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Plymouth

Plymouth (/ˈplɪməθ/ ) is a port city and unitary authority in Devon, South West England. It is located on the south coast of Devon, approximately 36 miles (58 km) southwest of Exeter and 193 miles (311 km) southwest of London. It is bordered by Cornwall to the west and southwest.

Plymouth
Nickname: 
Britain's Ocean City
Motto(s): 
Turris fortissima est nomen Jehova
"The name of Jehovah is the strongest tower"[1]
Shown within Devon
Plymouth
Location within the United Kingdom
Plymouth
Location within England
Plymouth
Location in Europe
Coordinates: 50°22′17″N 4°08′32″W / 50.37139°N 4.14222°W / 50.37139; -4.14222
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
CountryEngland
RegionSouth West England
Ceremonial countyDevon
City status1928
Unitary Authority1998
Government
 • TypeUnitary authority
 • BodyPlymouth City Council
 • LeadershipLeader and cabinet
 • Council controlLabour
(as of 04 July 2023)
 • Members of ParliamentJohnny Mercer (C)
Luke Pollard (L)
Gary Streeter (C)
Area
 • Total30.83 sq mi (79.85 km2)
 • Rank215th (of 296)
Highest elevation
509 ft (155 m)
Lowest elevation
0 ft (0 m)
Population
 (2021)
 • Total{264,726 City/Unitary Authority} {294,139 Urban}
 • Rank65th (of 296)
 • Demonyms
Plymothian (formal)
Janner (informal)
Time zoneUTC0 (GMT)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+1 (BST)
Postcode district
Area code01752
PoliceDevon and Cornwall
AmbulanceSouth Western
FireDevon and Somerset
Websitewww.plymouth.gov.uk

Plymouth's early history extends to the Bronze Age when a settlement emerged at Mount Batten, which was a trading post for the Roman Empire. By the ninth century Mount Batten had been surpassed by the village of Sutton on the opposite side of the mouth of the River Plym. Sutton was granted a charter making it a market town in 1254. As Sutton grew it also became known as Plymouth, with the change of name being formalised in 1439 when it was made a borough.

In 1588, an English fleet based in Plymouth intercepted and defeated the Spanish Armada. In 1620, the Pilgrim Fathers departed Plymouth for the New World and established Plymouth Colony, the second English settlement in what is now the United States of America. During the English Civil War, the town was held by the Parliamentarians and was besieged between 1642 and 1646.

Throughout the Industrial Revolution, Plymouth grew as a commercial shipping port, handling imports and passengers from the Americas, and exporting local minerals (tin, copper, lime, china clay and arsenic). From 1690 onwards a new dock for the Royal Navy was built on the banks of the River Tamar, 2 miles (3.2 km) west of Plymouth, around which grew a town called "Plymouth Dock", renamed Devonport in 1824. In 1914 Devonport and the neighbouring town of East Stonehouse were absorbed into the borough of Plymouth. Plymouth was awarded city status in 1928.

During World War II, due to the city's naval importance, the German military targeted and partially destroyed the city by bombing, an act known as the Plymouth Blitz. After the war, the city centre was completely rebuilt. Subsequent expansion led to the incorporation of Plympton, Plymstock, and other outlying suburbs, in 1967.

The city is home to 264,727 (2021) people, making it the 30th-most populous built-up area in the United Kingdom and the second-largest city in the South West, after Bristol. It is governed locally by Plymouth City Council and is represented nationally by two MPs. Plymouth's economy remains strongly influenced by shipbuilding and seafaring but has tended toward a service economy since the 1990s. It has ferry links to Brittany (Roscoff and St Malo) and to Spain (Santander). It has the largest operational naval base in Western Europe, HMNB Devonport, and is home to the University of Plymouth. Plymouth is categorized as a Small-Port City using the Southampton System for port-city classification.[3]

History edit

Early history edit

Upper Palaeolithic deposits, including bones of Homo sapiens, have been found in local caves,[4] and artefacts dating from the Bronze Age to the Middle Iron Age have been found at Mount Batten,[5] showing that it was one of few principal trading ports of pre-Roman Britannia dominating continental trade with Armorica.[6] An unidentified settlement named TAMARI OSTIA (mouth/estuaries of the Tamar) is listed in Ptolemy's Geographia and is presumed to be located in the area of the modern city.[7] An ancient promontory fort was located at Rame Head at the mouth of Plymouth Sound[8] with ancient hillforts located at Lyneham Warren to the east, Boringdon Camp[9] and Maristow Camp to the north.[10]

The settlement of Plympton, further up the River Plym than the current Plymouth, was also an early trading port. (See Plympton for the derivation of the name Plym.) As the river silted up in the early 11th century, mariners and merchants were forced to settle downriver, at the current day Barbican near the river mouth.[11] At the time this village was called Sutton, meaning south town in Old English.[11] The name Plym Mouth, meaning "mouth of the River Plym" was first mentioned in a Pipe Roll of 1211.[12] Plympton Priory owned land at Sutton and secured a charter from Henry III in 1254 granting the priory the right to hold a weekly market and annual fair at Sutton, making it a market town.[13]

Early defence and Renaissance edit

 
Prysten House, Finewell Street, 1498, is the oldest surviving house in Plymouth, and built from local Plymouth Limestone and Dartmoor granite

During the Hundred Years' War a French attack in 1340 burned a manor house and took some prisoners, but failed to get into the town.[14] In 1403 the town was burned by Breton raiders.[15] On 12 November 1439 the market town of Sutton was incorporated as a borough and formally renamed Plymouth, with a subsequent charter the following year formalising its boundaries. It was the first time a borough charter had been issued by parliament rather than directly from the monarch.[16][17]

In the late fifteenth century, Plymouth Castle, a "castle quadrate", was constructed close to the area now known as The Barbican; it included four round towers, one at each corner, as featured on the city coat of arms.[18]

 
Charter map of Sutton harbour and Plymouth in 1540

The castle served to protect Sutton Pool, which is where the fleet was based in Plymouth prior to the establishment of Plymouth Dockyard. In 1512, an Act of Parliament was passed to further fortify Plymouth. The work included defensive walls at the entrance to Sutton Pool (across which a chain was extended in times of danger).[19] Defences on St Nicholas Island also date from this time, and a string of six artillery blockhouses were built, including one on Fishers Nose at the south-eastern corner of the Hoe.[20] This location was further strengthened by the building of a fort (later known as Drake's Fort) in 1596; it was the site of the Citadel, established in the 1660s (see below).[21]

 
Siege of Plymouth, 1643

During the 16th century, locally produced wool was the major export commodity.[22] Plymouth was the home port for successful maritime traders, among them Sir John Hawkins, who led England's first foray into the Atlantic slave trade,[23] as well as Sir Francis Drake, Mayor of Plymouth in 1581–2. Crews for the first English failed settlement attempt at Roanoke Colony in North America departed in 1587 under Sir Walter Raleigh's and Drake's leadership; returning bearing maize, tobacco and potatoes. In 1588, according to legend, Drake insisted on completing his game of bowls on the Hoe before engaging the Spanish Armada.[24] In 1620 the Pilgrims set sail for the New World from Plymouth, establishing Plymouth Colony – the second English colony in what is now the United States of America.[25] In 1625, the town Mayor estimated that African slavers captured that summer about 1,000 villagers from the area, to be sold in Africa.[26]

 
the 'Invincible' Spanish Armada, 1588

During the English Civil War Plymouth sided with the Parliamentarians and was besieged for almost four years by the Royalists.[27] The last major attack by the Royalists was by Sir Richard Grenville leading thousands of soldiers towards Plymouth, but they were defeated by the Plymothians at Freedom Fields Park.[27][28] The civil war ended as a Parliamentary win, but monarchy was restored by King Charles II in 1660, who imprisoned many of the Parliamentary heroes on Drake's Island.[27] Construction of the Royal Citadel began in 1665, after the Restoration; it was armed with cannon facing both out to sea and into the town, rumoured to be a reminder to residents not to oppose the Crown.[29] Mount Batten tower also dates from around this time.[30]

Plymouth Dock, naval power and Foulston edit

 
John Foulston's Town Hall, Column and Library in Devonport
 
Black-eyed Sue and Sweet Poll of Plymouth mourning their lovers, who are soon to be transported to Botany Bay, 1792
 
Unloading mail by hand from the Sir Francis Drake at Millbay Docks, March 1926

Throughout the 17th century, Plymouth had gradually lost its pre-eminence as a trading port. By the mid-17th century, commodities manufactured elsewhere in England cost too much to transport to Plymouth, and the city had no means of processing sugar or tobacco imports, major products from the colonies. Local sailors turning to piracy such as Henry Every became infamous, celebrated in the London play The Successful Pyrate. It played a part in the Atlantic slave trade during the early 18th century, although it was relatively small.[22]

In the nearby parish of Stoke Damerel the first dockyard, HMNB Devonport, opened in 1690 on the eastern bank of the River Tamar. Further docks were built here in 1727, 1762 and 1793.[1] The settlement that developed here was called "Dock" or "Plymouth Dock" at the time,[31] and a new town, separate from Plymouth, grew up. In 1712 there were 318 men employed and by 1733 the population had grown to 3,000 people.[11]

Before the latter half of the 18th century, grain, timber and then coal were Plymouth's main imports.[32] During this time the real source of wealth was from the neighbouring town of Plymouth Dock (renamed in 1824 to Devonport) and the major employer in the entire region was the dockyard.[11] The Three Towns conurbation of Plymouth, Stonehouse and Devonport enjoyed some prosperity during the late 18th and early 19th century and were enriched by a series of neo-classical urban developments designed by London architect John Foulston.[33] Foulston was important for both Devonport and Plymouth and was responsible for several grand public buildings, many now destroyed,[34] including the Athenaeum, the Theatre Royal and Royal Hotel, and much of Union Street.[33]

Local chemist William Cookworthy established his short-lived Plymouth Porcelain venture in 1768 to exploit the deposits of china clay that he had discovered in Cornwall. He was acquainted with engineer John Smeaton, the builder of the third Eddystone Lighthouse.[35]

 
Plymouth the Hoe (postcard c1920) by A.R. Quinton
 
Plymouth the Promenade Pier (postcard c1925) by A. R. Quinton

The 1-mile-long (2 km) Breakwater in Plymouth Sound was designed by John Rennie to protect the fleet moving in and out of Devonport; work started in 1812. Numerous technical difficulties and repeated storm damage meant that it was not completed until 1841, twenty years after Rennie's death.[36] In the 1860s, a ring of Palmerston forts was constructed around the outskirts of Devonport, to protect the dockyard from attack from any direction.[37]

 
Plymouth (1860s-1880s) by Francis Frith

Some of the most significant imports to Plymouth from the Americas and Europe during the latter half of the 19th century included maize, wheat, barley, sugar cane, guano, sodium nitrate and phosphate.[38] Aside from the dockyard in the town of Devonport, industries in Plymouth such as the gasworks, the railways and tramways, and a number of small chemical works had begun to develop in the 19th century, continuing into the 20th century.[39]

Plan for Plymouth 1943 edit

During the First World War, Plymouth was the port of entry for many troops from around the Empire. It was developed as a facility for the manufacture of munitions.[40] Although major units of the Royal Navy moved to the safety of Scapa Flow, Devonport was an important base for escort vessels and repairs. Flying boats operated from Mount Batten.[40]

 
Royal William Victualling Yard, Stonehouse by Sir John Rennie,1825–33.
 
Plymouth Drake's Island (1860s-1880s) by Francis Frith

During the Second World War, Devonport was the headquarters of Western Approaches Command until 1941, and Sunderland flying boats were operated by the Royal Australian Air Force. It was an important embarkation point for US troops for D-Day.[41] The city was heavily bombed by the Luftwaffe, in a series of 59 raids known as the Plymouth Blitz.[39] Although the dockyards were the principal targets, much of the city centre and over 3,700 houses were completely destroyed and more than 1,000 civilians lost their lives. This was largely due to Plymouth's status as a major port.[42] Charles Church was hit by incendiary bombs and partially destroyed in 1941 during the Blitz, but has not been demolished. It has been designated as an official permanent monument to the bombing of Plymouth during World War II.[43]

The redevelopment of the city was planned by Sir Patrick Abercrombie in his 1943 Plan for Plymouth whilst simultaneously working on the reconstruction plan for London.[44] This initially included plans to expand the city into south east Cornwall, but these were abandoned after opposition from Cornwall County Council.[45] Between 1951 and 1957 over 1000 homes were completed every year, mostly using innovative prefabricated systems of just three main types.[46]

The Plan for Plymouth was, on the one hand, a template for the rapid reassembly of a destroyed city centre, but Abercrombie also took the opportunity to lay out a whole hierarchy of settlements across the city of communities, neighbourhoods and districts. Central to this was a revision of transport infrastructure that prioritised the position of the railway as a gateway to the city centre and provided in the long-term for a dual carriageway road by-pass that only finally came into being in the 1980s (forty years after being planned). The plan is the subject of Jill Craigie's documentary The Way We Live (1946).

