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Shrewsbury

Shrewsbury (/ˈʃrzbəri/ SHROHZ-bər-ee, also /ˈʃrz-/ SHROOZ-)[1][2] is a market town, civil parish and the county town of Shropshire, England. It is sited on the River Severn, 150 miles (240 km) north-west of London. At the 2021 census, the parish had a population of 76,782.[3]

Shrewsbury
County town
Clockwise from top: Shrewsbury skyline, Shrewsbury Castle, English Bridge and The Square
Shrewsbury
Location within Shropshire
Population76,782 (2021 Census)
OS grid referenceSJ 4915 1253
Civil parish
  • Shrewsbury
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Areas of the town
Post townSHREWSBURY
Postcode districtSY1 SY2 SY3
Dialling code01743
PoliceWest Mercia
FireShropshire
AmbulanceWest Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Shropshire

52°42′29″N 2°45′14″W / 52.708°N 2.754°W / 52.708; -2.754

Shrewsbury has Saxon roots and institutions whose foundations dating from that time represent a cultural continuity possibly going back as far as the 8th century.[4][5] The centre has a largely undisturbed medieval street plan and over 660 listed buildings,[6] including several examples of timber framing from the 15th and 16th centuries. Shrewsbury Castle, a red sandstone fortification, and Shrewsbury Abbey, were founded in 1074 and 1083 respectively by the Norman Earl of Shrewsbury, Roger de Montgomery.[7] The town is the birthplace of Charles Darwin.[8] It has had a role in nurturing aspects of English culture, including drama,[9] ballet, dance[10] and pantomime.[10]

Located 9 miles (14 km) east of the Welsh border, Shrewsbury serves as the commercial centre for Shropshire and parts of mid-Wales, with a retail output of over £299 million per year and light industry and distribution centres, such as Battlefield Enterprise Park, on the outskirts. The A5 and A49 trunk roads come together as the town's by-pass and five railway lines meet at Shrewsbury railway station.

Toponymy edit

In Old English the settlement was known as Scrobbesburh (dative Scrobbesbyrig), which may mean either "Scrobb's fort" or "the fortified place in the bushes" (or "shrubs", the modern derivate).[11] This name gradually evolved in three directions, into Sciropscire, which became Shropshire; into Sloppesberie, which became Salop / Salopia (an alternative name for both town and county), and into Schrosberie, which eventually became the town's name, Shrewsbury.[12]

Its later Welsh name Amwythig means "fortified place".[13]

History edit

Prehistory edit

Evidence of Neolithic occupation of a religious form dating back before 2,000 BC, was discovered in 2017 in the grounds of the medieval Church of the Holy Fathers in Sutton Farm, making it Britain's oldest place of worship.[14] An Early Bronze Age urned burial was excavated at Crowmeole in 2015.[15] An Iron Age double ring ditch has been excavated at Meole Brace. Amongst other finds, parts of an iron age sword and scabbard were recovered.[16][17]

Roman and Post-Roman edit

At Meole Brace, an extensive roadside settlement along the line of the Roman military road connecting Viroconium Cornoviorum and Caersws was uncovered,[18] with evidence of trading of amphorae and mortaria.[19] A major discovery was the finding of the Shrewsbury Hoard of more than 9000 Roman coins in a field near the town in 2009.[20][21]

Prior to the late 8th century, there is little in the way of reliable records. There is a tradition that the town was "founded in the 5th century, on occasion of the decay of the Roman Uriconium." The historian, John Wacher, suggests that Shrewsbury may have been refortified by refugees fleeing an outbreak of a plague in Viroconium around this time.[22]

It is claimed that Pengwern, sometime capital of the Kingdom of Powis (itself established by the 440s), was at Shrewsbury.[23] The first attested association of Pengwern with Shrewsbury is mentioned by Giraldus Cambrensis in the 12th century. Alternative suggestions as to the location of Pengwern include Whittington Castle near Oswestry,[24] and Berth, a hillfort near Baschurch. The Historia Divae Monacellae, composed in the 14th or 15th century, says that Brochwel Ysgithrog, the 6th-century king of Powis, had a palace at Shrewsbury that became the site of the foundation of St Chad.[25]

Saxon edit

In late 8th century, it is claimed that Offa took the town for the Mercians in 778,[26][a] and he is associated by some sources with establishing the town's first church and dedicating it to St Chad.[28] If so, then there may have been an ecclesiastical foundation in the town within a century of the death of Chad of Mercia.[29]

By the beginning of the 10th century, Shrewsbury was home to three moneyers who had permission to operate a mint in the town, using dies supplied by the royal government.[30][31]

 
Æthelflæd, 'Lady of the Mercians'

In 914,[32][b] Æthelflæd, daughter of Alfred the Great and known as the Lady of the Mercians, fortified Shrewsbury, along with Hereford and two other fortresses, at Scergeat (a currently unknown location) and Weardbyrig (thought to be Whitchurch,[34] which would make sense given the strategic importance of the Roman Road link via the Via Devana). Viking raiders from the north were reaching as far south as Bridgnorth by 910.[34]

In the early tenth century, the relics of St Alkmund were translated to the town from Derby, this was probably the work of Æthelflæd.[35] (Later, after St Alkmund's Church became the property of Lilleshall Abbey in about 1145, the relics were retranslated back to Derby.)[36]

Norman edit

 
Shrewsbury Castle, built at around 1074 by Roger de Montgomery

Roger de Montgomery was given the town as a gift from William the Conqueror and took the title of Earl of Shrewsbury. He built at Shrewsbury Castle in 1074,[7] though archaeological excavations at the site of Shrewsbury castle in 2019 have indicated that the location may have been a fortified site in the time of the Saxons.[37]

 
Shrewsbury Abbey, founded 1083

He also founded Shrewsbury Abbey as a Benedictine monastery in 1083.[38]

The town's position just off Watling Street placed it within the Forest of Arden, a thickly wooded area, unpenetrated by Roman roads and somewhat dangerous in medieval times, so that travellers would pray at Coughton before entering.[39]

In 1102, Robert of Bellême, 3rd Earl of Shrewsbury was deposed and the title forfeited, as a consequence of him rebelling against Henry I and joining the Duke of Normandy's invasion of England in 1101. William Pantulf, Lord of Wem, assisted Henry in putting down the rebellion. To deal with the thickly wooded local forests, ideal for the concealment of archers, Pantulf brought in 6,000 foot soldiers to cut down trees and open up the roads.[40][12] Henry subsequently took the government of the town into his own hands and in 1116 the nobility of England did homage to William Ætheling, Henry’s son, at Shrewsbury, and swore allegiance to his father.[41] The early death of William Ætheling without issue led to the succession crisis, known in history as the Anarchy, and during this period, in 1138, King Stephen successfully besieged the town's castle held by William FitzAlan for the Empress Maud.[42]

 
Part of the prologue of a life of St Winifred by Robert of Shrewsbury (Bodleian Mss. Laud c.94.)

