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Shoeburyness

Shoeburyness (/ˌʃbriˈnɛs/ SHOO-bree-NESS), or simply Shoebury, is a coastal town in the City of Southend-on-Sea, in the ceremonial county of Essex, England; it lies 3 miles (5 km) east of the city centre. It was formerly a separate town until it was absorbed into Southend in 1933.

Shoeburyness
Shoeburyness from the air
Shoeburyness
Location within Essex
Population22,275 (2018 mid census)[1]
OS grid referenceTQ941851
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townSOUTHEND-ON-SEA
Postcode districtSS3
Dialling code01702
PoliceEssex
FireEssex
AmbulanceEast of England
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Essex
51°31′54″N 0°47′52″E / 51.5316°N 0.7978°E / 51.5316; 0.7978

In Saxon times, the area was called Shoebury. Sometime between 1086 and the thirteenth century, it was divided into two parishes called North Shoebury and South Shoebury. The two villages remained small rural settlements until the 1850s, when a barracks was established in the parish of South Shoebury, later becoming MoD Shoeburyness. A garrison town, known as Shoeburyness, grew around the barracks, taking its name from the ness on the coast at the southern end of the parish. Shoeburyness railway station opened in 1884, as the eastern terminus of the London, Tilbury and Southend Railway.

The parish of South Shoebury was made an urban district in 1894, which was renamed Shoeburyness in 1895. The urban district of Shoeburyness and parish of North Shoebury were both abolished in 1933, being absorbed into the county borough of Southend-on-Sea. Development during the twentieth century saw the formerly separate settlements of Shoeburyness and North Shoebury absorbed into the built-up area of Southend.

History edit

The first record of occupation in Shoebury has been found from the Mesolithic period, with Neolithic and Bronze Age stone tools and Beaker pottery having also been discovered.[2] An Iron Age settlement has been found, that had ramparts that were believed to be originally 40ft wide and 12ft tall, with evidence of round houses, ditches and Postholes that is now a Scheduled Monument.[2] The Romans built a fortified settlement called Essobira at the Ness, that was attacked by the British in AD50 under Caratacus and later by Boudica's rebels.[2] Evidence of Essobira has not been found, however a Roman Kiln was found in 1892, 300 yards from Suttons, a historical house. A further Roman kiln was found in the grounds of the garrison in 1895.[3]

The Saxons re-established a settlement in the 6th century, which at this point that the name Shoebury, or in Anglo-Saxon Scobrih, or in Danish, Scabivig was first documented.[4] A Camp was built by the Dane Hastein in circa 894, but little remains as the Artillery Barracks were built over part of the site.[3] Shoebury (North and South were recorded as one) was listed in the Domesday Book of 1086, having a population of 33 and sitting within the control of the Rochford Hundred. The land was owned by three different people, Walter; Bishop Odo of Bayeux and the Swein of Essex, son of Robert FitzWimarc.[5][6]

 
St Andrew. South elevation

The parish church of South Shoebury, St. Andrew was originally constructed in the 12th century under the control of Prittlewell Priory, with the West Tower being added in the 15th century and the South porch in the 16th century. The church was restored during the 19th century by renown architect Sir Charles Nicholson.[3][7] The manor house, known as South Shoebury Hall, is a medieval timber-framed house with an 18th-century brick frontage and other alterations.[2] Other historical properties include Suttons, a Grade II listed manor house that was built in 1681, which is now on the most endangered list of Historic England.[3][8] South Shoebury has also been called under is parish name of Shoebury Magna (in Latin Magna Shoberi)[9] or Greater Shoebury.[10]

 
Shoebury High Street

South Shoebury was prone to flooding and Marsh fever, and in 1530 the parish had to sell St Andrew's bells to pay for repairs to the sea defences.[11] Shoebury Common first appeared as The Great Marsh on a map in 1687,[12] and in 1899 the land owner, Colonel Burges handed the Common to the Shoeburyness Urban District Council for the recreation and benefit of the inhabitants of South Shoebury and others.[13]

By 1851, the population of South Shoebury stood at 151, but just ten years later the census had shown the population had grown to 1,502. The growth in population was caused by the opening of nearby brickfields by the Frapping family,[14] and the construction of the Artillery Barracks that was the start of Shoebury Garrison.[15] Prior to the Garrison's arrival the land had been home to several warrens, after the Normans had introduced rabbits to the area.[11] In comparison, North Shoebury's population in 1894 was just 184.[16] The village of South Shoebury had been built up around the High Street and Rampart Street, but it was not until the 1920s and 1930s that the town grew, with the area known as Cambridge Town being established. The area was named after a local public house called the Duke of Cambridge.[17] The town was described by the military historian Patrick Barry as

a dreary place... the broadest and most sterile foreshore perhaps in England

[18]

It was home to the last recorded case of indigenous malaria in the British Isles during the 1930s.[11]

The brickfields use to run two narrow railways, that crossed the High Street without a level crossing, to transfer their goods to Thames Barges at East Beach, which took the bricks to London, which up to World War II brought refuse back that was used to power the brick kilns, pumping out nasty fumes.[17][11] In 1866, the Gas Light & Coke Company built a gas works to supply the Garrison, which a private company was then formed to manage the supply to Shoeburyness, which subsequently was taken over by Shoeburyness Urban District Council.[19] The council was created in 1894, separating the civil and ecclesiastical side of the parish, until it was absorbed into Southend Borough in 1933 which also absorbed the former North Shoebury parish.[20]