By 1964 over 20,000 new homes had been built, transforming the dense overcrowded and unsanitary slums of the pre-war city into a low density, dispersed suburbia.[46][47] Most of the city centre shops had been destroyed and those that remained were cleared to enable a zoned reconstruction according to his plan.[46][47] In 1962 the modernist high rise of the Civic Centre was constructed, an architecturally significant example of mid-twentieth century civic slab-and-tower set piece. The Plymouth City Council allowed it to fall into disrepair but it was grade II listed in 2007 by English Heritage to prevent its demolition.[46][48]

Post-war, Devonport Dockyard was kept busy refitting aircraft carriers such as the Ark Royal and, later, nuclear submarines. New light industrial factories were constructed in the newly zoned industrial sector, attracting rapid growth of the urban population. The army had substantially left the city by 1971, after barracks were pulled down in the 1960s,[47] but the city remains home to 29 Commando Regiment Royal Artillery[49] and also 42 Commando of the Royal Marines.[47]

Governance edit

As a unitary authority there is only one tier of local government covering Plymouth. Plymouth City Council meets at the Council House on Armada Way in the city centre. There are no civil parishes in the city, which is an unparished area.[50] The city forms part of the ceremonial county of Devon for the purposes of lieutenancy, but has been administratively independent from Devon County Council since it became a unitary authority in 1998.[51][52]

Administrative history edit

The first record of the existence of a settlement at Plymouth was in the Domesday Book in 1086 as Sudtone (Sutton), Saxon for south farm, located at the present-day Barbican.[1] From Saxon times, it was in the hundred of Roborough.[53] Sutton became a market town in 1254 and a borough in 1439, when it was formally renamed Plymouth.[1]

Plymouth was reformed to become a municipal borough in 1836, governed by a corporate body officially called the "mayor, aldermen and burgesses of the borough of Plymouth", but generally known as the corporation or town council.[54] When elected county councils were established in 1889, both Plymouth and neighbouring Devonport were considered large enough to provide their own county-level services and so they were made county boroughs, independent from Devon County Council.[55] In 1914 the county boroughs of Plymouth and Devonport and the adjoining urban district of East Stonehouse were merged to form a single county borough of Plymouth.[11] Collectively they were referred to as "The Three Towns".[56]

Plymouth was granted city status on 18 October 1928.[57] Between 1439 and 1935, Plymouth had a mayor.[58] In 1935 the city was given the right to appoint a Lord Mayor. The city's boundaries further expanded in 1967 to include the town of Plympton and the parish of Plymstock.[11]

The 1971 Local Government White Paper proposed abolishing county boroughs, which would have left Plymouth, a town of 250,000 people, being administered from a council based at the smaller Exeter, on the other side of the county. This led to Plymouth lobbying for the creation of a Tamarside county, to include Plymouth, Torpoint, Saltash, and the rural hinterland.[59] The campaign was not successful, and Plymouth ceased to be a county borough on 1 April 1974 with responsibility for education, social services, highways and libraries transferred to Devon County Council. All powers returned when the city became a unitary authority on 1 April 1998 under recommendations of the Banham Commission.[60]

Constituencies edit

In the Parliament of the United Kingdom, Plymouth is represented by the three constituencies of Plymouth Moor View, Plymouth Sutton and Devonport and South West Devon. Prior to Brexit in 2020 it was represented within the European Parliament as South West England.[61]

In 1919, Nancy Astor was elected the first-ever female member of parliament to take office in the British Houses of Parliament for the constituency of Plymouth Sutton. She was elected to the seat vacated by her husband Waldorf Astor on his elevation to the peerage. Lady Astor was a vibrantly active campaigner for her resident constituents.

In 1945, Plymouth-born Michael Foot was elected Labour MP for the constituency of Plymouth Devonport which had been heavily damaged in the Plymouth Blitz. He represented the seat until 1955. After serving as Secretary of State for Education and being responsible for the 1974 Health and Safety at Work Act, he went on to become the leader of the Labour Party (1980–1983).

City Council edit

 
Civic Centre, completed 1962, symbolic of the Post War 'Heroic Modernism' of the Welfare State; a listed building since 2007

The City of Plymouth is divided into 20 wards, 17 of which elect three councillors and the other three electing two councillors, making up a total council of 57.[62] Elecitions are held three years out of every four, with a third of the council being elected each time for a four year term.[62] The total electorate for Plymouth's Parliamentary constituencies was 190,006 in April 2019.[63] Since May 2023 Plymouth has had a Labour majority Council.[64] Plymouth City Council is formally twinned with: Brest, France (1963), Gdynia, Poland (1976), Novorossiysk, Russia (1990) San Sebastián, Spain (1990) and Plymouth, United States (2001).[65]

Plymouth was granted the dignity of Lord Mayor by King George V in 1935. The position is elected each year by a group of six councillors.[66] It is traditional that the position of the Lord Mayor alternates between the Conservative Party and the Labour Party annually and that the Lord Mayor chooses the Deputy Lord Mayor.[66]

 
The Great Hall in the Guildhall

The Lord Mayor's official residence is 3 Elliot Terrace, located on the Hoe.[67] Once a home of Waldorf and Nancy Astor, it was given by Lady Astor to the City of Plymouth as an official residence for future Lord Mayors and is also used today for civic hospitality, as lodgings for visiting dignitaries and High Court judges and it is also available to hire for private events.[67] The Civic Centre municipal office building in Armada Way became a listed building in June 2007 because of its quality and period features, but has become the centre of a controversy as the council planned for its demolition estimating that it could cost £40m to refurbish it, resulting in possible job losses.[68]

Geography edit

 
Northeastward view of Plymouth Sound from Mount Edgcumbe Country Park in Cornwall, with Drake's Island (centre) and, behind it from left to right, the Royal Citadel, the fuel tanks of Cattedown, and Mount Batten; in the background, the hills of Dartmoor.

Plymouth lies between the River Plym to the east and the River Tamar to the west; both rivers flow into the natural harbour of Plymouth Sound.[69] Since 1967, the unitary authority of Plymouth has included the, once independent, towns of Plympton and Plymstock which lie along the east of the River Plym.[11] The River Tamar forms the county boundary between Devon and Cornwall and its estuary forms the Hamoaze on which is sited Devonport Dockyard.[69]

The River Plym, which flows off Dartmoor to the north-east, forms a smaller estuary to the east of the city called Cattewater. Plymouth Sound is protected from the sea by the Plymouth Breakwater, in use since 1814.[70] In the Sound is Drake's Island which is seen from Plymouth Hoe, a flat public area on top of limestone cliffs.[71] The Unitary Authority of Plymouth is 79.85 square kilometres (30.83 sq mi).[2] The topography rises from sea level to a height, at Roborough, of about 509 feet (155 m) above Ordnance Datum (AOD).[72]

Geologically, Plymouth has a mixture of limestone, Devonian slate, granite and Middle Devonian limestone.[73] Plymouth Sound, Shores and Cliffs is a Site of Special Scientific Interest, because of its geology.[74] The bulk of the city is built upon Upper Devonian slates and shales and the headlands at the entrance to Plymouth Sound are formed of Lower Devonian slates, which can withstand the power of the sea.[73]

A band of Middle Devonian limestone runs west to east from Cremyll to Plymstock including the Hoe.[73] Local limestone may be seen in numerous buildings, walls and pavements throughout Plymouth.[73] To the north and northeast of the city is the granite mass of Dartmoor; the granite was mined and exported via Plymouth. Rocks brought down the Tamar from Dartmoor include ores containing tin, copper, tungsten, lead and other minerals.[73] There is evidence that the middle Devonian limestone belt at the south edge of Plymouth and in Plymstock was quarried at West Hoe, Cattedown and Radford.[75]

Urban form edit

 
Armada Way looking north

On 27 April 1944 Sir Patrick Abercrombie's Plan for Plymouth to rebuild the bomb-damaged city was published; it called for demolition of the few remaining pre-War buildings in the city centre to make way for their replacement with wide, parallel, modern boulevards aligned east–west linked by a north–south avenue (Armada Way) linking the railway station with the vista of Plymouth Hoe.[44]

A peripheral road system connecting the historic Barbican on the east and Union Street to the west determines the principal form of the city centre, even following pedestrianisation of the shopping centre in the late 1980s, and continues to inform the present 'Vision for Plymouth' developed by a team led by Barcelona-based architect David MacKay in 2003 which calls for revivification of the city centre with mixed-use and residential.[76]

In suburban areas, post-War prefabs had already begun to appear by 1946, and over 1,000 permanent council houses were built each year from 1951 to 1957 according to the Modernist zoned low-density garden city model advocated by Abercrombie.[47] By 1964 over 20,000 new homes had been built, more than 13,500 of them permanent council homes and 853 built by the Admiralty.[47]

Plymouth is home to 28 parks with an average size of 45,638 square metres (491,240 sq ft).[77] Its largest park is Central Park,[78] with other sizeable green spaces including Victoria Park, Freedom Fields Park, Alexandra Park, Devonport Park and the Hoe.[77] Central Park is the home of Plymouth Argyle Football Club and a number of other leisure facilities.

The Plymouth Plan 2019–2034 was published May 2019 and sets the direction for future development with a new spatial strategy[79] which reinforces links with the wider region in west Devon and east Cornwall in its Joint Local Plan and identifies three development areas within the city: the City centre and waterfront; a 'northern corridor' including Derriford and the vacant airfield site at Roborough; and an 'eastern corridor' including major new settlements at Sherford and Langage.[80]

Climate edit

Plymouth
Climate chart (explanation)
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
108
 
 
9
4
 
 
84
 
 
9
4
 
 
78
 
 
11
5
 
 
67
 
 
13
6
 
 
64
 
 
16
9
 
 
57
 
 
18
11
 
 
62
 
 
20
13
 
 
67
 
 
20
13
 
 
74
 
 
18
12
 
 
113
 
 
15
9
 
 
113
 
 
12
6
 
 
119
 
 
10
5
Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm
Source: Hong Kong Observatory
Imperial conversion
JFMAMJJASOND
 
 
4.3
 
 
48
39
 
 
3.3
 
 
48
38
 
 
3.1
 
 
51
41
 
 
2.6
 
 
55
43
 
 
2.5
 
 
60
48
 
 
2.2
 
 
64
52
 
 
2.4
 
 
68
56
 
 
2.6
 
 
68
56
 
 
2.9
 
 
65
53
 
 
4.4
 
 
59
49
 
 
4.4
 
 
53
44
 
 
4.7
 
 
49
40
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches

Plymouth has a moderated temperate oceanic climate (Köppen Cfb) which is wetter and milder than the rest of England. This means a wide range of exotic plants, palm trees, and yuccas can be cultivated. The annual mean high temperature is approximately 14 °C (57 °F). Due to the moderating effect of the sea and the south-westerly location, the climate is among the mildest of British cities, and one of the warmest UK cities in winter.[81] The coldest month of February is similarly moderate, having mild mean minimum temperatures between 3 and 4 °C (37 and 39 °F). Snow usually falls in small amounts but a noteworthy recent exception was the period of the European winter storms of 2009–10 which, in early January 2010, covered Plymouth in at least 1 inch (2.5 cm) of snow; more on higher ground. Another notable event was the 8 inches (20 cm) of snowfall between 17 and 19 December 2010 – though only 2 inches (5.1 cm) would lie at any one time due to melting. Over the 1961–1990 period, annual snowfall accumulation averaged less than 7 cm (3 in) per year.[82]

South West England has a favoured location when the Azores High pressure area extends north-eastwards towards the UK, particularly in summer. Coastal areas have average annual sunshine totals over 1,600 hours.[83]

Owing to its geographic location, rainfall tends to be associated with Atlantic depressions or with convection and is more frequent and heavier than in London and southeast England. The Atlantic depressions are more vigorous in autumn and winter and most of the rain which falls in those seasons in the south-west is from this source. Average annual rainfall is around 980 millimetres (39 in). November to March have the highest mean wind speeds, with June to August having the lightest winds. The predominant wind direction is from the south-west.[83]

Typically, the warmest day of the year (1971–2000) will achieve a temperature of 28.6 °C (83 °F),[84] although in July 2022 the temperature reached 33.9 °C (93.0 °F),[85] the site record. On average, 4.25 days[86] of the year will report a maximum temperature of 25.1 °C (77 °F) or above. During the winter half of the year, the coldest night will typically fall to −4.1 °C (25 °F)[87] although in January 1979 the temperature fell to −8.8 °C (16 °F).[88] Typically, 18.6 nights[89] of the year will register an air frost.

Climate data for Plymouth (Mount Batten)[a]
WMO ID: 03827; coordinates 50°21′18″N 4°07′16″W / 50.35489°N 4.12103°W / 50.35489; -4.12103 (Met Office Plymouth); elevation: 50 m (164 ft), 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1960–present
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 14.4
(57.9)
16.3
(61.3)
18.3
(64.9)
27.6
(81.7)
25.9
(78.6)
31.6
(88.9)
33.9
(93.0)
32.9
(91.2)
28.9
(84.0)
23.0
(73.4)
17.1
(62.8)
16.1
(61.0)
33.9
(93.0)
Average high °C (°F) 9.0
(48.2)
9.2
(48.6)
10.9
(51.6)
13.2
(55.8)
15.9
(60.6)
18.4
(65.1)
20.2
(68.4)
20.3
(68.5)
18.5
(65.3)
15.1
(59.2)
11.9
(53.4)
9.7
(49.5)
14.4
(57.9)
Daily mean °C (°F) 6.6
(43.9)
6.6
(43.9)
7.9
(46.2)
9.8
(49.6)
12.4
(54.3)
14.9
(58.8)
16.8
(62.2)
16.9
(62.4)
15.1
(59.2)
12.3
(54.1)
9.3
(48.7)
7.3
(45.1)
11.3
(52.4)
Average low °C (°F) 4.2
(39.6)
3.9
(39.0)
4.9
(40.8)
6.3
(43.3)
8.8
(47.8)
11.4
(52.5)
13.2
(55.8)
13.4
(56.1)
11.7
(53.1)
9.5
(49.1)
6.7
(44.1)
4.8
(40.6)
8.2
(46.8)
Record low °C (°F) −8.8
(16.2)
−7.0
(19.4)
−7.0
(19.4)
−2.4
(27.7)
−0.5
(31.1)
2.9
(37.2)
6.1
(43.0)
5.9
(42.6)
1.9
(35.4)
−1.0
(30.2)
−3.4
(25.9)
−5.7
(21.7)
−8.8
(16.2)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 109.6
(4.31)
87.7
(3.45)
76.2
(3.00)
68.5
(2.70)
60.1
(2.37)
64.4
(2.54)
63.5
(2.50)
80.3
(3.16)
72.3
(2.85)
112.1
(4.41)
117.8
(4.64)
125.2
(4.93)
1,037.7
(40.86)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 15.4 12.7 12.3 11.0 9.8 9.7 10.0 11.3 10.1 14.8 15.9 15.7 148.7
Average relative humidity (%) 86 84 82 80 79 80 81 82 83 85 85 86 82
Average dew point °C (°F) 5
(41)
4
(39)
5
(41)
6
(43)
9
(48)
11
(52)
13
(55)
14
(57)
12
(54)
10
(50)
7
(45)
5
(41)
8
(47)
Mean monthly sunshine hours 61.8 88.0 131.0 189.3 227.4 220.8 209.7 197.5 161.3 118.4 72.6 54.5 1,732.3
Average ultraviolet index 1 1 3 4 6 7 7 6 4 2 1 1 4
Source 1: Met Office[90] NOAA (Relative humidity and snow days 1961–1990)[91]
Source 2: KNMI[92] WeatherAtlas[93]

Source 3: Time and Date (dewpoints, between 1985-2015)[94][95]

Education edit

 
The Roland Levinsky Building – Faculty of Arts of the University of Plymouth

There are three universities based in Plymouth, the University of Plymouth, the University of St Mark & St John, and the Arts University Plymouth.

