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Newbury, Berkshire

Newbury is a market town in the county of Berkshire, England, and is home to the administrative headquarters of West Berkshire Council. The town centre around its large market square retains a rare medieval Cloth Hall, an adjoining half timbered granary, and the 15th-century St Nicolas Church, along with 17th- and 18th-century listed buildings. As well as being home to Newbury Racecourse, it is the headquarters of Vodafone and software company Micro Focus International. In the valley of the River Kennet, 26 mi (42 km) south of Oxford, 25 mi (40 km) north of Winchester, 27 mi (43 km) southeast of Swindon and 20 mi (32 km) west of Reading.

Newbury
Market town

Newbury clock tower at sunset in 2018

Flag
Newbury
Location within Berkshire
Area9.9 km2 (3.8 sq mi)
Population33,841 (2021 Census)[1]
• Density3,418/km2 (8,850/sq mi)
OS grid referenceSU4767
• London60 mi (100 km)[2]
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townNEWBURY
Postcode districtRG14
Dialling code01635
PoliceThames Valley
FireRoyal Berkshire
AmbulanceSouth Central
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Berkshire
51°24′04″N 1°19′23″W / 51.401°N 1.323°W / 51.401; -1.323Coordinates: 51°24′04″N 1°19′23″W / 51.401°N 1.323°W / 51.401; -1.323

Newbury lies on the edge of the Berkshire Downs; part of the North Wessex Downs Area of outstanding natural beauty, 3 mi (5 km) north of the Hampshire-Berkshire county boundary. In the suburban village of Donnington lies the part-ruined Donnington Castle and the surrounding hills are home to some of the country's most famous racehorse training grounds (centred on nearby Lambourn). To the south is a narrower range of hills including Walbury Hill and a few private landscape gardens and mansions, such as Highclere Castle. The local economy is inter-related to that of the eastern M4 corridor, which has most of its industrial, logistical and research businesses close to Newbury, mostly around Reading, Bracknell, Maidenhead and Slough. Together with the adjoining town of Thatcham, 3 mi (5 km) distant, Newbury forms the principal part of an urban area of approximately 70,000 people.[3]

History

 
Part of the facade of Camp Hopson of Newbury, dating from 1663 with classical brick pilasters, in 2014.
 
The pedestrianised Northbrook Street

There was a Mesolithic settlement at Newbury. Artefacts were recovered from the Greenham Dairy Farm in 1963, and the Faraday Road site in 2002.[4] Additional material was found in excavations along the route of the Newbury Bypass.[5] Newbury was founded late in the 11th century following the Norman conquest as a new borough, hence its name. Although there are references to the borough that predate the Domesday Book it is not mentioned by name in the survey. However, its existence within the manor of Ulvritone is evident from the massive rise in value of that manor at a time when most manors were worth less than in Saxon times. In 1086 the Domesday Book[6] assesses the borough as having land for 12 ploughs, 2 mills, woodland for 25 pigs, 11 villeins (resident farmhands, unfree peasant who owed his lord labour services), 11 bordars (unfree peasants with less land than villans/villeins), and 51 enclosures (private parks) rendering 70s 7d.

Doubt has been cast over the existence of Newbury Castle,[7] but the town did have royal connections and was visited a number of times by King John and Henry III while hunting in the area. The first reference to a bridge on the site of the current Newbury Bridge is an account of its reconstruction in the 14th Century. In 1312, King Edward II directed that its bridge should be kept in good order.[8] By 1623, when the bridge collapsed, it was recorded as being built of wood, being 30 feet (9 metres) in length and 20 ft (6 m) in width, and having shops on it. The bridge was presumably rebuilt, as it is recorded that in 1644 a guard was placed on the bridge.[9]

Historically, the town's economic foundation was the cloth trade. This is reflected in the person of the 16th-century cloth magnate, Jack of Newbury,[10] the proprietor of what may well have been the first factory in England, and the later tale of the Newbury Coat. The latter was the outcome of a bet as to whether a gentleman's suit could be produced by the end of the day from wool taken from a sheep's back at the beginning. The local legend was later immortalized in a humorous novel by Elizabethan writer Thomas Deloney. Newbury was the site of two battles during the English Civil War, the First Battle of Newbury[11] (at Wash Common) in 1643, and the Second Battle of Newbury[12] (at Speen) in 1644. The nearby Donnington Castle[13] was reduced to a ruin in the aftermath of the second battle. The disruption of trade during the civil war, compounded by a collapse of the local cloth trade in the late 16th century, left Newbury impoverished.

The local economy was boosted in the 18th century by the rise of Bath as a popular destination for the wealthy escaping London's summer heat and associated stench. Newbury was roughly halfway between London and Bath and an obvious stopping point in the two-day journey. Soon Newbury, and the Speenhamland area in particular, was filled with coaching inns of ever increasing grandeur and size. One inn, the George & Pelican, was reputed to have stabling for 300 horses. A theatre was built to provide the travellers with entertainment featuring the major stars of the age. In 1795 local magistrates, meeting at the George and Pelican Inn in Speenhamland, introduced the Speenhamland System which tied parish poor relief (welfare payments) to the cost of bread.[14]

In 1723, the Kennet Navigation made the River Kennet navigable downstream from Newbury to the River Thames in Reading. Some 70 years later, in 1794, work started on the centre section of the Kennet and Avon Canal, which would extend the Kennet Navigation to Bath, thus providing a through water route between London and Bristol via Newbury. This route was finally completed in 1810.[9][15] The opening of the Great Western Railway from London to Bath in 1841 effectively killed the canal and coaching trades, and as the line passed some 25 kilometres (15+12 mi) to the north it brought no advantage to the town. Newbury had to wait until 1847 to join the railway network, with the opening of the Berks and Hants Railway branch line from Reading to Hungerford via Newbury, and until 1906 to be on a main line, with the opening of the Reading-Taunton line. As a result, Newbury became something of a backwater market town, with an economy based largely on agriculture and horse-racing. In the 1980s, British electronics firm Racal decided to locate their newly formed telecommunications company Racal Vodafone, later Vodafone UK, in the town. In the subsequent decades Newbury became something of a regional centre for the high-tech industries, and the town has since enjoyed a return to general economic prosperity.