In between the two World Wars, Shoeburyness became a popular holiday resort, with a blacksmiths sitting next to the beach until the 1930s being a regular source of entertainment.[17] In 1928, the Southend Recorder reported that tents stretched from the Common to Thorpe Hall Avenue, while in the same year local landmark Uncle Toms Cabin was built on the Common.[12]

At the beginning of the Second World War, the depositing of a magnetic ground mine in the mud at the mouth of the Thames by the Luftwaffe was observed at Shoeburyness. Various sinkings of ships near the English coast in the preceding months were thought by many to be due to U-boat torpedoes, though the Admiralty suspected magnetic mines were being used.[21] The heroic recovery of an intact mine on 23 November 1939, by Lieutenant Commanders Ouvry and Lewis from HMS Vernon made it possible for the Navy to study it and devise countermeasures to neutralise it; among these were the degaussing cables installed in merchant ships in Allied and British fleets, and, of course, wooden minesweepers.[22] East Beach is the site of a defence boom, built in 1944, to prevent enemy shipping and submarines from accessing the River Thames.[23] This replaced an earlier, similar boom built 100 yards (91 m) east.

After the war, artillery and other regiments continued to be garrisoned at Shoebury until 1976 when the garrison headquarters closed.[2]

Up and to the early 1980s, the Shoebury's were still two distinctive villages, separated by farm land.[24] During the 1970s, a study by Southend Borough Council identified a lack of retail availability in the east of the borough. North Shoebury was identified as the site, with a supermarket of 50,000 square feet planned at its centre.[25] Before any development took place, Essex County Council Archaeology Section of the Planning Department and Southend Museum started the North Shoebury Project in 1980 under the guidance of John Wymer, whose digs established that the area had continuous human habitation from the Mesolithic period.[26][24] The planned store became the ASDA supermarket, which opened in 1981, while one of the former farm barns became the Parsons Barn public house.[27] This was joined by the Bishopsteignton housing development, that was completed between 1981 and 1988. The site was the former farm of listed building, the White House, which had been sold in 1919 to Southend Estates Company.[28] Following the closure of the Old Ranges in 1998 the old garrison land and buildings were sold, and in 2000 redevelopment of the site to housing started.[29][2] In 2022, a heritage centre was opened on the former garrison after 35 years of campaigning.[30]

Description edit

 
Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS) personnel at the Royal Artillery Experimental Unit, at Shoeburyness, using the Window Position Finder to sight shell bursts in the air or water, 1943.

Shoeburyness sits on the Thames Estuary and is at the far east of the district of Southend-on-Sea, bordered to the west by Thorpe Bay at Maplin Way and to the North by Great Wakering which is part of Rochford District.[1]

The MoD Shoeburyness site at Pig's Bay is situated nearby and the facility is run by the company QinetiQ.[31] The Garrison site is now part of a conservation area set up by Southend City Council.[2]

Shoeburyness has two beaches: East Beach and Shoebury Common Beach, both Blue Flag beaches.[32]

 
East Beach at Shoeburyness

East Beach is a sandy/pebbly beach around a quarter of a mile long and is sandwiched between the Pig's Bay MoD site and the former Shoeburyness Artillery barracks. Access to the large gravel/grass pay-and-display car park is via Rampart Terrace. The beach is closed when there is live fire at the MOD site.[33]

 
Shoebury Common & Beach

Shoebury Common Beach is bounded to the east by the land formerly occupied by the Shoeburyness Artillery barracks and by Thorpe Bay to the west. Shoebury Common Beach is the site of many beach huts located on both the promenade and the beach.[34] A Coast Guard watch tower at the eastern end of the beach keeps watch over the sands and mudflats while listening out for distress calls over the radio.[35] A cycle path skirts around the sea-front linking the East Beach to Shoebury Common Beach, and thence into Southend and onto Chalkwell, in Westcliff-on-Sea.[36]

 
Asda, Shoeburyness

Shoeburyness does not have an actual town centre. There are parades of shops in West Road,[37] Ness Road and[38] The Renown.[39] The town is served by two supermarkets, Asda[40] and Lidl.[41]

Shoeburyness has several industrial estates, with Towerfield Road, Vanguard Way and Campfield Road serving the area.[42]

The town is served by five doctors surgeries and three dentists,[1] with its nearest hospital located at Southend University Hospital.

Governance edit

There is only one tier of local government covering Shoeburyness, being the unitary authority of Southend-on-Sea City Council. Shoeburyness is split into West Shoebury and Shoeburyness wards, which are both represented by three councillors.[43]

Shoebury was listed in the Domesday Book of 1086, having a population of 33 and lying in the Rochford Hundred.[6] Some time after 1086, the separate parishes of North Shoebury and South Shoebury were created. In Wakering Road, north of Constable Way stands a marker where the historical boundary between the two civil parishes existed.[44] When parish and district councils were established in December 1894, the parish of North Shoebury was included within the Rochford Rural District whilst the parish of South Shoebury was made an urban district.[45] One of the first actions of the new urban district council was to request a change in the council's name from South Shoebury to Shoeburyness. The change of name took effect in January 1895.[46] The name of the civil parish containing the urban district continued to be called "South Shoebury".[47] In 1931 the parish had a population of 6720.[48] In 1933 both Shoeburyness Urban District Council (which managed the South Shoebury civil parish) and North Shoebury civil parishes were abolished and absorbed into the County Borough of Southend on Sea, except for a more rural eastern part of the old North Shoebury parish which was transferred to the parish of Great Wakering.[49][50][11][51]

Shoeburyness is part of the Rochford and Southend East Parliamentary constituency, and the current serving Member of Parliament is James Duddridge.