The University of Plymouth enrolls 23,155 total students as of 2018/2019 (57th largest in the UK out of 169).[96] It also employs 2,900 staff with an annual income of around £160 million.[97] It was founded in 1992 from Polytechnic South West (formerly Plymouth Polytechnic) following the Further and Higher Education Act 1992.[98] It has a wide range of courses including those in marine focused business, marine engineering, marine biology and Earth, ocean and environmental sciences, surf science, shipping and logistics.[99] The university formed a joint venture with the fellow Devonian University of Exeter in 2000, establishing the Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry. The college is ranked 8th out of 30 universities in the UK in 2011 for medicine.[100] Its dental school was established in 2006, which also provides free dental care in an attempt to improve access to dental care in the South West.

The University of St Mark & St John (known as "Marjon" or "Marjons") specialises in teacher training, and offers training across the country and abroad.[101]

Arts University Plymouth offers a selection of courses including media. It was originally founded as the Plymouth Drawing School in 1856, and in December 2008, Plymouth College of Art and Design was renamed to Plymouth College of Art. In May 2022, the College was awarded University status, and became Arts University Plymouth.[102]

The city is also home to two large colleges. The City College Plymouth provides courses from the most basic to Foundation degrees for approximately 26,000 students.[103]

Plymouth also has 71 state primary phase schools, 13 state secondary schools, eight special schools and three selective state grammar schools, Devonport High School for Girls, Devonport High School for Boys and Plymouth High School for Girls.[104] There is also an independent school Plymouth College.

The city was also home to the Royal Naval Engineering College; opened in 1880 in Keyham, it trained engineering students for five years before they completed the remaining two years of the course at Greenwich. The college closed in 1910, but in 1940 a new college opened at Manadon. This was renamed Dockyard Technical College in 1959 before finally closing in 1994; training was transferred to the University of Southampton.[105]

Plymouth is home to the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom (MBA; founded 1884) which conducts research in all areas of the marine sciences. The Plymouth Marine Laboratory (PML; founded 1988) was formed in part from components of the MBA. Together with the National Marine Aquarium, the Sir Alister Hardy Foundation for Ocean Sciences, Plymouth University's Marine Institute and the Diving Diseases Research Centre, these marine-related organisations form the Plymouth Marine Sciences Partnership. The Plymouth Marine Laboratory, which focuses on global issues of climate change and sustainability. It monitors the effects of ocean acidity on corals and shellfish and reports the results to the UK government. It also cultivates algae that could be used to make biofuels or in the treatment of wastewater by using technology such as photo-bioreactors. It works alongside the Boots Group to investigate the use of algae in skincare protects, taking advantage of the chemicals they contain that adapt to protect themselves from the sun.[106]

A scheme is in operation over summer 2018 to provide meals during the summer holidays for children with parents on a low income, the parents cannot afford to provide their children with healthy meals.[107]

UPSU also known as the University of Plymouth Student Union is based underground near the library. Every student at the University of Plymouth is a member of UPSU. The Union employs students across the University, from bar staff to events technicians. Every year the students at the University have an opportunity to vote which sabbatical officers represent them. In 2019 over 4000 students voted in the UPSU elections.

Demography edit

 
Population pyramid of Plymouth (unitary authority) in 2021

From the 2011 Census, the Office for National Statistics published that Plymouth's unitary authority area population was 256,384;[108] 15,664 more people than that of the last census from 2001, which indicated that Plymouth had a population of 240,720.[109] The Plymouth urban area had a population of 260,203 in 2011 (the urban sprawl which extends outside the authority's boundaries). The city's average household size was 2.3 persons.[110][111] At the time of the 2011 UK census, the ethnic composition of Plymouth's population was 96.2% White (of 92.9% was White British), with the largest minority ethnic group being Chinese at 0.5%.[108] The white Irish ethnic group saw the largest decline in its share of the population since the 2001 Census (−24%), while the Other Asian and Black African had the largest increases (360% and 351% respectively).[108][112] This excludes the two new ethnic groups added to the 2011 census of Gypsy or Irish Traveller and Arab. The population rose rapidly during the second half of the 19th century, but declined by over 1.6% from 1931 to 1951.

Plymouth's gross value added (a measure of the size of its economy) was £5,169 million in 2013 making up 25% of Devon's GVA.[113] Its GVA per person was £19,943 and compared to the national average of £23,755, was £3,812 lower.[113] Plymouth's unemployment rate was 7.0% in 2014 which was 2.0 points higher than the South West average and 0.8 points higher than the average for Great Britain (England, Wales and Scotland).[114]

A 2014 profile by the National Health Service showed Plymouth had higher than average levels of poverty and deprivation (26.2% of the population among the poorest 20.4% nationally).[115] Life expectancy, at 78.3 years for men and 82.1 for women, was the lowest of any region in the South West of England.[citation needed]

Ethnic Group Year
1991[116] 2001[117] 2011[118] 2021[119]
Number % Number % Number % Number %
White: Total 241,233 99.1% 236,767 98.4% 246,509 96.1% 248,727 94.1%
White: British 232,377 96.5% 238,263 92.9% 236,802 89.5%
White: Irish 1,359 0.6% 1,105 1,055 0.4%
White: Gypsy or Irish Traveller 153 165 0.1%
White: Roma 168 0.1%
White: Other 3,031 6,988 10,537 4.0%
Asian or Asian British: Total 971 0.4% 1,427 0.6% 3,906 1.5% 5,947 2.1%
Asian or Asian British: Indian 209 258 875 1,403 0.5%
Asian or Asian British: Pakistani 53 83 202 389 0.1%
Asian or Asian British: Bangladeshi 105 152 359 537 0.2%
Asian or Asian British: Chinese 382 685 1,251 1,430 0.5%
Asian or Asian British: Other Asian 222 249 1,219 2188 0.8%
Black or Black British: Total 621 0.3% 451 0.2% 1,678 0.7% 2,786 1.1%
Black or Black British: African 180 230 1,106 2,022 0.8%
Black or Black British: Caribbean 177 165 343 460 0.2%
Black or Black British: Other Black 264 56 229 304 0.1%
Mixed or British Mixed: Total 1,559 0.6% 3,287 1.3% 4,656 1.7%
Mixed: White and Black Caribbean 420 904 1,108 0.4%
Mixed: White and Black African 246 523 860 0.3%
Mixed: White and Asian 498 1,028 1,349 0.5%
Mixed: Other Mixed 395 832 1,339 0.5%
Other: Total 548 0.3% 516 0.6% 944 0.4% 2,579 1%
Other: Arab 339 677 0.3%
Other: Any other ethnic group 548 0.3% 516 0.6% 605 1,902 0.7%
Total 243,373 100% 240,720 100% 256,384 100% 264,695 100%

Economy edit

 
HMNB Devonport – the largest operational naval base in Western Europe.[120]

Because of its coastal location, the economy of Plymouth has traditionally been maritime,[121] in particular the defence sector with over 12,000 people employed and approximately 7,500 in the armed forces.[122] The Plymouth Gin Distillery has been producing Plymouth Gin since 1793, which was exported around the world by the Royal Navy.[123] During the 1930s, it was the most widely distributed gin and had a controlled term of origin[123] until 2015. Since the 1980s, employment in the defence sector has decreased substantially and the public sector is now prominent particularly in administration, health, education, medicine and engineering.[122]

Devonport Dockyard is the UK's only naval base that refits nuclear submarines and the Navy estimates that the Dockyard generates about 10% of Plymouth's income.[120] Plymouth has the largest cluster of marine and maritime businesses in the south west with 270 firms operating within the sector.[124] Other substantial employers include the university with almost 3,000 staff,[97] the national retail chain The Range at their Estover headquarters, as well as the Plymouth Science Park employing 500 people in 50 companies.[122]

Plymouth has a post-war shopping area in the city centre with substantial pedestrianisation.[47] At the west end of the zone inside a grade II listed building is the Pannier Market that was completed in 1959 – pannier meaning "basket" from French, so it translates as "basket market".[125] In terms of retail floorspace, Plymouth is ranked in the top five in the South West,[126] and 29th nationally.[127] Plymouth was one of the first ten British cities to trial the new Business improvement district initiative.[128] The Tinside Pool is situated at the foot of the Hoe and became a grade II listed building in 1998 before being restored to its 1930s look for £3.4 million.[129]

Plymouth 2020 edit

Since 2003, Plymouth Council has been undertaking a project of urban redevelopment called the "Vision for Plymouth" launched by the architect David Mackay and backed by both Plymouth City Council and the Plymouth Chamber of Commerce (PCC).[76] With the aim of growing the population to 300,000 by building 33,000 new dwellings, its projects range from shopping centres, new public realm, a cruise terminal, rebalancing the underutilised city centre retail district and opening waterfront development linked by a new urban boulevard.[76]

 
Interior of the Drake Circus Shopping Centre in 2006

In 2004 the old Drake Circus shopping centre and Charles Cross car park were demolished and replaced by the latest Drake Circus Shopping Centre, which opened in October 2006.[130] It received negative feedback before opening when David Mackay said it was already "ten years out of date".[130] It was awarded the first ever Carbuncle Cup, awarded for Britain's ugliest building, in 2006.[131] In contrast, the Theatre Royal's production and education centre, TR2, which was built on wasteland at Cattedown, was a runner-up for the RIBA Stirling Prize for Architecture in 2003.[132]

Proposals included the demolition of the Plymouth Pavilions entertainment arena to create a canal "boulevard" linking Millbay to the city centre delivered in 2020. Millbay is being regenerated with mixed residential, retail and office space alongside the ferry port.[133]

Plymouth's Civic Centre was vacated by Plymouth City Council and their operations dispersed across the city centre - the vacant and dilapidated modernist building was proposed for demolition by the Council but was ultimately saved by listing in 2007[134] for its national architectural merit and was gifted to the developers Urban Splash who intend to refurbish the structure for a mixed use regeneration including variable let accommodation.[135] The removal and relocation of Bretonside bus station - a site originally earmarked for the Council [136] was ultimately released for a mixed used commercial leisure redevelopment including cinema and restaurants named 'Barcode' owned by British Land which also owns the adjacent Drake's Circus .[137]

Jacka Bakery in the Barbican district is reputedly the oldest bakery in the UK[138], and has operated since the 1600s.

Transport edit

Railway edit

 
Inter-city trains at Plymouth station, operated by Great Western Railway

Plymouth railway station is served by two train operating companies:[139]

Smaller stations in the suburban area west of the city centre are served by trains on the Tamar Valley Line to Gunnislake and local services on the Cornish Main Line, which crosses the Tamar on the Royal Albert Bridge. This was designed by Brunel and opened in 1859. The parallel road bridge was completed in 1961.

History edit

The station opened on its present site in 1877 and was previously named Plymouth North Road, when there were other main line stations in the city at Millbay and Friary; these have since closed.

Future edit

There have been proposals to reopen the Exeter to Plymouth railway of the LSWR which would connect Cornwall and Plymouth to Exeter using the former Southern Railway main line from Plymouth to Exeter via Okehampton, because the main line through South Devon is vulnerable to damage from rough seas at Dawlish, where some of the cliffs are also fragile. There are related proposals to reopen part of the old main line from Bere Alston on the Plymouth-Gunnislake line as far as Tavistock to serve a new housing development but, although the idea has been discussed since 2008, progress has been slow.

Roads edit

The A38 dual-carriageway runs from east to west across the north of the city; within the city, it is known as 'The Parkway' and represents the boundary between the older parts of the city and more recently developed suburban areas. Heading east, it connects Plymouth to the M5 motorway, about 40 miles (65 km) away near Exeter; heading west, it connects Devon with Cornwall via the Tamar Bridge.

Buses edit

Bus services are provided mainly by Plymouth Citybus and Stagecoach South West, but a few routes are served by smaller local operators. Long distance inter-city bus services terminate at Plymouth coach station.[142]

There are three Park and Ride services at Milehouse, Coypool (Plympton) and George Junction (Plymouth City Airport), which are operated by Stagecoach South West except Milehouse park and ride. This is served by Plymouth Citybus[143]

Ferries edit

 
MV Pont-Aven: Brittany Ferries service to Roscoff, France and Santander, Spain in Millbay Docks

A regular international ferry service provided by Brittany Ferries operates from Millbay taking cars and foot passengers directly to France (Roscoff) and Spain (Santander) on the three ferries, MV Armorique, MV Bretagne and MV Pont-Aven.[144] The Cremyll Ferry is a passenger ferry between Stonehouse and the Cornish hamlet of Cremyll, which is believed to have operated continuously since 1204.[145] There is also a pedestrian ferry from the Mayflower Steps to Mount Batten,[146] and an alternative to using the Tamar Bridge via the Torpoint Ferry (vehicle and pedestrian) across the River Tamar.[147]

Air edit

The city's airport was Plymouth City Airport about 4 miles (6 km) north of the city centre.[148] The airport was home to the local airline Air Southwest,[149] which operated flights across the United Kingdom and Ireland.[150] In June 2003, a report by the South West RDA was published looking at the future of aviation in the south-west and the possible closure of airports.[151] It concluded that the best option for the south-west was to close Plymouth City Airport and expand Exeter International Airport and Newquay Cornwall Airport, although it did conclude that this was not the best option for Plymouth.[152] In April 2011, it was announced that the airport would close,[153] which it did on 23 December. A local company, FlyPlymouth, put forward plans in 2015 to reopen the airport by 2018, providing daily services to various destinations including London, but as of now, these projects have stalled.[154]

Cycle routes edit

Plymouth is at the southern end of the 99-mile (159 km) long Devon Coast to Coast Cycle Route (National Cycle Route 27). The route runs mostly traffic-free on off-road sections between Ilfracombe and Plymouth. The route uses former railway lines, though there are some stretches on public roads.[155]

Religion edit

 
The Roman Catholic Cathedral Church of Saint Mary and Saint Boniface (Stonehouse, Plymouth)

Plymouth has about 150 churches city-wide. The Plymouth Cathedral is Roman Catholic, and is located in Stonehouse. It was opened in 1858, and consecrated in 1880.[156][157] The city's oldest church is Plymouth Minster, also known as St Andrew's Church, (Anglican) located at the top of Royal Parade—it is the largest parish church in Devon and has been a site of gathering since AD 800.[156] The city also includes five Baptist churches, over twenty Methodist chapels, and thirteen Roman Catholic churches.[158] In 1831 the first Brethren assembly in England, a movement of conservative non-denominational Evangelical Christians, was established in the city, so that Brethren are often called Plymouth Brethren, although the movement did not begin locally.[159]

Plymouth has the first known reference to Jews in the South West from Sir Francis Drake's voyages in 1577 to 1580, as his log mentioned "Moses the Jew" – a man from Plymouth.[156] The Plymouth Synagogue is a Listed Grade II* building, built in 1762 and is the oldest Ashkenazi Synagogue in the English speaking world.[160] There are also places of worship for Islam, Baháʼí, Buddhism, Unitarianism, Chinese beliefs and Humanism.[161]