In 1138 the relics of St Winifred were brought to Shrewsbury from Gwytheryn,[43] following their purchase by the Abbot of Shrewsbury, the abbey being ready for consecration but having no relics prior to that time.[44] The popularity of St Winifred grew in the 14th and 15th centuries and a new shrine for her relics was built in the late 1300s. Around this time the abbey illegally acquired the relics of St Beuno, uncle of St Winifred, by stealing them. As a result the abbey was fined but allowed to keep the relics[45]

From 1155, during the reign of Henry II, there was a leper hospital dedicated to St Giles and associated with Shrewsbury Abbey. From the 1220s, there was also a general hospital dedicated to St John the Baptist.[46]

In January 1234 Prince Llywelyn ab Iorwerth of Wales and Richard Marshal, 3rd Earl of Pembroke burned down the town and laid siege to its castle.[47]

In 1283, Edward I summoned a parliament in Shrewsbury, later adjourned to Acton Burnell,[48] to try and condemn Dafydd ap Gruffydd, last of the native Princes of Wales, to execution by hanging, drawing and quartering within the town after Dafydd was captured, ending his rebellion against the king.[49] It is thought this parliament met in the Abbey.[28]

Middle Ages edit

Shrewsbury was devastated by the Black Death, which, records suggest, arrived in the spring of 1349.[50] Examining the number of local church benefices falling vacant due to death, 1349 alone saw twice as many vacancies as the previous ten years combined, suggesting a high death toll in Shrewsbury.[51]

"The Great Fire of Shrewsbury" took place in 1394: St Chad's church was consumed by an accidental fire, which spread to a great portion of the town, then chiefly consisting of timber houses with thatched roofs. The damage was so considerable that Richard II remitted the town's taxes for three years towards the repairs.[28] In 1398, Richard summoned a Great Parliament in the town, which is believed to have met in the Abbey.[28]

In 1403 the Battle of Shrewsbury was fought at Battlefield, a few miles north of the town centre, between King Henry IV and Henry Percy (Hotspur), with the king emerging victorious.[52] Hotspur's body was taken by Thomas Neville, to Whitchurch, for burial. However, when rumours circulated that Percy was still alive, the king "had the corpse exhumed and displayed it, propped upright between two millstones, in the market place at Shrewsbury".[53] That being done, Percy was subjected to posthumous execution.[54]

 
The Two Princes Edward and Richard in the Tower, 1483 by Sir John Everett Millais: Richard of Shrewsbury was born in the town, his older brother Edward was resident in the town and engaged in its government as Prince of Wales

One of the Princess in the Tower, Richard of Shrewsbury, was born in the town around 17 August 1473,[55] the second son of King Edward IV of England and Elizabeth Woodville. In 1480, Edward V, then Prince of Wales (and the other prince of the Princes in the Tower), was resident in Shrewsbury. On May 11, Edward V he confirmed the composition of the town's Mercer's Company, which had merged with the guilds of the Ironmongers and Goldsmiths. This fraternity were patrons of the Altar of St. Michael in St. Chad's Church and they kept a Mercers Hall on the site of the Sextry of Old St Chads.[28]

 
The building Henry Tudor stayed in before the Battle of Bosworth

In 1485, ahead of the Battle of Bosworth Field, Henry Tudor, while not yet king, marched his forces on a route that lay through Shrewsbury. He was initially denied access to the town, but on intervention by a member of the Stanley family he was admitted.[56][57] Thomas Mytton, the Bailiff of the town, a supporter of Richard III, had vowed that the only way he would get through was "over his dead body". Thomas then lay down and allowed Henry to step over him, to free himself from his oath.[58] Henry was accommodated in the building now known as Henry Tudor House on Wyle Cop.[59]

In 1490, Henry VII, accompanied by his queen and his son, Prince Arthur, celebrated the feast of St. George in the town.[28] The town is recorded as having entertained Henry again in 1496, with attendants lodged in the Sextry of Old St Chads;[28] more generally it is said of Henry VII's relations with the town that:

The intercourse which had begun thus favourably was kept up in after years by Henry, who, with his queen and son, frequently visited this town, upon which occasions they were feasted by the Bailiffs in a most royal and hospitable manner.[28]

Reformation edit

Shrewsbury's monastic institutions were disbanded with the Dissolution of the Monasteries and the Abbey was closed in 1540. Henry VIII intended to make Shrewsbury one of his 13 new bishoprics (serving Shropshire and Staffordshire) and hence a cathedral city, after the formation of the Church of England but the citizens of the town declined the offer, which is the point of origin of the term "Proud Salopians": the town leadership preferring to be the most senior town in the country and not the most junior city.[28][c]

As a consequence of the dissolution, the monastic hospitals were closed and the incomes from their endowments were transferred to secular owners. St Giles's leper hospital passed to the Prince family, who were succeeded by their descendants the Earls of Tankerville. St John the Baptist hospital passed to the Wood family and became almshouses.[46] At this time the shrine and relics of St Winifred were destroyed.[44]

Council of Wales and the Marches edit

 
Sir Henry Sidney
Principal members of the Council of the Marches

The Council of Wales and the Marches was established during the 1470s by Edward IV with a headquarters in the town.[60] Its buildings partly survive near the castle and were later adapted to be an episcopal palace,[61] the council also met at Ludlow Castle. Members of this council included John Dudley, Earl of Warwick, Sir Henry Sidney,William Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke, and Sir Rowland Hill, publisher of the Geneva Bible and potential inspiration for a hero in Shakespeare's As You Like It.[62]

 
Gate house of the council headquarters in the town

Its functions were interpreted widely. It was to hear all suits, civil and criminal, which were brought by individuals too poor to sue at common law; it was to try all cases of murder, felony, piracy, wrecking and such crimes as were likely to disturb the peace; it was to investigate charges of misgovernment by officials and the false verdicts of juries; it was to enforce the laws against livery and maintenance, to punish rumour mongers and adulterers, and to deal with disputes concerning enclosures, villein service and manorial questions; it heard appeals from the common law courts; and it was responsible for administering the legislation dealing with religion.[63] According to historian John Davies, at its peak in the mid-16th Century, the Council:

represented a remarkable experiment in regional government. It administered the law cheaply and rapidly; it dealt with up to twenty cases a day and George Owen stated that the 'oppressed poor' flocked to it.[64]

 
Dr John Caius

In 1551 there was a notable outbreak of sweating sickness in the town, which Dr John Caius was in the town to attend to at the command of the council.[65] The following year, after his return to London, Caius published A Boke or Counseill Against the Disease Commonly Called the Sweate, or Sweatyng Sicknesse. The president of the council was the dedicatee of the book and the dedicatory epistle explains his appointment. This text became the main source of knowledge of this disease, now understood to be influenza.[66]

In 1581, Sir Henry Sidney, celebrated the feast of St. George, on April 23, in this town, with great splendour: a solemn procession went from the Council House to St. Chad’s Church, the choir of which was fitted up in imitation of St. George’s Chapel, Windsor with the stalls decorated with the arms of the Knights of the Garter; on the conclusion of divine service Sir Henry devoted the afternoon to feasting the burgesses.[28]

Early Modern edit

Shrewsbury thrived throughout the 16th and 17th centuries, a period when the town was at the height of its commercial importance. This success was largely due to the town's location, which allowed it to control the Welsh wool trade, a major industry at the time, with the rest of Britain and Europe, with the River Severn and Watling Street acting as trading routes.[67] This trade was dominated by the Shrewsbury Drapers Company for many years.[68] As a result, a number of grand edifices, including the Ireland's Mansion (built 1575) and Draper's Hall (1658), were constructed.

It was in this period that Edward VI gave permission for the foundation of a free school, which was later to become Shrewsbury School.[69]

Civil War edit

 
Prince Rupert

During the English Civil War, Shrewsbury was a Royalist stronghold, under the command of Sir Francis Ottley.[70] In the autumn of 1642 Charles I had a temporary base in the town.[71]

Prince Rupert established his headquarters in the town on 18 February 1644, being welcomed by Shrewsbury's aldermen. He was billeted in a building then the home of the family of Thomas Jones[72] in the precincts of what is now the Prince Rupert Hotel.[73] Shrewsbury only fell to Parliament forces after they were let in by a parliamentarian sympathiser at the St Mary's Water Gate (now also known as Traitor's Gate).[74] After Thomas Mytton captured Shrewsbury in February 1645; in following with the ordnance of no quarter; a dozen Irish prisoners were selected to be killed after picking lots.[75][76] This prompted Rupert to respond by executing Parliamentarian prisoners in Oswestry.[77]

Georgian and Victorian edit

By the 18th century Shrewsbury had become an important market town and stopping point for stagecoaches travelling between London and Holyhead with passengers on their way to Ireland; this led to the establishment of a number of coaching inns, many of which, such as the Lion Hotel, are extant to this day.

