fbpx
Wikipedia

St Helier

St Helier (/ˈhɛliər/; Jèrriais: Saint Hélyi; French: Saint-Hélier) is one of the twelve parishes of Jersey, the largest of the Channel Islands in the English Channel. St Helier has a population of 35,822[2] – over one-third of the total population of Jersey – and is the capital of the island. The town of St Helier is the largest settlement and only town of Jersey. The town consists of the built-up areas of St Helier, including First Tower, and parts of the parishes of St Saviour and St Clement, with further suburbs in surrounding parishes.[3] The greater part of St Helier is rural.

St Helier
Saint Hélyi (Norman)
Saint-Hélier (French)
Panoramic, Saint Helier pilgrimage, Jersey Girl sculpture, Jersey Opera House, Cenotaph, war memorial of Jersey; King Street, Ferries, Elizabeth Castle, Houses in Saint Helier
Nickname: 
Town
Location of Saint Helier in Jersey
St Helier
St Helier
Coordinates: 49°11′09″N 02°06′36″W / 49.18583°N 2.11000°W / 49.18583; -2.11000Coordinates: 49°11′09″N 02°06′36″W / 49.18583°N 2.11000°W / 49.18583; -2.11000
Crown DependencyJersey
Named forHelier, patron saint of Jersey
Vingtaines
List
  • Vingtaine de la Ville
  • Vingtaine du Rouge Bouillon
  • Vingtaine de Bas du Mont au Prêtre
  • Vingtaine de Haut du Mont au Prêtre
  • Vingtaine du Mont à l'Abbé
  • Vingtaine du Mont Cochon
Government
 • ConnétableSimon Crowcroft (Ind.)
Area
 • Total10.6 km2 (4.1 sq mi)
 • RankRanked 5th
Population
 (2021)Bulletin 1: Population characteristics. In: Census 2021. Statistics Jersey (gov.je). Census taken 21 March 2021. Published and retrieved 13 April 2022.
 • Total35,822
 • Density3,400/km2 (8,800/sq mi)
Time zoneGMT
 • Summer (DST)UTC+01
Postcode district
Postcode sector
3 and 4
Websitewww.sthelier.je

The parish covers a surface area of 4.1 sq mi (10.6 km2), being 9% of the total land area of the island (this includes reclaimed land area of 494 acres (2.00 km2) or 200 ha). The growth of the town has been described as "spasmodic", its expansion reflecting waves of migration to the island. The parish arms are two crossed gold axes on a blue background, the blue symbolising the sea, and the axes symbolising the martyrdom of Helier at the hands of Saxon pirates in 555 AD.

History

 
The Hermitage of Saint Helier lies in the bay off St Helier and is accessible on foot at low tide

Saint

 
The face of St Helier as sculpted on the 1978 monument La Croix de la Reine in St Helier.

St Helier is named for Helier (or Helerius), a 6th-century ascetic hermit from Belgium. The traditional date of his martyrdom is AD 555. His feast day, marked by an annual municipal and ecumenical pilgrimage to the Hermitage, is on 16 July.

The medieval hagiographies of Helier, the patron saint martyred in Jersey and after whom the parish and town are named, suggest a picture of a small fishing village on the dunes between the marshy land behind and the high-water mark.

An Abbey of Saint Helier was founded in 1155 on L'Islet, a tidal island adjacent to the Hermitage. Closed at the Reformation, the site of the abbey was fortified to create the castle that replaced Mont Orgueil as the island's major fortress. The new Elizabeth Castle was named after the Queen by the Governor of Jersey 1600–1603, Sir Walter Raleigh.

Early St Helier

The land now known as the town of St Helier was once not much more than a low-lying basin consisting of marshy lands and sand dunes (to the west), surrounded by low hills on other sides. There is very little evidence of prehistorical settlement in the St Helier basin; the archaeological site in the parish is an Iron Age dolmen, which used to sit atop Mont de la Ville (the present site of Fort Regent), but which was moved to the house of a former Governor in Henley-on-Thames in the 1780s. It is thought that the site of St Helier was settled at the time of the Roman control of Gaul.[4]

By 540 AD, the monk Helerius (for whom the parish is named) had settled on the islet in the bay of St Aubin, now part of the parish and the modern-day site of Elizabeth Castle. From this hermitage, the monk converted the island's population to Christianity, but he was killed in 555 AD by seagoing raiders, attempting to defend the island. Therefore, his hermitage took on great spiritual significance. This establishment of Christianity as the principal religion of the islanders brought with it new governmental structures by the end of the 10th century, including the parochial system. It is believed the boundaries of the parish have not much changed since that time.[4]

 
The Parish Church of St Helier

The first evidence for the existence of a settlement in St Helier is in the Assize Roll of 1229. However, the parish church, the Town Church, is known to contain features that date to at least the 11th century.[4] Although it is now some considerable distance from the sea, at the time of its original construction it was on the edge of the dunes at the closest practical point to St Helier's Hermitage. Before land reclamation and port construction started, boats could be tied up to the churchyard wall on the seaward side.

It is believed the first residences in St Helier were along modern-day Hill Street, opposite the church. These would have been simple fishermen's huts, probably constructed from local granite with roofs of thatch. There is some archaeological evidence of 12th-century habitation around Old Street, outwith the medieval town area. Another site of settlement was around the Town Mills at the base of Mont Nerou. Despite not having access to the site, the location of the Abbey and the Town Church led to the village developing into the main town for the insular community. Regular markets were held in the town from at least the 15th century and the Royal Court is recorded to have sat in St Helier from ancient times. The town gained formal recognition by the Privy Council by the mid-16th century.[4]

The street layout of the medieval town is difficult to determine, as there are no detailed street maps. A 1563 map shows a group of buildings huddled behind the town church, with an axis - likely either King Street or the Royal Square - through the centre. It is believed that the Royal Square, which was initially the town's market square, became entirely encircled with buildings by 1550. At this time, the line of King Street and Queen Street were established, extending from Charing Cross (the outlet of Le Grand Douet) and Snow Hill.[4]

St Helier's growth has been marked by waves aligning with waves of migration to the island. The earliest such period of growth for the town seems to be between the Reformation and the Civil War as many French Protestants sought refuge in Jersey, Jersey being a Francophone Protestant state, especially following the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685. The first expansion of the old town was to the weSt Jurat Helier Hue's lands to the north of Charing Cross were sold and developed as Hue Street and Dumaresq Street. John Seale bought lands near Charing Cross and developed Seale Street. The Vignatine de la Ville officials confirmed their ownership of Mont de la Ville, so developed a new road La Rue des Trois Pigeons (Hill Street) to the south of the Royal Court.[5]

By the start of the 17th century, the town consisted of the modern Royal Square, Hill Street, Regent Road, Church Street, King Street, Queen Street and little else. The eastern gateway to the town was Snow Hill, where the roads from the eastern parishes met, and the western gateway Charing Cross (which led to the market square down Broad Street), where King Street met the sandy plains over which Westerners would travel to come to town. Therefore, King and Queen Streets formed the core axis for St Helier at this time. Approaches to the town included La Motte Street (for St Saviour), Val Plaisant onto Old Street (for the northern parishes and the Town Mill), and St John's Road. The land to the north and southeast of the old town were of considerable value, cultivated as market gardens or planted as orchards.[4]

Improvements to take place during the 17th century included the walling of the Town Church cemetery, the construction of a prison (which arched over Charing Cross) and the paving of important streets. An order of the Royal Court in 1610 led to the improvement of the streets, proprietors being compelled to pave the space before his house to a width of 12 ft (3.7 m), leading to a non-uniform pattern of paving.[4]

18th century

In 1700, the cattle market was moved from Broad Street to a site on the beach, around 60 to 100 yards to the southwest of the churchyard (roughly the site of the Royal Yacht Hotel). It remained here until being relocated to the modern site of Minden Place Car Park in 1841.[4]

La Cohue (a Norman word for courthouse) stood on one side of the Royal Square, now rebuilt as the Royal Court and States Chamber (called collectively the States Building). The market cross in the centre of the square was pulled down at the Reformation, and the iron cage for holding prisoners was replaced by a prison gatehouse at the western edge of town. The road now known as Broad Street served as the coast road for the town and may have also been referred to as La Rue d'Égypte being exposed to wind-blown sand. The Richmond Map of 1795[6] shows that the town at this period was only a small stub at the foot of Mont de la Ville, consisting of the main thoroughfare (La Rue de Derrière from Charing Cross through to La Colomberie) to the north of the Royal Square, at the time the town market. La Rue du Val and Old St John's Hill were the primary connections up to the north, with La Rue du Val connecting the town to its mill at Grands Vaux. In 1718, John Durell bought a number of St Helier fiefs and constructed a new gated street from King Street to Rue du Val.[5] Maps show that the town experienced a steady increase in densification between 1700 and 1756.[4]

Falle gives an account in the early 18th century of the state of the town

The Town in its present enlarged state, contains about 400 houses, laid out into several wide and well-paved streets. ... The Town is inhabited chiefly by merchants, shop-keepers ... and retailers of liquors; the landed gentlemen generally living upon their estates in the country. In short here is scarce anything wanting for necessity or convenience. Besides the stream running through the place [and literally under some houses] there is farther supply of good water from wells and pumps.

— Falle, c. 18th century
 
The statue of George II in the Royal Square is the zero milestone from which all distances in Jersey are measured

George II gave £200 towards the construction of a new harbour – previously boats would be beached on a falling tide and unloaded by cart across the sands. A statue of the king by John Cheere was erected in the square in 1751 in gratitude, and the marketplace was renamed Royal Square, although the name has remained Lé Vièr Marchi (the old market) to this day in Jèrriais. Many of St Helier's road names and street names are bilingual English/French or English/Jèrriais, but some have only one name. The names in the various languages are not usually translations: distinct naming traditions survive alongside each other.

The Royal Square was also the scene of the Battle of Jersey on 6 January 1781, the last attempt by French forces to seize Jersey. John Singleton Copley's epic painting The Death of Major Pierson captures an imaginative version of the scene. Following the 1789 French Revolution, many thousands of French refugees settled in Jersey, many aristocratic and most settling in St Helier. This doubled the number of houses in town and its vicinity; many of the tree-lined lanes leading from the town became built up with new houses and streets.[4]

As harbour construction moved development seaward, a population growth meant that marshland and pasture north of the ribbon of urban activity was built on speculatively. Settlement by English immigrants added quarters of colonial-style town houses to the traditional building stock.

Continuing military threats from France spurred the construction of a citadel fortress, Fort Regent, on the Mont de la Ville, the crag dominating the shallow basin of St Helier.