58.1% of the population described themselves in the 2011 census return as being at least nominally Christian and 0.8% as Muslim with all other religions represented by less than 0.5% each. The portion of people without a religion is 32.9%; above the national average of 24.7%. 7.1% did not state their religious belief.[162] Since the 2001 Census, the number of Christians and Jews has decreased (−16% and −7% respectively), while all other religions have increased and non-religious people have almost doubled in number.[163]

Culture edit

 
The New Palace Theatre in 2008

Built in 1815, Union Street was at the heart of Plymouth's historical culture.[164] It became known as the servicemen's playground, as it was where sailors from the Royal Navy would seek entertainment of all kinds.[164] During the 1930s, there were 30 pubs and it attracted such performers as Charlie Chaplin to the New Palace Theatre.[164] It was described in 2008 as the late-night hub of Plymouth's entertainment strip.[165]

Outdoor events and festivals are held including the annual British Firework Championships in August, which attracts tens of thousands of people across the waterfront.[166] In August 2006 the world record for the most simultaneous fireworks was surpassed, by Roy Lowry of the University of Plymouth, over Plymouth Sound.[167] From 2014 MTV Crashes Plymouth has taken place every July on Plymouth Hoe, hosting big-name acts such as The 1975, Little Mix, Tinie Tempah and Busted.[168] Between 1992 and 2012 the Music of the Night celebration was performed in the Royal Citadel by the 29 Commando Regiment and local performers to raise money for local and military charities.[169] A number of other smaller cultural events taken place annually, including Plymouth Art Weekender,[170] Plymouth Fringe Festival[171] and Illuminate Festival.[172]

The city's main theatre is Theatre Royal Plymouth, presenting large-scale West End shows and smaller works as well as an extensive education and outreach programme. The main building is located in the city centre and contains three performance spaces – The Lyric (1,315 capacity),[173] Drum Theatre (200 capacity),[174] and The Lab (60 capacity) – and they also run their own specialised production and creative learning centre called TR2, based in Cattedown.[175] Plymouth Pavilions has multiple uses for the city staging music concerts, basketball matches and stand-up comedy.[176] There are also three cinemas: Reel Cinema at Derrys Cross, Plymouth Arts Centre at Looe Street and a Vue cinema at the Barbican Leisure Park.[177] Barbican Theatre, Plymouth delivers a theatre and dance programme of performances and workshops focused on young people and emerging artists contains a main auditorium (110 – 140 capacity) and rehearsal studio;[178] they also host the B-Bar (80 capacity), which offers a programme of music, comedy and spoken word performance.[179] The Plymouth Athenaeum, which includes a local interest library, is a society dedicated to the promotion of learning in the fields of science, technology, literature and art. In 2017 its auditorium (340 capacity) returned to use as a theatre, having been out of service since 2009.[180] The Plymouth City Museum and Art Gallery is operated by Plymouth City Council allowing free admission – it has six galleries.[181]

Plymouth is the regional television centre of BBC South West.[182] A team of journalists are headquartered at Plymouth for the ITV West Country regional station, after a merger with ITV West forced ITV Westcountry to close on 16 February 2009.[183] The main local newspapers serving Plymouth are The Herald and Western Morning News with Greatest Hits Radio South West, BBC Radio Devon, Heart West, and Pirate FM being the local radio stations with the most listeners.[184]

Sport edit

 
Home Park
 
Plymouth Pavilions, home to the Plymouth City Patriots.

Plymouth is home to Plymouth Argyle F.C., who, as of the 2023-24 season, play in the second tier of English football, the EFL Championship.[185] The team's home ground is called Home Park and is located in Central Park.[186] It links itself with the group of English non-conformists that left Plymouth for the New World in 1620: its nickname is "The Pilgrims".[187] The city also has three Non-League football clubs; Plymouth Parkway who play at Bolitho Park, Elburton Villa who play at Haye Road and Plymstock United who play at Dean Cross. Plymouth Parkway were promoted to the Western League from the South West Peninsula League in 2018, and after two Covid-19 interrupted years to the Southern Football League in 2021, whilst Elburton Villa and Plymstock United continue to compete in the South West Peninsula League.

Other sports clubs competing in national competition include Plymouth Albion, Plymouth City Patriots, Plymouth Raiders and Plymouth Gladiators.

Plymouth Albion Rugby Football Club is a rugby union club that was founded in 1875 and are currently competing in the third tier of Professional English Rugby the National League 1. They play at the Brickfields.[188]

In basketball, the city is represented by two teams; Plymouth City Patriots, of the top-tier British Basketball League, and Plymouth Raiders of the National Basketball League.

Plymouth Gladiators are a speedway team, currently competing in the British National League, with home meetings taking place at the Plymouth Coliseum. Plymouth cricket club was formed in 1843, the current 1st XI play in the Devon Premier League. Plymouth is also home to Plymouth Marjons Hockey Club, with their 1st XI playing in the National League last season. Plymouth Mariners Baseball club play in the South West Baseball League, they play their home games at Wilson Field in Central Park. Plymouth was home to an American football club, the Plymouth Admirals until 2010.

Plymouth Leander is the most successful swimming club in Great Britain along with Plymouth Diving Club.

Plymouth is an important centre for watersports, especially scuba diving and sailing. The Port of Plymouth Regatta is one of the oldest regattas in the world, and has been held regularly since 1823. In September 2011, Plymouth hosted the America's Cup World Series for nine days.[189]

Public services edit

 
The Devonport Leat on Dartmoor looking up stream

Since 1973 Plymouth has been supplied water by South West Water. Prior to the 1973 take over it was supplied by Plymouth County Borough Corporation.[190] Before the 19th century two leats were built to provide drinking water for the town. They carried water from Dartmoor to Plymouth. A watercourse, known as Plymouth or Drake's Leat, was opened on 24 April 1591 to tap the River Meavy.[191] The Devonport Leat was constructed to carry fresh drinking water to the expanding town of Devonport and its ever-growing dockyard. It was fed by three Dartmoor rivers: The West Dart, Cowsic and Blackabrook. It seems to have been carrying water since 1797, but it was officially completed in 1801. It was originally designed to carry water to Devonport town but has since been shortened and now carries water to Burrator Reservoir, which feeds most of the water supply of Plymouth.[192] Burrator Reservoir is located about 5 miles (8 km) north of the city and was constructed in 1898 and expanded in 1928.[193]

 
The Plymouth Combined Crown and County Court Centre

Plymouth City Council is responsible for waste management throughout the city and South West Water is responsible for sewerage.[194][195] Plymouth's electricity is supplied from the National Grid and distributed to Plymouth via Western Power Distribution.[196] On the outskirts of Plympton a combined cycle gas-powered station, the Langage Power Station, which started to produce electricity for Plymouth at the end of 2009.[197]

Her Majesty's Courts Service provide a magistrates' court and a Combined Crown and County Court Centre in the city.[198][199] The Plymouth Borough Police, formed in 1836, eventually became part of Devon and Cornwall Constabulary.[200] There are police stations at Charles Cross and Crownhill (the Divisional HQ) and smaller stations at Plympton and Plymstock.[201] The city has one of the Devon and Cornwall Area Crown Prosecution Service Divisional offices.[202] Plymouth has five fire stations located in Camel's Head, Crownhill, Greenbank, Plympton and Plymstock which is part of Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue Service.[203] The Royal National Lifeboat Institution have an Atlantic 85 class lifeboat and Severn class lifeboat stationed at Millbay Docks.[204]

Plymouth is served by Plymouth Hospitals NHS Trust and the city's NHS hospital is Derriford Hospital 4 miles (6 km) north of the city centre. The Royal Eye Infirmary is located at Derriford Hospital.[205] South Western Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust operates in Plymouth and the rest of the south west; its headquarters are in Exeter.[206]

The mid-19th-century burial ground at Ford Park Cemetery was reopened in 2007 by a successful trust and the City council operate two large early 20th century cemeteries at Weston Mill and Efford both with crematoria and chapels. There is also a privately owned cemetery on the outskirts of the city, Drake Memorial Park which does not allow headstones to mark graves, but a brass plaque set into the ground.[207]

Landmarks and tourist attractions edit

 
Grade I listed Town Hall, Column and Library in Devonport
 
Elliot Terrace, Plymouth Hoe

After the English Civil War the Royal Citadel was erected in 1666 towards the eastern section of Plymouth Hoe, to defend the port from naval attacks, suppress Plymothian Parliamentary leanings and to train the armed forces. Currently, guided tours are available in the summer months.[29] Further west is Smeaton's Tower, which is a standard lighthouse that was constructed in 1759. 14 miles (23 km) Furthermore, Smeaton's Tower was dismantled in 1877 and the top two-thirds were reassembled on Plymouth Hoe.[208] It is open to the public and has views over the Plymouth Sound and the city from the lantern room.[209] Plymouth has 20 war memorials of which nine are on The Hoe including: Plymouth Naval Memorial, to remember those killed in World Wars I and II, and the Armada Memorial, to commemorate the defeat of the Spanish Armada.[210]

The early port settlement of Plymouth, called "Sutton", approximates to the area now referred to as the Barbican and has 100 listed buildings and the largest concentration of cobbled streets in Britain.[211] The Pilgrim Fathers left for the New World in 1620 near the commemorative Mayflower Steps in Sutton Pool.[212] Also on Sutton Pool is the National Marine Aquarium which displays 400 marine species and includes Britain's deepest aquarium tank.[213]

One mile (two kilometres) upstream on the opposite side of the River Plym is the Saltram estate, which has a Jacobean and Georgian mansion.[214]

On the northern outskirts of the city, Crownhill Fort is a well-restored example of a "Palmerston's Folly". It is owned by the Landmark Trust and is open to the public.[215]

To the west of the city is Devonport, one of Plymouth's historic quarters. As part of Devonport's millennium regeneration project, the Devonport Heritage Trail has been introduced, complete with over 70 waymarkers outlining the route.[216]

Plymouth is often used as a base by visitors to Dartmoor, the Tamar Valley and the beaches of south-east Cornwall.[217] Kingsand, Cawsand and Whitsand Bay are popular.[218]

The Roland Levinsky Building, the landmark building of the University of Plymouth, is located in the city's central quarter. Designed by leading architect Henning Larsen, the building was opened in 2008 and houses the University's Arts faculty.[219]

Beckley Point, at 78m / 20 floors, is Plymouth's tallest building[220][221] and was completed on 8 February 2018. It was designed by Boyes Rees Architects and built by contractors Kier.

Notable people edit

 
Sir Francis Drake

People from Plymouth are known as Plymothians or less formally as Janners.[222] Its meaning is described as a person from Devon, deriving from Cousin Jan (the Devon form of John), but more particularly in naval circles anyone from the Plymouth area.[223]

The Elizabethan navigator, Sir Francis Drake was born in the nearby town of Tavistock and was the mayor of Plymouth.[224] He was the first Englishman to circumnavigate the world and was known by the Spanish as El Draco meaning "The Dragon" after he raided many of their ships.[225] He died of dysentery in 1596 off the coast of Portobelo,[226] Panama. In 2002 a mission to recover his body and bring it to Plymouth was allowed by the Ministry of Defence.[227] His cousin and contemporary John Hawkins was a Plymouth man.

Painter Sir Joshua Reynolds, founder and first president of the Royal Academy was born and educated in nearby Plympton, now part of Plymouth. William Cookworthy born in Kingsbridge set up his successful porcelain business in the city and was a close friend of John Smeaton designer of the Eddystone Lighthouse. Benjamin Robert Haydon, an English painter who specialised in grand historical pictures, was born here in 1786.[228] The naturalist William Elford Leach FRS, who did much to pave the way in Britain for Charles Darwin, was born at Hoe Gate in 1791.

Antarctic explorers Robert Falcon Scott who was born in Plymouth and Frank Bickerton both lived in the city.[229][230] Artists include Beryl Cook whose paintings depict the culture of Plymouth[231] and Robert Lenkiewicz, whose paintings investigated themes of vagrancy, sexual behaviour and suicide, lived in the city from the 1960s until his death in 2002.[232] Illustrator and creator of children's series Mr Benn and King Rollo, David McKee, was born and brought up in South Devon and trained at Plymouth College of Art. Jazz musician John Surman, born in nearby Tavistock, has close connections to the area, evidenced by his 2012 album Saltash Bells. The avant-garde prepared guitarist Keith Rowe was born in the city before establishing the jazz free improvisation band AMM in London in 1965 and MIMEO in 1997. The musician and film director Cosmo Jarvis has lived in several towns in South Devon and has filmed videos in and around Plymouth.[233] In addition, actors Sir Donald Sinden and Judi Trott were born in Plymouth. George Passmore of Turner Prize winning duo Gilbert and George was also born in the city, as was Labour politician Michael Foot whose family reside at nearby Trematon Castle.[234]

Notable athletes include swimmer Sharron Davies,[235] diver Tom Daley,[236] dancer Wayne Sleep,[237] and footballer Trevor Francis.[238] Other past residents include composer journalist and newspaper editor William Henry Wills, Ron Goodwin,[239] and journalist Angela Rippon and comedian Dawn French.[240] Canadian politician and legal scholar Chris Axworthy hails from Plymouth. America based actor Donald Moffat, whose roles include American Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson in the film The Right Stuff, and fictional President Bennett in Clear and Present Danger, was born in Plymouth.[241] Canadian actor Mark Holden was also born in Plymouth. Kevin Owen is an international TV news anchor who was born in Freedom Fields Hospital, while his father served as a Royal Navy officer. Cambridge spy Guy Burgess was born at 2 Albemarle Villas, Stoke whilst his father was a serving Royal Navy officer.[242]

Twin city edit

Freedom of the City edit

The following People, Military Units and Organisations and Groups have received the Freedom of the City of Plymouth.