 
The former Shire Hall (since demolished) and Old Market Hall, 1796

A town hall was built in the Market Place on the site of an ancient guildhall in 1730;[78] it was demolished and a new combined guildhall and shirehall was erected on the site in 1837.[79]

Local soldier and statesman Robert Clive served as the town's mayor in 1762 and was Shrewsbury's MP from 1762 until his death in 1774.[80]

St Chad's Church collapsed in 1788 after attempts to expand the crypt compromised the structural integrity of the tower above. Now known as Old St Chad's, the remains of the church building and its churchyard are on the corner of Princess Street, College Hill and Belmont. A new St Chad's Church was built just four years after the collapse, but as a large neo-classical round church and in a different and more elevated location, at the top of Claremont Hill close to the Quarry.[31]

In the Industrial Revolution the Shrewsbury Canal opened in 1797, initially connecting the town to Trench. By 1835 it had been linked up to the Shropshire Canal and thence to the rest of the canal network.[81]

In the period directly after Napoleon's surrender after the Waterloo, the town's own 53rd (Shropshire) Regiment of Foot was sent to guard him in his exile on St Helena. A locket containing a lock of the emperor's hair, presented to an officer of the 53rd, remains to this day in the collections of the Soldiers of Shropshire Museum at Shrewsbury Castle.[82]

 
Shrewsbury's Georgian prison

HM Prison Shrewsbury, when new in the Georgian period, was considered a national example of improved conditions and more enlightened penal policy. Times change and a 2005 report on prison population found that it was the most overcrowded in England and Wales, despite a major expansion in Victorian times.[83] The prison, which was also known as the Dana because it was built near the site of the medieval Dana gaol, was closed in 2013 and then sold by the Ministry of Justice to private property developers in 2014.[84]

In 1821, the county purchased a building in College Hill which was adapted to become the judge's lodgings, providing accommodation for the judges and their retinue during their attendance at the Assizes.[28]

20th and 21st centuries edit

 
BT Telephone Exchange, Town Walls

The town suffered very little from air raids in the Second World War; the worst case was in 1940, when a woman and her two grandchildren were killed when a cottage was destroyed on Ellesmere Road, the only local air raid deaths.[85] Therefore, many of its ancient buildings remain intact and there was little redevelopment in the 1960s and 1970s. However, some historic buildings were demolished to make way for the brutalist architectural style of the 1960s, though the town was saved from a new inner ring road due to its challenging geography.[86] A notable example of 1960s/70s construction in Shrewsbury was Telecom House on Smithfield Road, demolished in the 2000s.[87]

Between 1962 and 1992 there was a hardened nuclear bunker, built for No 16 Group Royal Observer Corps Shrewsbury, who provided the field force of the United Kingdom Warning and Monitoring Organisation and would have sounded the four-minute warning alarm in the event of war and warned the population of Shrewsbury in the event of approaching radioactive fallout.[88] The building was staffed by up to 120 volunteers who trained on a weekly basis. After the breakup of the communist bloc in 1989, the Royal Observer Corps was disbanded between September 1991 and December 1995. However, the nuclear bunker still stands just inside Holywell Street near the Abbey as a lasting reminder of the Cold War, but is now converted and used as a veterinary practice.[89]

The town was targeted by the IRA in 1992. One bomb was detonated at Shrewsbury Castle, causing severe damage to the regimental museum of the Shropshire Light Infantry,[90] estimated to be in the region of £250,000 and many artefacts were lost. A second bomb, detonated in the Darwin Shopping Centre, was put out by the sprinkler system before any major damage was caused. Finally, a third bomb was discovered elsewhere in the town centre but failed to do any serious damage.[91]

 
Flooding in Shrewsbury (2000)

From the late 1990s, the town experienced severe flooding problems from the Severn and Rea Brook. In the autumn of 2000 large swathes of the town were underwater, notably Frankwell, which flooded three times in six weeks.[92] The Frankwell flood defences were completed in 2003, along with the new offices of Shrewsbury and Atcham Borough Council. More recently, such as in 2005 and 2007 but not 2020, flooding has been less severe and the defences have generally held back floodwaters from the town centre areas. However, the town car parks are often left to be flooded in the winter, which reduces trade in the town, most evidenced in the run up to Christmas in 2007.[93]

Shrewsbury won the West Midlands Capital of Enterprise award in 2004.[94] The town has two large expanding business parks, Shrewsbury Business Park by the A5 in the southeast and Battlefield Enterprise Park in the north. There are many residential developments currently under construction in the town to cater for the increasing numbers of people wishing to live in the town, which is a popular place to commute to Telford, Wolverhampton and Birmingham from.[95]

In 2009 Shrewsbury Town Council was formed and the town's traditional coat of arms was returned to everyday use.[96]

In 2021 the lost seal of the town, dating from 1425, was discovered.[97]

Governance edit

The Borough of Shrewsbury's first charter was granted by Henry I allowing the collection of rents. Richard I granted another early charter in 1189. Further charters were granted in 1199 John, 1495, Henry VII, 1638, Charles I and 1685, James II. In 1974 a charter from Elizabeth II incorporated the Borough of Shrewsbury and Atcham, under the auspices of which the town remained until 2009.[98]

Shrewsbury is the administrative centre for the new Shropshire Council, the unitary authority covering most of Shropshire (but excluding the Borough of Telford and Wrekin, a separate unitary authority area). Shropshire Council have their headquarters at the Shirehall, on Abbey Foregate.[99]

Shrewsbury is in the Shrewsbury and Atcham constituency and is the only large settlement in the constituency. At the most recent general election, in 2019, Daniel Kawczynski of the Conservative Party was elected with a majority of 11,217. The 19th-century Prime Minister, Benjamin Disraeli, was MP for Shrewsbury.[100]

Town Council edit

Shrewsbury Town Council
Year Lab Lib Con Grn
2009 3 2 12 0
2010* 4 2 11 0
2012* 4 3 10 0
2013 7 5 5 0
2017 7 3 6 1
2021 7 6 2 2
The changing political make-up of the town council – * = by-election

Until 2009, Shrewsbury was an unparished area with neither town or parish council. Instead, the mayor of Shrewsbury and Atcham, based in the Guildhall in Dogpole,[101] was also the mayor of the town. However, as part of wider changes to local government in Shropshire, the town was parished on 13 May 2008, with a single parish created covering the entire town and previously unparished area. At the time of creation, Shrewsbury was the second-most populous civil parish in England, though further creations of large town councils mean it is now the fourth. The area of the parish is 3,799 hectares (9,390 acres).

The town council first convened on 1 April 2009 and its chair is the mayor of Shrewsbury. For the interim period before the first elections, the existing county councillors who represented electoral divisions covering Shrewsbury were the town councillors. On 4 June 2009, the first election was held to the town council, with councillors elected from 17 single-member wards coterminous with Shropshire Council electoral divisions.

The political make-up of the town council, as of the 2021 local elections, sees Labour as the largest party with 7 seats, the Liberal Democrats with 6, the Conservatives with 2 and the Green Party with 2.