19th century

Around 1800, the market was moved from the Royal Square to a new purpose-built and enlarged premises at its current site. This shifted the cultural core of the town out of its old medieval heart, but did not diminish the importance of the old centre, which also saw new works to the waterfront, such as the building of Commercial Buildings.[4] Military roads linking coastal defences around the island with St Helier harbour allowed farmers to exploit Jersey's temperate micro-climate and use new fast sailing ships and then steamships to get their produce to the markets of London and Paris before the competition. This was the start of Jersey's agricultural prosperity in the 19th century.

 
In 1855 an obelisk was constructed in Broad Street to commemorate the reformer Pierre Le Sueur, five times elected Constable of St Helier. The monument was restored in 2005 and the fountains restored to working order.

The Napoleonic Wars brought the threat of war to Jersey's shores, and the island was fortified against French invasion. Martello towers were constructed around the coast (including First Tower in St Helier) and in 1805, the States agreed to sell to the British government Mont de la Ville to site a major fort. The construction of the fort buildings led to a major influx of both people and capital, many of whom came from Ireland and England. The States used the proceeds of the sale of Mont de la Ville to fund improvements to town pavements.

The early 19th century was a period of growth of trade for Jersey. An English Custom House was established in the island in 1810. A key turning point in St Helier history was the introduction of steamships. Previous to that, travel to the island was long and unpredictable. In the mid-1820s, the post office switched to steam as well. The first paddle steamer to visit Jersey was the Medina on 11 June 1823. In 1824, two shipping companies were established, each operating weekly steamship services to England.[7]: 239 

This brought thousands of passengers to the town. By 1840, there were 5,000 English residents in Jersey, who some say did not mix well or interact deeply with the native Jèrriais. The number of English-speaking soldiers stationed on the island and the number of retired officers and English-speaking labourers who came to the islands in the 1820s led to the island gradually moving towards an English-speaking culture in St Helier. This new immigration had a large impact on local architecture, with a number of mainland Georgian-style houses and terraces erected on the main roads out of the town. It also expanded with many new streets, such as Burrard Street, first developed in 1812. In 1831, gas street lighting was first introduced on town roads.[7]: 239–40 

The rapid growth of St Helier was one of the most significant changes in the landscape of Jersey during the 19th century. The town developed from a small settlement by the coast to encompassing most of the parish and spreading out into St Clement and St Saviour. The town's expansion mainly happened in the semi-saucer of flat land between Westmount and Mount Pleasant, so there remained a significant rural part of the parish. In 1776, both St Aubin and St Helier had had roughly the same size, however by the end of the 19th century, St Helier was far larger.[8]: 42–43  It is estimated that the number of houses by the mid-19th century was 2,600, 2,000 higher than just sixty years prior.[4]

An important growth for St Helier in the early 19th century was the construction of the harbour. Previously, ships coming into the town had only a small jetty at the site now called the English Harbour and the French Harbour. The Chamber of Commerce urged the States to build a new harbour, but the States refused, so the Chamber took it into their own hands and paid to upgrade the harbour in 1790. A new breakwater was constructed to shelter the jetty and harbours. In 1814, the merchants constructed the roads now known as Commercial Buildings and Le Quai des Marchands to connect the harbours to the town and in 1832 construction was finished on the Esplanade and its sea wall. A rapid expansion in shipping led the States in 1837 to order the construction of two new piers: the Victoria and Albert Piers.[7]: 242 

Pierre Le Sueur, reforming Constable of St Helier, was responsible for installing sewerage and provision of clean water in St Helier following outbreaks of cholera in the 1830s. An obelisk with a fountain in the town centre was raised to his memory following his premature death in office from overwork.

In the second half of the 19th century, hundreds of trucks laden with potatoes and other export produce needed access to the harbour. This prompted a programme of road-widening which swept away many of the ancient buildings of the town centre. Pressure for redevelopment has meant that very few buildings remain in urban St Helier which date to before the 19th century, giving the town primarily a Regency or Victorian character.

Towards the end of the century, in the 1870s, the new Jersey Railway opened, connecting the town to the West, with its terminus at the Weighbridge, and a few years later the Eastern Railway, with its terminus at Snow Hill. By this time, the town had three parks: The Parade Gardens, Howard Davis Park, and People's Park. Until the opening of the Waterfront and Millenium Parks in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, these parks would be the only three to exist in the town basin.[4]

The expansion of the town during the 19th century also caused an expansion of social facilities, particularly of churches, due to the importance of religion. These 19th-century churches include St James' Church (1829), St Mark's Church (1843), Wesley Street Methodist Chapel (1827, rebuilt in 1876) and St Thomas' Catholic Church (1887).[4]

20th century

 
A statue celebrating the island's liberation from Nazi occupation

By the turn of the century, all the large open spaces around St Helier were mostly developed. Most new buildings involved maximising the density of a plot, joining smaller plots to form larger premises (especially in order to retailize the heart of town). After the First World War, the need for new homes could not be met in the confines of the basin, and with the growth of the motorcar, the roads leading out into the country allowed ribbon development in all directions, along the coast, up over the hills and into neighbouring parishes. In the 1930s, the States constructed the first-ever public housing estate in Jersey at Wellington Park.[4]

After the German occupation of the Channel Islands, St Helier continued to change as a result of renewed tourism industry and Jersey's role as a financial centre. A large change was the unprecedented movement of people around the island thanks to the motor car, but this required higher capacity on the old road network and more parking.[4] In the 1960s, income from the Jersey States Lottery was used to excavate a two-lane road tunnel under Fort Regent, enabling traffic from the harbour to the east coast towns to avoid a tortuous route around the fort.

A number of architecturally and historically significant buildings have been destroyed since the Second World War, including the demolishing of one of the oldest townhouses the Manoir de la Motte, located on the corner of Grosvenor and St James Streets, the site where Lt-Governor Corbet surrendered to the French during the Battle of Jersey. A heritage architecture preservation movement grew, partly due to the destruction of a number of historic buildings in the Hue/Dumaresq Street area. This led to increased planning restrictions aimed to preserve the town's architectural heritage and preservation of the town's character has become a key part of Jersey's national planning policy.[4]

About the same time, the Fort was converted into a major leisure facility and was linked to the town centre by a gondola cableway – closed and demolished in the 1990s. In the 1970s, a programme of pedestrianisation of the central streets was undertaken.

21st century

Liberation Square is now a focal point in the town – the former terminus of the Jersey Railway housed the Jersey Tourism office until 2007.

In 2006, it was reported that the Connétable, with the backing of the Chief Minister of Jersey, was to seek city status for St Helier.[9]

An explosion at a block of flats in Pier Road on 10 December 2022 killed at least eight people. The initial assumption is that it was caused by a gas leak.[10]

Governance

 
The States Chamber, the island's parliamentary building, is located in St Helier

The parish is a first-level administrative division of the Bailiwick of Jersey, a British Crown dependency. St Helier is generally considered to be the capital of the Bailiwick, although the island has no de jure capital. It contains the seat of the island's government, the States of Jersey, including the home of the States Assembly and most Government of Jersey offices. Government House, the official residence of the Lieutenant-Governor, however, is located in neighbouring St Saviour.

States representation

At present, the parish forms three electoral districts for States Assembly elections and elects 13 Deputies and the parish's Connétable, who sits in the States ex oficio. The current Deputies for St Helier are listed below.

Electoral districts of St Helier[11]
District Vigntaines Deputies
Whole parish for Connétable Simon Crowcroft
North
  • Inna Gardiner
  • Mary Le Hegarat
  • Max Andrews
  • Steve Ahier
Central
  • Carina Alves
  • Catherine Curtis
  • Lyndsay Feltham
  • Robert Ward
South Vigntaine de la Ville

Administration

 
The Town Hall is the seat of municipal administration

The Parish has its own responsibilities and elections to the Municipality of St Helier take place to elect honorary officials who fulfill a variety of roles for Parishioners under the overall control of the Constable, two Procureurs du Bien Public and the Parish Assembly.

Five members of the Roads Committee and ten Roads Inspectors are also elected by parishioners and ensure that the roads of the parish are kept in good repair.

The members of the Assessment Committee are elected to agree to the rate chargeable to each property in the Parish.

The Accounts Committee are elected to ensure that the accounts of the Parish represent a 'true and fair view' of the state of the Parish finances in order that the Parish Assembly may rely upon the information to set the Parish Rate.

Elected officials are supported by a paid administration within the Parish.

The parish is divided into vingtaines for administrative purposes:

Honorary Police

All parishes of Jersey, including St Helier, have an Honorary Police force.

Conseil Municipal

The Conseil Municipal is a new municipal council for St Helier. The idea of creating a council was first floated in 1892, however, the idea was not put into place until November 2019, when it was agreed to establish a Shadow Conseil to trail the idea in 2020. The idea is to help the Parish to deliver the parish objectives.[12]

It is composed of:[12]

  • The Constable
  • The Procureurs du Bien Public
  • Roads Committee members
  • One elected youth members
  • Four other members to be elected

Geography

St Helier is one of the twelve parishes of Jersey and is the most populated of them. It is located on the island's south coast, on the eastern end of St Aubin's Bay. It covers the majority, and the principal part of, the island's principal settlement (henceforth referred to as "the town"). A large part of the parish is rural.

The town has no clearly defined boundary and does not directly match any parish boundaries. The 2011 Island Plan defines the built-up area as including a large part of the Southern part of the parish (the contiguous built-up area within the parish, notably excluding parts of Mont à l'Abbé, Le Mont au Prêtre, Grands Vaux, and St Andrews), a part of St Saviour (however not the Five Oaks area, despite being part of the contiguous urban area) and the Georgetown-Plat Douet area of St Saviour and St Clement.[13] Most of the town is located on low-lying land, consisting of escarpment and flood plain.[14]

The town's centre is located entirely within the Parish of St Helier, and mostly consists of the area surrounding the town's high street, King Street, and Queen Street. It also contains the Parade Cenotaph, Town Church, Town Hall, Royal Square, Victorian Market, the States Chamber and Liberation Square. The town centre is the central business district for the island, containing the principal retail and finance companies.

The parish has a population of 33,522[15] and a land area of 10.6 km2, making it the densest parish on the island.

The topography of the parish is one of the most varied. The marshland on which the town is situated is encircled by highlands which protect the town from the worst winds.[5] In the southeast of the parish, rising from the plains in the centre of town is Mont de Ville and Mount Bingham which divide the Havre des Pas district from the Harbour.

Le Grand Douet runs underneath the parish from the north near Grands Vaux, out near the Underpass (pictured below).