Climate edit

Climate data for Shoeburyness, Essex 1991-2020
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 7.8
(46.0)
8.3
(46.9)
10.6
(51.1)
13.5
(56.3)
16.6
(61.9)
19.8
(67.6)
22.3
(72.1)
22.4
(72.3)
19.4
(66.9)
15.3
(59.5)
11.1
(52.0)
8.4
(47.1)
14.6
(58.3)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 2.7
(36.9)
2.4
(36.3)
3.7
(38.7)
5.4
(41.7)
8.3
(46.9)
11.2
(52.2)
13.6
(56.5)
13.8
(56.8)
11.5
(52.7)
8.9
(48.0)
5.5
(41.9)
3.2
(37.8)
7.5
(45.5)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 43.0
(1.69)
36.1
(1.42)
32.7
(1.29)
36.1
(1.42)
41.6
(1.64)
44.1
(1.74)
41.1
(1.62)
48.6
(1.91)
43.0
(1.69)
57.8
(2.28)
54.0
(2.13)
48.8
(1.92)
526.9
(20.75)
Average rainy days 9.5 8.3 7.8 7.5 7.5 7.8 7.3 7.1 7.5 10.2 10.6 10.7 101.8
Mean monthly sunshine hours 70.5 88.9 136.8 200.4 241.2 243.3 257.0 212.2 162.4 130.0 84.7 56.9 1,884.3
Source: Met Office[52]

Transport edit

 
A c2c Class 357 at the Shoeburyness depot

The eastern terminus of the London, Tilbury and Southend line (c2c line) is at Shoeburyness railway station, where services run to London Fenchurch Street in the City of London. Shoeburyness Depot is the easternmost depot on the c2c line. The eastern end of the A13 is at Shoeburyness and is the only A Road in the town. Shoeburyness is served by Arriva and Stephensons of Essex bus companies.

Education edit

Shoeburyness High School is the only secondary school within the town and incorporates a sixth form, while primary education is delivered by St George's Catholic Primary School, Friars Primary School, Hinguar Community Primary School, Richmond Avenue Primary and Nursery School and Thorpedene Primary School & Nursery.[53]

Leisure edit

Shoeburyness Leisure Centre in Delaware Road provides a swimming pool, gym and indoor courts.[54] Shoeburyness formerly had an operating cinema, The Palace in Ness Road which opened in 1913 and closed in 1955.[55]

Gunners Park and Shoebury Ranges is a 25-hectare nature reserve managed by the Essex Wildlife Trust (EWT).[56] Other parks include Shoeburyness Park, Friars Park, Bishopsteignton Park, Shoebury Common and St. Mary's Nature Reserve. A skate park is located in Anson Chase.

Conservation edit

Shoebury Garrison is one of Southend's 14 listed conservation areas, being first designated in 1981 before a further extension in 2004.[57][58] Historic England have listed a total of 44 properties between Grade II and Grade II*, with both parish churches amongst this list. The majority of the listings are on the former garrison site, including the Cart and Wagon Shed heritage and community centre.[59]

Pig's Bay edit

 
Ex Gatwick Express British Railways Mark 2 coaches in a siding at Pig's Bay. Just visible at the extreme left is some former Northern line 1972 Stock.

Pig's Bay is a coastal area in the east of Shoeburyness.[60] The main entrance to the site is at Blackgate Road, Shoeburyness. This is also the gateway to the island of Foulness, the third largest island off the coast of England.

The bay is the site of MoD Shoeburyness, a military installation established in 1849 and which is still used as a firing range.[31][61] The Bay is home to Shoeburyness Boom, a World War II and Cold War defensive boom that is a Scheduled Monument.[62]

One of the other uses of the site is the storage and scrapping of old railway vehicles.[63] It has its own private railway network, stretching for around six miles, linked to one of the sidings at Network Rail's Shoeburyness c2c electrical multiple unit depot by means of two unmanned level crossings across Shoeburyness High Street and Blackgate Road, respectively.[64]

The front locomotive of the passenger train involved in the 1997 Southall rail crash – when an InterCity 125 train collided with a freight train, killing seven people – was scrapped here, being cut up by Serco three years after the incident once the inquiry had been completed.[65]

In popular culture edit

 
Shoeburyness Fisherman Hailing a Whitstable Hoy by J. M. W. Turner, 1809

The English painter J. M. W. Turner depicted the fishermen of Shoeburyness in his oil painting Shoeburyness Fishermen Hailing a Whitstable Hoy. The painting was exhibited in 1809, and was part of a series Turner made of the Thames estuary between 1808 and 1810. The painting has been in the collection of the National Gallery of Canada since 1939.[66][67]

In the fifth Temeraire novel Victory of Eagles (2008) by Naomi Novik, Shoeburyness is the setting of a fictitious climactic battle in which Wellesley and Nelson drive Napoleon out of England in early 1808.[68]

Shoeburyness is home to "the commuter", protagonist in the eponymous song and music video by Ceephax Acid Crew.[69]

Shoeburyness is mentioned in the Porridge episode "The Harder They Fall" (S2 E6), at approximately 6 min 10 seconds.[70]

Shoeburyness is one of the better-known entrants in Douglas Adams' and John Lloyd's 1990 spoof dictionary The Deeper Meaning of Liff. It is defined as "the vague feeling of uncomfortableness caused by sitting on a bus seat still warm from someone else's bottom".