The town council was based at the Guildhall on Frankwell Quay, a facility which had originally been built in 2004 as the headquarters of Shrewsbury and Atcham Borough Council; however the town council moved to Riggs Hall in 2017.[102] Riggs Hall is one of the original buildings on the former site of Shrewsbury School on Castle Gates.[103] Since 2023, the town council have their offices at Livesey House, on St. John's Hill and the council itself meets in the Shirehall.[104]

Coat of arms edit

 
Coat of arms

The coat of arms of the former Shrewsbury Borough Council and now of the Town Council, depicts three loggerheads (leopards), with the motto Floreat Salopia, a Latin phrase that can be translated to "May Shrewsbury Flourish".[105][106] The coat of arms of the (now abolished) Shrewsbury and Atcham Borough Council was Shrewsbury's shield with the addition of Atcham Bridge running above the leopards. The flag of Shropshire and other county crests, also uses the three loggerheads.

Affiliations edit

Shrewsbury was twinned with Zutphen, Netherlands from 1977[107] until 2018.[108] The Royal Navy submarine, HMS Talent, decommissioned in 2022, was affiliated with Shrewsbury.[109]

Geography edit

 
The River Severn at the English Bridge

Shrewsbury is about 14 miles (23 km) west of Telford, 43 miles (69 km) west of Birmingham and the West Midlands conurbation and about 153 miles (246 km) north-west of the capital, London. More locally, the town is to the east of Welshpool, with Bridgnorth and Kidderminster to the south-east. The border with Wales is 9 miles (14 km) to the west.

The town centre is partially built on a hill whose elevation is, at its highest, 246 feet (75 m) above sea level. The longest river in the United Kingdom, the River Severn, flows through the town, forming a meander around its centre.[12] The Rea Brook is a small river that has its confluence with the Severn at Shrewsbury, just upstream from the English Bridge, and much of the Rea Brook Valley within the town is a country park and local nature reserve, encompassing 36 hectares (89 acres).[110] The town is subject to flooding from these rivers.

Areas of Shrewsbury

Geology edit

The town lies to the west of Haughmond Hill, a site where Precambrian rocks, some of the oldest rocks in the county can be found,[111] and the town itself is sited on an area of largely Carboniferous rocks.[112] A fault, the Hodnet Fault, starts approximately at the town and runs north-east into the Stoke-on-Trent area.[113]

Climate edit

 
The Quarry is often busy during spring and summer

The climate of Shrewsbury is similar to that of the rest of Shropshire, generally moderate.

Rainfall averages 76 to 100 cm (30 to 39 in), influenced by being in the rainshadow of the Cambrian Mountains from warm, moist frontal systems of the Atlantic Ocean, which bring generally light precipitation in autumn and spring.[114] The nearest weather station is at Shawbury, about 6.5 miles (10.5 km) north-east of Shrewsbury town centre. The local topography, being that of a low-lying plain surrounded by higher ground to the west, south and east gives the Shrewsbury area its own microclimate – the absolute maximum at Shawbury of 34.9 °C (94.8 °F) and absolute minimum of −25.2 °C (−13.4 °F) represents the largest temperature range of any individual weather station in the British Isles – although the maximum range of average temperatures tends to peak to the south-east of the Shrewsbury area, particularly in the south-east midlands, inland East Anglia and inland south-east England. In an average year, the warmest day is 28.4 °C (83.1 °F),[115] giving a total of 8.9 days[116] of 25.1 °C (77.2 °F) or above. The absolute maximum of 34.9 °C (94.8 °F)[117] was recorded in August 1990.

Conversely, the coldest night of the year typically falls to −9.6 °C (14.7 °F)[118] – in total 61.7 air frosts are recorded in an average year. The absolute minimum of −25.2 °C (−13.4 °F)[119] was recorded in 1981.

Annual average rainfall averages around 650 millimetres (26 in), with over 1 millimetre (0.04 in) falling on 124 days of the year.

Climate data for Shawbury[d]
WMO ID: 03414; coordinates 52°47′41″N 2°39′53″W / 52.79469°N 2.66473°W / 52.79469; -2.66473 (Met Office Shawbury); elevation: 72 m (236 ft); 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1960–present
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 14.6
(58.3)
17.4
(63.3)
21.5
(70.7)
25.2
(77.4)
26.7
(80.1)
31.2
(88.2)
35.7
(96.3)
34.9
(94.8)
29.6
(85.3)
28.1
(82.6)
18.4
(65.1)
15.4
(59.7)
35.7
(96.3)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 7.5
(45.5)
8.1
(46.6)
10.3
(50.5)
13.2
(55.8)
16.3
(61.3)
19.1
(66.4)
21.1
(70.0)
20.7
(69.3)
18.1
(64.6)
14.2
(57.6)
10.3
(50.5)
7.7
(45.9)
13.9
(57.0)
Daily mean °C (°F) 4.3
(39.7)
4.6
(40.3)
6.3
(43.3)
8.6
(47.5)
11.5
(52.7)
14.4
(57.9)
16.3
(61.3)
16.0
(60.8)
13.7
(56.7)
10.4
(50.7)
6.9
(44.4)
4.5
(40.1)
9.8
(49.6)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 1.2
(34.2)
1.2
(34.2)
2.3
(36.1)
3.9
(39.0)
6.8
(44.2)
9.6
(49.3)
11.5
(52.7)
11.4
(52.5)
9.3
(48.7)
6.6
(43.9)
3.5
(38.3)
1.3
(34.3)
5.7
(42.3)
Record low °C (°F) −21.4
(−6.5)
−12.9
(8.8)
−12.2
(10.0)
−5.9
(21.4)
−3.3
(26.1)
−0.5
(31.1)
2.5
(36.5)
0.8
(33.4)
−2.5
(27.5)
−5.9
(21.4)
−12.5
(9.5)
−25.2
(−13.4)
−25.2
(−13.4)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 57.4
(2.26)
43.3
(1.70)
43.4
(1.71)
47.1
(1.85)
53.6
(2.11)
59.0
(2.32)
57.6
(2.27)
64.2
(2.53)
61.1
(2.41)
68.8
(2.71)
60.8
(2.39)
66.3
(2.61)
682.5
(26.87)
Average snowfall mm (inches) 26
(1.0)
19
(0.7)
3
(0.1)
4
(0.2)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
1
(0.0)
27
(1.1)
80
(3.1)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 12.1 10.8 10.2 10.4 10.0 10.1 10.5 10.5 10.0 11.3 12.5 13.1 131.6
Average snowy days 3.0 2.9 1.1 0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.2 1.6 9.1
Average relative humidity (%) 90 87 84 83 82 84 83 83 86 88 90 90 86
Mean monthly sunshine hours 52.8 74.9 114.6 158.1 194.9 187.5 193.3 168.0 134.7 97.5 61.8 49.9 1,487.8
Mean daily daylight hours 8.3 9.9 11.9 14.0 15.8 16.8 16.3 14.7 12.7 10.6 8.7 7.7 12.3
Average ultraviolet index 2 2 2 3 4 4 4 4 3 3 2 2 3
Source 1: Met Office[120] European Climate Assessment and Dataset[121]
Source 2: WeatherAtlas[122]


Demography edit

In 2021, the town of Shrewsbury had a population of 76,782. This represents an increase of 0.69% since 2011. The ethnic distribution was as follows: White – 72,975; Asian – 1755; Black – 348; Arab – 122; Mixed – 1,267; Other – 308.[123]

Religious affiliations were as follows: Christian – 52.7%;, Muslim – 0.5%; Sikh – 0.5%; Buddhist – 0.3%; Hindu – 0.2%; Jewish – 0.1%; Other – 0.1%; No religion – 39.1%; No answer – 6.4%.[124]

Economy edit

 
Pride Hill, one of the town's main shopping streets

Throughout the medieval period, Shrewsbury was a centre for the wool trade,[125] and later used its position on the River Severn to transport goods across England via the canal system.