 
The Waterfront Centre was constructed on land reclaimed in the 1980s.

Since the 1980s, a significant reclamation project has extended the southern area of St Helier – the area now known as the Waterfront. The A1 dual carriageway was upgraded and extended, with a new grade-separated roundabout junction, the first in the Channel Islands.

Architecture

The town is not particularly visible from the island's countryside due to the town's position in a sheltering landscape. The parish has a number of character areas:[14]

  • West Esplanade and Elizabeth Castle is defined by extensive panoramic views of St Aubin's Bay and the sea and architecturally dominated by Elizabeth Castle.
  • La Collette consists of mostly reclaimed ground surrounded on three sides by the sea. Its primary usage is industrial and it holds the iconic landmark of La Collette power station chimney, visible across St Helier.
  • Havre des Pas is one of the most distinctive and pleasant areas of the town. Predominantly historical architecture with a seaside town flavour.
  • Fort Regent – its silhouette is one of the most recognisable images of St Helier. It is an iconic landmark, significant historic site, and major leisure facility.
  • Old Harbours has a distinctive identity as a historic harbour area, with open public spaces such as Liberation Square. The piers and harbour structures originate from the early 19th century.
  • New Waterfront – on mostly reclaimed land. Distinguishable from the rest of town, consisting of contemporary architecture and a lack of traditional street layout. Home to a leisure centre, modern apartments and office spaces, and several green spaces.
  • The Parade and Esplanade is the historic built edge of the town. A mix of historic, post-war and modern buildings. It hosts the General Hospital and the Parade Gardens.
  • Town Centre Core, the civic heart of St Helier, has a network of pedestrianised streets and public spaces, as well as a number of significant landmarks.
  • Town Centre North is predominantly residential, home to St Thomas' Church, Springfield Stadium, and the Millenium Town Park.
  • Town Centre Edges and Slopes hosts predominantly suburban low-density residential, with a notable landmark being Victoria College.

Climate

Under the Köppen climate classification, St Helier has a Oceanic climate, with mild, rainy winters and mild to warm, quite sunny summers. [16] Winters on the island tend to be milder than in both mainland Britain and Continental Europe, being greatly influenced by the sourroundig ocean and the Gulf stream. Snow and frosts are rare and happen only when a severe cold snap reaches Western Europe. Summers on the island dosent see the hot temperatures that England and mainland europe can experience in occasional heatwaves, but the weather is often better than on the mainland with more sunshine and less rain. As the island is more subject to influence from the azores high, and the ocean prevents convectional percipitaion, rainfall is plentiful in autumn-winter but modest in late spring and summer with July being the driest month. Sunshine hours are noticeably higher than in mainland UK and northern France averaging 1950 pr year compared to 1650 in London or Paris . January is the coldest month with an average high of 9 °C (48 °F), and a low of 5 °C (41 °F). July is the warmest month, with an average high of 21 °C (70 °F), and a low of 14 °C (57 °F).[17] St Helier also set the record for the most sunshine ever reported in one calendar year in the British Isles.[18]

Climate data for Saint Helier 54m asl, 1991-2020
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 9.4
(48.9)
9.3
(48.7)
11.7
(53.1)
14.4
(57.9)
17
(63)
19.4
(66.9)
21.9
(71.4)
21.9
(71.4)
20.3
(68.5)
16.3
(61.3)
12.6
(54.7)
10.6
(51.1)
15.4
(59.7)
Average low °C (°F) 6.2
(43.2)
5.4
(41.7)
6.3
(43.3)
7.7
(45.9)
10.4
(50.7)
12.8
(55.0)
14.5
(58.1)
15.0
(59.0)
13.8
(56.8)
11.7
(53.1)
9.4
(48.9)
8.0
(46.4)
10.1
(50.2)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 95
(3.7)
72
(2.8)
63
(2.5)
55
(2.2)
54
(2.1)
50
(2.0)
43
(1.7)
52
(2.0)
65
(2.6)
105
(4.1)
107
(4.2)
110
(4.3)
871
(34.2)
Average rainy days (≥ 1.0 mm) 5.9 4.4 2.9 3.3 3.0 2.7 0.5 1.9 3.4 4.5 5.5 5.7 43.7
Mean monthly sunshine hours 70.3 116.0 170.8 198.9 268.7 242.9 278.8 255.0 192.4 127.4 89.6 72.4 2,083.2
Source: Infoclimat[19]

Demography

 
A depiction of the Town of St Helier as it was in 1709

St Helier is the most populated of Jersey's parishes, with 33,522 residents according to the 2011 census.[20]

Historical population
YearPop.±%
199128,123—    
199627,523−2.1%
200128,310+2.9%
201133,522+18.4%

Culture

St Helier contains cultural facilities at the Jersey Museum, the Maritime Museum, the Jersey Opera House, the Jersey Arts Centre, the performance venue of St James, the sports and entertainment facilities at Fort Regent, the Jersey Library, the library of La Société Jersiaise and the Jersey Archive.

The parish has hosted the Jersey Battle of Flowers carnival since 1902.

Public squares and parks

The Weighbridge

 
The Fete dé Noué Christmas Market in the Weighbridge in 2010
 
A view over the Weighbridge

The Weighbridge is a public space in the south of town. The modern space consists of three squares, trisected by La Route de la Libération and the Esplanade. The Weighbridge is notable for being the site of the Liberation of Jersey, when British soldiers raised the Union Flag at the Pomme d'Or Hotel, bringing a return to British rule in the island after five years under Nazi occupation.

In 1995, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Jersey's liberation from Nazi occupation, and thus 50 years of peace, a sculpture was erected in the focal point for the celebrations when the island was liberated.

The sculpture was originally to depict islanders releasing doves of peace, but this came under fierce criticism, with some islanders remarking that had any doves been on the island during the occupation, they would have been eaten by starving German soldiers. Therefore, the sculpture was revised to show islanders raising the British flag, as they had done on the day of liberation 50 years previous.

The site is on reclaimed land and has served many purposes over the years. The initial weighbridge was constructed in 1825. The town terminus of the Jersey Railway was opened here in 1870. A statue of Queen Victoria was initially located in what is now Weighbridge Place (it has been relocated to Victoria Park at West Park). This area also served as the island's bus terminus until the opening of Liberation Station in 2005.[21]

In the 1990s, Liberation Square was built in front of the Pomme D'Or for the 50th anniversary of Liberation. It features a statue of islanders holding up a Union Flag. The circular forms of the square represent free thought and liberation. There is a moat around the statue representing the sea and twelve representing the parishes of the island.[22]

The Parade

 
The statue of former Governor Don in Parade Gardens

The Parade is a wide area in the west of St Helier, incorporating a park in the centre and roads around most of the edges. The area is home to the Cenotaph and General Hospital. It is known as Les Mielles in Jèrriais, meaning sand dunes.[23]

It was initially a drilling ground for the island's troops. The original hospital building was completed in 1768, but was originally used as barracks.[24] The Cenotaph was constructed in 1923 to commemorate those islanders who lost their lives in the First World War (however has also been expanded to the Second World War), designed by Charles de Gruchy. It is the focal site for Rememebrance Day celebrations on the island.[25][26]

Millennium Town Park

 
Millenium Park in 2012

This is the newest park in St Helier, opened on a former car park site in 2013. Its creation was initially agreed in 2000, however, plans stalled due to a lack of funds.[27] The park has water features, sculptures, a playground and an area to play ball games. It also has a cycle path through the centre of it.

The site has contributed to local regeneration, with new developments nearby such as Merchant's Square[28] and the Gas Place development.[29]

Charing Cross

 
Le Crapaud of Charing Cross

Formerly the site of the prison in the 17th century, Charing Cross is a square at the western end of King Street. There is a monument of a Toad ("Le Crapaud"). It was erected in 2004 as part of the commemoration of 800 years of allegiance to the English Crown. On the side, there are inscribed extracts from the Code Le Geyt. Across the road, there is La Croix de la Reine, a cross erected to commemorate the Queen's Silver Jubilee in 1977.[30] Recently, the Co-operative building on the square was redeveloped, with a new food store and the island's first Premier Inn.[31]

St Andrew's Park

St Andrew's Park is located around St Andrew's Church in First Tower. It was donated by the Seigneur of Mélèches in 1911. Two neolithic dolmens can be found at St Andrew's Park near the main road which date to 2800 and 2300 BCE.[32]

Landmarks

Many places in St Helier have been formally listed as Sites of Special Interest by the Planning and Environment department of Jersey.[33]

Elizabeth Castle

 
The castle viewed from the town, with the duck ferry running in its amphibious form

Elizabeth Castle is a 16th-century castle located on a tidal island off the coast of the town. It was constructed to supplement the defence provided by Mont Orgeuil in St Martin. It is now a museum and tourist attraction, administered by Jersey Heritage. It can be accessed by a causeway at low tide, which becomes inundated at high tide, and a duck ferry, which runs on land at low tide and by sea at high tide.

Fort Regent

 
Fort Regent

Fort Regent is located at the top of the Mont de la Ville. It was initially constructed as a barracks at the end of the Napoleonic Wars. It was decided to develop it into a leisure complex in 1967. There was a cable car that gave access to Fort Regent from Snow Hill. However, it was closed in 1991. There also used to be a swimming pool that opened in 1971, but it was knocked down in 2020.[34][35]

A tunnel (A17) was opened under the Fort on 25 February 1970 after seven years of construction.[36] The tunnel links traffic from the east to the west of the island, and allowed for the pedestrianisation of the town centre.

Central Market and Beresford Market

 
Central Market

Central Market, in Beresford Street, St Helier, is an indoor market that was opened in 1882.[37] It is an official Site of Special Interest,[38] and is popular with tourists and locals. It features Victorian architecture including cast iron structures, and an ornamental fountain in the centre. The market was designed by Thomas Helliwell of Brighouse, Yorkshire, working with Bellamy and Hardy of Lincoln.[39][40] The market comprises stalls selling flowers, fruit and vegetables, as well as small shops and cafés.

Beresford Market is a separate building next to the Central Market and specialises in fishmongery.[41]

16 New Street

This is an 18th-century Georgian townhouse, with some 19th century additions, which has been renovated by the National Trust for Jersey, and is now operated as a museum.[42][43]

Transport

 
The Underpass, near Liberation Square in the south of St Helier. In the background is the new International Finance Centre. Le Grand Douet runs underneath this road.

The primary road network in the parish consists of the St Helier Ring Road (part of which is located in St Saviour) and a series of A roads branching from there to the surrounding parishes, such as Victoria Avenue. Under Fort Regent, a road tunnel connects the West and the East of the island together.