Greenham Common

 
Greenham Common in the late 80s

A large Royal Air Force station was established during the Second World War at Greenham Common on the edge of the town. In the 1950s, it became home to US Air Force bombers and tankers, for which it was equipped with the longest military runway in the United Kingdom. In the 1980s, it became one of only two USAF bases in the UK equipped with ground-launched nuclear-armed cruise missiles, causing it to become the site of protests by up to 40,000 protesters and the establishment of the Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp. With the end of the Cold War, the base was closed, the runway was broken up, much of it used as fill material in building the Newbury bypass, and the area was restored to heathland. This project then saw Greenham and Crookham commons reopened to the public in 2000.

1943 Bombing

On 10 February 1943, two German bombers, Dornier Do 217s from ll/KG40 Bomber unit in Holland, on a nuisance raid, followed the Great Western Railway line running west from London. One of the bombers headed towards Reading while the other followed the line all the way to Newbury. At 4:43pm the bomber dropped eight high-explosive bombs over the town. There had been no time for a warning siren. The Senior Council School, St. Bartholomew's Almshouses, St. John's Church (just the altar was left standing) and Southampton Terrace were all destroyed, and another 265 dwellings were damaged, many of which had to be demolished. St John's Church was completely rebuilt after the war. 15 people were killed and a further 41 people were injured, 25 seriously.[16]

Government

 
Newbury Town Hall, completed in 1881
Arms of Newbury Town Council
CrestOn a Wreath Or and Azure a Castle of three Towers domed Gules flying from the centre tower a forked Pennant Argent charged with a Bar wavy Azure and from the exterior towers a Flag also Azure.
BlazonGules on a Fesse Argent between in chief a Teazle Flower between two Garbs and in base as many Swords in saltire points upwards Or a Bar wavy Azure.
MottoFloruit Floreat
Granted to the borough council on 24th June 1948.[17]

Newbury is the administrative centre of the district administered by the unitary authority of West Berkshire, which as of 2011 has a population of 153,822 (an approximately straight-line increase of 15,022 since 1991).[18] Newbury is also a civil parish, with parish council responsibilities undertaken by Newbury Town Council, based at Newbury Town Hall, since 1997. Newbury Town Council currently has 23 councillors, representing seven wards of the town, currently: Brummel Grove, Clay Hill, Falkland, Northcroft, Pyle Hill, Victoria and St Johns. As of 2019, 19 of the councillors represent the Liberal Democrats, 2 represent the Conservative Party and 2 represent the Greens.[19]

In the House of Commons, the town is in the Newbury constituency. Since the general election of December 2019 this constituency has been represented by Laura Farris, a Conservative. From 1999 to 2020 Newbury was part of the South East England European Parliament constituency electing MEPs by proportional representation. The twinning was held at The Corn Exchange Newbury. Newbury is twinned with the following:

Geography

 
View of Newbury and surroundings from Donnington Castle

The Civil Parish of Newbury consists of the town and the suburbs of Wash Common, The City, West Fields, East Fields and Speenhamland. The modern conurbation of Newbury, however, with close bus and road links and almost contiguous development, may be taken to include the surrounding villages of Speen, Donnington, Shaw and Greenham.[21] Speen, which is now a suburb of western Newbury, is roughly equidistant between Bristol[22] and London.[23]

Elevations vary from a minimum of 72 m above mean sea level to 122 m at Wash Common. Elevations reach 150–200 m in the directly adjoining hills.[21] The River Kennet and the Kennet and Avon Canal flow east through the centre of the town to reach the Thames at Reading, while the River Lambourn (beside which is the country's largest horse-training paddocks in the Valley of the Lambourn Downs) partly forms its northern boundary, ending in the town. A tributary that is smaller still, the River Enborne, forms the southern boundary (and also the county boundary with Hampshire).

Adjoining the town's south-eastern border is Greenham Common and the famous Newbury Racecourse. Newbury is surrounded on three sides (north, west and south) by the North Wessex Downs. The downland to the south rises steeply out of the river valley providing scenic views, including Watership Down (made famous by the novel of the same name), Beacon Hill, the southeast's highest point Walbury Hill, and Combe Gibbet.

Demography

Newbury has two very narrowly buffered settlements, Thatcham (25,267 inh. as at 2011) and Shaw cum Donnington (1,686 inh. as at 2011) forming an identifiable, informal greater Newbury urban and suburban conglomeration. In major use classes 11% of Newbury's land is occupied by roads and as of 2005, 34% of its land was occupied by domestic gardens.