Unlike many other towns in this period, Shrewsbury never became a major centre for heavy industry. Though, in 1915, the Sentinel Waggon Works at Shrewsbury was opened for the building of steam rail and road locomotives. Later it converted to the production of diesel locomotives before being taken over, in 1958, by Rolls-Royce Limited for the manufacture of their range of diesel industrial engines, so that the Derby facility could concentrate on aero engines.[126]

By the early 1900s, the town became focused on transport services and the general service and professional sector, owing to its position on the A5, part of the strategic route to North Wales.[127]

The town is the location of both town and county councils and a number of retail complexes, both in and out of the town centre. These provide significant employment. Shrewsbury is home to a high number of independent businesses, including shops, cafes and restaurants. Wyle Cop in Shrewsbury is said to have the 'longest uninterrupted row of independent shops'.[128] Four in five jobs in the town are in the service industry. Within this sector, the largest employers are the administration and distribution sectors, which includes retail, food and accommodation.[129]

 
The Parade Shopping Centre is housed in the former premises of the Royal Salop Infirmary.

Shrewsbury has two shopping centres. The Darwin Shopping Centre houses many high street retailers such as Marks & Spencer, H&M, Topshop and Primark.[130] The Parade Shopping Centre is a second centre exclusively housing independent retailers.[citation needed] There are two retail warehouse clusters: at Meole Brace Retail Park to the south and at Sundorne Retail Park to the north. Major supermarkets in the town are the Tesco Extra at Harlescott, Morrisons on Whitchurch Road, Asda on Old Potts Way and Sainsbury's at Meole Brace.

 
Wyle Cop

The visitor economy of Shrewsbury and Atcham was worth about £115 million in 2001, with about 2,500 people employed directly in the visitor industry and 3,400 indirectly. There were about 3.1 million visitors – both day visitors and staying visitors – to the borough in 2001, with 88% being day visitors and 12% being staying visitors; staying visitors accounted for 42% of spending.[131] Shrewsbury's position of being the only sizeable town for a large area, especially to the west in Mid-Wales, allows it to attract a large retail base beyond that of its resident population. This is not only evident in the retail sector, but also in the healthcare sector, where the Royal Shrewsbury Hospital has the only A&E department westwards until Aberystwyth, about 75 miles (121 km) away.[132]

Businesses in Shrewsbury voted in favour of a Business Improvement District in late 2013 and Shrewsbury BID started operating in April 2014. Shrewsbury BID delivers on a five-year business plan of projects, which include major destination marketing campaigns, significant cost savings for businesses and strategic work ensuring the best possible town centre environment in which business can flourish. The company is governed by a board of directors and employed three staff full-time in 2017.[133]

In terms of social and economic deprivation, according to the Overall Index of Multiple Deprivation of 2004, one Super Output Area (SOA) in the town is in the bottom 15% of all areas nationally. This area is in the ward of Harlescott.[134] A further four SOAs fall into the bottom 30% nationally, these being in the wards of Monkmoor, Sundorne, Battlefield and Heathgates and Meole Brace. The most affluent areas of the town are generally to the south and west, around the grounds of Shrewsbury School and the Copthorne area.[citation needed]

Culture edit

Literary and performance heritage edit

 
A surviving 1679 arbour, that of the Shoemakers Guild

Prior to the Reformation, there are accounts of major festivals in Kingsland:

In ancient times, while the Romish religion prevailed, all the companies united once a year in celebrating the day of Corpus Christi, with great pomp and splendour. At the reformation this ceremony was commuted for another, held on the second Monday after Trinity Sunday, which is still continued, though with less pomp and circumstance than formerly. The Companies form themselves into processions, headed severally by men on horseback in gaudy apparel, called kings, probably as representatives of the monarchs who granted their charters* They move in marshalled array to Kingsland, where they are met by the mayor and corporation and the day is spent in festivity.[135]

The town's Quarry Park has been the site of cultural activity since before the Reformation: a bank there, cut in the form of an amphitheatre, was used by the friars of the adjacent convent, who performed the ancient religious mystery plays or miracle plays;[28] this continued in the mid-16th century when the plays of Thomas Ashton's Shrewsbury School attracted royal attention.[136] On several occasions the school put on pageants for the visiting Council of Wales and the Marches. In 1581, the Lord President, Sir Henry Sidney, leaving the town by barge, was greeted by several scholars on an island downstream of the castle dressed as green nymphs with willow branches tied to their heads reciting verses across the water.[137]

 
Quarto edition of Henry IV, Part 1

William Shakespeare set the last two acts of his play, Henry IV, Part 1, written around 1596, near the town.[138] It has been suggested, placing reliance on a record of a performance by his company, the King's Men in the town between 1603 and 1605, and supposed familiarity with the landscape; that Shakespeare performed in the town and knew the area.[139]

The playwright George Farquhar's 1706 play The Recruiting Officer is set in the town.[140]

In the later Renaissance period, the land at Kingsland was devoted to elaborate performances, with grand arbours being built by the various town guilds.[141] Some of the arbours survive, such as that for the Shoemakers Guild.[142]

 
John Weaver's 1718 production of Orpheus and Eurydice

Known as the father of English ballet,[143] as well as the originator of pantomime,[144] John Weaver, developed his art in Shrewsbury. A second generation dancing master in the town,[145] he also wrote on the philosophy, theology, statecraft and biology embedded in his era's understating of dance, which he located in a wider understanding of his culture as representing a component of Ptolemaic harmony and an earnest part of the statecraft of his time.[146]

In modern popular culture edit

Pioneering early 18th-century travel writers, Daniel Defoe and Celia Fiennes, wrote about their visits to Shrewsbury in A Tour thro' the Whole Island of Great Britain[147] and Through England on a Side Saddle in the Time of William and Mary[148] respectively.

In the 19th century, Charles Dickens made three visits to the town. The first, in 1838, was while he was travelling to Wales. On this occasion he stayed at the Lion Hotel. In 1852 he again visited, this time as part of a theatrical tour, staging benefit performances to raise money for the Guild of Literature and Art. His final visit, in 1858, was as part of a nationwide reading tour. Once again he stayed at the Lion.[149]

The town appears in the Brother Cadfael novels by Ellis Peters. The novels take Shrewsbury Abbey for their setting and have made medieval Shrewsbury familiar to a wide readership.[150]

Shrewsbury was used as the setting for the 1984 television film A Christmas Carol, which filmed many of its interior and exterior shots in and around the town.[149]

 
The Magnum Photos Evolution Explored exhibition in The Square

In early 2017, Shrewsbury BID, The Hive and GRAIN Photography Hub organised an outdoor Magnum Photos exhibition.[151] Inspired by Shrewsbury's links to Charles Darwin, this exhibition considered the theme of evolution through the eyes of international photographers. The 10-week exhibition was free to the public and staged at St Mary's Churchyard and The Square.

In 2022, the BBC production of Great Expectations with Olivia Colman and Tom Hardy was filmed in the town.[152] The same year, episodes of The Apprentice and Celebrity Hunted were filmed in Shrewsbury. The prison was used for the BBC TV series Time as well appearing in the ITV remake of The Ipcress File.[153]

Contemporary performance edit

Theatre Severn is the town's main performing arts complex, it is situated in Frankwell next to the Welsh Bridge on the bank of the River Severn. The theatre includes two performance spaces, the 635 seat Main Auditorium and a smaller studio space, the Walker Theatre, which can accommodate 250 seating or 500 standing. The venue includes a full sized dance studio, function rooms and a restaurant.[154] The new complex replaced the old theatre, the Music Hall, which has been refurbished and expanded in preparation for its current use as home to Shrewsbury Museum and Art Gallery, opened 2014.[155]

Royal visits edit

The following royal visits have been made to Shrewsbury in modern times:

Festivals and events edit

 
The Shropshire Horticultural Society organises the town's annual flower show in August.