The parish is responsible for the upkeep of by-roads (chemins vicinaux) within its boundaries, managed by the Roads Committee. The Government is responsible for main roads.[44]

The parish contains Liberation Station, the bus terminus for the island's public transport network. Every bus route on the island terminates in St Helier and the parish has bus connections to every settlement on the island.[45] A number of bus services provide a direct connection to Jersey Airport in St Peter. In 2022, the TownLink service was introduced which provides a local service within St Helier.

The parish contains the island's main port, with ferry services to Saint-Malo, Poole and Portsmouth.

Religious sites

The parish church is known as the Town Church and is the oldest building in St Helier, located on Church Street, across from the Royal Court. It predates the Battle of Hastings and has been altered and enlarged a number of times since. After the Reformation, the church became a Huguenot temple and eight successive Rectors were French Huguenot ministers. In 1842, due to the rising population of St Helier, the Dean of Jersey raised money to replace the church with a larger building, however it was never built. The Rector of the Town Church is normally co-officially the Dean of Jersey. Charles II attended service in the Town Church a number of times before and during his reign.[32]

As the town expanded in the 19th century, more Anglican churches were needed, especially for English services. The Church of St Mark on David Place, was opened in 1844, with a large two-storey congregation. The church was constructed on a shareholder system, whereby parishioners could purchase pews. The church's bells are the most southerly in the British Isles. St Andrew's Church at First Tower was originally opened in 1850 as a seamen's mission on Castle Street. It then moved to the Esplanade in a dedicated building in 1854. As the town spread west, the church's curate moved his church to a new park on a site donated by the Seigneur of Mélèches and opened in 1930.[32]

The St Helier Methodist Centre on Halkett Place was originally part of the French Methodist circuit. The centre was built in 1847 for a congregation of 1,450. There were several other Methodist churches. In 1956, the French and English Methodist Churches combined into a single circuit; the congregations of Wesley Street and Grove Place combined into the Wesley Grove Methodist Church. In 2000, all the Methodist congregations in St Helier moved to the Halkett Place Chapel. St Thomas', commonly known as the French Church, is the largest Catholic congregation in the island. Its 1887 building is the finest example of French Gothic architecture in Jersey. There is also a Polish shrine and a Portuguse chapel, to serve the island's Catholic immigrant populations, the latter dedicated to Our Lady of Fatima.[32]

Future plans

 
Waterfront Gardens (Jardîns du Quartchi du Hâvre) in 2022

The Waterfront (Quartchi du Hâvre) district of St Helier sits on land reclaimed during the 1980s. Since then, there have been numerous plans aimed at developing the area. The current planning framework covering the area is the Southwest St Helier Planning Framework, published in 2019. The plan aims to improve safety and convenience for pedestrians across La Route de la Libération (which is a road that runs through the area and is grade separated and at some points six lanes wide), including the possibility of an 'iconic bridge'; require major development proposals to have detailed landscaping schemes to enhance open space and secure a mix of uses in the area, including community facilities.[46]

The state-owned Jersey Development Company, which owns much of the land in the area, is managing the redevelopment and has contracted Gillespies, a landscape architecture firm, after a concept design competition.[47] As of June 2021, the proposals include demolishing the existing Waterfront Centre buildings, redesigning the existing Jardins de la Mer and Waterfront Gardens parks, creating new public squares and new single-phase signalised crossings across Route de la Libération.[48]

Twin towns and sister cities

St Helier is twinned with:

Sport

The parish has a number of sports facilities, including Springfield Stadium (incorporating the island's football pitch), Aquasplash (swimming pool), pétanque pitches, badminton and the Fort Regent leisure centre. Motorsports events take place on roads in the Parish as well as an annual Town Criterium, and the start and finish of the Jersey Marathon.

In 2021, the Government of Jersey published a report Inspiring Active Places Strategy.[51] The strategy will have a total cost of circa £100 million. The plan proposes the removal of sports facilities from Fort Regent by early 2022, which is "beyond the end of its useful life". The report states it is not the best location for health and fitness facilities for St Helier residents. Therefore, by the end of 2021, there will be the need to create temporary or alternative facilities to enable sport relocation from Fort Regent.

Springfield will be refurbished to provide better public active facilities and a new town community park, with the single stadium pitch replaced with two smaller 5-a-side pitches by 2026/27. However, in the interim, parts of Springfield will be redeveloped to provide more parking.

The plan includes the reprovision of facilities from Fort Regent. By 2030, a new leisure centre will be constructed in the town centre, on the site of the Waterfront centre. The leases on the current Waterfront development terminate in 2027. It will include a large swimming pool, with minimal spectator provision, and 1,250 m2 (13,500 sq ft) of health and fitness space. This will re-accommodate the Aquasplash facility, which will be demolished, and the current fitness facilities at the Fort. Due to the high-density town centre location, there is the opportunity to construct a three-story residential site above the facility.[citation needed]

Notable people

See also

References

  1. ^ "Members". Statesassembly.gov.je. Retrieved 4 October 2012.
  2. ^ Bulletin 1: Population characteristics. In: Census 2021. Statistics Jersey (gov.je). Census taken 21 March 2021. Published and retrieved 13 April 2022.
  3. ^ "States of Jersey – Revised 2011 Island Plan – 4 Built Environment". consult.gov.je. Retrieved 10 December 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q St Helier Urban Character Appraisal: Evolution of Character (PDF) (Report). October 2005.
  5. ^ a b c Cox, Robin; Garthwaite, Caroline (1983). "A Chronological View of the Growth of St Helier". Annual Bulletin of the Société Jersiaise: 301–.
  6. ^ Richmond, Duke of (1795). Map of Jersey. Jersey.
  7. ^ a b c Syvret, Marguerite (2011). Balleine's History of Jersey. The History Press. ISBN 978-1860776502.
  8. ^ Kelleher, John D. (1991). The rural community in nineteenth century Jersey (Thesis). S.l.: typescript.
  9. ^ Jersey Evening Post, 5 August 2006
  10. ^ "Seven dead and two still missing after block of flats destroyed in Jersey explosion". ITV News. 13 December 2022. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
  11. ^ "St Helier Electoral Districts Map 2022". Retrieved 4 June 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  12. ^ a b St Helier Shadow Conseil Municipal, Background. Parish of St Helier (sthelier.je). n.d. [Accessed: 11 February 2022].
  13. ^ "ArcGIS Web Application". www.arcgis.com. Retrieved 10 December 2020.
  14. ^ a b Willie Miller Urban Design; Drew Mackie Associates; et al.. St Helier urban character appraisal. Government of Jersey (gov.je) [Accessed: 11 February 2022].
  15. ^ States of Jersey Statistics Unit (2011). Jersey Census 2011 - Bulletin 1: Total population. States of Jersey. Census taken on 27 March 2011 [Accessed: April 2012].
  16. ^ "The Weather in Jersey". Fly Jersey.
  17. ^ "Hottest day of each year from 1875". www.trevorharley.com. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
  18. ^ "1949". www.trevorharley.com. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
  19. ^ "Saint Helier 1991–2020 averages". Infoclimat. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
  20. ^ "Jersey Census 2011" (PDF). Retrieved 4 October 2012.
  21. ^ "A history of bus services in Jersey – theislandwiki". www.theislandwiki.org. Retrieved 12 December 2020.
  22. ^ "Saint Helier – Jersey Liberation Sculpture". statues.vanderkrogt.net. Retrieved 12 December 2020.
  23. ^ Dictionnaithe Angliais-Jèrriais : EnglishJèrriais dictionary. Jèrri [Channel Islands]: Don Balleine Trust. 2008. ISBN 978-1-904210-09-2. OCLC 320341131.
  24. ^ "The Parade - theislandwiki". www.theislandwiki.org. Retrieved 10 January 2021.
  25. ^ "The Channel Islands and The Great War". www.greatwarci.net. Retrieved 10 January 2021.
  26. ^ "The Cenotaph – theislandwiki". www.theislandwiki.org. Retrieved 10 January 2021.
  27. ^ "Jersey's Millennium town park opens after 13-year wait". BBC News. 29 October 2011. Retrieved 12 December 2020.
  28. ^ "£70million Bath Street project approved". Le Masurier. 18 October 2019. Retrieved 12 December 2020.
  29. ^ "Gas Works Site". Retrieved 12 December 2020.
  30. ^ Charing Cross (Sign in square). Parish of St Helier. 2020.
  31. ^ "Charing Cross – Jersey | Channel Islands Co-operative". www.channelislands.coop. Retrieved 17 December 2020.
  32. ^ a b c d Hunt, Peter (2010). A guide to the Churches of Jersey. Jersey: Société Jersiaise.
  33. ^ "Sites of special interest (SSIs)". Gov.je. 26 July 2012. Retrieved 4 October 2012.
  34. ^ "Fort Regent – theislandwiki". www.theislandwiki.org. Retrieved 12 December 2020.
  35. ^ Taylor, Ed. "Fort Regent pool building to be demolished at a cost of £2.69m". jerseyeveningpost.com. Retrieved 12 December 2020.
  36. ^ "Route du Fort – theislandwiki". www.theislandwiki.org. Retrieved 10 January 2021.
  37. ^ Parishes
  38. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 August 2006.
  39. ^ Jersey Independent and Daily Telegraph – Saturday 15 May 1880 p. 2
  40. ^ "Markets – theislandwiki". www.theislandwiki.org.
  41. ^ "Jersey Markets Information". Thisisjersey.com. Retrieved 4 October 2012.
  42. ^ "Historic environment details". Mygov.je. Retrieved 11 October 2012.
  43. ^ "16 New Street | The National Trust for Jersey". Nationaltrust.je. 26 April 2012. Retrieved 11 October 2012.
  44. ^ "Parishes – Roads". parish.gov.je. Retrieved 10 December 2020.
  45. ^ Liberty Bus Route Map, Winter 2020 http://liberty-admin.nabxtmim3c.eu-west-2.elasticbeanstalk.com/api/v1/files/269/resolve
  46. ^ Southwest St Helier Planning Framework (PDF) (Report). Government of Jersey. December 2019. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
  47. ^ "JDC appoints UK landscape architect for St Helier's Waterfront". Channel Eye. 18 August 2020. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
  48. ^ "Consultation". St Helier Waterfront. Retrieved 9 June 2021.
  49. ^ "St Helier 'twinned' with Madeiran capital Funchal". BBC News. 10 April 2012. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
  50. ^ "Trenton twinning tourism boost for Jersey?". Jersey Evening Post. 29 November 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  51. ^ Inspiring Active Places Strategy 2021 (PDF) (Report). Government of Jersey. 2021.
  52. ^ "Sir George Carteret, Baronet | British politician". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 15 October 2020.
  53. ^ a b "The night is young, the mood is mellow..." MetaFilter. Retrieved 27 May 2013.
  54. ^ Trewhela, Lee (23 May 2021). "Cornwall pop star Vaughn Toulouse of Department S who died far too young". Cornwall Live. Retrieved 6 August 2021.