2011 Published Statistics: Population, home ownership and extracts from Physical Environment, surveyed in 2005[24]
Output area Homes owned outright Owned with a loan Socially rented Privately rented Other km2 roads km2 water km2 domestic gardens Usual residents km2
Civil parish 3816 4549 2589 2464 133 1.146 0.189 3.430 41075 9.9

Economy

 
Part of the Vodafone Headquarters

Newbury and its immediate surroundings constitute the major commercial and retail centre of West Berkshire. The local economy is inter-related to that of the eastern M4 corridor which has most of its industrial, logistical and research businesses close to Newbury, Reading and Slough, with smaller industrial estates in the county at Theale, Bracknell and Maidenhead. Newbury is home to the United Kingdoms headquarters of the mobile network operator Vodafone, which is the town's largest employer with over 6,000 workers. Before moving to their £129 million headquarters in the outskirts of the town in 2002, Vodafone used 64 buildings spread across the town centre.[25]

As well as Vodafone, Newbury is also home to the United Kingdom headquarters of National Instruments, Micro Focus, Stryker Corporation, Grass Valley (formerly Snell Advanced Media which was formerly Quantel), Cognito, EValue and Newbury Building Society. The pharmaceutical company Bayer AG are also headquartered in the town, although in October 2015 the company announced their intention to move to the Green Park Business Park near Reading.[26]

Transport

 
The Kennet and Avon Canal runs through the middle of Newbury

Newbury spans the River Kennet, the valley of which has for millennia formed an important east–west transport route, served by the Kennet and Avon Canal, and the Reading to Taunton Line, one of three routes from London to the West Country.

 
The bridge next to the Lock Stock and Barrel pub
 
Cheap Street
 
Main Street in Newbury, view from the Bridge
 
Intersection between Northcroft Street, Northbrook Street and Bridge Street

Rail

Today, Newbury is served by two railway stations, Newbury and Newbury Racecourse, which both are on the Reading to Taunton line. It was also served by the Didcot, Newbury and Southampton Railway until this closed in the 1960s.

Road

Following a similar east–west route is the A4 road from London to Bristol, historically the main route west from London. This road has been superseded as a long-distance route by the M4 motorway which runs almost parallel and can be accessed three miles (five kilometres) to the north at the Chieveley interchange at Junction 13. At Newbury this east–west route is crossed by a dual-carriageway north–south trunk road, from the major south coast port of Southampton to the industrial centres of the Midlands. Although this route was once served by the Didcot, Newbury and Southampton Railway, today it is only served by the A34 road, which now bypasses Newbury to the west on an alignment partially using the old rail route (see also 'Newbury Bypass' below).

Until the completion of the bypass, the A34 and A4 met in the town centre at the Robin Hood Roundabout, a complicated gyratory system encompassing 6 approaching roads, a fire station, ambulance station and an exit on the inside of the roundabout, which has a north–south flyover across the roundabout. In 2007, the sculpture Couple in Conversation was unveiled on the roundabout, providing a new landmark for one of the major gateways into the town. Other significant roads radiating from Newbury include the A339 which now includes the renumbered part of the old A34 through the town centre and then heads towards Basingstoke and the M3 motorway, the A343 to Andover, the B4000 to Lambourn, the B4494 to Wantage and the B4009 to Streatley.

Bus services

Most local bus services were provided by Newbury Buses, a division of Reading Buses before August 2011. This was when they were transferred to private companies. The Link and route 7 remain in private hands, operated by Stagecoach South, with West Berkshire Connect also operating a couple of services. The main operator being Weavaway Travel, trading as Newbury & District. However, West Berkshire Council contracted services were transferred back to Reading Buses, who continue to operate the Vodafone Buses and the Jet Black 1 service, initially alongside Weavaway, under the Kennections brand in September 2016. 2 years later, in September 2018, they also acquired Newbury & District from Weavaway.

Newbury bypass

The town's location at the intersection of the routes from London to Bristol and from Southampton to Birmingham made it, for many years, a transport bottleneck. In 1963 a dual carriageway was built east of the town centre to ease congestion and the opening of the M4 motorway in 1971 moved the intersection of these major trunk routes three miles (five kilometres) north of the town, to Chieveley. The ring road around the town still suffered serious congestion and the Newbury bypass was proposed in 1981. The plans were approved in 1990.

However they were extremely controversial and this led to a major environmentalist campaign opposing the road development (dubbed the Third Battle of Newbury by parts of the national media).[citation needed] In spite of this, the road was built and finally opened in 1998. Within two months the road surface began to break up and the entire length of the bypass was eventually resurfaced over two weekends using an improved low-noise water-absorbent surface. In August 2004, the improved A34-M4 junction was re-opened which allowed north–south traffic on the A34 to completely bypass the earlier roundabout at the M4. This junction continued to be improved, with new road markings and traffic signals completed in 2008.

Education

Newbury has three main secondary schools:

There is also Newbury College, a further and higher education college, funded by a private finance initiative, and Mary Hare School, a residential co-educational community special needs school for deaf pupils.

Independent schools nearby include:

Sports and leisure

 
The Berkshire Stand and The Grandstand at Newbury Racecourse
 
Newbury R.F.C. home ground

Newbury is home to one of England's major racecourses, Newbury Racecourse, which celebrated its centenary in 2005. The most prestigious race in the calendar is the Hennessy Gold Cup which normally takes place in late November. Newbury has one of the last remaining lidos in the United Kingdom. It was originally built in the 1890s, although the structure we see today was erected in the 1930s. The pool is still in use today and is capable of receiving more than 1000 visitors a day during peak times. It is owned and subsidised by West Berkshire Council but is managed by an external contractor, Parkwood Leisure.[27]

Newbury's rugby union club, Newbury R.F.C. sponsored by Vodafone, is based in the town. The club was founded in 1928 and in 1996 moved to a new purpose-built ground at Monks Lane, [28] which has since hosted England U21 fixtures. Cricket clubs in the town include Newbury Cricket Club, situated right in the town centre, and Falkland CC. Newbury also has two athletics clubs: Team Kennet and Newbury Athletics Club. Newbury District Leagues exist in many other sports such as badminton, table tennis, squash and darts.