The town is home to the 'longest running flower show in the world'. The annual Shrewsbury Flower Show is a two-day event, which takes place in mid-August, has been running for more than 125 years.[169] The event attracts around 100,000 visitors each year and offers a multitude of events, exhibitions and gardens, with a fireworks display at the end of each day.

 
The Shrewsbury Folk Festival is held at the West Mid Showground.

The Shrewsbury Folk Festival has been held in Shrewsbury since 2006. Held annually over the August bank holiday, the event is very popular, with people travelling from across the UK to attend.[170]

The town celebrates its links to Darwin with an annual Darwin Festival in February. The two and a half week multi-media event celebrates the town as the 'Origin of Independent Thinking' with activities including lectures, dance performances and live music.[171]

Other events held in Shrewsbury's busy spring and summer of events include the Shrewsbury Bookfest, Shrewsbury Regatta, Cycle Grand Prix, Shrewsbury Carnival, Food Festival, Dragon Boat Race and the Coracle World Championships.[172] Since 2016, Shrewsbury International Comedy Festival has been held over the third weekend of July in multiple venues across town.[173]

Comics Salopia (formerly the Cartoon Festival) was a large biannual festival of the comics arts, attracting over a quarter of a million visitors. In format and scope it aimed to emulate on a smaller scale, the Angoulême International Comics Festival in France. In June 2023, It was announced that after making substantial losses in 2022, it would not be continued.[174]

Museums and attractions edit

 
Shrewsbury Museum and Art Gallery

The Shrewsbury Museum and Art Gallery is in the town square, occupying the former music hall and the 13th-century Vaughan's mansion and is part of Shropshire Museums.[175]

The Old Market Hall cinema opened in 2004 in the prominent Tudor market hall positioned in The Square. The independent cinema features daily screens of films from around the world along with a cafe and bar.[176]

Further museums in the town include the Shropshire Regimental Museum, renamed in 2019 as Soldiers of Shropshire Museum,[177] based at Shrewsbury Castle,[7] and the restored 19th-century steam-powered Coleham Pumping Station,[178] which opens for tours on specific days each year.

There are various private galleries and art shops around the town, including the Gateway Education and Arts Centre.[179]

The National Trust owns the last remaining Town Walls Tower which dates from the 14th century. It is now available to rent as a one bedroom holiday cottage.[180]

 
The Golden Cross

The town has some very old public houses and coaching inns:

  • The Golden Cross is reputed to be the oldest licensed public house in Shrewsbury and records show that it was used as an inn as far back as 1428; its original name was the Sextry, because it began as the sacristy of Old St Chad's Church.[181]
  • The King's Head in Mardol contains a 14th-century wall painting,[182] and its timbers have been dated to c.1404.[183]
  • The Dun Cow in Abbey Foregate dates to the 16th century.[184]

Media edit

Two newspapers are published for Shrewsbury – the local edition of the county's Shropshire Star and the more traditional Shrewsbury Chronicle, which is one of the oldest weekly newspapers in the country, having produced its first edition in 1772.[185] The forerunner of Private Eye was a school magazine edited by Richard Ingrams, Willie Rushton, Christopher Booker and Paul Foot at Shrewsbury School in the mid-1950s.[186]

Local news and television programmes are provided by BBC West Midlands and ITV Central. Television signals are received from the Wrekin TV transmitter.[187]

There are three radio stations that specifically serve either the Shrewsbury area or encompass it as part of a Shropshire-wide broadcast. They are Free Radio Black Country & Shropshire;[188] BBC Radio Shropshire, which is based in Shrewsbury;[189] and, as of September 2020, Greatest Hits Radio Black Country & Shropshire, which previously broadcast from the Shropshire Star building in Telford.[190]

In 2009 an online independent media company, Shropshire Live, launched covering Shrewsbury and Shropshire.[191]

Food edit

Shrewsbury cakes (or biscuits) are typically crisp and brittle creations that may incorporate fruit. They can be small in size for serving several at a time, or large for serving as a dessert in their own right. Traditionally they have a distinct hint of lemon.[192] The playwright William Congreve mentioned Shrewsbury cakes in his play The Way of the World in 1700 as a simile[193] (Witwoud – "Why, brother Wilfull of Salop, you may be as short as a Shrewsbury cake, if you please. But I tell you 'tis not modish to know relations in town"). The recipe is also included in several early cookbooks including The Compleat Cook of 1658.[194] A final reference to the cakes can be seen to this day as the subject of a plaque affixed to a building close to Shrewsbury's town library by the junction of Castle Street and School Gardens. The aforementioned plaque marks the spot where the Shrewsbury Cake's recipe is said to have been pioneered in 1760 by Mr Pailin;[192] a further quote, drawn from Richard Harris Barham's Ingoldby Legends, reads:

Oh! Pailin. Prince of Cake Compounders
The mouth liquifies at the very name.

Shrewsbury is the origin of a popular Simnel cake recipe. Different towns had their own recipes and shapes of the Simnel cake. Bury, Devizes and Shrewsbury produced large numbers to their own recipes, but it is the Bury version that became most well known.[195]

The town is alleged to be the origin of Shrewsbury sauce, made from Worcester sauce, red wine and mustard, thickened with flour, which is typically served with lamb. Only known from the 1960s when it appeared in the J. Salmon County Series Cookbooks.[196]

 
Ditherington Flax Mill

Beer brewed in Shrewsbury was celebrated as early as about 1400 when the bard Iolo Goch praised the supply of "Crwg Amwythig" dispensed at the Sycharth palace of Owain Glyndŵr.[197] In 1900 there were eight breweries in the town, chief among them being Southam's and Trouncer's, which had their own maltings and owned many local public houses, as well as five other maltsters,[198] but the conventional brewing industry gradually closed after takeovers in the 1960s. The last maltings, at Ditherington, closed in 1987.[199] Completed in 1797, these maltings, known as the Ditherington Flax Mill from its original purpose, was the world's first iron-framed building and commonly regarded as "the grandfather of the skyscraper". Its importance was recognised in the 1950s, resulting in it becoming a Grade I listed building.[200][201] After the biggest heritage project ever undertaken by Historic England, the building was restored and opened as a museum in 2022.[202]

A real ale brewery, The Salopian Brewery, was established in the town in 1995.[203] It was based in the Old Dairy on Mytton Oak Road before relocating in 2014 to Hadnall a few miles north of the town.[204]

Architecture edit

 
Fish Street and Grope Lane, Shrewsbury

The historic town centre still retains its medieval street pattern and many narrow passages. Some of the passages, especially those that pass through buildings from one street to the next, are called "shuts" (the word deriving from "to shoot through" from one street to another).[205] Many specialist shops, traditional pubs and local restaurants can be found in the hidden corners, squares and lanes of Shrewsbury.