General bibliography

  • Balleine's History of Jersey, Marguerite Syvret and Joan Stevens (1998) ISBN 1-86077-065-7.
  • Jersey in Figures, 2003–2004, published by the States of Jersey.

External links

  • Official website  

helier, saint, helier, other, uses, disambiguation, jèrriais, saint, hélyi, french, saint, hélier, twelve, parishes, jersey, largest, channel, islands, english, channel, population, over, third, total, population, jersey, capital, island, town, largest, settle. For the saint see Helier For other uses see St Helier disambiguation St Helier ˈ h ɛ l i er Jerriais Saint Helyi French Saint Helier is one of the twelve parishes of Jersey the largest of the Channel Islands in the English Channel St Helier has a population of 35 822 2 over one third of the total population of Jersey and is the capital of the island The town of St Helier is the largest settlement and only town of Jersey The town consists of the built up areas of St Helier including First Tower and parts of the parishes of St Saviour and St Clement with further suburbs in surrounding parishes 3 The greater part of St Helier is rural St Helier Saint Helyi Norman Saint Helier French Jersey parishPanoramic Saint Helier pilgrimage Jersey Girl sculpture Jersey Opera House Cenotaph war memorial of Jersey King Street Ferries Elizabeth Castle Houses in Saint HelierFlagCoat of armsNickname TownLocation of Saint Helier in JerseySt HelierShow map of JerseySt HelierShow map of Channel IslandsCoordinates 49 11 09 N 02 06 36 W 49 18583 N 2 11000 W 49 18583 2 11000 Coordinates 49 11 09 N 02 06 36 W 49 18583 N 2 11000 W 49 18583 2 11000Crown DependencyJerseyNamed forHelier patron saint of JerseyVingtainesList Vingtaine de la VilleVingtaine du Rouge BouillonVingtaine de Bas du Mont au PretreVingtaine de Haut du Mont au PretreVingtaine du Mont a l AbbeVingtaine du Mont CochonGovernment 1 ConnetableSimon Crowcroft Ind Area Total10 6 km2 4 1 sq mi RankRanked 5thPopulation 2021 Bulletin 1 Population characteristics In Census 2021 Statistics Jersey gov je Census taken 21 March 2021 Published and retrieved 13 April 2022 Total35 822 Density3 400 km2 8 800 sq mi Time zoneGMT Summer DST UTC 01Postcode districtJE2Postcode sector3 and 4Websitewww sthelier jeThe parish covers a surface area of 4 1 sq mi 10 6 km2 being 9 of the total land area of the island this includes reclaimed land area of 494 acres 2 00 km2 or 200 ha The growth of the town has been described as spasmodic its expansion reflecting waves of migration to the island The parish arms are two crossed gold axes on a blue background the blue symbolising the sea and the axes symbolising the martyrdom of Helier at the hands of Saxon pirates in 555 AD Contents 1 History 1 1 Saint 1 2 Early St Helier 1 3 18th century 1 4 19th century 1 5 20th century 1 6 21st century 2 Governance 2 1 States representation 2 2 Administration 2 2 1 Honorary Police 2 2 2 Conseil Municipal 3 Geography 3 1 Architecture 3 2 Climate 4 Demography 5 Culture 6 Public squares and parks 6 1 The Weighbridge 6 2 The Parade 6 3 Millennium Town Park 6 4 Charing Cross 6 5 St Andrew s Park 7 Landmarks 7 1 Elizabeth Castle 7 2 Fort Regent 7 3 Central Market and Beresford Market 7 4 16 New Street 8 Transport 9 Religious sites 10 Future plans 11 Twin towns and sister cities 12 Sport 13 Notable people 14 See also 15 References 16 General bibliography 17 External linksHistory EditSee also History of Jersey The Hermitage of Saint Helier lies in the bay off St Helier and is accessible on foot at low tide Saint Edit The face of St Helier as sculpted on the 1978 monument La Croix de la Reine in St Helier St Helier is named for Helier or Helerius a 6th century ascetic hermit from Belgium The traditional date of his martyrdom is AD 555 His feast day marked by an annual municipal and ecumenical pilgrimage to the Hermitage is on 16 July The medieval hagiographies of Helier the patron saint martyred in Jersey and after whom the parish and town are named suggest a picture of a small fishing village on the dunes between the marshy land behind and the high water mark An Abbey of Saint Helier was founded in 1155 on L Islet a tidal island adjacent to the Hermitage Closed at the Reformation the site of the abbey was fortified to create the castle that replaced Mont Orgueil as the island s major fortress The new Elizabeth Castle was named after the Queen by the Governor of Jersey 1600 1603 Sir Walter Raleigh Early St Helier Edit The land now known as the town of St Helier was once not much more than a low lying basin consisting of marshy lands and sand dunes to the west surrounded by low hills on other sides There is very little evidence of prehistorical settlement in the St Helier basin the archaeological site in the parish is an Iron Age dolmen which used to sit atop Mont de la Ville the present site of Fort Regent but which was moved to the house of a former Governor in Henley on Thames in the 1780s It is thought that the site of St Helier was settled at the time of the Roman control of Gaul 4 By 540 AD the monk Helerius for whom the parish is named had settled on the islet in the bay of St Aubin now part of the parish and the modern day site of Elizabeth Castle From this hermitage the monk converted the island s population to Christianity but he was killed in 555 AD by seagoing raiders attempting to defend the island Therefore his hermitage took on great spiritual significance This establishment of Christianity as the principal religion of the islanders brought with it new governmental structures by the end of the 10th century including the parochial system It is believed the boundaries of the parish have not much changed since that time 4 The Parish Church of St HelierThe first evidence for the existence of a settlement in St Helier is in the Assize Roll of 1229 However the parish church the Town Church is known to contain features that date to at least the 11th century 4 Although it is now some considerable distance from the sea at the time of its original construction it was on the edge of the dunes at the closest practical point to St Helier s Hermitage Before land reclamation and port construction started boats could be tied up to the churchyard wall on the seaward side It is believed the first residences in St Helier were along modern day Hill Street opposite the church These would have been simple fishermen s huts probably constructed from local granite with roofs of thatch There is some archaeological evidence of 12th century habitation around Old Street outwith the medieval town area Another site of settlement was around the Town Mills at the base of Mont Nerou Despite not having access to the site the location of the Abbey and the Town Church led to the village developing into the main town for the insular community Regular markets were held in the town from at least the 15th century and the Royal Court is recorded to have sat in St Helier from ancient times The town gained formal recognition by the Privy Council by the mid 16th century 4 The street layout of the medieval town is difficult to determine as there are no detailed street maps A 1563 map shows a group of buildings huddled behind the town church with an axis likely either King Street or the Royal Square through the centre It is believed that the Royal Square which was initially the town s market square became entirely encircled with buildings by 1550 At this time the line of King Street and Queen Street were established extending from Charing Cross the outlet of Le Grand Douet and Snow Hill 4 St Helier s growth has been marked by waves aligning with waves of migration to the island The earliest such period of growth for the town seems to be between the Reformation and the Civil War as many French Protestants sought refuge in Jersey Jersey being a Francophone Protestant state especially following the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685 The first expansion of the old town was to the weSt Jurat Helier Hue s lands to the north of Charing Cross were sold and developed as Hue Street and Dumaresq Street John Seale bought lands near Charing Cross and developed Seale Street The Vignatine de la Ville officials confirmed their ownership of Mont de la Ville so developed a new road La Rue des Trois Pigeons Hill Street to the south of the Royal Court 5 By the start of the 17th century the town consisted of the modern Royal Square Hill Street Regent Road Church Street King Street Queen Street and little else The eastern gateway to the town was Snow Hill where the roads from the eastern parishes met and the western gateway Charing Cross which led to the market square down Broad Street where King Street met the sandy plains over which Westerners would travel to come to town Therefore King and Queen Streets formed the core axis for St Helier at this time Approaches to the town included La Motte Street for St Saviour Val Plaisant onto Old Street for the northern parishes and the Town Mill and St John s Road The land to the north and southeast of the old town were of considerable value cultivated as market gardens or planted as orchards 4 Improvements to take place during the 17th century included the walling of the Town Church cemetery the construction of a prison which arched over Charing Cross and the paving of important streets An order of the Royal Court in 1610 led to the improvement of the streets proprietors being compelled to pave the space before his house to a width of 12 ft 3 7 m leading to a non uniform pattern of paving 4 18th century Edit In 1700 the cattle market was moved from Broad Street to a site on the beach around 60 to 100 yards to the southwest of the churchyard roughly the site of the Royal Yacht Hotel It remained here until being relocated to the modern site of Minden Place Car Park in 1841 4 La Cohue a Norman word for courthouse stood on one side of the Royal Square now rebuilt as the Royal Court and States Chamber called collectively the States Building The market cross in the centre of the square was pulled down at the Reformation and the iron cage for holding prisoners was replaced by a prison gatehouse at the western edge of town The road now known as Broad Street served as the coast road for the town and may have also been referred to as La Rue d Egypte being exposed to wind blown sand The Richmond Map of 1795 6 shows that the town at this period was only a small stub at the foot of Mont de la Ville consisting of the main thoroughfare La Rue de Derriere from Charing Cross through to La Colomberie to the north of the Royal Square at the time the town market La Rue du Val and Old St John s Hill were the primary connections up to the north with La Rue du Val connecting the town to its mill at Grands Vaux In 1718 John Durell bought a number of St Helier fiefs and constructed a new gated street from King Street to Rue du Val 5 Maps show that the town experienced a steady increase in densification between 1700 and 1756 4 Falle gives an account in the early 18th century of the state of the town The Town in its present enlarged state contains about 400 houses laid out into several wide and well paved streets The Town is inhabited chiefly by merchants shop keepers and retailers of liquors the landed gentlemen generally living upon their estates in the country In short here is scarce anything wanting for necessity or convenience Besides the stream running through the place and literally under some houses there is farther supply of good water from wells and pumps Falle c 18th century The statue of George II in the Royal Square is the zero milestone from which all distances in Jersey are measured George II gave 200 towards the construction of a new harbour previously boats would be beached on a falling tide and unloaded by cart across the sands A statue of the king by John Cheere was erected in the square in 1751 in gratitude and the marketplace was renamed Royal Square although the name has remained Le Vier Marchi the old market to this day in Jerriais Many of St Helier s road names and street names are bilingual English French or English Jerriais but some have only one name The names in the various languages are not usually translations distinct naming traditions survive alongside each other The Royal Square was also the scene of the Battle of Jersey on 6 January 1781 the last attempt by French forces to seize Jersey John Singleton Copley s epic painting The Death of Major Pierson captures an imaginative version of