Newbury was home to A.F.C. Newbury, also sponsored by Vodafone] but in May 2006 Vodafone ended its sponsorship of the club,[29] following which the club collapsed. A local pub team from the Old London Apprentice took over the ground temporarily and now compete in the Reading League as Newbury F.C. Their future at the ground is uncertain as the owner, West Berkshire Council, plans to turn it into a car park. Victoria Park, near the centre of the town, is used for several events during the year such as the Newbury Waterways Festival, the Keep Off The Grass (KOTG) dance music event[30] and Crafty Craft, an improvised raft race along the canal.[31]

Newbury Library moved to a new building in July 2000. The Corn Exchange provides a venue for both professional and amateur live performances. Other theatres near the town are the Watermill Theatre, and New Greenham Arts on the former Greenham Common air force base. Annually the Newbury Spring Festival of classical music brings internationally renowned soloists and ensembles to a variety of venues in and around the town. The Newbury Comedy Festival, which started in 2004, has become a feature in the town's cultural calendar. Newbury is also home to the Donnington Grove estate, where a golf course was opened in 1993. The Donnington Grove mansion, built between 1763 and 1772, is a local historic landmark.

Media

There are four main local radio stations broadcasting in the Newbury area; BBC Radio Berkshire; a community radio station, Kennet Radio; and two Independent Local Radio stations – Greatest Hits Radio Berkshire & North Hampshire (formerly 'Newbury Sound' and 'Kick FM') which broadcasts from Newbury, and Heart South (formerly 210FM) which broadcasts into the area from nearby Reading. Film and media production companies in Newbury include 822 Productions, Preview Productions, Dudleigh Films and MWS Media, based at Greenham Business Park.[citation needed] The following local newspapers are distributed in Newbury (circulation):[32]

  • Newbury Weekly News (Part of Newbury Weekly News, advertising-funded free paper) (33,400)
  • Newbury & Thatcham Chronicle (21,500)
  • Newbury Weekly News (24,300)

Places of interest

.

Notable people

A number of notable people have originated from, worked, lived or died in Newbury:

Nobles killed at the First Battle of Newbury

See also

References

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  67. ^ Roy, Ian (28 September 2006). "Dormer, Robert, first earl of Carnarvon (1610?–1643)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/7839. Retrieved 31 August 2021. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  68. ^ G. E. Cokayne; with Vicary Gibbs, H.A. Doubleday, Geoffrey H. White, Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden, editors. The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant, new ed., 13 volumes in 14 (1910-1959; reprint in 6 volumes, Gloucester, U.K.: Alan Sutton Publishing, 2000), volume XII/1, pages 161, 483 and 484.
  69. ^ Smith, David (29 May 2014). "Cary, Lucius, second Viscount Falkland (1609/10–1643)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/4841. Retrieved 31 August 2021.

Sources

  • Higgott Tony (2001). The Story of Newbury. Countryside Books.
  • Money, Walter (1887). History of Newbury. Oxford.

External links

  • Newbury Town Council
  • The History of Newbury District
  • "Newbury" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.
  • A History of RAF Greenham Common and RAF Welford