Individuals edit

[252]

Military Units edit

Organisations and Groups edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Weather station is located 1.6 miles (2.6 km) from the Plymouth city centre.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Brief history of Plymouth". Plymouth City Council. from the original on 26 July 2013. Retrieved 20 July 2008.
  2. ^ a b "Mid-Year Population Estimates, UK, June 2021". Office for National Statistics. 21 December 2022. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
  3. ^ Roberts, Toby; Williams, Ian; Preston, John (2021). "The Southampton system: A new universal standard approach for port-city classification". Maritime Policy & Management. 48 (4): 530–542. doi:10.1080/03088839.2020.1802785. S2CID 225502755.
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plymouth, this, article, about, city, england, town, massachusetts, massachusetts, other, uses, disambiguation, port, city, unitary, authority, devon, south, west, england, located, south, coast, devon, approximately, miles, southwest, exeter, miles, southwest. This article is about the city in England For the town in Massachusetts see Plymouth Massachusetts For other uses see Plymouth disambiguation Plymouth ˈ p l ɪ m e 8 is a port city and unitary authority in Devon South West England It is located on the south coast of Devon approximately 36 miles 58 km southwest of Exeter and 193 miles 311 km southwest of London It is bordered by Cornwall to the west and southwest PlymouthCity and unitary authorityClockwise from top West Hoe Smeaton s Tower University of Plymouth Royal William Yard National Marine Aquarium Southside St BarbicanFlagNickname Britain s Ocean CityMotto s Turris fortissima est nomen Jehova The name of Jehovah is the strongest tower 1 Shown within DevonPlymouthLocation within the United KingdomShow map of the United KingdomPlymouthLocation within EnglandShow map of EnglandPlymouthLocation in EuropeShow map of EuropeCoordinates 50 22 17 N 4 08 32 W 50 37139 N 4 14222 W 50 37139 4 14222Sovereign stateUnited KingdomCountryEnglandRegionSouth West EnglandCeremonial countyDevonCity status1928Unitary Authority1998Government TypeUnitary authority BodyPlymouth City Council LeadershipLeader and cabinet Council controlLabour as of 04 July 2023 Members of ParliamentJohnny Mercer C Luke Pollard L Gary Streeter C Area 2 Total30 83 sq mi 79 85 km2 Rank215th of 296 Highest elevation509 ft 155 m Lowest elevation0 ft 0 m Population 2021 Total 264 726 City Unitary Authority 294 139 Urban Rank65th of 296 DemonymsPlymothian formal Janner informal Time zoneUTC0 GMT Summer DST UTC 1 BST Postcode districtPL1 9Area code01752PoliceDevon and CornwallAmbulanceSouth WesternFireDevon and SomersetWebsitewww wbr plymouth wbr gov wbr ukPlymouth s early history extends to the Bronze Age when a settlement emerged at Mount Batten which was a trading post for the Roman Empire By the ninth century Mount Batten had been surpassed by the village of Sutton on the opposite side of the mouth of the River Plym Sutton was granted a charter making it a market town in 1254 As Sutton grew it also became known as Plymouth with the change of name being formalised in 1439 when it was made a borough In 1588 an English fleet based in Plymouth intercepted and defeated the Spanish Armada In 1620 the Pilgrim Fathers departed Plymouth for the New World and established Plymouth Colony the second English settlement in what is now the United States of America During the English Civil War the town was held by the Parliamentarians and was besieged between 1642 and 1646 Throughout the Industrial Revolution Plymouth grew as a commercial shipping port handling imports and passengers from the Americas and exporting local minerals tin copper lime china clay and arsenic From 1690 onwards a new dock for the Royal Navy was built on the banks of the River Tamar 2 miles 3 2 km west of Plymouth around which grew a town called Plymouth Dock renamed Devonport in 1824 In 1914 Devonport and the neighbouring town of East Stonehouse were absorbed into the borough of Plymouth Plymouth was awarded city status in 1928 During World War II due to the city s naval importance the German military targeted and partially destroyed the city by bombing an act known as the Plymouth Blitz After the war the city centre was completely rebuilt Subsequent expansion led to the incorporation of Plympton Plymstock and other outlying suburbs in 1967 The city is home to 264 727 2021 people making it the 30th most populous built up area in the United Kingdom and the second largest city in the South West after Bristol It is governed locally by Plymouth City Council and is represented nationally by two MPs Plymouth s economy remains strongly influenced by shipbuilding and seafaring but has tended toward a service economy since the 1990s It has ferry links to Brittany Roscoff and St Malo and to Spain Santander It has the largest operational naval base in Western Europe HMNB Devonport and is home to the University of Plymouth Plymouth is categorized as a Small Port City using the Southampton System for port city classification 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Early defence and Renaissance 1 3 Plymouth Dock naval power and Foulston 1 4 Plan for Plymouth 1943 2 Governance 2 1 Administrative history 2 2 Constituencies 2 3 City Council 3 Geography 3 1 Urban form 3 2 Climate 4 Education 5 Demography 6 Economy 6 1 Plymouth 2020 7 Transport 7 1 Railway 7 1 1 History 7 1 2 Future 7 2 Roads 7 3 Buses 7 4 Ferries 7 5 Air 7 6 Cycle routes 8 Religion 9 Culture 10 Sport 11 Public services 12 Landmarks and tourist attractions 13 Notable people 14 Twin city 15 Freedom of the City 15 1 Individuals 15 2 Military Units 15 3 Organisations and Groups 16 See also 17 Notes 18 References 19 Further reading 20 External linksHistory editMain article History of Plymouth See also Timeline of Plymouth Early history edit Upper Palaeolithic deposits including bones of Homo sapiens have been found in local caves 4 and artefacts dating from the Bronze Age to the Middle Iron Age have been found at Mount Batten 5 showing that it was one of few principal trading ports of pre Roman Britannia dominating continental trade with Armorica 6 An unidentified settlement named TAMARI OSTIA mouth estuaries of the Tamar is listed in Ptolemy s Geographia and is presumed to be located in the area of the modern city 7 An ancient promontory fort was located at Rame Head at the mouth of Plymouth Sound 8 with ancient hillforts located at Lyneham Warren to the east Boringdon Camp 9 and Maristow Camp to the north 10 The settlement of Plympton further up the River Plym than the current Plymouth was also an early trading port See Plympton for the derivation of the name Plym As the river silted up in the early 11th century mariners and merchants were forced to settle downriver at the current day Barbican near the river mouth 11 At the time this village was called Sutton meaning south town in Old English 11 The name Plym Mouth meaning mouth of the River Plym was first mentioned in a Pipe Roll of 1211 12 Plympton Priory owned land at Sutton and secured a charter from Henry III in 1254 granting the priory the right to hold a weekly market and annual fair at Sutton making it a market town 13 Early defence and Renaissance edit nbsp Prysten House Finewell Street 1498 is the oldest surviving house in Plymouth and built from local Plymouth Limestone and Dartmoor graniteDuring the Hundred Years War a French attack in 1340 burned a manor house and took some prisoners but failed to get into the town 14 In 1403 the town was burned by Breton raiders 15 On 12 November 1439 the market town of Sutton was incorporated as a borough and formally renamed Plymouth with a subsequent charter the following year formalising its boundaries It was the first time a borough charter had been issued by parliament rather than directly from the monarch 16 17 In the late fifteenth century Plymouth Castle a castle quadrate was constructed close to the area now known as The Barbican it included four round towers one at each corner as featured on the city coat of arms 18 nbsp Charter map of Sutton harbour and Plymouth in 1540The castle served to protect Sutton Pool which is where the fleet was based in Plymouth prior to the establishment of Plymouth Dockyard In 1512 an Act of Parliament was passed to further fortify Plymouth The work included defensive walls at the entrance to Sutton Pool across which a chain was extended in times of danger 19 Defences on St Nicholas Island also date from this time and a string of six artillery blockhouses were built including one on Fishers Nose at the south eastern corner of the Hoe 20 This location was further strengthened by the building of a fort later known as Drake s Fort in 1596 it was the site of the Citadel established in the 1660s see below 21 nbsp Siege of Plymouth 1643During the 16th century locally produced wool was the major export commodity 22 Plymouth was the home port for successful maritime traders among them Sir John Hawkins who led England s first foray into the Atlantic slave trade 23 as well as Sir Francis Drake Mayor of Plymouth in 1581 2 Crews for the first English failed settlement attempt at Roanoke Colony in North America departed in 1587 under Sir Walter Raleigh s and Drake s leadership returning bearing maize tobacco and potatoes In 1588 according to legend Drake insisted on completing his game of bowls on the Hoe before engaging the Spanish Armada 24 In 1620 the Pilgrims set sail for the New World from Plymouth establishing Plymouth Colony the second English colony in what is now the United States of America 25 In 1625 the town Mayor estimated that African slavers captured that summer about 1 000 villagers from the area to be sold in Africa 26 nbsp the Invincible Spanish Armada 1588During the English Civil War Plymouth sided with the Parliamentarians and was besieged for almost four years by the Royalists 27 The last major attack by the Royalists was by Sir Richard Grenville leading thousands of soldiers towards Plymouth but they were defeated by the Plymothians at Freedom Fields Park 27 28 The civil war ended as a Parliamentary win but monarchy was restored by King Charles II in 1660 who imprisoned many of the Parliamentary heroes on Drake s Island 27 Construction of the Royal Citadel began in 1665 after the Restoration it was armed with cannon facing both out to sea and into the town rumoured to be a reminder to residents not to oppose the Crown 29 Mount Batten tower also dates from around this time 30 Plymouth Dock naval power and Foulston edit nbsp John Foulston s Town Hall Column and Library in Devonport nbsp Black eyed Sue and Sweet Poll of Plymouth mourning their lovers who are soon to be transported to Botany Bay 1792 nbsp Unloading mail by hand from the Sir Francis Drake at Millbay Docks March 1926Throughout the 17th century Plymouth had gradually lost its pre eminence as a trading port By the mid 17th century commodities manufactured elsewhere in England cost too much to transport to Plymouth and the city had no means of processing sugar or tobacco imports major products from the colonies Local sailors turning to piracy such as Henry Every became infamous celebrated in the London play The Successful Pyrate It played a part in the Atlantic slave trade during the early 18th century although it was relatively small 22 In the nearby parish of Stoke Damerel the first dockyard HMNB Devonport opened in 1690 on the eastern bank of the River Tamar Further docks were built here in 1727 1762 and 1793 1 The settlement that developed here was called Dock or Plymouth Dock at the time 31 and a new town separate from Plymouth grew up In 1712 there were 318 men employed and by 1733 the population had grown to 3 000 people 11 Before the latter half of the 18th century grain timber and then coal were Plymouth s main imports 32 During this time the real source of wealth was from the neighbouring town of Plymouth Dock renamed in 1824 to Devonport and the major employer in the entire region was the dockyard 11 The Three Towns conurbation of Plymouth Stonehouse and Devonport enjoyed some prosperity during the late 18th and early 19th century and were enriched by a series of neo classical urban developments designed by London architect John Foulston 33 Foulston was important for both Devonport and Plymouth and was responsible for several grand public buildings many now destroyed 34 including the Athenaeum the Theatre Royal and Royal Hotel and much of Union Street 33 Local chemist William Cookworthy established his short lived Plymouth Porcelain venture in 1768 to exploit the deposits of china clay that he had discovered in Cornwall He was acquainted with engineer John Smeaton the builder of the third Eddystone Lighthouse 35 nbsp Plymouth the Hoe postcard c1920 by A R Quinton nbsp Plymouth the Promenade Pier postcard c1925 by A R QuintonThe 1 mile long 2 km Breakwater in Plymouth Sound was designed by John Rennie to protect the fleet moving in and out of Devonport work started in 1812 Numerous technical difficulties and repeated storm damage meant that it was not completed until 1841 twenty years after Rennie s death 36 In the 1860s a ring of Palmerston forts was constructed around the outskirts of Devonport to protect the dockyard from attack from any direction 37 nbsp Plymouth 1860s 1880s by Francis FrithSome of the most significant imports to Plymouth from the Americas and Europe during the latter half of the 19th century included maize wheat barley sugar cane guano sodium nitrate and phosphate 38 Aside from the dockyard in the town of Devonport industries in Plymouth such as the gasworks the railways and tramways and a number of small chemical works had begun to develop in the 19th century continuing into the 20th century 39 Plan for Plymouth 1943 edit During the First World War Plymouth was the port of entry for many troops from around the Empire It was developed as a facility for the manufacture of munitions 40 Although major units of the Royal Navy moved to the safety of Scapa Flow Devonport was an important base for escort vessels and repairs Flying boats operated from Mount Batten 40 nbsp Royal William Victualling Yard Stonehouse by Sir John Rennie 1825 33 nbsp Plymouth Drake s Island 1860s 1880s by Francis FrithDuring the Second World War Devonport was the headquarters of Western Approaches Command until 1941 and Sunderland flying boats were operated by the Royal Australian Air Force It was an important embarkation point for US troops for D Day 41 The city was heavily bombed by the Luftwaffe in a series of 59 raids known as the Plymouth Blitz 39 Although the dockyards were the principal targets much of the city centre and over 3 700 houses were completely destroyed and more than 1 000 civilians lost their lives This was largely due to Plymouth s status as a major port 42 Charles Church was hit by incendiary bombs and partially destroyed in 1941 during the Blitz but has not been demolished It has been designated as an official permanent monument to the bombing of Plymouth during World War II 43 The redevelopment of the city was planned by Sir Patrick Abercrombie in his 1943 Plan for Plymouth whilst simultaneously working on the reconstruction plan for London 44 This initially included plans to expand the city into south east Cornwall but these were abandoned after opposition from Cornwall County Council 45 Between 1951 and 1957 over 1000 homes were completed every year mostly using innovative prefabricated systems of just three main types 46 The Plan for Plymouth was on the one hand a template for the rapid reassembly of a destroyed city centre but Abercrombie also took the opportunity to lay out a whole hierarchy of settlements across the city of communities neighbourhoods and districts Central to this was a revision of transport infrastructure that prioritised the position of the railway as a gateway to the city centre and provided in the long term for a dual carriageway road by pass that only finally came into being in the 1980s forty years after being planned The plan is the subject of Jill Craigie s documentary The Way We Live 1946 By 1964 over 20 000 new homes had been built transforming the dense overcrowded and unsanitary slums of the pre war city into a low density dispersed suburbia 46 47 Most of the city centre shops had been destroyed and those that remained were cleared to enable a zoned reconstruction according to his plan 46 47 In 1962 the modernist high rise of the Civic Centre was constructed an architecturally significant example of mid twentieth century civic slab and tower set piece The Plymouth City