the scene Following the 1789 French Revolution many thousands of French refugees settled in Jersey many aristocratic and most settling in St Helier This doubled the number of houses in town and its vicinity many of the tree lined lanes leading from the town became built up with new houses and streets 4 As harbour construction moved development seaward a population growth meant that marshland and pasture north of the ribbon of urban activity was built on speculatively Settlement by English immigrants added quarters of colonial style town houses to the traditional building stock Continuing military threats from France spurred the construction of a citadel fortress Fort Regent on the Mont de la Ville the crag dominating the shallow basin of St Helier 19th century Edit Around 1800 the market was moved from the Royal Square to a new purpose built and enlarged premises at its current site This shifted the cultural core of the town out of its old medieval heart but did not diminish the importance of the old centre which also saw new works to the waterfront such as the building of Commercial Buildings 4 Military roads linking coastal defences around the island with St Helier harbour allowed farmers to exploit Jersey s temperate micro climate and use new fast sailing ships and then steamships to get their produce to the markets of London and Paris before the competition This was the start of Jersey s agricultural prosperity in the 19th century In 1855 an obelisk was constructed in Broad Street to commemorate the reformer Pierre Le Sueur five times elected Constable of St Helier The monument was restored in 2005 and the fountains restored to working order The Napoleonic Wars brought the threat of war to Jersey s shores and the island was fortified against French invasion Martello towers were constructed around the coast including First Tower in St Helier and in 1805 the States agreed to sell to the British government Mont de la Ville to site a major fort The construction of the fort buildings led to a major influx of both people and capital many of whom came from Ireland and England The States used the proceeds of the sale of Mont de la Ville to fund improvements to town pavements The early 19th century was a period of growth of trade for Jersey An English Custom House was established in the island in 1810 A key turning point in St Helier history was the introduction of steamships Previous to that travel to the island was long and unpredictable In the mid 1820s the post office switched to steam as well The first paddle steamer to visit Jersey was the Medina on 11 June 1823 In 1824 two shipping companies were established each operating weekly steamship services to England 7 239 This brought thousands of passengers to the town By 1840 there were 5 000 English residents in Jersey who some say did not mix well or interact deeply with the native Jerriais The number of English speaking soldiers stationed on the island and the number of retired officers and English speaking labourers who came to the islands in the 1820s led to the island gradually moving towards an English speaking culture in St Helier This new immigration had a large impact on local architecture with a number of mainland Georgian style houses and terraces erected on the main roads out of the town It also expanded with many new streets such as Burrard Street first developed in 1812 In 1831 gas street lighting was first introduced on town roads 7 239 40 The rapid growth of St Helier was one of the most significant changes in the landscape of Jersey during the 19th century The town developed from a small settlement by the coast to encompassing most of the parish and spreading out into St Clement and St Saviour The town s expansion mainly happened in the semi saucer of flat land between Westmount and Mount Pleasant so there remained a significant rural part of the parish In 1776 both St Aubin and St Helier had had roughly the same size however by the end of the 19th century St Helier was far larger 8 42 43 It is estimated that the number of houses by the mid 19th century was 2 600 2 000 higher than just sixty years prior 4 An important growth for St Helier in the early 19th century was the construction of the harbour Previously ships coming into the town had only a small jetty at the site now called the English Harbour and the French Harbour The Chamber of Commerce urged the States to build a new harbour but the States refused so the Chamber took it into their own hands and paid to upgrade the harbour in 1790 A new breakwater was constructed to shelter the jetty and harbours In 1814 the merchants constructed the roads now known as Commercial Buildings and Le Quai des Marchands to connect the harbours to the town and in 1832 construction was finished on the Esplanade and its sea wall A rapid expansion in shipping led the States in 1837 to order the construction of two new piers the Victoria and Albert Piers 7 242 Pierre Le Sueur reforming Constable of St Helier was responsible for installing sewerage and provision of clean water in St Helier following outbreaks of cholera in the 1830s An obelisk with a fountain in the town centre was raised to his memory following his premature death in office from overwork In the second half of the 19th century hundreds of trucks laden with potatoes and other export produce needed access to the harbour This prompted a programme of road widening which swept away many of the ancient buildings of the town centre Pressure for redevelopment has meant that very few buildings remain in urban St Helier which date to before the 19th century giving the town primarily a Regency or Victorian character Towards the end of the century in the 1870s the new Jersey Railway opened connecting the town to the West with its terminus at the Weighbridge and a few years later the Eastern Railway with its terminus at Snow Hill By this time the town had three parks The Parade Gardens Howard Davis Park and People s Park Until the opening of the Waterfront and Millenium Parks in the late 20th and early 21st centuries these parks would be the only three to exist in the town basin 4 The expansion of the town during the 19th century also caused an expansion of social facilities particularly of churches due to the importance of religion These 19th century churches include St James Church 1829 St Mark s Church 1843 Wesley Street Methodist Chapel 1827 rebuilt in 1876 and St Thomas Catholic Church 1887 4 20th century Edit A statue celebrating the island s liberation from Nazi occupation By the turn of the century all the large open spaces around St Helier were mostly developed Most new buildings involved maximising the density of a plot joining smaller plots to form larger premises especially in order to retailize the heart of town After the First World War the need for new homes could not be met in the confines of the basin and with the growth of the motorcar the roads leading out into the country allowed ribbon development in all directions along the coast up over the hills and into neighbouring parishes In the 1930s the States constructed the first ever public housing estate in Jersey at Wellington Park 4 After the German occupation of the Channel Islands St Helier continued to change as a result of renewed tourism industry and Jersey s role as a financial centre A large change was the unprecedented movement of people around the island thanks to the motor car but this required higher capacity on the old road network and more parking 4 In the 1960s income from the Jersey States Lottery was used to excavate a two lane road tunnel under Fort Regent enabling traffic from the harbour to the east coast towns to avoid a tortuous route around the fort A number of architecturally and historically significant buildings have been destroyed since the Second World War including the demolishing of one of the oldest townhouses the Manoir de la Motte located on the corner of Grosvenor and St James Streets the site where Lt Governor Corbet surrendered to the French during the Battle of Jersey A heritage architecture preservation movement grew partly due to the destruction of a number of historic buildings in the Hue Dumaresq Street area This led to increased planning restrictions aimed to preserve the town s architectural heritage and preservation of the town s character has become a key part of Jersey s national planning policy 4 About the same time the Fort was converted into a major leisure facility and was linked to the town centre by a gondola cableway closed and demolished in the 1990s In the 1970s a programme of pedestrianisation of the central streets was undertaken 21st century Edit Liberation Square is now a focal point in the town the former terminus of the Jersey Railway housed the Jersey Tourism office until 2007 In 2006 it was reported that the Connetable with the backing of the Chief Minister of Jersey was to seek city status for St Helier 9 An explosion at a block of flats in Pier Road on 10 December 2022 killed at least eight people The initial assumption is that it was caused by a gas leak 10 Governance Edit The States Chamber the island s parliamentary building is located in St Helier The parish is a first level administrative division of the Bailiwick of Jersey a British Crown dependency St Helier is generally considered to be the capital of the Bailiwick although the island has no de jure capital It contains the seat of the island s government the States of Jersey including the home of the States Assembly and most Government of Jersey offices Government House the official residence of the Lieutenant Governor however is located in neighbouring St Saviour States representation Edit See also List of members of the States Assembly At present the parish forms three electoral districts for States Assembly elections and elects 13 Deputies and the parish s Connetable who sits in the States ex oficio The current Deputies for St Helier are listed below Electoral districts of St Helier 11 District Vigntaines DeputiesWhole parish for Connetable Simon CrowcroftNorth Vingtaine du Mont Cochon Vingtaine du Mont a l Abbe Vingtaine de Haut du Mont au Pretre Inna Gardiner Mary Le Hegarat Max Andrews Steve AhierCentral Vingtaine de Bas du Mont au Pretre Vingtaine du Rouge Bouillon Carina Alves Catherine Curtis Lyndsay Feltham Robert WardSouth Vigntaine de la Ville Beatriz Poree David Warr Geoff Southern Sam Mezec Tom ColesAdministration Edit The Town Hall is the seat of municipal administrationThe Parish has its own responsibilities and elections to the Municipality of St Helier take place to elect honorary officials who fulfill a variety of roles for Parishioners under the overall control of the Constable two Procureurs du Bien Public and the Parish Assembly Five members of the Roads Committee and ten Roads Inspectors are also elected by parishioners and ensure that the roads of the parish are kept in good repair The members of the Assessment Committee are elected to agree to the rate chargeable to each property in the Parish The Accounts Committee are elected to ensure that the accounts of the Parish represent a true and fair view of the state of the Parish finances in order that the Parish Assembly may rely upon the information to set the Parish Rate Elected officials are supported by a paid administration within the Parish The parish is divided into vingtaines for administrative purposes La Vingtaine de la Ville Canton de Bas de la Vingtaine de la Ville Canton de Haut de la Vingtaine de la Ville La Vingtaine du Rouge Bouillon La Vingtaine de Bas du Mont au Pretre La Vingtaine de Haut du Mont au Pretre La Vingtaine du Mont a l Abbe La Vingtaine du Mont CochonHonorary Police Edit All parishes of Jersey including St Helier have an Honorary Police force Conseil Municipal Edit The Conseil Municipal is a new municipal council for St Helier The idea of creating a council was first floated in 1892 however the idea was not put into place until November 2019 when it was agreed to establish a Shadow Conseil to trail the idea in 2020 The idea is to help the Parish to deliver the parish objectives 12 It is composed of 12 The Constable The Procureurs du Bien Public Roads Committee members One elected youth members Four other members to be electedGeography EditSt Helier is one of the twelve parishes of Jersey and is the most populated of them It is located on the island s south coast on the eastern end of St Aubin s Bay It covers the majority