Many of the street names have remained unchanged for centuries and there are some more unusual names, such as Longden Coleham, Dogpole, Mardol, Frankwell, Roushill, Grope Lane, Gullet Passage, Murivance, the Dana, Portobello, Bear Steps, Shoplatch and Bellstone.[206]

The public library, in the pre-1882 Shrewsbury School building,[207] is on Castle Street. Above the main entrance are two statues bearing the Greek inscriptions "Philomathes" and "Polymathes". These portray the virtues "Lover of learning" and "Much learning" to convey the lesson that it is good to gain knowledge through a love of learning.[208]

In the centre of the town lies The Quarry. This 29 acres (12 ha)[209] riverside park attracts thousands of people throughout the year and is enjoyed as a place of recreation. Shrewsbury has traditionally been known as the "Town of Flowers", a slogan incorporated into many of the signs on entrance to the town via major roads, although this was replaced in 2007 with "The birthplace of Charles Darwin".[8]

 
Lord Hill's Column

The British Army's Light Infantry has been associated with Shrewsbury since the 17th century when the first regiments were formed and many more regiments have been raised at Shrewsbury before being deployed all over the world from the American Revolutionary War to the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. Today, after several major reorganisations, the Light Infantry now forms part of the regiment known simply as the Rifles. Shrewsbury's Copthorne Barracks, spiritual home of the Light Division, ultimately housed the Headquarters of the British Army's 143 (West Midlands) Brigade before it moved in 2014, while that of the 5th Division disbanded in April 2012 as part of the reorganisation of the Army's Support Command.[210]

Another notable feature of the town is Lord Hill's Column, sited outside the Shirehall. At 133 ft 6 in (40.7 m) it is the tallest Doric column in England.[211] It was erected as a monument to Rowland Hill commander of II Corps at Waterloo and the man who led the charge against the Imperial Guard towards the end of the battle.[212]

The Quantum Leap is an abstract sculpture unveiled in the town centre in 2009 to mark the bicentenary of the birth of Shrewsbury biologist Charles Darwin.[213]

Shrewsbury's town centre is almost entirely encircled by the River Severn and there are nine bridges across the river. In addition, there are several that cross the Rea Brook. Working downstream, they are in order:

  • Frankwell Bridge, a modern pedestrian footbridge which spans the River Severn between Frankwell and the town centre.
 
The medieval St George's Bridge, c. 1776
 
The current Welsh Bridge
  • Further along from the Welsh Bridge is the Porthill Bridge, a pedestrian suspension bridge running between the Quarry and Porthill, built in 1922.[215][216]
 
Kingsland Bridge, the town's only toll bridge
 
The English Bridge
  • Following the Greyfriars Bridge is the English Bridge, historically called Stone Bridge, which was rebuilt in the 1920s. The bridge was also sketched by Turner.[217]
  • Beyond it is the railway station, which is partly built over the river.
  • After the station is Castle Walk Footbridge, another modern pedestrian footbridge.[218][219]
  • The last bridge to cross the river within the Shrewsbury bypass area is the A5112 Telford Way, which has separate lanes for vehicles, bicycles and pedestrians.

A. E. Housman wrote of the area in A Shropshire Lad, which mentions the bridges of the town in part XXVIII: The Welsh Marches.[220]

High the vanes of Shrewsbury gleam
Islanded in Severn stream;
The bridges from the steepled crest,
Cross the water east and west.

Transport edit

Railway edit

 
The main station building

Shrewsbury railway station is served by three train operating companies:

The main railway station building was built in a mock Tudor architectural style; it includes a clock tower, imitation Tudor chimneys and carved heads in the frames of every window and is Grade II listed.[224] There is a small British Transport Police station within the building. The station is known as the Gateway to Wales.[225]

Shrewsbury Abbey was the terminus of the Shropshire and Montgomeryshire Railway, which connected Shrewsbury with Llanymynech. Shrewsbury West was the railway's other station in the town. The line and the stations closed in 1960.[226] Abbey Foregate was built by the Shrewsbury and Birmingham Railway and closed in 1912.[227]

Buses edit

 
An Arriva park & ride bus at the Oxon site in November 2023

Bus services in the town are operated primarily by Arriva Midlands; routes are centred around Shrewsbury bus station, adjacent to the Darwin Shopping Centre, and is a short walk from the railway station. Arriva also operate county services both independently and on behalf of Shropshire Council. Key routes connect the town with Telford, Market Drayton and Newport.[228]

There are other bus companies operating around the Shrewsbury area, including Boultons of Shropshire, Minsterley Motors[229] and Tanat Valley Coaches with the latter operating services across the Welsh border from nearby towns including Llanfyllin and Montgomery.[230]

Shrewsbury has a park & ride bus scheme in operation, with three car parks on the edge of town; these are at Harlescott (to the north, colour-coded blue), Oxon (to the west, colour-coded pink) and Meole Brace (to the south, colour-coded green).[231]

Road edit

 
A map of Shrewsbury showing suburbs, surrounding villages, rivers (blue), roads (red) and rail routes (green)

Shrewsbury has been an important centre for road traffic. In 1815, Thomas Telford designed a new coaching route from London to Holyhead in order to improve communications with Ireland. He routed the new road via Shrewsbury, which opened in 1830. The road is now the A5.[232] The road connects the town north-west to Oswestry and east towards Telford, where it joins the M54. The A5 once ran through the town centre, until a bypass was built in the 1930s. Subsequently, in 1992, a 17-mile (27 km) dual carriageway was completed at a cost of £79 million to the south of the town and was made to form part of the A5 route. This dual carriageway was built further out of the town to act as a substantial link to Telford, as well as a bypass for the town.[233]

The A49 goes to Shrewsbury, joining the A5 at the south of the town, coming from Ludlow and Leominster. At this point, the road merges with the A5 for 3 miles (4.8 km), before separating again to the east of the town. From there it runs north, passing Sundorne, then Battlefield, before heading out towards Whitchurch. At Battlefield, the A53 route begins and heads north-east towards Shawbury and Market Drayton, then onwards towards Newcastle-under-Lyme and Stoke-on-Trent.

The A458 (Mallwyd-Quinton) runs through the town centre, entering in the west and leaving to the south-east. The A528 begins in the town centre and heads north, heading for Ellesmere. The A488 begins just west of the town centre in Frankwell and heads out to Bishop's Castle, Clun and Knighton crossing the border in the southwest of Shropshire.

Major roads within the town include the A5112, A5191 and A5064. The A5191 goes north–south via the town centre, while the A5112 runs north–south to the east of the town centre. The A5064 is a short, one mile (1.6 km) stretch of road to the south-east of the town centre, called London Road. Additionally, the A5124, the most recent bypass, was completed in 1998 and runs across the northern edge of the town at Battlefield (connecting the A49/A53 to the A528), though it did exist before as Harlescott Lane (which has since become unclassified).

Construction of a major new artery, referred to as the North West Relief Road (NWRR), was granted central government funding in April 2019. Together with the existing A5 and A49 by-passes, the Battlefield Link Road (A5124) and the Oxon Link Road; this will result in the completion of the ring road around the outskirts of the town. Construction is expected to be completed by 2026.[234] The NWRR will involve the construction of a new bridge over the River Severn, upstream from the town centre.[235]

Cycling edit

Shrewsbury has a comprehensive network of on-road and traffic-free cycle routes.[236] In 2008, the town was awarded Cycling Town status by Cycling England;[237] as a result, it benefited from £1.8 million of grant funding from the Department for Transport between 2008 and 2011. The funding was used to make improvements to the cycle network in Shrewsbury and to provide cycle training, information and advice to people to help encourage them to cycle to school and work.[238]

Education edit

 
Shrewsbury Library, Castle Gates; formerly Shrewsbury School

Prior to the reformation, Shrewsbury Abbey and the Collegiate Churches of St Mary (established by King Edgar in the 10th century) and St Chad (established in the 13th) were providing education in the town.[citation needed] Remains of the college of St Chad can be traced in the land adjoining the south-western extremity of the church on the old site, with portions of the wall traceable to a considerable distance in the neighbouring gardens.[28][better source needed] These were closed by the dissolutions.[69] There is mention of a grammar school at Shrewsbury in a court case of 1439.[239]

An effort was made to found a university in the 1600s during the Commonwealth which followed the execution of Charles I. Richard Baxter, a puritan minister from Shropshire, suggested the establishment of a university for Wales at Shrewsbury in the belief that he could obtain the support of Cromwell and Parliament for the scheme.[240]