Shoeburyness is referenced in the Billy Bragg song "A13 Trunk Road to the Sea"[71] and in the Ian Dury song "Billericay Dickie".[72]

Shoeburyness was featured in the Viral Marketing[73] for the Universal Pictures 2022 American science fiction action film sequel Jurassic World Dominion,[74] with a number of the featured videos on the DinoTracker website filmed in the area[75] doubling for locations around the world.

Notable people edit

References edit

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  70. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 September 2014.
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  72. ^ "Ian Dury – Billericay Dickie".
  73. ^ "Jurassic World Dominion Dinotracker". www.dinotracker.com. Retrieved 15 June 2022.
  74. ^ @Dinotracker (19 May 2022). "The residents of Shoeburyness, U.K. ignored DPW warnings of growing prehistoric predator activity in their area. Unfortunately, their pets paid the price" (Tweet). Retrieved 15 June 2022 – via Twitter.
  75. ^ England, Sophie (25 June 2022). "Jurassic World marketing campaigns filmed in Southend". Echo News. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
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External links edit

  •   Media related to Shoeburyness at Wikimedia Commons
  • "Shoeburyness" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 24 (11th ed.). 1911.

shoeburyness, shoo, bree, ness, simply, shoebury, coastal, town, city, southend, ceremonial, county, essex, england, lies, miles, east, city, centre, formerly, separate, town, until, absorbed, into, southend, 1933, from, airlocation, within, essexpopulation22,. Shoeburyness ˌ ʃ uː b r i ˈ n ɛ s SHOO bree NESS or simply Shoebury is a coastal town in the City of Southend on Sea in the ceremonial county of Essex England it lies 3 miles 5 km east of the city centre It was formerly a separate town until it was absorbed into Southend in 1933 ShoeburynessShoeburyness from the airShoeburynessLocation within EssexPopulation22 275 2018 mid census 1 OS grid referenceTQ941851Unitary authoritySouthend on SeaCeremonial countyEssexRegionEastCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townSOUTHEND ON SEAPostcode districtSS3Dialling code01702PoliceEssexFireEssexAmbulanceEast of EnglandUK ParliamentRochford and Southend EastList of places UK England Essex 51 31 54 N 0 47 52 E 51 5316 N 0 7978 E 51 5316 0 7978 In Saxon times the area was called Shoebury Sometime between 1086 and the thirteenth century it was divided into two parishes called North Shoebury and South Shoebury The two villages remained small rural settlements until the 1850s when a barracks was established in the parish of South Shoebury later becoming MoD Shoeburyness A garrison town known as Shoeburyness grew around the barracks taking its name from the ness on the coast at the southern end of the parish Shoeburyness railway station opened in 1884 as the eastern terminus of the London Tilbury and Southend Railway The parish of South Shoebury was made an urban district in 1894 which was renamed Shoeburyness in 1895 The urban district of Shoeburyness and parish of North Shoebury were both abolished in 1933 being absorbed into the county borough of Southend on Sea Development during the twentieth century saw the formerly separate settlements of Shoeburyness and North Shoebury absorbed into the built up area of Southend Contents 1 History 2 Description 3 Governance 4 Climate 5 Transport 6 Education 7 Leisure 8 Conservation 9 Pig s Bay 10 In popular culture 11 Notable people 12 References 13 External linksHistory editThe first record of occupation in Shoebury has been found from the Mesolithic period with Neolithic and Bronze Age stone tools and Beaker pottery having also been discovered 2 An Iron Age settlement has been found that had ramparts that were believed to be originally 40ft wide and 12ft tall with evidence of round houses ditches and Postholes that is now a Scheduled Monument 2 The Romans built a fortified settlement called Essobira at the Ness that was attacked by the British in AD50 under Caratacus and later by Boudica s rebels 2 Evidence of Essobira has not been found however a Roman Kiln was found in 1892 300 yards from Suttons a historical house A further Roman kiln was found in the grounds of the garrison in 1895 3 The Saxons re established a settlement in the 6th century which at this point that the name Shoebury or in Anglo Saxon Scobrih or in Danish Scabivig was first documented 4 A Camp was built by the Dane Hastein in circa 894 but little remains as the Artillery Barracks were built over part of the site 3 Shoebury North and South were recorded as one was listed in the Domesday Book of 1086 having a population of 33 and sitting within the control of the Rochford Hundred The land was owned by three different people Walter Bishop Odo of Bayeux and the Swein of Essex son of Robert FitzWimarc 5 6 nbsp St Andrew South elevation The parish church of South Shoebury St Andrew was originally constructed in the 12th century under the control of Prittlewell Priory with the West Tower being added in the 15th century and the South porch in the 16th century The church was restored during the 19th century by renown architect Sir Charles Nicholson 3 7 The manor house known as South Shoebury Hall is a medieval timber framed house with an 18th century brick frontage and other alterations 2 Other historical properties include Suttons a Grade II listed manor house that was