and the principal part of the island s principal settlement henceforth referred to as the town A large part of the parish is rural The town has no clearly defined boundary and does not directly match any parish boundaries The 2011 Island Plan defines the built up area as including a large part of the Southern part of the parish the contiguous built up area within the parish notably excluding parts of Mont a l Abbe Le Mont au Pretre Grands Vaux and St Andrews a part of St Saviour however not the Five Oaks area despite being part of the contiguous urban area and the Georgetown Plat Douet area of St Saviour and St Clement 13 Most of the town is located on low lying land consisting of escarpment and flood plain 14 The town s centre is located entirely within the Parish of St Helier and mostly consists of the area surrounding the town s high street King Street and Queen Street It also contains the Parade Cenotaph Town Church Town Hall Royal Square Victorian Market the States Chamber and Liberation Square The town centre is the central business district for the island containing the principal retail and finance companies The parish has a population of 33 522 15 and a land area of 10 6 km2 making it the densest parish on the island The topography of the parish is one of the most varied The marshland on which the town is situated is encircled by highlands which protect the town from the worst winds 5 In the southeast of the parish rising from the plains in the centre of town is Mont de Ville and Mount Bingham which divide the Havre des Pas district from the Harbour Le Grand Douet runs underneath the parish from the north near Grands Vaux out near the Underpass pictured below The Waterfront Centre was constructed on land reclaimed in the 1980s Since the 1980s a significant reclamation project has extended the southern area of St Helier the area now known as the Waterfront The A1 dual carriageway was upgraded and extended with a new grade separated roundabout junction the first in the Channel Islands Architecture Edit The town is not particularly visible from the island s countryside due to the town s position in a sheltering landscape The parish has a number of character areas 14 West Esplanade and Elizabeth Castle is defined by extensive panoramic views of St Aubin s Bay and the sea and architecturally dominated by Elizabeth Castle La Collette consists of mostly reclaimed ground surrounded on three sides by the sea Its primary usage is industrial and it holds the iconic landmark of La Collette power station chimney visible across St Helier Havre des Pas is one of the most distinctive and pleasant areas of the town Predominantly historical architecture with a seaside town flavour Fort Regent its silhouette is one of the most recognisable images of St Helier It is an iconic landmark significant historic site and major leisure facility Old Harbours has a distinctive identity as a historic harbour area with open public spaces such as Liberation Square The piers and harbour structures originate from the early 19th century New Waterfront on mostly reclaimed land Distinguishable from the rest of town consisting of contemporary architecture and a lack of traditional street layout Home to a leisure centre modern apartments and office spaces and several green spaces The Parade and Esplanade is the historic built edge of the town A mix of historic post war and modern buildings It hosts the General Hospital and the Parade Gardens Town Centre Core the civic heart of St Helier has a network of pedestrianised streets and public spaces as well as a number of significant landmarks Town Centre North is predominantly residential home to St Thomas Church Springfield Stadium and the Millenium Town Park Town Centre Edges and Slopes hosts predominantly suburban low density residential with a notable landmark being Victoria College Climate Edit Under the Koppen climate classification St Helier has a Oceanic climate with mild rainy winters and mild to warm quite sunny summers 16 Winters on the island tend to be milder than in both mainland Britain and Continental Europe being greatly influenced by the sourroundig ocean and the Gulf stream Snow and frosts are rare and happen only when a severe cold snap reaches Western Europe Summers on the island dosent see the hot temperatures that England and mainland europe can experience in occasional heatwaves but the weather is often better than on the mainland with more sunshine and less rain As the island is more subject to influence from the azores high and the ocean prevents convectional percipitaion rainfall is plentiful in autumn winter but modest in late spring and summer with July being the driest month Sunshine hours are noticeably higher than in mainland UK and northern France averaging 1950 pr year compared to 1650 in London or Paris January is the coldest month with an average high of 9 C 48 F and a low of 5 C 41 F July is the warmest month with an average high of 21 C 70 F and a low of 14 C 57 F 17 St Helier also set the record for the most sunshine ever reported in one calendar year in the British Isles 18 Climate data for Saint Helier 54m asl 1991 2020Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 9 4 48 9 9 3 48 7 11 7 53 1 14 4 57 9 17 63 19 4 66 9 21 9 71 4 21 9 71 4 20 3 68 5 16 3 61 3 12 6 54 7 10 6 51 1 15 4 59 7 Average low C F 6 2 43 2 5 4 41 7 6 3 43 3 7 7 45 9 10 4 50 7 12 8 55 0 14 5 58 1 15 0 59 0 13 8 56 8 11 7 53 1 9 4 48 9 8 0 46 4 10 1 50 2 Average rainfall mm inches 95 3 7 72 2 8 63 2 5 55 2 2 54 2 1 50 2 0 43 1 7 52 2 0 65 2 6 105 4 1 107 4 2 110 4 3 871 34 2 Average rainy days 1 0 mm 5 9 4 4 2 9 3 3 3 0 2 7 0 5 1 9 3 4 4 5 5 5 5 7 43 7Mean monthly sunshine hours 70 3 116 0 170 8 198 9 268 7 242 9 278 8 255 0 192 4 127 4 89 6 72 4 2 083 2Source Infoclimat 19 Demography Edit A depiction of the Town of St Helier as it was in 1709 St Helier is the most populated of Jersey s parishes with 33 522 residents according to the 2011 census 20 Historical populationYearPop 199128 123 199627 523 2 1 200128 310 2 9 201133 522 18 4 Culture EditSt Helier contains cultural facilities at the Jersey Museum the Maritime Museum the Jersey Opera House the Jersey Arts Centre the performance venue of St James the sports and entertainment facilities at Fort Regent the Jersey Library the library of La Societe Jersiaise and the Jersey Archive The parish has hosted the Jersey Battle of Flowers carnival since 1902 Public squares and parks EditThe Weighbridge Edit The Fete de Noue Christmas Market in the Weighbridge in 2010 A view over the Weighbridge The Weighbridge is a public space in the south of town The modern space consists of three squares trisected by La Route de la Liberation and the Esplanade The Weighbridge is notable for being the site of the Liberation of Jersey when British soldiers raised the Union Flag at the Pomme d Or Hotel bringing a return to British rule in the island after five years under Nazi occupation In 1995 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Jersey s liberation from Nazi occupation and thus 50 years of peace a sculpture was erected in the focal point for the celebrations when the island was liberated The sculpture was originally to depict islanders releasing doves of peace but this came under fierce criticism with some islanders remarking that had any doves been on the island during the occupation they would have been eaten by starving German soldiers Therefore the sculpture was revised to show islanders raising the British flag as they had done on the day of liberation 50 years previous The site is on reclaimed land and has served many purposes over the years The initial weighbridge was constructed in 1825 The town terminus of the Jersey Railway was opened here in 1870 A statue of Queen Victoria was initially located in what is now Weighbridge Place it has been relocated to Victoria Park at West Park This area also served as the island s bus terminus until the opening of Liberation Station in 2005 21 In the 1990s Liberation Square was built in front of the Pomme D Or for the 50th anniversary of Liberation It features a statue of islanders holding up a Union Flag The circular forms of the square represent free thought and liberation There is a moat around the statue representing the sea and twelve representing the parishes of the island 22 The Parade Edit The statue of former Governor Don in Parade Gardens The Parade is a wide area in the west of St Helier incorporating a park in the centre and roads around most of the edges The area is home to the Cenotaph and General Hospital It is known as Les Mielles in Jerriais meaning sand dunes 23 It was initially a drilling ground for the island s troops The original hospital building was completed in 1768 but was originally used as barracks 24 The Cenotaph was constructed in 1923 to commemorate those islanders who lost their lives in the First World War however has also been expanded to the Second World War designed by Charles de Gruchy It is the focal site for Rememebrance Day celebrations on the island 25 26 Millennium Town Park Edit Millenium Park in 2012 This is the newest park in St Helier opened on a former car park site in 2013 Its creation was initially agreed in 2000 however plans stalled due to a lack of funds 27 The park has water features sculptures a playground and an area to play ball games It also has a cycle path through the centre of it The site has contributed to local regeneration with new developments nearby such as Merchant s Square 28 and the Gas Place development 29 Charing Cross Edit Le Crapaud of Charing Cross Formerly the site of the prison in the 17th century Charing Cross is a square at the western end of King Street There is a monument of a Toad Le Crapaud It was erected in 2004 as part of the commemoration of 800 years of allegiance to the English Crown On the side there are inscribed extracts from the Code Le Geyt Across the road there is La Croix de la Reine a cross erected to commemorate the Queen s Silver Jubilee in 1977 30 Recently the Co operative building on the square was redeveloped with a new food store and the island s first Premier Inn 31 St Andrew s Park Edit St Andrew s Park is located around St Andrew s Church in First Tower It was donated by the Seigneur of Meleches in 1911 Two neolithic dolmens can be found at St Andrew s Park near the main road which date to 2800 and 2300 BCE 32 Landmarks EditMany places in St Helier have been formally listed as Sites of Special Interest by the Planning and Environment department of Jersey 33 Elizabeth Castle Edit The castle viewed from the town with the duck ferry running in its amphibious form Elizabeth Castle is a 16th century castle located on a tidal island off the coast of the town It was constructed to supplement the defence provided by Mont Orgeuil in St Martin It is now a museum and tourist attraction administered by Jersey Heritage It can be accessed by a causeway at low tide which becomes inundated at high tide and a duck ferry which runs on land at low tide and by sea at high tide Fort Regent Edit Main article Fort Regent Fort Regent Fort Regent is located at the top of the Mont de la Ville It was initially constructed as a barracks at the end of the Napoleonic Wars It was decided to develop it into a leisure complex in 1967 There was a cable car that gave access to Fort Regent from Snow Hill However it was closed in 1991 There also used to be a swimming pool that opened in 1971 but it was knocked down in 2020 34 35 A tunnel A17 was opened under the Fort on 25 February 1970 after seven years of construction 36 The tunnel links traffic from the east to the west of the island and allowed for the pedestrianisation of the town centre Central Market and Beresford Market Edit Central Market Central Market in Beresford Street St Helier is an indoor market that was opened in 1882 37 It is an official Site of Special Interest 38 and is popular with tourists and locals It features Victorian architecture including cast iron structures and an ornamental fountain in the centre The market was designed by Thomas Helliwell of Brighouse Yorkshire working with Bellamy and Hardy of Lincoln 39 40 The market comprises stalls selling flowers fruit and vegetables as well as small shops and cafes Beresford Market is a separate building next to the Central Market and specialises in fishmongery 41 16 New Street Edit This is an 18th century Georgian townhouse with some 19th century additions which