Council allowed it to fall into disrepair but it was grade II listed in 2007 by English Heritage to prevent its demolition 46 48 Post war Devonport Dockyard was kept busy refitting aircraft carriers such as the Ark Royal and later nuclear submarines New light industrial factories were constructed in the newly zoned industrial sector attracting rapid growth of the urban population The army had substantially left the city by 1971 after barracks were pulled down in the 1960s 47 but the city remains home to 29 Commando Regiment Royal Artillery 49 and also 42 Commando of the Royal Marines 47 Governance editAs a unitary authority there is only one tier of local government covering Plymouth Plymouth City Council meets at the Council House on Armada Way in the city centre There are no civil parishes in the city which is an unparished area 50 The city forms part of the ceremonial county of Devon for the purposes of lieutenancy but has been administratively independent from Devon County Council since it became a unitary authority in 1998 51 52 Administrative history edit The first record of the existence of a settlement at Plymouth was in the Domesday Book in 1086 as Sudtone Sutton Saxon for south farm located at the present day Barbican 1 From Saxon times it was in the hundred of Roborough 53 Sutton became a market town in 1254 and a borough in 1439 when it was formally renamed Plymouth 1 Plymouth was reformed to become a municipal borough in 1836 governed by a corporate body officially called the mayor aldermen and burgesses of the borough of Plymouth but generally known as the corporation or town council 54 When elected county councils were established in 1889 both Plymouth and neighbouring Devonport were considered large enough to provide their own county level services and so they were made county boroughs independent from Devon County Council 55 In 1914 the county boroughs of Plymouth and Devonport and the adjoining urban district of East Stonehouse were merged to form a single county borough of Plymouth 11 Collectively they were referred to as The Three Towns 56 Plymouth was granted city status on 18 October 1928 57 Between 1439 and 1935 Plymouth had a mayor 58 In 1935 the city was given the right to appoint a Lord Mayor The city s boundaries further expanded in 1967 to include the town of Plympton and the parish of Plymstock 11 The 1971 Local Government White Paper proposed abolishing county boroughs which would have left Plymouth a town of 250 000 people being administered from a council based at the smaller Exeter on the other side of the county This led to Plymouth lobbying for the creation of a Tamarside county to include Plymouth Torpoint Saltash and the rural hinterland 59 The campaign was not successful and Plymouth ceased to be a county borough on 1 April 1974 with responsibility for education social services highways and libraries transferred to Devon County Council All powers returned when the city became a unitary authority on 1 April 1998 under recommendations of the Banham Commission 60 Constituencies edit In the Parliament of the United Kingdom Plymouth is represented by the three constituencies of Plymouth Moor View Plymouth Sutton and Devonport and South West Devon Prior to Brexit in 2020 it was represented within the European Parliament as South West England 61 In 1919 Nancy Astor was elected the first ever female member of parliament to take office in the British Houses of Parliament for the constituency of Plymouth Sutton She was elected to the seat vacated by her husband Waldorf Astor on his elevation to the peerage Lady Astor was a vibrantly active campaigner for her resident constituents In 1945 Plymouth born Michael Foot was elected Labour MP for the constituency of Plymouth Devonport which had been heavily damaged in the Plymouth Blitz He represented the seat until 1955 After serving as Secretary of State for Education and being responsible for the 1974 Health and Safety at Work Act he went on to become the leader of the Labour Party 1980 1983 City Council edit nbsp Civic Centre completed 1962 symbolic of the Post War Heroic Modernism of the Welfare State a listed building since 2007Main article Plymouth City Council The City of Plymouth is divided into 20 wards 17 of which elect three councillors and the other three electing two councillors making up a total council of 57 62 Elecitions are held three years out of every four with a third of the council being elected each time for a four year term 62 The total electorate for Plymouth s Parliamentary constituencies was 190 006 in April 2019 63 Since May 2023 Plymouth has had a Labour majority Council 64 Plymouth City Council is formally twinned with Brest France 1963 Gdynia Poland 1976 Novorossiysk Russia 1990 San Sebastian Spain 1990 and Plymouth United States 2001 65 Plymouth was granted the dignity of Lord Mayor by King George V in 1935 The position is elected each year by a group of six councillors 66 It is traditional that the position of the Lord Mayor alternates between the Conservative Party and the Labour Party annually and that the Lord Mayor chooses the Deputy Lord Mayor 66 nbsp The Great Hall in the GuildhallThe Lord Mayor s official residence is 3 Elliot Terrace located on the Hoe 67 Once a home of Waldorf and Nancy Astor it was given by Lady Astor to the City of Plymouth as an official residence for future Lord Mayors and is also used today for civic hospitality as lodgings for visiting dignitaries and High Court judges and it is also available to hire for private events 67 The Civic Centre municipal office building in Armada Way became a listed building in June 2007 because of its quality and period features but has become the centre of a controversy as the council planned for its demolition estimating that it could cost 40m to refurbish it resulting in possible job losses 68 Geography editSee also List of places in Plymouth nbsp Northeastward view of Plymouth Sound from Mount Edgcumbe Country Park in Cornwall with Drake s Island centre and behind it from left to right the Royal Citadel the fuel tanks of Cattedown and Mount Batten in the background the hills of Dartmoor Plymouth lies between the River Plym to the east and the River Tamar to the west both rivers flow into the natural harbour of Plymouth Sound 69 Since 1967 the unitary authority of Plymouth has included the once independent towns of Plympton and Plymstock which lie along the east of the River Plym 11 The River Tamar forms the county boundary between Devon and Cornwall and its estuary forms the Hamoaze on which is sited Devonport Dockyard 69 The River Plym which flows off Dartmoor to the north east forms a smaller estuary to the east of the city called Cattewater Plymouth Sound is protected from the sea by the Plymouth Breakwater in use since 1814 70 In the Sound is Drake s Island which is seen from Plymouth Hoe a flat public area on top of limestone cliffs 71 The Unitary Authority of Plymouth is 79 85 square kilometres 30 83 sq mi 2 The topography rises from sea level to a height at Roborough of about 509 feet 155 m above Ordnance Datum AOD 72 Geologically Plymouth has a mixture of limestone Devonian slate granite and Middle Devonian limestone 73 Plymouth Sound Shores and Cliffs is a Site of Special Scientific Interest because of its geology 74 The bulk of the city is built upon Upper Devonian slates and shales and the headlands at the entrance to Plymouth Sound are formed of Lower Devonian slates which can withstand the power of the sea 73 A band of Middle Devonian limestone runs west to east from Cremyll to Plymstock including the Hoe 73 Local limestone may be seen in numerous buildings walls and pavements throughout Plymouth 73 To the north and northeast of the city is the granite mass of Dartmoor the granite was mined and exported via Plymouth Rocks brought down the Tamar from Dartmoor include ores containing tin copper tungsten lead and other minerals 73 There is evidence that the middle Devonian limestone belt at the south edge of Plymouth and in Plymstock was quarried at West Hoe Cattedown and Radford 75 Urban form edit nbsp Armada Way looking northOn 27 April 1944 Sir Patrick Abercrombie s Plan for Plymouth to rebuild the bomb damaged city was published it called for demolition of the few remaining pre War buildings in the city centre to make way for their replacement with wide parallel modern boulevards aligned east west linked by a north south avenue Armada Way linking the railway station with the vista of Plymouth Hoe 44 A peripheral road system connecting the historic Barbican on the east and Union Street to the west determines the principal form of the city centre even following pedestrianisation of the shopping centre in the late 1980s and continues to inform the present Vision for Plymouth developed by a team led by Barcelona based architect David MacKay in 2003 which calls for revivification of the city centre with mixed use and residential 76 In suburban areas post War prefabs had already begun to appear by 1946 and over 1 000 permanent council houses were built each year from 1951 to 1957 according to the Modernist zoned low density garden city model advocated by Abercrombie 47 By 1964 over 20 000 new homes had been built more than 13 500 of them permanent council homes and 853 built by the Admiralty 47 Plymouth is home to 28 parks with an average size of 45 638 square metres 491 240 sq ft 77 Its largest park is Central Park 78 with other sizeable green spaces including Victoria Park Freedom Fields Park Alexandra Park Devonport Park and the Hoe 77 Central Park is the home of Plymouth Argyle Football Club and a number of other leisure facilities The Plymouth Plan 2019 2034 was published May 2019 and sets the direction for future development with a new spatial strategy 79 which reinforces links with the wider region in west Devon and east Cornwall in its Joint Local Plan and identifies three development areas within the city the City centre and waterfront a northern corridor including Derriford and the vacant airfield site at Roborough and an eastern corridor including major new settlements at Sherford and Langage 80 Climate edit PlymouthClimate chart explanation J F M A M J J A S O N D 108 9 4 84 9 4 78 11 5 67 13 6 64 16 9 57 18 11 62 20 13 67 20 13 74 18 12 113 15 9 113 12 6 119 10 5 Average max and min temperatures in C Precipitation totals in mmSource Hong Kong ObservatoryImperial conversionJFMAMJJASOND 4 3 48 39 3 3 48 38 3 1 51 41 2 6 55 43 2 5 60 48 2 2 64 52 2 4 68 56 2 6 68 56 2 9 65 53 4 4 59 49 4 4 53 44 4 7 49 40 Average max and min temperatures in F Precipitation totals in inchesPlymouth has a moderated temperate oceanic climate Koppen Cfb which is wetter and milder than the rest of England This means a wide range of exotic plants palm trees and yuccas can be cultivated The annual mean high temperature is approximately 14 C 57 F Due to the moderating effect of the sea and the south westerly location the climate is among the mildest of British cities and one of the warmest UK cities in winter 81 The coldest month of February is similarly moderate having mild mean minimum temperatures between 3 and 4 C 37 and 39 F Snow usually falls in small amounts but a noteworthy recent exception was the period of the European winter storms of 2009 10 which in early January 2010 covered Plymouth in at least 1 inch 2 5 cm of snow more on higher ground Another notable event was the 8 inches 20 cm of snowfall between 17 and 19 December 2010 though only 2 inches 5 1 cm would lie at any one time due to melting Over the 1961 1990 period annual snowfall accumulation averaged less than 7 cm 3 in per year 82 South West England has a favoured location when the Azores High pressure area extends north eastwards towards the UK particularly in summer Coastal areas have average annual sunshine totals over 1 600 hours 83 Owing to its geographic location rainfall tends to be associated with Atlantic depressions or with convection and is more frequent and heavier than in London and southeast England The Atlantic depressions are more vigorous in autumn and winter and most of the rain which falls in those seasons in the south west is from this source Average annual rainfall is around 980 millimetres 39 in November to March have the highest mean wind speeds with June to August having the lightest winds The predominant wind direction is from the south west 83 Typically the warmest day of the year 1971 2000 will achieve a temperature of 28 6 C 83 F 84 although in July 2022 the temperature reached 33 9 C 93 0 F 85 the site record On average 4 25 days 86 of the year will report a maximum temperature of 25 1 C 77 F or above During the winter half of the year the coldest night will typically fall to 4 1 C 25 F 87 although in January 1979 the temperature fell to 8 8 C 16 F 88 Typically 18 6 nights 89 of the year will register an air frost Climate data for Plymouth Mount Batten a WMO ID 03827 coordinates 50 21 18 N 4 07 16 W 50 35489 N 4 12103 W 50 35489 4 12103 Met Office Plymouth elevation 50 m 164 ft 1991 2020 normals extremes 1960 presentMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 14 4 57 9 16 3 61 3 18 3 64 9 27 6 81 7 25 9 78 6 31 6 88 9 33 9 93 0 32 9 91 2 28 9 84 0 23 0 73 4 17 1 62 8 16 1 61 0 33 9 93 0 Average high C F 9 0 48 2 9 2 48 6 10 9 51 6 13 2 55 8 15 9 60 6 18 4 65 1 20 2 68 4 20 3 68 5 18 5 65 3 15 1 59 2 11 9 53 4 9 7 49 5 14 4 57 9 Daily mean C F 6 6 43 9 6 6 43 9 7 9 46 2 9 8 49 6 12 4 54 3 14 9 58 8 16 8 62 2 16 9 62 4 15 1 59 2 12 3 54 1 9 3 48 7 7 3 45 1 11 3 52 4 Average low C F 4 2 39 6 3 9 39 0 4 9 40 8 6 3 43 3 8 8 47 8 11 4 52 5 13 2 55 8 13 4 56 1 11 7 53 1 9 5 49 1 6 7 44 1 4 8 40 6 8 2 46 8 Record low C F 8 8 16 2 7 0 19 4 7 0 19 4 2 4 27 7 0 5 31 1 2 9 37 2 6 1 43 0 5 9 42 6 1 9 35 4 1 0 30 2 3 4 25 9 5 7 21 7 8 8 16 2 Average precipitation mm inches 109 6 4 31 87 7 3 45 76 2 3 00 68 5 2 70 60 1 2 37 64 4 2 54 63 5 2 50 80 3 3 16 72 3 2 85 112 1 4 41 117 8 4 64 125 2 4 93 1 037 7 40 86 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 15 4 12 7 12 3 11 0 9 8 9 7 10 0 11 3 10 1 14 8 15 9 15 7 148 7Average relative humidity 86 84 82 80 79 80 81 82 83 85 85 86 82Average dew point C F 5 41 4 39 5 41 6 43 9 48 11 52 13 55 14 57 12 54 10 50 7 45 5 41 8 47 Mean monthly sunshine hours 61 8 88 0 131 0 189 3 227 4 220 8 209 7 197 5 161 3 118 4 72 6 54 5 1 732 3Average ultraviolet index 1 1 3 4 6 7 7 6 4 2 1 1 4Source 1 Met Office 90 NOAA Relative humidity and snow days 1961 1990 91 Source 2 KNMI 92 WeatherAtlas 93 Source 3 Time and Date dewpoints between 1985 2015 94 95 Education editSee also List of schools in Plymouth nbsp The Roland Levinsky Building Faculty of Arts of the University of PlymouthThere are three universities based in Plymouth the University of Plymouth the University of St Mark amp St John and the Arts University Plymouth The University of Plymouth enrolls 23 155 total students as of 2018 2019 57th largest in the UK out of 169 96 It also employs 2 900 staff with an annual income of around 160 million 97 It was founded in 1992 from Polytechnic South West formerly Plymouth Polytechnic following the Further and Higher Education Act 1992 98 It has a wide range of courses including those in marine focused business marine engineering marine biology and Earth ocean and environmental sciences surf science shipping and logistics 99 The university formed a joint venture with the fellow Devonian University of Exeter in 2000 establishing the Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry The college is ranked 8th out of 30 universities in the UK in 2011 for medicine 100 Its dental school was established in 2006 which also provides free dental care in an attempt to improve access to dental care in the South West The University of St Mark amp St John known as Marjon or Marjons specialises in teacher training and offers training across the country and abroad 101 Arts University Plymouth offers a selection of courses including media It was originally founded as the Plymouth Drawing School in 1856 and in December 2008 Plymouth College of Art and Design was renamed to Plymouth College of Art In May 2022 the College was awarded University status and became Arts University Plymouth 102 The city is also home to two large colleges The City College Plymouth provides courses from the most basic to Foundation degrees for approximately 26 000 students 103 Plymouth also has 71 state primary phase schools 13 state secondary schools eight special schools and three selective state grammar schools Devonport High School for Girls Devonport High School for Boys and Plymouth High School for Girls 104 There is also an independent school Plymouth College The city was