built in 1681 which is now on the most endangered list of Historic England 3 8 South Shoebury has also been called under is parish name of Shoebury Magna in Latin Magna Shoberi 9 or Greater Shoebury 10 See also North Shoebury nbsp Shoebury High Street South Shoebury was prone to flooding and Marsh fever and in 1530 the parish had to sell St Andrew s bells to pay for repairs to the sea defences 11 Shoebury Common first appeared as The Great Marsh on a map in 1687 12 and in 1899 the land owner Colonel Burges handed the Common to the Shoeburyness Urban District Council for the recreation and benefit of the inhabitants of South Shoebury and others 13 By 1851 the population of South Shoebury stood at 151 but just ten years later the census had shown the population had grown to 1 502 The growth in population was caused by the opening of nearby brickfields by the Frapping family 14 and the construction of the Artillery Barracks that was the start of Shoebury Garrison 15 Prior to the Garrison s arrival the land had been home to several warrens after the Normans had introduced rabbits to the area 11 In comparison North Shoebury s population in 1894 was just 184 16 The village of South Shoebury had been built up around the High Street and Rampart Street but it was not until the 1920s and 1930s that the town grew with the area known as Cambridge Town being established The area was named after a local public house called the Duke of Cambridge 17 The town was described by the military historian Patrick Barry as a dreary place the broadest and most sterile foreshore perhaps in England 18 It was home to the last recorded case of indigenous malaria in the British Isles during the 1930s 11 The brickfields use to run two narrow railways that crossed the High Street without a level crossing to transfer their goods to Thames Barges at East Beach which took the bricks to London which up to World War II brought refuse back that was used to power the brick kilns pumping out nasty fumes 17 11 In 1866 the Gas Light amp Coke Company built a gas works to supply the Garrison which a private company was then formed to manage the supply to Shoeburyness which subsequently was taken over by Shoeburyness Urban District Council 19 The council was created in 1894 separating the civil and ecclesiastical side of the parish until it was absorbed into Southend Borough in 1933 which also absorbed the former North Shoebury parish 20 In between the two World Wars Shoeburyness became a popular holiday resort with a blacksmiths sitting next to the beach until the 1930s being a regular source of entertainment 17 In 1928 the Southend Recorder reported that tents stretched from the Common to Thorpe Hall Avenue while in the same year local landmark Uncle Toms Cabin was built on the Common 12 At the beginning of the Second World War the depositing of a magnetic ground mine in the mud at the mouth of the Thames by the Luftwaffe was observed at Shoeburyness Various sinkings of ships near the English coast in the preceding months were thought by many to be due to U boat torpedoes though the Admiralty suspected magnetic mines were being used 21 The heroic recovery of an intact mine on 23 November 1939 by Lieutenant Commanders Ouvry and Lewis from HMS Vernon made it possible for the Navy to study it and devise countermeasures to neutralise it among these were the degaussing cables installed in merchant ships in Allied and British fleets and of course wooden minesweepers 22 East Beach is the site of a defence boom built in 1944 to prevent enemy shipping and submarines from accessing the River Thames 23 This replaced an earlier similar boom built 100 yards 91 m east After the war artillery and other regiments continued to be garrisoned at Shoebury until 1976 when the garrison headquarters closed 2 Up and to the early 1980s the Shoebury s were still two distinctive villages separated by farm land 24 During the 1970s a study by Southend Borough Council identified a lack of retail availability in the east of the borough North Shoebury was identified as the site with a supermarket of 50 000 square feet planned at its centre 25 Before any development took place Essex County Council Archaeology Section of the Planning Department and Southend Museum started the North Shoebury Project in 1980 under the guidance of John Wymer whose digs established that the area had continuous human habitation from the Mesolithic period 26 24 The planned store became the ASDA supermarket which opened in 1981 while one of the former farm barns became the Parsons Barn public house 27 This was joined by the Bishopsteignton housing development that was completed between 1981 and 1988 The site was the former farm of listed building the White House which had been sold in 1919 to Southend Estates Company 28 Following the closure of the Old Ranges in 1998 the old garrison land and buildings were sold and in 2000 redevelopment of the site to housing started 29 2 In 2022 a heritage centre was opened on the former garrison after 35 years of campaigning 30 Description edit nbsp Auxiliary Territorial Service ATS personnel at the Royal Artillery Experimental Unit at Shoeburyness using the Window Position Finder to sight shell bursts in the air or water 1943 Shoeburyness sits on the Thames Estuary and is at the far east of the district of Southend on Sea bordered to the west by Thorpe Bay at Maplin Way and to the North by Great Wakering which is part of Rochford District 1 The MoD Shoeburyness