newbury, berkshire, newbury, market, town, county, berkshire, england, home, administrative, headquarters, west, berkshire, council, town, centre, around, large, market, square, retains, rare, medieval, cloth, hall, adjoining, half, timbered, granary, 15th, ce. Newbury is a market town in the county of Berkshire England and is home to the administrative headquarters of West Berkshire Council The town centre around its large market square retains a rare medieval Cloth Hall an adjoining half timbered granary and the 15th century St Nicolas Church along with 17th and 18th century listed buildings As well as being home to Newbury Racecourse it is the headquarters of Vodafone and software company Micro Focus International In the valley of the River Kennet 26 mi 42 km south of Oxford 25 mi 40 km north of Winchester 27 mi 43 km southeast of Swindon and 20 mi 32 km west of Reading NewburyMarket townNewbury clock tower at sunset in 2018FlagNewburyLocation within BerkshireArea9 9 km2 3 8 sq mi Population33 841 2021 Census 1 Density3 418 km2 8 850 sq mi OS grid referenceSU4767 London60 mi 100 km 2 Unitary authorityWest BerkshireCeremonial countyBerkshireRegionSouth EastCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townNEWBURYPostcode districtRG14Dialling code01635PoliceThames ValleyFireRoyal BerkshireAmbulanceSouth CentralUK ParliamentNewburyList of places UK England Berkshire 51 24 04 N 1 19 23 W 51 401 N 1 323 W 51 401 1 323 Coordinates 51 24 04 N 1 19 23 W 51 401 N 1 323 W 51 401 1 323Newbury lies on the edge of the Berkshire Downs part of the North Wessex Downs Area of outstanding natural beauty 3 mi 5 km north of the Hampshire Berkshire county boundary In the suburban village of Donnington lies the part ruined Donnington Castle and the surrounding hills are home to some of the country s most famous racehorse training grounds centred on nearby Lambourn To the south is a narrower range of hills including Walbury Hill and a few private landscape gardens and mansions such as Highclere Castle The local economy is inter related to that of the eastern M4 corridor which has most of its industrial logistical and research businesses close to Newbury mostly around Reading Bracknell Maidenhead and Slough Together with the adjoining town of Thatcham 3 mi 5 km distant Newbury forms the principal part of an urban area of approximately 70 000 people 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Greenham Common 1 2 1943 Bombing 2 Government 3 Geography 4 Demography 5 Economy 6 Transport 6 1 Rail 6 2 Road 6 2 1 Bus services 6 2 2 Newbury bypass 7 Education 8 Sports and leisure 9 Media 10 Places of interest 11 Notable people 12 See also 13 References 14 Sources 15 External linksHistory Edit Part of the facade of Camp Hopson of Newbury dating from 1663 with classical brick pilasters in 2014 Donnington Castle The pedestrianised Northbrook Street There was a Mesolithic settlement at Newbury Artefacts were recovered from the Greenham Dairy Farm in 1963 and the Faraday Road site in 2002 4 Additional material was found in excavations along the route of the Newbury Bypass 5 Newbury was founded late in the 11th century following the Norman conquest as a new borough hence its name Although there are references to the borough that predate the Domesday Book it is not mentioned by name in the survey However its existence within the manor of Ulvritone is evident from the massive rise in value of that manor at a time when most manors were worth less than in Saxon times In 1086 the Domesday Book 6 assesses the borough as having land for 12 ploughs 2 mills woodland for 25 pigs 11 villeins resident farmhands unfree peasant who owed his lord labour services 11 bordars unfree peasants with less land than villans villeins and 51 enclosures private parks rendering 70s 7d Doubt has been cast over the existence of Newbury Castle 7 but the town did have royal connections and was visited a number of times by King John and Henry III while hunting in the area The first reference to a bridge on the site of the current Newbury Bridge is an account of its reconstruction in the 14th Century In 1312 King Edward II directed that its bridge should be kept in good order 8 By 1623 when the bridge collapsed it was recorded as being built of wood being 30 feet 9 metres in length and 20 ft 6 m in width and having shops on it The bridge was presumably rebuilt as it is recorded that in 1644 a guard was placed on the bridge 9 Historically the town s economic foundation was the cloth trade This is reflected in the person of the 16th century cloth magnate Jack of Newbury 10 the proprietor of what may well have been the first factory in England and the later tale of the Newbury Coat The latter was the outcome of a bet as to whether a gentleman s suit could be produced by the end of the day from wool taken from a sheep s back at the beginning The local legend was later immortalized in a humorous novel by Elizabethan writer Thomas Deloney Newbury was the site of two battles during the English Civil War the First Battle of Newbury 11 at Wash Common in 1643 and the Second Battle of Newbury 12 at Speen in 1644 The nearby Donnington Castle 13 was reduced to a ruin in the aftermath of the second battle The disruption of trade during the civil war compounded by a collapse of the local cloth trade in the late 16th century left Newbury impoverished The local economy was boosted in the 18th century by the rise of Bath as a popular destination for the wealthy escaping London s summer heat and associated stench Newbury was roughly halfway between London and Bath and an obvious stopping point in the two day journey Soon Newbury and the Speenhamland area in particular was filled with coaching inns of ever increasing grandeur and size One inn the George amp Pelican was reputed to have stabling for 300 horses A theatre was built to provide the travellers with entertainment featuring the major stars of the age In 1795 local magistrates meeting at the George and Pelican Inn in Speenhamland introduced the Speenhamland System which tied parish poor relief welfare payments to the cost of bread 14 In 1723 the Kennet Navigation made the River Kennet navigable downstream from Newbury to the River Thames in Reading Some 70 years later in 1794 work started on the centre section of the Kennet and Avon Canal which would extend the Kennet Navigation to Bath thus providing a through water route between London and Bristol via Newbury This route was finally completed in 1810 9 15 The opening of the Great Western Railway from London to Bath in 1841 effectively killed the canal and coaching trades and as the line passed some 25 kilometres 15 1 2 mi to the north it brought no advantage to the town Newbury had to wait until 1847 to join the railway network with the opening of the Berks and Hants Railway branch line from Reading to Hungerford via Newbury and until 1906 to be on a main line with the opening of the Reading Taunton line As a result Newbury became something of a backwater market town with an economy based largely on agriculture and horse racing In the 1980s British electronics firm Racal decided to locate their newly formed telecommunications company Racal Vodafone later Vodafone UK in the town In the subsequent decades Newbury became something of a regional