also home to the Royal Naval Engineering College opened in 1880 in Keyham it trained engineering students for five years before they completed the remaining two years of the course at Greenwich The college closed in 1910 but in 1940 a new college opened at Manadon This was renamed Dockyard Technical College in 1959 before finally closing in 1994 training was transferred to the University of Southampton 105 Plymouth is home to the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom MBA founded 1884 which conducts research in all areas of the marine sciences The Plymouth Marine Laboratory PML founded 1988 was formed in part from components of the MBA Together with the National Marine Aquarium the Sir Alister Hardy Foundation for Ocean Sciences Plymouth University s Marine Institute and the Diving Diseases Research Centre these marine related organisations form the Plymouth Marine Sciences Partnership The Plymouth Marine Laboratory which focuses on global issues of climate change and sustainability It monitors the effects of ocean acidity on corals and shellfish and reports the results to the UK government It also cultivates algae that could be used to make biofuels or in the treatment of wastewater by using technology such as photo bioreactors It works alongside the Boots Group to investigate the use of algae in skincare protects taking advantage of the chemicals they contain that adapt to protect themselves from the sun 106 A scheme is in operation over summer 2018 to provide meals during the summer holidays for children with parents on a low income the parents cannot afford to provide their children with healthy meals 107 UPSU also known as the University of Plymouth Student Union is based underground near the library Every student at the University of Plymouth is a member of UPSU The Union employs students across the University from bar staff to events technicians Every year the students at the University have an opportunity to vote which sabbatical officers represent them In 2019 over 4000 students voted in the UPSU elections Demography edit nbsp Population pyramid of Plymouth unitary authority in 2021From the 2011 Census the Office for National Statistics published that Plymouth s unitary authority area population was 256 384 108 15 664 more people than that of the last census from 2001 which indicated that Plymouth had a population of 240 720 109 The Plymouth urban area had a population of 260 203 in 2011 the urban sprawl which extends outside the authority s boundaries The city s average household size was 2 3 persons 110 111 At the time of the 2011 UK census the ethnic composition of Plymouth s population was 96 2 White of 92 9 was White British with the largest minority ethnic group being Chinese at 0 5 108 The white Irish ethnic group saw the largest decline in its share of the population since the 2001 Census 24 while the Other Asian and Black African had the largest increases 360 and 351 respectively 108 112 This excludes the two new ethnic groups added to the 2011 census of Gypsy or Irish Traveller and Arab The population rose rapidly during the second half of the 19th century but declined by over 1 6 from 1931 to 1951 Plymouth s gross value added a measure of the size of its economy was 5 169 million in 2013 making up 25 of Devon s GVA 113 Its GVA per person was 19 943 and compared to the national average of 23 755 was 3 812 lower 113 Plymouth s unemployment rate was 7 0 in 2014 which was 2 0 points higher than the South West average and 0 8 points higher than the average for Great Britain England Wales and Scotland 114 A 2014 profile by the National Health Service showed Plymouth had higher than average levels of poverty and deprivation 26 2 of the population among the poorest 20 4 nationally 115 Life expectancy at 78 3 years for men and 82 1 for women was the lowest of any region in the South West of England citation needed Ethnic Group Year1991 116 2001 117 2011 118 2021 119 Number Number Number Number White Total 241 233 99 1 236 767 98 4 246 509 96 1 248 727 94 1 White British 232 377 96 5 238 263 92 9 236 802 89 5 White Irish 1 359 0 6 1 105 1 055 0 4 White Gypsy or Irish Traveller 153 165 0 1 White Roma 168 0 1 White Other 3 031 6 988 10 537 4 0 Asian or Asian British Total 971 0 4 1 427 0 6 3 906 1 5 5 947 2 1 Asian or Asian British Indian 209 258 875 1 403 0 5 Asian or Asian British Pakistani 53 83 202 389 0 1 Asian or Asian British Bangladeshi 105 152 359 537 0 2 Asian or Asian British Chinese 382 685 1 251 1 430 0 5 Asian or Asian British Other Asian 222 249 1 219 2188 0 8 Black or Black British Total 621 0 3 451 0 2 1 678 0 7 2 786 1 1 Black or Black British African 180 230 1 106 2 022 0 8 Black or Black British Caribbean 177 165 343 460 0 2 Black or Black British Other Black 264 56 229 304 0 1 Mixed or British Mixed Total 1 559 0 6 3 287 1 3 4 656 1 7 Mixed White and Black Caribbean 420 904 1 108 0 4 Mixed White and Black African 246 523 860 0 3 Mixed White and Asian 498 1 028 1 349 0 5 Mixed Other Mixed 395 832 1 339 0 5 Other Total 548 0 3 516 0 6 944 0 4 2 579 1 Other Arab 339 677 0 3 Other Any other ethnic group 548 0 3 516 0 6 605 1 902 0 7 Total 243 373 100 240 720 100 256 384 100 264 695 100 Economy edit nbsp HMNB Devonport the largest operational naval base in Western Europe 120 Because of its coastal location the economy of Plymouth has traditionally been maritime 121 in particular the defence sector with over 12 000 people employed and approximately 7 500 in the armed forces 122 The Plymouth Gin Distillery has been producing Plymouth Gin since 1793 which was exported around the world by the Royal Navy 123 During the 1930s it was the most widely distributed gin and had a controlled term of origin 123 until 2015 Since the 1980s employment in the defence sector has decreased substantially and the public sector is now prominent particularly in administration health education medicine and engineering 122 Devonport Dockyard is the UK s only naval base that refits nuclear submarines and the Navy estimates that the Dockyard generates about 10 of Plymouth s income 120 Plymouth has the largest cluster of marine and maritime businesses in the south west with 270 firms operating within the sector 124 Other substantial employers include the university with almost 3 000 staff 97 the national retail chain The Range at their Estover headquarters as well as the Plymouth Science Park employing 500 people in 50 companies 122 Plymouth has a post war shopping area in the city centre with substantial pedestrianisation 47 At the west end of the zone inside a grade II listed building is the Pannier Market that was completed in 1959 pannier meaning basket from French so it translates as basket market 125 In terms of retail floorspace Plymouth is ranked in the top five in the South West 126 and 29th nationally 127 Plymouth was one of the first ten British cities to trial the new Business improvement district initiative 128 The Tinside Pool is situated at the foot of the Hoe and became a grade II listed building in 1998 before being restored to its 1930s look for 3 4 million 129 Plymouth 2020 edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information February 2017 Since 2003 Plymouth Council has been undertaking a project of urban redevelopment called the Vision for Plymouth launched by the architect David Mackay and backed by both Plymouth City Council and the Plymouth Chamber of Commerce PCC 76 With the aim of growing the population to 300 000 by building 33 000 new dwellings its projects range from shopping centres new public realm a cruise terminal rebalancing the underutilised city centre retail district and opening waterfront development linked by a new urban boulevard 76 nbsp Interior of the Drake Circus Shopping Centre in 2006In 2004 the old Drake Circus shopping centre and Charles Cross car park were demolished and replaced by the latest Drake Circus Shopping Centre which opened in October 2006 130 It received negative feedback before opening when David Mackay said it was already ten years out of date 130 It was awarded the first ever Carbuncle Cup awarded for Britain s ugliest building in 2006 131 In contrast the Theatre Royal s production and education centre TR2 which was built on wasteland at Cattedown was a runner up for the RIBA Stirling Prize for Architecture in 2003 132 Proposals included the demolition of the Plymouth Pavilions entertainment arena to create a canal boulevard linking Millbay to the city centre delivered in 2020 Millbay is being regenerated with mixed residential retail and office space alongside the ferry port 133 Plymouth s Civic Centre was vacated by Plymouth City Council and their operations dispersed across the city centre the vacant and dilapidated modernist building was proposed for demolition by the Council but was ultimately saved by listing in 2007 134 for its national architectural merit and was gifted to the developers Urban Splash who intend to refurbish the structure for a mixed use regeneration including variable let accommodation 135 The removal and relocation of Bretonside bus station a site originally earmarked for the Council 136 was ultimately released for a mixed used commercial leisure redevelopment including cinema and restaurants named Barcode owned by British Land which also owns the adjacent Drake s Circus 137 Jacka Bakery in the Barbican district is reputedly the oldest bakery in the UK 138 and has operated since the 1600s Transport editRailway edit See also Railways in Plymouth nbsp Inter city trains at Plymouth station operated by Great Western RailwayPlymouth railway station is served by two train operating companies 139 Great Western Railway operates inter city services to Penzance Exeter St Davids Taunton Reading London Paddington Bristol Temple Meads and Cardiff Central local services run to Gunnislake It also manages the station 140 CrossCountry operate services from the South West to the Midlands North East and Scotland destinations include Bristol Birmingham New Street Derby Sheffield York Newcastle Edinburgh Waverley Glasgow Central and Aberdeen 141 Smaller stations in the suburban area west of the city centre are served by trains on the Tamar Valley Line to Gunnislake and local services on the Cornish Main Line which crosses the Tamar on the Royal Albert Bridge This was designed by Brunel and opened in 1859 The parallel road bridge was completed in 1961 History edit The station opened on its present site in 1877 and was previously named Plymouth North Road when there were other main line stations in the city at Millbay and Friary these have since closed Future edit There have been proposals to reopen the Exeter to Plymouth railway of the LSWR which would connect Cornwall and Plymouth to Exeter using the former Southern Railway main line from Plymouth to Exeter via Okehampton because the main line through South Devon is vulnerable to damage from rough seas at Dawlish where some of the cliffs are also fragile There are related proposals to reopen part of the old main line from Bere Alston on the Plymouth Gunnislake line as far as Tavistock to serve a new housing development but although the idea has been discussed since 2008 progress has been slow Roads edit The A38 dual carriageway runs from east to west across the north of the city within the city it is known as The Parkway and represents the boundary between the older parts of the city and more recently developed suburban areas Heading east it connects Plymouth to the M5 motorway about 40 miles 65 km away near Exeter heading west it connects Devon with Cornwall via the Tamar Bridge Buses edit Bus services are provided mainly by Plymouth Citybus and Stagecoach South West but a few routes are served by smaller local operators Long distance inter city bus services terminate at Plymouth coach station 142 There are three Park and Ride services at Milehouse Coypool Plympton and George Junction Plymouth City Airport which are operated by Stagecoach South West except Milehouse park and ride This is served by Plymouth Citybus 143 Ferries edit nbsp MV Pont Aven Brittany Ferries service to Roscoff France and Santander Spain in Millbay DocksA regular international ferry service provided by Brittany Ferries operates from Millbay taking cars and foot passengers directly to France Roscoff and Spain Santander on the three ferries MV Armorique MV Bretagne and MV Pont Aven 144 The Cremyll Ferry is a passenger ferry between Stonehouse and the Cornish hamlet of Cremyll which is believed to have operated continuously since 1204 145 There is also a pedestrian ferry from the Mayflower Steps to Mount Batten 146 and an alternative to using the Tamar Bridge via the Torpoint Ferry vehicle and pedestrian across the River Tamar 147 Air edit The city s airport was Plymouth City Airport about 4 miles 6 km north of the city centre 148 The airport was home to the local airline Air Southwest 149 which operated flights across the United Kingdom and Ireland 150 In June 2003 a report by the South West RDA was published looking at the future of aviation in the south west and the possible closure of airports 151 It concluded that the best option for the south west was to close Plymouth City Airport and expand Exeter International Airport and Newquay Cornwall Airport although it did conclude that this was not the best option for Plymouth 152 In April 2011 it was announced that the airport would close 153 which it did on 23 December A local company FlyPlymouth put forward plans in 2015 to reopen the airport by 2018 providing daily services to various destinations including London but as of now these projects have stalled 154 Cycle routes edit Plymouth is at the southern end of the 99 mile 159 km long Devon Coast to Coast Cycle Route National Cycle Route 27 The route runs mostly traffic free on off road sections between Ilfracombe and Plymouth The route uses former railway lines though there are some stretches on public roads 155 Religion edit nbsp The Roman Catholic Cathedral Church of Saint Mary and Saint Boniface Stonehouse Plymouth Plymouth has about 150 churches city wide The Plymouth Cathedral is Roman Catholic and is located in Stonehouse It was opened in 1858 and consecrated in 1880 156 157 The city s oldest church is Plymouth Minster also known as St Andrew s Church Anglican located at the top of Royal Parade it is the largest parish church in Devon and has been a site of gathering since AD 800 156 The city also includes five Baptist churches over twenty Methodist chapels and thirteen Roman Catholic churches 158 In 1831 the first Brethren assembly in England a movement of conservative non denominational Evangelical Christians was established in the city so that Brethren are often called Plymouth Brethren although the movement did not begin locally 159 Plymouth has the first known reference to Jews in the South West from Sir Francis Drake s voyages in 1577 to 1580 as his log mentioned Moses the Jew a man from Plymouth 156 The Plymouth Synagogue is a Listed Grade II building built in 1762 and is the oldest Ashkenazi Synagogue in the English speaking world 160 There are also places of worship for Islam Bahaʼi Buddhism Unitarianism Chinese beliefs and Humanism 161 58 1 of the population described themselves in the 2011 census return as being at least nominally Christian and 0 8 as Muslim with all other religions represented by less than 0 5 each The portion of people without a religion is 32 9 above the national average of 24 7 7 1 did not state their religious belief 162 Since the 2001 Census the number of Christians and Jews has decreased 16 and 7 respectively while all other religions have increased and non religious people have almost doubled in number 163 Culture editMain article Culture of Plymouth nbsp The New Palace Theatre in 2008Built in 1815 Union Street was at the heart of Plymouth s historical culture 164 It became known as the servicemen s playground as it was where sailors from the Royal Navy would seek entertainment of all kinds 164 During the 1930s there were 30 pubs and it attracted such performers as Charlie Chaplin to the New Palace Theatre 164 It was described in 2008 as the late night hub of Plymouth s entertainment strip 165 Outdoor events and festivals are held including the annual British Firework Championships in August which attracts tens of thousands of people across the waterfront 166 In August 2006 the world record for the most simultaneous fireworks was surpassed by Roy Lowry of the University of Plymouth over Plymouth Sound 167 From 2014 MTV Crashes Plymouth has taken place every July on Plymouth Hoe hosting big name acts such as The 1975 Little Mix Tinie Tempah and Busted 168 Between 1992 and 