has been renovated by the National Trust for Jersey and is now operated as a museum 42 43 Transport Edit The Underpass near Liberation Square in the south of St Helier In the background is the new International Finance Centre Le Grand Douet runs underneath this road Further information Transport in Jersey The primary road network in the parish consists of the St Helier Ring Road part of which is located in St Saviour and a series of A roads branching from there to the surrounding parishes such as Victoria Avenue Under Fort Regent a road tunnel connects the West and the East of the island together The parish is responsible for the upkeep of by roads chemins vicinaux within its boundaries managed by the Roads Committee The Government is responsible for main roads 44 The parish contains Liberation Station the bus terminus for the island s public transport network Every bus route on the island terminates in St Helier and the parish has bus connections to every settlement on the island 45 A number of bus services provide a direct connection to Jersey Airport in St Peter In 2022 the TownLink service was introduced which provides a local service within St Helier The parish contains the island s main port with ferry services to Saint Malo Poole and Portsmouth Religious sites EditThe parish church is known as the Town Church and is the oldest building in St Helier located on Church Street across from the Royal Court It predates the Battle of Hastings and has been altered and enlarged a number of times since After the Reformation the church became a Huguenot temple and eight successive Rectors were French Huguenot ministers In 1842 due to the rising population of St Helier the Dean of Jersey raised money to replace the church with a larger building however it was never built The Rector of the Town Church is normally co officially the Dean of Jersey Charles II attended service in the Town Church a number of times before and during his reign 32 As the town expanded in the 19th century more Anglican churches were needed especially for English services The Church of St Mark on David Place was opened in 1844 with a large two storey congregation The church was constructed on a shareholder system whereby parishioners could purchase pews The church s bells are the most southerly in the British Isles St Andrew s Church at First Tower was originally opened in 1850 as a seamen s mission on Castle Street It then moved to the Esplanade in a dedicated building in 1854 As the town spread west the church s curate moved his church to a new park on a site donated by the Seigneur of Meleches and opened in 1930 32 The St Helier Methodist Centre on Halkett Place was originally part of the French Methodist circuit The centre was built in 1847 for a congregation of 1 450 There were several other Methodist churches In 1956 the French and English Methodist Churches combined into a single circuit the congregations of Wesley Street and Grove Place combined into the Wesley Grove Methodist Church In 2000 all the Methodist congregations in St Helier moved to the Halkett Place Chapel St Thomas commonly known as the French Church is the largest Catholic congregation in the island Its 1887 building is the finest example of French Gothic architecture in Jersey There is also a Polish shrine and a Portuguse chapel to serve the island s Catholic immigrant populations the latter dedicated to Our Lady of Fatima 32 Future plans Edit Waterfront Gardens Jardins du Quartchi du Havre in 2022 The Waterfront Quartchi du Havre district of St Helier sits on land reclaimed during the 1980s Since then there have been numerous plans aimed at developing the area The current planning framework covering the area is the Southwest St Helier Planning Framework published in 2019 The plan aims to improve safety and convenience for pedestrians across La Route de la Liberation which is a road that runs through the area and is grade separated and at some points six lanes wide including the possibility of an iconic bridge require major development proposals to have detailed landscaping schemes to enhance open space and secure a mix of uses in the area including community facilities 46 The state owned Jersey Development Company which owns much of the land in the area is managing the redevelopment and has contracted Gillespies a landscape architecture firm after a concept design competition 47 As of June 2021 the proposals include demolishing the existing Waterfront Centre buildings redesigning the existing Jardins de la Mer and Waterfront Gardens parks creating new public squares and new single phase signalised crossings across Route de la Liberation 48 Twin towns and sister cities EditSt Helier is twinned with Funchal Madeira Portugal 49 Avranches France Bad Wurzach Germany Trenton New Jersey United States 50 Sport EditThe parish has a number of sports facilities including Springfield Stadium incorporating the island s football pitch Aquasplash swimming pool petanque pitches badminton and the Fort Regent leisure centre Motorsports events take place on roads in the Parish as well as an annual Town Criterium and the start and finish of the Jersey Marathon In 2021 the Government of Jersey published a report Inspiring Active Places Strategy 51 The strategy will have a total cost of circa 100 million The plan proposes the removal of sports facilities from Fort Regent by early 2022 which is beyond the end of its useful life The report states it is not the best location for health and fitness facilities for St Helier residents Therefore by the end of 2021 there will be the need to create temporary or alternative facilities to enable sport relocation from Fort Regent Springfield will be refurbished to provide better public active facilities and a new town community park with the single stadium pitch replaced with two smaller 5 a side pitches by 2026 27 However in the interim parts of Springfield will be redeveloped to provide more parking The plan includes the reprovision of facilities from Fort Regent By 2030 a new leisure centre will be constructed in the town centre on the site of the Waterfront centre The leases on the current Waterfront development terminate in 2027 It will include a large swimming pool with minimal spectator provision and 1 250 m2 13 500 sq ft of health and fitness space This will re accommodate the Aquasplash facility which will be demolished and the current fitness facilities at the Fort Due to the high density town centre location there is the opportunity to construct a three story residential site above the facility citation needed Notable people EditSir George Carteret b 1610 royal statesman slave trader and first lord proprietor of the British colony of New Jersey born in St Helier 52 John St Helier Lander artist Henry Cavill b 1983 actor known for playing Superman in the DC Extended Universe and Geralt of Rivia in The Witcher Vaughn Toulouse born Vaughn Cotillard 30 July 1959 8 August 1991 British singer founding member of Guns for Hire and its successor band Department S both of whom emerged from the late 70s British punk rock scene 53 Toulouse was born in St Helier on the island of Jersey and raised in St Austell Cornwall 54 53 See also EditBeaulieu Convent School Victoria College Jersey Maritime history of the Channel IslandsReferences Edit Members Statesassembly gov je Retrieved 4 October 2012 Bulletin 1 Population characteristics In Census 2021 Statistics Jersey gov je Census taken 21 March 2021 Published and retrieved 13 April 2022 States of Jersey Revised 2011 Island Plan 4 Built Environment consult gov je Retrieved 10 December 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q St Helier Urban Character Appraisal Evolution of Character PDF Report October 2005 a b c Cox Robin Garthwaite Caroline 1983 A Chronological View of the Growth of St Helier Annual Bulletin of the Societe Jersiaise 301 Richmond Duke of 1795 Map of Jersey Jersey a b c Syvret Marguerite 2011 Balleine s History of Jersey The History Press ISBN 978 1860776502 Kelleher John D 1991 The rural community in nineteenth century Jersey Thesis S l typescript Jersey Evening Post 5 August 2006 Seven dead and two still missing after block of flats destroyed in Jersey explosion ITV News 13 December 2022 Retrieved 13 December 2022 St Helier Electoral Districts Map 2022 Retrieved 4 June 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b St Helier Shadow Conseil Municipal Background Parish of St Helier sthelier je n d Accessed 11 February 2022 ArcGIS Web Application www arcgis com Retrieved 10 December 2020 a b Willie Miller Urban Design Drew Mackie Associates et al St Helier urban character appraisal Government of Jersey gov je Accessed 11 February 2022 States of Jersey Statistics Unit 2011 Jersey Census 2011 Bulletin 1 Total population States of Jersey Census taken on 27 March 2011 Accessed April 2012 The Weather in Jersey Fly Jersey Hottest day of each year from 1875 www trevorharley com Retrieved 26 June 2021 1949 www trevorharley com Retrieved 26 June 2021 Saint Helier 1991 2020 averages Infoclimat Retrieved 6 March 2022 Jersey Census 2011 PDF Retrieved 4 October 2012 A history of bus services in Jersey theislandwiki www theislandwiki org Retrieved 12 December 2020 Saint Helier Jersey Liberation Sculpture statues vanderkrogt net Retrieved 12 December 2020 Dictionnaithe Angliais Jerriais EnglishJerriais dictionary Jerri Channel Islands Don Balleine Trust 2008 ISBN 978 1 904210 09 2 OCLC 320341131 The Parade theislandwiki www theislandwiki org Retrieved 10 January 2021 The Channel Islands and The Great War www greatwarci net Retrieved 10 January 2021 The Cenotaph theislandwiki www theislandwiki org Retrieved 10 January 2021 Jersey s Millennium town park opens after 13 year wait BBC News 29 October 2011 Retrieved 12 December 2020 70million Bath Street project approved Le Masurier 18 October 2019 Retrieved 12 December 2020 Gas Works Site Retrieved 12 December 2020 Charing Cross Sign in square Parish of St Helier 2020 Charing Cross Jersey Channel Islands Co operative www channelislands coop Retrieved 17 December 2020 a b c d Hunt Peter 2010 A guide to the Churches of Jersey Jersey Societe Jersiaise Sites of special interest SSIs Gov je 26 July 2012 Retrieved 4 October 2012 Fort Regent theislandwiki www theislandwiki org Retrieved 12 December 2020 Taylor Ed Fort Regent pool building to be demolished at a cost of 2 69m jerseyeveningpost com Retrieved 12 December 2020 Route du Fort theislandwiki www theislandwiki org Retrieved 10 January 2021 Parishes Central Market Flooring Archived from the original on 25 August 2006 Jersey Independent and Daily Telegraph Saturday 15 May 1880 p 2 Markets theislandwiki www theislandwiki org Jersey Markets Information Thisisjersey com Retrieved 4 October 2012 Historic environment details Mygov je Retrieved 11 October 2012 16 New Street The National Trust for Jersey Nationaltrust je 26 April 2012 Retrieved 11 October 2012 Parishes Roads parish gov je Retrieved 10 December 2020 Liberty Bus Route Map Winter 2020 http liberty admin nabxtmim3c eu west 2 elasticbeanstalk com api v1 files 269 resolve Southwest St Helier Planning Framework PDF Report Government of Jersey December 2019 Retrieved 9 June 2021 JDC appoints UK landscape architect for St Helier s Waterfront Channel Eye 18 August 2020 Retrieved 9 June 2021 Consultation St Helier Waterfront Retrieved 9 June 2021 St Helier twinned with Madeiran capital Funchal BBC News 10 April 2012 Retrieved 4 June 2019 Trenton twinning tourism boost for Jersey Jersey Evening Post 29 November 2019 Retrieved 29 November 2019 Inspiring Active Places Strategy 2021 PDF Report Government of Jersey 2021 Sir George Carteret Baronet British politician Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 15 October 2020 a b The night is young the mood is mellow MetaFilter Retrieved 27 May 2013 Trewhela Lee 23 May 2021 Cornwall pop star Vaughn Toulouse of Department S who died far too young Cornwall Live Retrieved 6 August 2021 General bibliography EditBalleine s History of Jersey Marguerite Syvret and Joan Stevens 1998 ISBN 1 86077 065 7 Jersey in Figures 2003 2004 published by the States of Jersey External links EditSt Helier at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Travel information from Wikivoyage Resources from Wikiversity Data from Wikidata Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Helier amp oldid 1130700619, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.