centre for the high tech industries and the town has since enjoyed a return to general economic prosperity Greenham Common Edit Greenham Common in the late 80s A large Royal Air Force station was established during the Second World War at Greenham Common on the edge of the town In the 1950s it became home to US Air Force bombers and tankers for which it was equipped with the longest military runway in the United Kingdom In the 1980s it became one of only two USAF bases in the UK equipped with ground launched nuclear armed cruise missiles causing it to become the site of protests by up to 40 000 protesters and the establishment of the Greenham Common Women s Peace Camp With the end of the Cold War the base was closed the runway was broken up much of it used as fill material in building the Newbury bypass and the area was restored to heathland This project then saw Greenham and Crookham commons reopened to the public in 2000 1943 Bombing Edit On 10 February 1943 two German bombers Dornier Do 217s from ll KG40 Bomber unit in Holland on a nuisance raid followed the Great Western Railway line running west from London One of the bombers headed towards Reading while the other followed the line all the way to Newbury At 4 43pm the bomber dropped eight high explosive bombs over the town There had been no time for a warning siren The Senior Council School St Bartholomew s Almshouses St John s Church just the altar was left standing and Southampton Terrace were all destroyed and another 265 dwellings were damaged many of which had to be demolished St John s Church was completely rebuilt after the war 15 people were killed and a further 41 people were injured 25 seriously 16 Government Edit Newbury Town Hall completed in 1881 Arms of Newbury Town CouncilCrestOn a Wreath Or and Azure a Castle of three Towers domed Gules flying from the centre tower a forked Pennant Argent charged with a Bar wavy Azure and from the exterior towers a Flag also Azure BlazonGules on a Fesse Argent between in chief a Teazle Flower between two Garbs and in base as many Swords in saltire points upwards Or a Bar wavy Azure MottoFloruit FloreatGranted to the borough council on 24th June 1948 17 Newbury is the administrative centre of the district administered by the unitary authority of West Berkshire which as of 2011 has a population of 153 822 an approximately straight line increase of 15 022 since 1991 18 Newbury is also a civil parish with parish council responsibilities undertaken by Newbury Town Council based at Newbury Town Hall since 1997 Newbury Town Council currently has 23 councillors representing seven wards of the town currently Brummel Grove Clay Hill Falkland Northcroft Pyle Hill Victoria and St Johns As of 2019 19 of the councillors represent the Liberal Democrats 2 represent the Conservative Party and 2 represent the Greens 19 In the House of Commons the town is in the Newbury constituency Since the general election of December 2019 this constituency has been represented by Laura Farris a Conservative From 1999 to 2020 Newbury was part of the South East England European Parliament constituency electing MEPs by proportional representation The twinning was held at The Corn Exchange Newbury Newbury is twinned with the following Braunfels in Germany 1963 Bagnols sur Ceze in France 1970 20 Eeklo in Belgium 1974 Feltre in Italy 2003 Carcaixent in Spain 2019 Geography Edit View of Newbury and surroundings from Donnington Castle The Civil Parish of Newbury consists of the town and the suburbs of Wash Common The City West Fields East Fields and Speenhamland The modern conurbation of Newbury however with close bus and road links and almost contiguous development may be taken to include the surrounding villages of Speen Donnington Shaw and Greenham 21 Speen which is now a suburb of western Newbury is roughly equidistant between Bristol 22 and London 23 Elevations vary from a minimum of 72 m above mean sea level to 122 m at Wash Common Elevations reach 150 200 m in the directly adjoining hills 21 The River Kennet and the Kennet and Avon Canal flow east through the centre of the town to reach the Thames at Reading while the River Lambourn beside which is the country s largest horse training paddocks in the Valley of the Lambourn Downs partly forms its northern boundary ending in the town A tributary that is smaller still the River Enborne forms the southern boundary and also the county boundary with Hampshire Adjoining the town s south eastern border is Greenham Common and the famous Newbury Racecourse Newbury is surrounded on three sides north west and south by the North Wessex Downs The downland to the south rises steeply out of the river valley providing scenic views including Watership Down made famous by the novel of the same name Beacon Hill the southeast s highest point Walbury Hill and Combe Gibbet Demography EditNewbury has two very narrowly buffered settlements Thatcham 25 267 inh as at 2011 and Shaw cum Donnington 1 686 inh as at 2011 forming an identifiable informal greater Newbury urban and suburban conglomeration In major use classes 11 of Newbury s land is occupied by roads and as of 2005 34 of its land was occupied by domestic gardens 2011 Published Statistics Population home ownership and extracts from Physical Environment surveyed in 2005 24 Output area Homes owned outright Owned with a loan Socially rented Privately rented Other km2 roads km2 water km2 domestic gardens Usual residents km2Civil parish 3816 4549 2589 2464 133 1 146 0 189 3 430 41075 9 9Economy Edit Part of the Vodafone Headquarters Newbury and its immediate surroundings constitute the major commercial and retail centre of West Berkshire The local economy is inter related to that of the eastern M4 corridor which has most of its industrial logistical and research businesses close to Newbury Reading and Slough with smaller industrial estates in the county at Theale Bracknell and Maidenhead Newbury is home to the United Kingdoms headquarters of the mobile network operator Vodafone which is the town s largest employer with over 6 000 workers Before moving to their 129 million headquarters in the outskirts of the town in 2002 Vodafone used 64 buildings spread across the town centre 25 As well as Vodafone Newbury is also home to the United Kingdom headquarters of National Instruments Micro Focus Stryker Corporation Grass Valley formerly Snell Advanced Media which was formerly Quantel Cognito EValue and Newbury Building Society The pharmaceutical company Bayer AG are also headquartered in the town although in October 2015 the company announced their intention to move to the Green Park Business Park near Reading 26 Transport Edit The Kennet and Avon Canal runs through the middle of Newbury Newbury spans the River Kennet the valley of which has for millennia formed an important east west transport route served by the Kennet and Avon Canal and the Reading to Taunton Line one of three routes from London to the West Country The Newbury Bypass near Donnington The bridge next to the Lock Stock and Barrel pub Cheap Street Main Street in Newbury view from the Bridge Intersection between Northcroft Street Northbrook Street and Bridge Street Rail Edit Today Newbury is served by two railway stations Newbury and Newbury Racecourse which both are on