site at Pig s Bay is situated nearby and the facility is run by the company QinetiQ 31 The Garrison site is now part of a conservation area set up by Southend City Council 2 Shoeburyness has two beaches East Beach and Shoebury Common Beach both Blue Flag beaches 32 nbsp East Beach at Shoeburyness East Beach is a sandy pebbly beach around a quarter of a mile long and is sandwiched between the Pig s Bay MoD site and the former Shoeburyness Artillery barracks Access to the large gravel grass pay and display car park is via Rampart Terrace The beach is closed when there is live fire at the MOD site 33 nbsp Shoebury Common amp Beach Shoebury Common Beach is bounded to the east by the land formerly occupied by the Shoeburyness Artillery barracks and by Thorpe Bay to the west Shoebury Common Beach is the site of many beach huts located on both the promenade and the beach 34 A Coast Guard watch tower at the eastern end of the beach keeps watch over the sands and mudflats while listening out for distress calls over the radio 35 A cycle path skirts around the sea front linking the East Beach to Shoebury Common Beach and thence into Southend and onto Chalkwell in Westcliff on Sea 36 nbsp Asda Shoeburyness Shoeburyness does not have an actual town centre There are parades of shops in West Road 37 Ness Road and 38 The Renown 39 The town is served by two supermarkets Asda 40 and Lidl 41 Shoeburyness has several industrial estates with Towerfield Road Vanguard Way and Campfield Road serving the area 42 The town is served by five doctors surgeries and three dentists 1 with its nearest hospital located at Southend University Hospital Governance editThere is only one tier of local government covering Shoeburyness being the unitary authority of Southend on Sea City Council Shoeburyness is split into West Shoebury and Shoeburyness wards which are both represented by three councillors 43 Shoebury was listed in the Domesday Book of 1086 having a population of 33 and lying in the Rochford Hundred 6 Some time after 1086 the separate parishes of North Shoebury and South Shoebury were created In Wakering Road north of Constable Way stands a marker where the historical boundary between the two civil parishes existed 44 When parish and district councils were established in December 1894 the parish of North Shoebury was included within the Rochford Rural District whilst the parish of South Shoebury was made an urban district 45 One of the first actions of the new urban district council was to request a change in the council s name from South Shoebury to Shoeburyness The change of name took effect in January 1895 46 The name of the civil parish containing the urban district continued to be called South Shoebury 47 In 1931 the parish had a population of 6720 48 In 1933 both Shoeburyness Urban District Council which managed the South Shoebury civil parish and North Shoebury civil parishes were abolished and absorbed into the County Borough of Southend on Sea except for a more rural eastern part of the old North Shoebury parish which was transferred to the parish of Great Wakering 49 50 11 51 Shoeburyness is part of the Rochford and Southend East Parliamentary constituency and the current serving Member of Parliament is James Duddridge Climate editClimate data for Shoeburyness Essex 1991 2020 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year Mean daily maximum C F 7 8 46 0 8 3 46 9 10 6 51 1 13 5 56 3 16 6 61 9 19 8 67 6 22 3 72 1 22 4 72 3 19 4 66 9 15 3 59 5 11 1 52 0 8 4 47 1 14 6 58 3 Mean daily minimum C F 2 7 36 9 2 4 36 3 3 7 38 7 5 4 41 7 8 3 46 9 11 2 52 2 13 6 56 5 13 8 56 8 11 5 52 7 8 9 48 0 5 5 41 9 3 2 37 8 7 5 45 5 Average precipitation mm inches 43 0 1 69 36 1 1 42 32 7 1 29 36 1 1 42 41 6 1 64 44 1 1 74 41 1 1 62 48 6 1 91 43 0 1 69 57 8 2 28 54 0 2 13 48 8 1 92 526 9 20 75 Average rainy days 9 5 8 3 7 8 7 5 7 5 7 8 7 3 7 1 7 5 10 2 10 6 10 7 101 8 Mean monthly sunshine hours 70 5 88 9 136 8 200 4 241 2 243 3 257 0 212 2 162 4 130 0 84 7 56 9 1 884 3 Source Met Office 52 Transport edit nbsp A c2c Class 357 at the Shoeburyness depot The eastern terminus of the London Tilbury and Southend line c2c line is at Shoeburyness railway station where services run to London Fenchurch Street in the City of London Shoeburyness Depot is the easternmost depot on the c2c line The eastern end of the A13 is at Shoeburyness and is the only A Road in the town Shoeburyness is served by Arriva and Stephensons of Essex bus companies Education editShoeburyness High School is the only secondary school within the town and incorporates a sixth form while primary education is delivered by St George s Catholic Primary School Friars Primary School Hinguar Community Primary School Richmond Avenue Primary and Nursery School and Thorpedene Primary School amp Nursery 53 Leisure editShoeburyness Leisure Centre in Delaware Road provides a swimming pool gym and indoor courts 54 Shoeburyness formerly had an operating cinema The Palace in Ness Road which opened in 1913 and closed in 1955 55 Gunners Park and Shoebury Ranges is a 25 hectare nature reserve managed by the Essex Wildlife Trust EWT 56 Other parks include Shoeburyness Park Friars Park Bishopsteignton Park Shoebury Common and St Mary s Nature Reserve A skate park is located in Anson Chase Conservation editShoebury Garrison is one of Southend s 14 listed conservation areas being first designated in 1981 before a further extension in 2004 57 58 Historic England have listed a total of 