside University Archived from the original on 15 June 2021 Retrieved 14 June 2021 Teesside University About Us Teesside University Website 22 March 2019 Archived from the original on 22 March 2019 Retrieved 22 March 2019 Animex 20 at Teesside University Teesside University Website 22 March 2019 Archived from the original on 22 March 2019 Retrieved 22 March 2019 Middlesbrough highlighted in Tech Nation 2018 Teesside University Website 18 May 2018 Archived from the original on 4 August 2020 Retrieved 22 March 2019 Middlesbrough Council Invest Brochure 2 PDF Middlesbrough Borough Council 2 February 2017 Archived PDF from the original on 14 December 2019 Retrieved 14 December 2019 Emily Diamand Workshops Trinity Catholic College website Trinitycatholiccollege middlesbrough sch uk Archived from the original on 31 August 2009 Retrieved 28 February 2014 a b Middlesbrough Hebrew Congregation amp Jewish Community Jewish Communities amp Records 2 January 2017 Archived from the original on 23 February 2017 Retrieved 23 February 2017 a b c d e f Visit Middlesbrough The Middlesbrough Faith Trail Muslims in Middlesbrough PDF Archived PDF from the original on 7 October 2011 Retrieved 4 September 2011 Abu Bakr Mosque Middlesbrough Abubakr org uk Archived from the original on 3 September 2011 Retrieved 4 September 2011 The Blade Runner Connection BBC Online Archived from the original on 12 June 2015 Retrieved 23 May 2015 Top Gear stars in Middlesbrough visit Evening Gazette Archived from the original on 1 March 2012 Retrieved 4 September 2011 No surgeries for 14 years is Sir Stuart Bell Britain s laziest MP The Independent 8 September 2011 Archived from the original on 14 May 2022 Retrieved 5 August 2017 Moss Richard 9 September 2011 Sir Stuart Bell the laziest MP BBC News Archived from the original on 28 October 2018 Retrieved 5 August 2017 Are Teessiders getting enough from Sir Stuart Bell gazettelive co uk 6 September 2011 Archived from the original on 5 August 2017 Retrieved 5 August 2017 Pleasance Chris 19 March 2013 Riot in Middlesbrough as BBC films George Gently episode The Northern Echo Retrieved 18 September 2023 Middlesbrough efl com Archived from the original on 26 August 2019 Retrieved 26 August 2019 Brown Mike 8 July 2017 Riverside Stadium s new capacity confirmed after Boro s relegation to Championship Archived from the original on 11 July 2017 Retrieved 14 July 2017 Boro lift Carling Cup BBC Sport 29 February 2004 Archived from the original on 12 November 2012 Retrieved 2 January 2008 Sevilla end 58 year wait UEFA Archived from the original on 3 July 2006 Retrieved 2 January 2008 Proud Keith 18 August 2008 The player with the Common touch The Northern Echo Newsquest Archived from the original on 20 May 2013 Retrieved 12 February 2012 Middlesbrough 10k road race Middlesbrough Council runmiddlesbrough Archived from the original on 18 April 2012 Retrieved 30 March 2012 Asda Foundation MIDDLESBROUGH 10K Event Information 14 April 2021 Archived from the original on 20 June 2021 Retrieved 15 June 2021 Middlesbrough to host Tour de Yorkshire final day start before route pits cyclists against gruelling Sutton Bank 9 December 2015 Archived from the original on 7 June 2021 Retrieved 7 June 2021 Middlesbrough Sports Village Athletes hail 21m facility ahead of open weekend The Gazette Archived from the original on 5 January 2016 Retrieved 7 November 2015 Price Kelley 4 July 2018 Tennis World has 200 000 makeover see what s new Teesside Live Retrieved 18 September 2023 a b Town Twinning Middlesbrough Council 16 June 2016 Archived from the original on 20 March 2016 Retrieved 14 December 2019 British towns twinned with French towns Complete France Archived from the original on 5 July 2013 Retrieved 11 July 2013 Civic visit from Mayor of Masvingo Zimbabwe Northern Echo Archived from the original on 20 July 2021 Retrieved 20 July 2021 Further reading editBell Lady Florence At the Works a Study of a Manufacturing Town 1907 online Briggs Asa Victorian Cities 1965 pp 245 82 Doyle Barry Labour and hospitals in urban Yorkshire Middlesbrough Leeds and Sheffield 1919 1938 Social history of medicine 2010 hkq007 Glass Ruth The social background of a plan a study of Middlesbrough 1948 Warwick Tosh Central Middlesbrough through time 2013 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Middlesbrough nbsp Middlesbrough travel guide from Wikivoyage Official Middlesbrough Council Website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Middlesbrough amp oldid 1195444313, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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