the Reading to Taunton line It was also served by the Didcot Newbury and Southampton Railway until this closed in the 1960s Road Edit Following a similar east west route is the A4 road from London to Bristol historically the main route west from London This road has been superseded as a long distance route by the M4 motorway which runs almost parallel and can be accessed three miles five kilometres to the north at the Chieveley interchange at Junction 13 At Newbury this east west route is crossed by a dual carriageway north south trunk road from the major south coast port of Southampton to the industrial centres of the Midlands Although this route was once served by the Didcot Newbury and Southampton Railway today it is only served by the A34 road which now bypasses Newbury to the west on an alignment partially using the old rail route see also Newbury Bypass below Until the completion of the bypass the A34 and A4 met in the town centre at the Robin Hood Roundabout a complicated gyratory system encompassing 6 approaching roads a fire station ambulance station and an exit on the inside of the roundabout which has a north south flyover across the roundabout In 2007 the sculpture Couple in Conversation was unveiled on the roundabout providing a new landmark for one of the major gateways into the town Other significant roads radiating from Newbury include the A339 which now includes the renumbered part of the old A34 through the town centre and then heads towards Basingstoke and the M3 motorway the A343 to Andover the B4000 to Lambourn the B4494 to Wantage and the B4009 to Streatley Bus services Edit Most local bus services were provided by Newbury Buses a division of Reading Buses before August 2011 This was when they were transferred to private companies The Link and route 7 remain in private hands operated by Stagecoach South with West Berkshire Connect also operating a couple of services The main operator being Weavaway Travel trading as Newbury amp District However West Berkshire Council contracted services were transferred back to Reading Buses who continue to operate the Vodafone Buses and the Jet Black 1 service initially alongside Weavaway under the Kennections brand in September 2016 2 years later in September 2018 they also acquired Newbury amp District from Weavaway Newbury bypass Edit The town s location at the intersection of the routes from London to Bristol and from Southampton to Birmingham made it for many years a transport bottleneck In 1963 a dual carriageway was built east of the town centre to ease congestion and the opening of the M4 motorway in 1971 moved the intersection of these major trunk routes three miles five kilometres north of the town to Chieveley The ring road around the town still suffered serious congestion and the Newbury bypass was proposed in 1981 The plans were approved in 1990 However they were extremely controversial and this led to a major environmentalist campaign opposing the road development dubbed the Third Battle of Newbury by parts of the national media citation needed In spite of this the road was built and finally opened in 1998 Within two months the road surface began to break up and the entire length of the bypass was eventually resurfaced over two weekends using an improved low noise water absorbent surface In August 2004 the improved A34 M4 junction was re opened which allowed north south traffic on the A34 to completely bypass the earlier roundabout at the M4 This junction continued to be improved with new road markings and traffic signals completed in 2008 Education EditNewbury has three main secondary schools St Bartholomew s School one of the oldest schools in Berkshire founded in 1466 Park House School Trinity School formed after the closure of Shaw House School and Turnpike School There is also Newbury College a further and higher education college funded by a private finance initiative and Mary Hare School a residential co educational community special needs school for deaf pupils Independent schools nearby include Horris Hill an all boys day and boarding school from ages 4 to 13 boarding from 7 to 13 Downe House School Cheam School St Gabriel s School an all girls school from the ages 3 to 18 Thorngrove School a day co educational school in nearby Highclere from the ages 2 to 13 Newbury Hall School an international high school St Michael s School a Roman Catholic school in BurghclereSports and leisure Edit The Berkshire Stand and The Grandstand at Newbury Racecourse Newbury R F C home ground Newbury is home to one of England s major racecourses Newbury Racecourse which celebrated its centenary in 2005 The most prestigious race in the calendar is the Hennessy Gold Cup which normally takes place in late November Newbury has one of the last remaining lidos in the United Kingdom It was originally built in the 1890s although the structure we see today was erected in the 1930s The pool is still in use today and is capable of receiving more than 1000 visitors a day during peak times It is owned and subsidised by West Berkshire Council but is managed by an external contractor Parkwood Leisure 27 Newbury s rugby union club Newbury R F C sponsored by Vodafone is based in the town The club was founded in 1928 and in 1996 moved to a new purpose built ground at Monks Lane 28 which has since hosted England U21 fixtures Cricket clubs in the town include Newbury Cricket Club situated right in the town centre and Falkland CC Newbury also has two athletics clubs Team Kennet and Newbury Athletics Club Newbury District Leagues exist in many other sports such as badminton table tennis squash and darts Newbury was home to A F C Newbury also sponsored by Vodafone but in May 2006 Vodafone ended its sponsorship of the club 29 following which the club collapsed A local pub team from the Old London Apprentice took over the ground temporarily and now compete in the Reading League as Newbury F C Their future at the ground is uncertain as the owner West Berkshire Council plans to turn it into a car park Victoria Park near the centre of the town is used for several events during the year such as the Newbury Waterways Festival the Keep Off The Grass KOTG dance music event 30 and Crafty Craft an improvised raft race along the canal 31 The Corn Exchange Newbury Library moved to a new building in July 2000 The Corn Exchange provides a venue for both professional and amateur live performances Other theatres near the town are the Watermill Theatre and New Greenham Arts on the former Greenham Common air force base Annually the Newbury Spring Festival of classical music brings internationally renowned soloists and ensembles to a variety of venues in and around the town The Newbury Comedy Festival which started in 2004 has become a feature in the town s cultural calendar Newbury is also home to the Donnington Grove estate where a golf course was opened in 1993 The Donnington Grove mansion built between 1763 and 1772 is a local historic landmark Media EditThere are four main local radio stations broadcasting in the Newbury area BBC Radio Berkshire a community radio station Kennet Radio and two Independent Local Radio stations Greatest Hits Radio Berkshire amp North Hampshire formerly Newbury Sound and Kick FM which broadcasts from Newbury and Heart South formerly 