2012 the Music of the Night celebration was performed in the Royal Citadel by the 29 Commando Regiment and local performers to raise money for local and military charities 169 A number of other smaller cultural events taken place annually including Plymouth Art Weekender 170 Plymouth Fringe Festival 171 and Illuminate Festival 172 The city s main theatre is Theatre Royal Plymouth presenting large scale West End shows and smaller works as well as an extensive education and outreach programme The main building is located in the city centre and contains three performance spaces The Lyric 1 315 capacity 173 Drum Theatre 200 capacity 174 and The Lab 60 capacity and they also run their own specialised production and creative learning centre called TR2 based in Cattedown 175 Plymouth Pavilions has multiple uses for the city staging music concerts basketball matches and stand up comedy 176 There are also three cinemas Reel Cinema at Derrys Cross Plymouth Arts Centre at Looe Street and a Vue cinema at the Barbican Leisure Park 177 Barbican Theatre Plymouth delivers a theatre and dance programme of performances and workshops focused on young people and emerging artists contains a main auditorium 110 140 capacity and rehearsal studio 178 they also host the B Bar 80 capacity which offers a programme of music comedy and spoken word performance 179 The Plymouth Athenaeum which includes a local interest library is a society dedicated to the promotion of learning in the fields of science technology literature and art In 2017 its auditorium 340 capacity returned to use as a theatre having been out of service since 2009 180 The Plymouth City Museum and Art Gallery is operated by Plymouth City Council allowing free admission it has six galleries 181 Plymouth is the regional television centre of BBC South West 182 A team of journalists are headquartered at Plymouth for the ITV West Country regional station after a merger with ITV West forced ITV Westcountry to close on 16 February 2009 183 The main local newspapers serving Plymouth are The Herald and Western Morning News with Greatest Hits Radio South West BBC Radio Devon Heart West and Pirate FM being the local radio stations with the most listeners 184 Sport editMain article Sport in Plymouth nbsp Home Park nbsp Plymouth Pavilions home to the Plymouth City Patriots Plymouth is home to Plymouth Argyle F C who as of the 2023 24 season play in the second tier of English football the EFL Championship 185 The team s home ground is called Home Park and is located in Central Park 186 It links itself with the group of English non conformists that left Plymouth for the New World in 1620 its nickname is The Pilgrims 187 The city also has three Non League football clubs Plymouth Parkway who play at Bolitho Park Elburton Villa who play at Haye Road and Plymstock United who play at Dean Cross Plymouth Parkway were promoted to the Western League from the South West Peninsula League in 2018 and after two Covid 19 interrupted years to the Southern Football League in 2021 whilst Elburton Villa and Plymstock United continue to compete in the South West Peninsula League Other sports clubs competing in national competition include Plymouth Albion Plymouth City Patriots Plymouth Raiders and Plymouth Gladiators Plymouth Albion Rugby Football Club is a rugby union club that was founded in 1875 and are currently competing in the third tier of Professional English Rugby the National League 1 They play at the Brickfields 188 In basketball the city is represented by two teams Plymouth City Patriots of the top tier British Basketball League and Plymouth Raiders of the National Basketball League Plymouth Gladiators are a speedway team currently competing in the British National League with home meetings taking place at the Plymouth Coliseum Plymouth cricket club was formed in 1843 the current 1st XI play in the Devon Premier League Plymouth is also home to Plymouth Marjons Hockey Club with their 1st XI playing in the National League last season Plymouth Mariners Baseball club play in the South West Baseball League they play their home games at Wilson Field in Central Park Plymouth was home to an American football club the Plymouth Admirals until 2010 Plymouth Leander is the most successful swimming club in Great Britain along with Plymouth Diving Club Plymouth is an important centre for watersports especially scuba diving and sailing The Port of Plymouth Regatta is one of the oldest regattas in the world and has been held regularly since 1823 In September 2011 Plymouth hosted the America s Cup World Series for nine days 189 Public services edit nbsp The Devonport Leat on Dartmoor looking up streamSince 1973 Plymouth has been supplied water by South West Water Prior to the 1973 take over it was supplied by Plymouth County Borough Corporation 190 Before the 19th century two leats were built to provide drinking water for the town They carried water from Dartmoor to Plymouth A watercourse known as Plymouth or Drake s Leat was opened on 24 April 1591 to tap the River Meavy 191 The Devonport Leat was constructed to carry fresh drinking water to the expanding town of Devonport and its ever growing dockyard It was fed by three Dartmoor rivers The West Dart Cowsic and Blackabrook It seems to have been carrying water since 1797 but it was officially completed in 1801 It was originally designed to carry water to Devonport town but has since been shortened and now carries water to Burrator Reservoir which feeds most of the water supply of Plymouth 192 Burrator Reservoir is located about 5 miles 8 km north of the city and was constructed in 1898 and expanded in 1928 193 nbsp The Plymouth Combined Crown and County Court CentrePlymouth City Council is responsible for waste management throughout the city and South West Water is responsible for sewerage 194 195 Plymouth s electricity is supplied from the National Grid and distributed to Plymouth via Western Power Distribution 196 On the outskirts of Plympton a combined cycle gas powered station the Langage Power Station which started to produce electricity for Plymouth at the end of 2009 197 Her Majesty s Courts Service provide a magistrates court and a Combined Crown and County Court Centre in the city 198 199 The Plymouth Borough Police formed in 1836 eventually became part of Devon and Cornwall Constabulary 200 There are police stations at Charles Cross and Crownhill the Divisional HQ and smaller stations at Plympton and Plymstock 201 The city has one of the Devon and Cornwall Area Crown Prosecution Service Divisional offices 202 Plymouth has five fire stations located in Camel s Head Crownhill Greenbank Plympton and Plymstock which is part of Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue Service 203 The Royal National Lifeboat Institution have an Atlantic 85 class lifeboat and Severn class lifeboat stationed at Millbay Docks 204 Plymouth is served by Plymouth Hospitals NHS Trust and the city s NHS hospital is Derriford Hospital 4 miles 6 km north of the city centre The Royal Eye Infirmary is located at Derriford Hospital 205 South Western Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust operates in Plymouth and the rest of the south west its headquarters are in Exeter 206 The mid 19th century burial ground at Ford Park Cemetery was reopened in 2007 by a successful trust and the City council operate two large early 20th century cemeteries at Weston Mill and Efford both with crematoria and chapels There is also a privately owned cemetery on the outskirts of the city Drake Memorial Park which does not allow headstones to mark graves but a brass plaque set into the ground 207 Landmarks and tourist attractions edit nbsp Grade I listed Town Hall Column and Library in Devonport nbsp Elliot Terrace Plymouth HoeAfter the English Civil War the Royal Citadel was erected in 1666 towards the eastern section of Plymouth Hoe to defend the port from naval attacks suppress Plymothian Parliamentary leanings and to train the armed forces Currently guided tours are available in the summer months 29 Further west is Smeaton s Tower which is a standard lighthouse that was constructed in 1759 14 miles 23 km Furthermore Smeaton s Tower was dismantled in 1877 and the top two thirds were reassembled on Plymouth Hoe 208 It is open to the public and has views over the Plymouth Sound and the city from the lantern room 209 Plymouth has 20 war memorials of which nine are on The Hoe including Plymouth Naval Memorial to remember those killed in World Wars I and II and the Armada Memorial to commemorate the defeat of the Spanish Armada 210 The early port settlement of Plymouth called Sutton approximates to the area now referred to as the Barbican and has 100 listed buildings and the largest concentration of cobbled streets in Britain 211 The Pilgrim Fathers left for the New World in 1620 near the commemorative Mayflower Steps in Sutton Pool 212 Also on Sutton Pool is the National Marine Aquarium which displays 400 marine species and includes Britain s deepest aquarium tank 213 One mile two kilometres upstream on the opposite side of the River Plym is the Saltram estate which has a Jacobean and Georgian mansion 214 On the northern outskirts of the city Crownhill Fort is a well restored example of a Palmerston s Folly It is owned by the Landmark Trust and is open to the public 215 To the west of the city is Devonport one of Plymouth s historic quarters As part of Devonport s millennium regeneration project the Devonport Heritage Trail has been introduced complete with over 70 waymarkers outlining the route 216 Plymouth is often used as a base by visitors to Dartmoor the Tamar Valley and the beaches of south east Cornwall 217 Kingsand Cawsand and Whitsand Bay are popular 218 The Roland Levinsky Building the landmark building of the University of Plymouth is located in the city s central quarter Designed by leading architect Henning Larsen the building was opened in 2008 and houses the University s Arts faculty 219 Beckley Point at 78m 20 floors is Plymouth s tallest building 220 221 and was completed on 8 February 2018 It was designed by Boyes Rees Architects and built by contractors Kier Images of landmarks nbsp Smeaton s Tower nbsp Plymouth Sound and Breakwater nbsp National Armada memorial Britannia nbsp Naval War Memorial nbsp The Parade Barbican nbsp The Mayflower Steps Memorial nbsp Saltram House remodelled by the architect Robert Adam nbsp Beckley PointNotable people editMain article List of people from Plymouth nbsp Sir Francis DrakePeople from Plymouth are known as Plymothians or less formally as Janners 222 Its meaning is described as a person from Devon deriving from Cousin Jan the Devon form of John but more particularly in naval circles anyone from the Plymouth area 223 The Elizabethan navigator Sir Francis Drake was born in the nearby town of Tavistock and was the mayor of Plymouth 224 He was the first Englishman to circumnavigate the world and was known by the Spanish as El Draco meaning The Dragon after he raided many of their ships 225 He died of dysentery in 1596 off the coast of Portobelo 226 Panama In 2002 a mission to recover his body and bring it to Plymouth was allowed by the Ministry of Defence 227 His cousin and contemporary John Hawkins was a Plymouth man Painter Sir Joshua Reynolds founder and first president of the Royal Academy was born and educated in nearby Plympton now part of Plymouth William Cookworthy born in Kingsbridge set up his successful porcelain business in the city and was a close friend of John Smeaton designer of the Eddystone Lighthouse Benjamin Robert Haydon an English painter who specialised in grand historical pictures was born here in 1786 228 The naturalist William Elford Leach FRS who did much to pave the way in Britain for Charles Darwin was born at Hoe Gate in 1791 Antarctic explorers Robert Falcon Scott who was born in Plymouth and Frank Bickerton both lived in the city 229 230 Artists include Beryl Cook whose paintings depict the culture of Plymouth 231 and Robert Lenkiewicz whose paintings investigated themes of vagrancy sexual behaviour and suicide lived in the city from the 1960s until his death in 2002 232 Illustrator and creator of children s series Mr Benn and King Rollo David McKee was born and brought up in South Devon and trained at Plymouth College of Art Jazz musician John Surman born in nearby Tavistock has close connections to the area evidenced by his 2012 album Saltash Bells The avant garde prepared guitarist Keith Rowe was born in the city before establishing the jazz free improvisation band AMM in London in 1965 and MIMEO in 1997 The musician and film director Cosmo Jarvis has lived in several towns in South Devon and has filmed videos in and around Plymouth 233 In addition actors Sir Donald Sinden and Judi Trott were born in Plymouth George Passmore of Turner Prize winning duo Gilbert and George was also born in the city as was Labour politician Michael Foot whose family reside at nearby Trematon Castle 234 Notable athletes include swimmer Sharron Davies 235 diver Tom Daley 236 dancer Wayne Sleep 237 and footballer Trevor Francis 238 Other past residents include composer journalist and newspaper editor William Henry Wills Ron Goodwin 239 and journalist Angela Rippon and comedian Dawn French 240 Canadian politician and legal scholar Chris Axworthy hails from Plymouth America based actor Donald Moffat whose roles include American Vice President Lyndon B Johnson in the film The Right Stuff and fictional President Bennett in Clear and Present Danger was born in Plymouth 241 Canadian actor Mark Holden was also born in Plymouth Kevin Owen is an international TV news anchor who was born in Freedom Fields Hospital while his father served as a Royal Navy officer Cambridge spy Guy Burgess was born at 2 Albemarle Villas Stoke whilst his father was a serving Royal Navy officer 242 Twin city editBrest France 243 Gdynia Poland 243 Novorossiysk Russia 243 Plymouth Massachusetts United States 243 San Sebastian Spain 243 Jiaxing China 244 Freedom of the City editThe following People Military Units and Organisations and Groups have received the Freedom of the City of Plymouth This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items November 2021 Individuals edit Mark Ormrod 22 November 2021 245 246 Thomas Robert Daley 17 February 2022 247 248 249 250 251 Lewis Pugh 27 March 2023 Heather Knight 27 March 2023 252 Military Units edit 42 Commando RM 1955 253 The Merchant Navy 22 March 2009 The Rifles 25 September 2010 254 The Ministry of Defence Hospital Unit Derriford 30 January 2023 255 Organisations and Groups edit Veterans of the Falklands War 25 June 2022 256 257 The Federation of Plymouth and District Ex Services Associations 19 June 2023 258 See also edit nbsp Devon portalFortifications of Plymouth Grade I listed buildings in Plymouth Grade II listed buildings in PlymouthNotes edit Weather station is located 1 6 miles 2 6 km from the Plymouth city centre References edit a b c d Brief history of Plymouth Plymouth City Council Archived from the original on 26 July 2013 Retrieved 20 July 2008 a b Mid Year Population Estimates UK June 2021 Office for National Statistics 21 December 2022 Retrieved 18 October 2023 Roberts Toby Williams Ian Preston John 2021 The Southampton system A new universal standard approach for port city classification Maritime Policy amp Management 48 4 530 542 doi 10 1080 03088839 2020 1802785 S2CID 225502755 Andrew T Chamberlain Keith W Ray Charlotte Henderson Richard Welton Fisher 1994 A Catalogue of Quaternary Fossil bearing Cave Sites in the Plymouth Area Plymouth City Archaeology ISBN 1 85522 345 7 Historic England Mount Batten 1017598 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 30 March 2019 Cunliffe Barry 2004 Britain and the Continent Networks of Interaction In Malcolm Todd ed A Companion to Roman Britain Blackwell Publishing p 3 ISBN 0 631 21823 8 Archived from the original on 23 July 2021 Retrieved 23 June 2008 Denis Larionov amp Alexander Zhulin Read the ebook Geographia classica or The application of antient geography to the classics by Samuel Butler Ebooksread com Archived from the original on 21 May 2013 Retrieved 17 September 2012 Rame Head Archived from the original on 16 October 2017 Retrieved 16 October 2017 Wasteberry Camp Archived from the original on 17 October 2017 Retrieved 16 October 2017 Atlas of hillforts of Great Britain and Ireland Hillforts arch ox ac uk Retrieved 19 July 2022 a b c d e f g The early history of Plymouth Plymouth City Council Archived from the original on 9 June 2008 Retrieved 19 July 2008 Gill Crispin 1979 Plymouth A New 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