44 properties between Grade II and Grade II with both parish churches amongst this list The majority of the listings are on the former garrison site including the Cart and Wagon Shed heritage and community centre 59 Pig s Bay edit nbsp Ex Gatwick Express British Railways Mark 2 coaches in a siding at Pig s Bay Just visible at the extreme left is some former Northern line 1972 Stock Pig s Bay is a coastal area in the east of Shoeburyness 60 The main entrance to the site is at Blackgate Road Shoeburyness This is also the gateway to the island of Foulness the third largest island off the coast of England The bay is the site of MoD Shoeburyness a military installation established in 1849 and which is still used as a firing range 31 61 The Bay is home to Shoeburyness Boom a World War II and Cold War defensive boom that is a Scheduled Monument 62 One of the other uses of the site is the storage and scrapping of old railway vehicles 63 It has its own private railway network stretching for around six miles linked to one of the sidings at Network Rail s Shoeburyness c2c electrical multiple unit depot by means of two unmanned level crossings across Shoeburyness High Street and Blackgate Road respectively 64 The front locomotive of the passenger train involved in the 1997 Southall rail crash when an InterCity 125 train collided with a freight train killing seven people was scrapped here being cut up by Serco three years after the incident once the inquiry had been completed 65 In popular culture edit nbsp Shoeburyness Fisherman Hailing a Whitstable Hoy by J M W Turner 1809 The English painter J M W Turner depicted the fishermen of Shoeburyness in his oil painting Shoeburyness Fishermen Hailing a Whitstable Hoy The painting was exhibited in 1809 and was part of a series Turner made of the Thames estuary between 1808 and 1810 The painting has been in the collection of the National Gallery of Canada since 1939 66 67 In the fifth Temeraire novel Victory of Eagles 2008 by Naomi Novik Shoeburyness is the setting of a fictitious climactic battle in which Wellesley and Nelson drive Napoleon out of England in early 1808 68 Shoeburyness is home to the commuter protagonist in the eponymous song and music video by Ceephax Acid Crew 69 Shoeburyness is mentioned in the Porridge episode The Harder They Fall S2 E6 at approximately 6 min 10 seconds 70 Shoeburyness is one of the better known entrants in Douglas Adams and John Lloyd s 1990 spoof dictionary The Deeper Meaning of Liff It is defined as the vague feeling of uncomfortableness caused by sitting on a bus seat still warm from someone else s bottom Shoeburyness is referenced in the Billy Bragg song A13 Trunk Road to the Sea 71 and in the Ian Dury song Billericay Dickie 72 Shoeburyness was featured in the Viral Marketing 73 for the Universal Pictures 2022 American science fiction action film sequel Jurassic World Dominion 74 with a number of the featured videos on the DinoTracker website filmed in the area 75 doubling for locations around the world Notable people editTony Holland 1940 2007 BBC screenwriter was born in Shoeburyness 76 Godfrey Rampling 1909 2009 English athlete resident 2 David Nelson VC 1887 1918 student and instructor at the Royal Artillery School of Gunnery Shoeburyness 77 78 References edit a b c Troy Planning amp Design November 2020 AREA PROFILE SHOEBURYNESS PDF SETTLEMENT ROLE AND HIERARCHY STUDY a b c d e f g h Southend Borough Council 5 March 2022 Southend on Sea Shoebury Garrison Conservation Area Appraisal PDF p 29 a b c d An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Essex Volume 4 South east His Majesty s Stationery Office 1923 pp 143 145 White s Directory of Essex 1848 History Domesday Days Rochford Town History Retrieved 31 March 2023 a b Shoebury Open Domesday Retrieved 31 March 2023 CHURCH OF ST ANDREW Historic England 23 November 1951 Shoebury Manor dating back to 1600s at risk Evening Echo 30 December 2021 Archbishop of Canterbury 1956 Registrum Roberti Winchelsey Cantuariensis Archiepiscopi A D 1294 1313 Volume 52 p 1147 Philip Benton 1888 The History of Rochford Hundred together with the Parishes Comprised Within the Union Vol 2 3 Unicorn Press p 907 ISBN 978 0 9516587 1 0 a b c d e Judith Williams 1 December 2006 Shoeburyness A History Phillimore ISBN 978 1 86077 435 5 a b Is the Peace Tranquillity and Beauty of Shoebury Common under Threat from the Council s Proposals Daphne Johnson Ruth Stockley 2013 In the Matter of an Application to Register Land Known as Shoebury Common Road Shoebury Southend On Sea Essex as a Town or Village Green PDF Report p 24 Application Number VG 01 2013 The almost forgotten Manor Suttons For the Love of History 19 April 2021 GB Historical GIS University of Portsmouth History of South Shoebury in Southend on Sea and Essex Map and description A Vision of Britain through Time North Shoebury The Comprehensive Gazetteer of England amp Wales 1894 1895 a b c The Federation of Essex Women s Institute 19 October 1988 The Essex Village Book Published jointly by Countryside Books and the FEWI ISBN 978 1 85306 013 7 Patrick Barry 1865 Shoeburyness and the guns a philosophical discourse ISBN 978 1 275 49149 6 Malcolm E Falkus 1 January 1988 Always under Pressure A History of North Thames Gas since 1949 Springer pp 27 28 ISBN 978 0 333 46819 7 Shoeburyness Urban District Council The National Archives Retrieved 29 March 2023 Winston S Churchill The Second World War vol 1 The Gathering Storm Boston Houghton