210FM which broadcasts into the area from nearby Reading Film and media production companies in Newbury include 822 Productions Preview Productions Dudleigh Films and MWS Media based at Greenham Business Park citation needed The following local newspapers are distributed in Newbury circulation 32 Newbury Weekly News Part of Newbury Weekly News advertising funded free paper 33 400 Newbury amp Thatcham Chronicle 21 500 Newbury Weekly News 24 300 Places of interest Edit St Nicolas Church The Corn Exchange theatre and cinema Kennet and Avon Canal shop and tearooms West Berkshire Museum Jack of Newbury s House St Nicolas Church CofE completed in 1532 This is a fine example of a parish church built entirely in the Perpendicular style St Joseph s Church Newbury Roman Catholic church with Italianate architecture St Bartholomew s Hospital almshouses Raymond Almshouses Newtown Road built in 1796 founded by Philip Jemmett of Kintbury and endowed by his daughter Anne and her husband Sir Jonathan Raymond Alderman of the City of London 33 34 The Litten Chapel The Falkland Memorial Donnington Castle Nearby places of interest include Bucklebury Farm Park Combe Gibbet Highclere Castle the Sandham Memorial Chapel The Nature Discovery Centre the Watermill Theatre and Watership Down New Greenham Arts an ex US military building on Greenham Common airbase now used to house artist studios and a performing arts centre Disused GAMA cruise missile storage area at Greenham Common Greenham Control Tower cafe and museum Notable people Edit Richard Adams Francis Baily A number of notable people have originated from worked lived or died in Newbury Richard Adams 1920 2016 author 35 Hannah Aldworth 1778 philanthropist 36 Roger Attfield 1939 thoroughbred horse trainer 37 Francis Baily 1774 1844 astronomer 38 Captain Collet Barker 1784 1831 early Australian explorer 39 Michael Bond 1926 2017 creator of Paddington Bear 40 Harry Bowl 1914 footballer Bruno Brookes 1959 radio and television presenter 41 Lord Carey 1935 former Archbishop of Canterbury 42 Lawrence Chaney 1996 drag performer 43 Simon Channing Williams 1945 2009 film producer 44 Keith Chegwin 1957 2017 television presenter 45 Harry Cotterell 1841 1925 British trader Miles or Myles Coverdale 1488 1569 bishop co author of the 1st English Bible 46 George Dangerfield 1904 1986 journalist and author 47 Sebastian Faulks 1953 author 48 49 Gerald Finzi 1901 1956 composer and founder of the Newbury String Players 50 Jill Fraser 1946 2006 Watermill Theatre owner and director 51 William Henry Gore 1857 1942 painter of the Berkshire countryside born and died in Newbury 52 James Hanson Lord Hanson 1922 2004 haulier later venture capitalist 53 Alec Hopkins 1986 actor who played the young Severus Snape in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix Sir Michael Hordern 1911 1995 actor 54 Luke Humphries 1995 professional darts player 55 John Kendrick 1573 1624 philanthropic patron of the town of Reading 56 Edwin Lewis 1881 1959 Methodist theologian 57 William Marshal The Marshal seen as first Lord Marshal 1147 1219 medieval knight given up as a hostage at Newbury Castle 58 Henry Martin 1866 British murderer 59 Jack O Newbury 1489 1557 cloth merchant and patron 60 John Septimus Roe 1797 1878 the first Surveyor General of Western Australia 61 Lord George Sanger 1825 1911 circus owner born in Newbury who gave the Queen Victoria statue to the town in 1902 62 Hannah Snell 1723 1792 female soldier 63 Edward C Ted Titchmarsh 1899 1963 leading 20th century theoretical mathematician 64 Theo Walcott 1989 footballer originally for A F C Newbury Currently plays as a forward for Southampton previously played for Arsenal and Everton 65 Sir Frank Williams 1942 2021 Formula One manager founded the WilliamsF1 team 66 Nobles killed at the First Battle of Newbury Earl of Carnarvon 67 Earl of Sunderland 68 Lord Falkland 69 See also EditNewbury power stationReferences Edit Newbury City population Retrieved 25 October 2022 Grid Reference Finder www gridreferencefinder com Archived from the original on 13 January 2018 Retrieved 5 May 2021 United Kingdom Urban Areas in England Population Statistics in Maps and Charts www citypopulation de Archived from the original on 6 June 2007 Retrieved 28 June 2015 An 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combination of Muhammad Ali and Kissinger BBC News Archived from the original on 7 November 2020 Retrieved 31 August 2021 In 1152 when William was just six Stephen besieged Newbury Castle and took William hostage until his father agreed to surrender Berkshire Record Office 1866 harvtxt error no target CITEREFBerkshire Record Office1866 help Pollard Albert Kerridge Eric 23 September 2004 Winchcombe John Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 29712 Archived from the original on 31 August 2021 Retrieved 31 August 2021 Subscription or UK public library membership required John Septimus Roe All Saints College Archived from the original on 13 April 2013 Retrieved 27 August 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Assael Brenda September 2004 Sanger George 1825 1911 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 1 online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 35940 Retrieved 22 June 2010 Subscription or UK public library membership required Ford David Nash Hannah Snell 1723 1792 www berkshirehistory com Archived from the original on 6 February 2020 Retrieved 31 August 2021 Cartwright M L 1964 Edward Charles Titchmarsh 1899 1963 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 10 305 326 doi 10 1098 rsbm 1964 0018 Fricker Martin 9 May 2006 Theo Lions on His Shirt Daily Mirror London Archived from the original on 14 October 2007 Retrieved 31 August 2021 Lawrence Linora 9 October 2008 Formula for success Oxford Mail Archived from the original on 25 July 2020 Retrieved 31 August 2021 By 1986 Frank had moved to his present home a small mansion near Newbury Roy Ian 28 September 2006 Dormer Robert first earl of Carnarvon 1610 1643 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 7839 Retrieved 31 August 2021 Subscription or UK public library membership required G E Cokayne with Vicary Gibbs H A Doubleday Geoffrey H White Duncan Warrand and Lord Howard de Walden editors The Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom Extant Extinct or Dormant new ed 13 volumes in 14 1910 1959 reprint in 6 volumes Gloucester U K Alan Sutton Publishing 2000 volume XII 1 pages 161 483 and 484 Smith David 29 May 2014 Cary Lucius second Viscount Falkland 1609 10 1643 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 4841 Retrieved 31 August 2021 Sources EditHiggott Tony 2001 The Story of Newbury Countryside Books Money Walter 1887 History of Newbury Oxford External links Edit Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Newbury and Thatcham Wikimedia Commons has media related to Newbury Berkshire Newbury Town Council Newbury Twin Town Association The History of Newbury District Newbury Community Website Newbury New International Encyclopedia 1905 A History of RAF Greenham Common and RAF Welford Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Newbury Berkshire amp oldid 1127942694, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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