Mifflin 1948 p 505 Simpson James 23 November 2014 How Britain Beat Germany s Magnetic Sea Mines War Is Boring Retrieved 31 May 2017 Gordon Dee 3 February 2014 The Secret History of Southend on Sea History Press p 84 ISBN 978 0 7509 5545 4 a b Archaeological Digs in Essex Essex Journal 16 19 1982 Ross Davies 2012 Retail and Commercial Planning RLE Retailing and Distribution Routledge pp 179 181 ISBN 978 1 136 24621 0 Wymer J Brown N R Andrews D D 1995 Excavations at North Shoebury Settlement and Economy in South east Essex 1500BC AD1500 Essex County Council Archaeology Section Planning Department in conjunction with the Scole Archaeological Committee ISBN 978 1 85281 130 3 Parsons Barn Wetherspoons Retrieved 9 April 2023 Ian Yearsley 15 April 2016 Southend in 50 Buildings ISBN 978 1 4456 5189 7 MOD Shoeburyness Qinetiq Retrieved 12 March 2016 After 35 years heritage centre finally set to open in Shoebury Garrison Yellow Advertiser 5 August 2022 a b MOD Shoeburyness Qinetiq Retrieved 12 March 2016 Blue flags awarded to a dozen sunny Anglia beaches ITV News Retrieved 31 May 2017 Shoebury East Beach The Beach Guide Retrieved 30 March 2023 Shoebury Common Beach Visit Southend Retrieved 30 March 2023 HM Coastguard Southend respond to Shoebury submerged car Evening Echo 30 December 2022 WHERE TO RIDE IN SOUTHEND Love to Ride Essex Retrieved 30 March 2023 Shoeburyness West Road Christmas lights switch on Evening Echo 10 November 2021 Commercial Opportunity Ness Road Shoeburyness Rightmove Retrieved 30 March 2023 THE RENOWN SHOEBURYNESS Hair amp Son Retrieved 30 March 2023 Asda Shoeburyness Asda Retrieved 30 March 2023 Lidl reveals opening date for new store on Campfield Road Shoebury Evening Echo 4 February 2021 Southend Local Plan 3 8 Shoeburyness Southend City Council Retrieved 15 April 2023 Ward Maps Southend City Council Retrieved 29 March 2023 Ian Yearsley 15 September 2022 Secret City of Southend ISBN 978 1 3981 1155 4 Annual Report of the Local Government Board London 1895 p 249 Retrieved 6 September 2023 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Shoeburyness Urban District Council Change of name Essex County Chronicle Chelmsford 18 January 1895 p 1 Retrieved 6 September 2023 Relationships and changes South Shoebury CP AP through time A Vision of Britain through Time Retrieved 6 March 2024 Population statistics South Shoebury CP AP through time A Vision of Britain through Time Retrieved 6 March 2024 Yearsley I 2016 Southend in 50 Buildings ISBN 978 1 4456 5189 7 Shoeburyness UD Essex through time Administrative history of Local Government District Archived 1 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine visionofbritain org uk accessed 18 November 2017 Appendix M Urban Powers Conferred Twenty sixth Annual Report of the Local Government Board 1897 Shoeburyness Climatic Averages 1991 2020 Met Office Retrieved 17 December 2021 The Best Primary Schools in Shoeburyness Locrating Retrieved 29 March 2023 Shoeburyness Leisure Centre Visit Southend Retrieved 29 March 2023 Palace Cinema Cinema Treasures Retrieved 29 March 2023 Gunners Park and Shoebury Ranges Essex Wildlife Trust Retrieved 30 August 2016 Shoebury Garrison Conservation Area Southend on Sea Borough Council Retrieved 19 October 2017 Listed Buildings in Shoeburyness Ward Southend on Sea British Listing Buildings co uk Retrieved 19 October 2017 Shoeburyness Historic England Retrieved 10 April 2023 Pig s Bay Southend on Sea Ordance Survey Retrieved 29 March 2023 Explosions Shoeburyness And Foulness Damage Hansard Volume 564 12 February 1957 Cold War defence boom Pig s Bay Shoeburyness Historic England Retrieved 29 March 2023 Passenger Carriages Pressed Steel Co Class 117 DMU Trailer Composite with Lavatory TCL Helston Railway Retrieved 29 March 2023 The Shoeburyness Military Tramways Byelaws PDF Statutory Instruments No 388 Her Majesty s Principal Secretary of State for the War Department 1960 119 Essex 297 QXA DB 977144 MTA Brake Force Runner Departmentals com Retrieved 12 March 2016 Shoeburyness Fishermen Hailing a Whitstable Hoy before 1809 National Gallery of Canada website retrieved 18 June 2013 Shoeburyness Fisherman Hailing a Whitstable Hoy tate org uk retrieved 18 June 2013 The Temeraire Reread Victory of Eagles Tor com 18 May 2016 Retrieved 31 May 2017 The Commuter by Ceephax Acid Crew 2010 on YouTube accessed 18 November 2017 Springfield Springfield Archived from the original on 9 September 2014 Billy Bragg A13 Trunk Road to the Sea Ian Dury Billericay Dickie Jurassic World Dominion Dinotracker www dinotracker com Retrieved 15 June 2022 Dinotracker 19 May 2022 The residents of Shoeburyness U K ignored DPW warnings of growing prehistoric predator activity in their area Unfortunately their pets paid the price Tweet Retrieved 15 June 2022 via Twitter England Sophie 25 June 2022 Jurassic World marketing campaigns filmed in Southend Echo News Retrieved 25 June 2022 Ace Juliet 3 December 2007 Tony Holland The Guardian London Retrieved 25 May 2010 Personnel 58th Brigade Royal Field Artillery Retrieved 17 March 2024 Long awaited centre opens near Southend Key Military 20 October 2023 External links edit nbsp Media related to Shoeburyness at Wikimedia Commons Shoeburyness Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 24 11th ed 1911 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shoeburyness amp oldid 1217248867, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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