Independent sector edit

 
Shrewsbury School's main building on the site it moved to in 1882 was built c. 1765

Shrewsbury School is a public school, on a large site in Kingsland, just south of the town centre overlooking the loop of the Severn. The school was located in the town centre between 1552 and 1882. The buildings it formerly occupied then are now occupied by the main county library on Castle Street.[241] Opposite it on the other side of the river is Shrewsbury High School, an independent girls' day school.[242]

Prestfelde School is an independent preparatory school, on London Road, close to the Lord Hill's Column. As part of the Woodard Schools group, it is affiliated to the largest group of Church of England schools in the country. Whilst originally a school for boys it started accepting girls between the ages of three and thirteen. The school is set in 30 acres (12 ha) of grounds on the outskirts of the town.[243]

The town's other long-established boys' preparatory school is Kingsland Grange, on Old Roman Road in Kingsland. In 2007, it merged with the junior department of Shrewsbury Girls' High School, sharing the two sites with some classes remaining single sex, but others switching to a co-educational format.[244]

State sector edit

 
The Main Grade II listed building of Shrewsbury Sixth Form College, built circa 1910

The majority of the town's pupils attend one of the several comprehensive schools. The Priory School, formerly a grammar school for girls;[245] Meole Brace School, The Grange School, Sundorne School and Belvidere School. In 2016, The Grange and Sundorne schools were amalgamated to form Shrewsbury Academy. The school has two campuses; however, it is planned in the next few years for all pupils to move to the Corndon Crescent site of the former Sundorne School.[246]

The Wakeman School, which was geographically the closest school to the town centre 'loop', next to the English Bridge, was previously the Shrewsbury Technical School and was attended by the First World War poet Wilfred Owen. It closed as part of reorganisation in July 2013.[247] The site is now utilised by the Shrewsbury Colleges Group.[248]

Further education is provided by Shrewsbury Sixth Form College, previously the Priory School for Boys,[249] ranked 17th in the top 20 of sixth form colleges nationally by the Sunday Times newspaper in November 2012,[250] and Shrewsbury College, which handles primarily vocational courses. In 2016, the two establishments were merged into the Shrewsbury Colleges Group.[251]

University edit

University Centre Shrewsbury has been offering postgraduate courses since autumn 2014 and undergraduate courses from autumn 2015. It was established by the University of Chester and Shropshire Council. The main campus is located in the renovated Guildhall.[252]

Religious sites edit

 
Ruins of Old St Chad's
 
The spire of St Alkmund's Church and the tower of St Julian's Church


There are two Saxon foundations of Collegiate Churches: that of St Chad, since resited after the collapse of the original church and rebuilt in 1792 and St Mary, replaced by what is described as the most complete medieval church in Shrewsbury, dating back to the 12th century.[253] The Norman Shrewsbury Abbey was founded in 1083.[254]

 
John Wesley first preached here.

According to legend, the spire of St Alkmund's Church was damaged by the Devil in 1553 and climbed four times by a drunken steeplejack in 1621.[255]

There are a number of other Anglican churches in Shrewsbury: Shrewsbury All Saints in Castlefields, The Church of the Holy Spirit in Harlescott, Holy Trinity, St George of Cappadocia, St Giles, Greenfields United Church and St Peter in Monkmoor.[256]

Methodists,[257] Baptists[258] and the United Reformed Church are also represented, alongside newer church groups including Elim Pentecostal[259] and two Newfrontiers.[260][261] Shrewsbury Evangelical Church met in the former Anglican parish church of St Julian at the Wyle Cop end of Fish Street,[262] later moving into the Springfield estate in the eastern suburbs.[263] One of the houses in Fish Street, facing St Alkmund's Church, was the site of John Wesley's first preaching in Shrewsbury; a wall plaque records the date as 16 March 1761. The Grade II listed Shrewsbury Unitarian Church was founded in 1662 according to the inscription above the main door. The current building was built between 1839 and 1840.[264]

Shrewsbury has a Roman Catholic Cathedral, by the Town Walls.[265] Designed by Edward Pugin after the death of his father, Augustus, it was consecrated in 1856.[266] There are two other parishes, in Harlescott and Monkmoor, within the Roman Catholic Diocese of Shrewsbury.

Shrewsbury's Greek Orthodox Church, a former Anglican church building, is off Sutton Road to the south.[267]

Shrewsbury's first dedicated non-Christian place of worship, a Muslim prayer centre, was approved in 2013. It is in the Column Lodge, the former registry office in Preston Street. Before then, the local Muslim community had been hosted by the United Reformed Church on English Bridge.[268]

Community and charity projects edit

Many community projects in Shrewsbury are based in, or have been started by local churches, including the Isaiah 58 project, which is the primary work amongst homeless people in the town, whilst 'Churches Together in Shrewsbury' works to help homeless people through the Ark project.[269][270]

Shrewsbury Food Bank, based at Barnabas Community Church Centre and part of 'Food Bank PLUS,' provides a wide range of social action initiatives including 'Money Advice' (a confidential, not for profit debt, benefits and financial help service) and Eclipse Child Bereavement, which works with local schools to help children who have experienced losses to overcome their situation. Also run by Barnabas are projects including '360 Journey to Work,' which help people gain skills in applying for jobs including basics like CV writing. 'Cage football' is an initiative that is lent out to local community groups, youth clubs and other churches.[271]

Sport edit

Football edit

 
New Meadow stadium, home of Shrewsbury Town

The town has a claim on the emergence of the formally codified game of association football via Shrewsbury School which published a set of ten rules in about 1856, agreed with Eton, Harrow and Rugby schools and Cambridge University This predated the Football Association's initial rule book by seven years.[272]

Shrewsbury is home to a professional football club, Shrewsbury Town. As of 2024, they compete in Football League One[273] and since 2007 has played their home games at New Meadow – from 1910 to 2007 the club played at the Gay Meadow stadium. The town is also home to a semi-professional football club, Haughmond, who take their name from the nearby Haughmond Hill. They currently compete in the Midland Football League and play their home games at the Shrewsbury Sports Village, in Sundorne.[274]

Rowing edit

 
An eight rowing on the Severn in Shrewsbury

The River Severn in the town is used for rowing by both the Pengwern Boat Club,[275] founded in 1871 and using an ancient name for the town,[276] and the Royal Shrewsbury School Boat Club (RSSBC), founded in 1866.[277][278] The Pengwern brick and timber club house was built in 1881 and is a Grade II listed building.[276][279] The club house was expanded around 2013.[280] More recently, the two clubs have been joined by students of Harper Adams University, University Centre Shrewsbury and crews from other local schools.

There is an annual rowing regatta in the town in May. It is one of the oldest events in the rowing calendar, having first been held in 1871.[281][282] A head of the river race was run annually between 1936 and the 1990s.[283]

Rugby edit

There is a local rugby club, Shrewsbury Rugby Club.[284]

Motor sports edit

The local motorsports heritage includes the Loton Park Hillclimb and Hawkstone Park Motocross Circuit near Shrewsbury. Shrewsbury Motocross Club has staged motocross events in the area for over 30 years.[285]

Other sports edit

Shrewsbury Sports Village is a sports centre in the Sundorne district of the town, aimed at providing a wide range of sports facilities for townspeople.[286] There are a number of golf facilities, including Meole Brace Municipal Golf Course, in the area. Shrewsbury holds its own annual Sprint Triathlon, which takes place each September at the West Midlands Country Showground, organised by SYTri (Shrewsbury Triathlon Club) which is affiliated to the British Triathlon Federation.[287] A free weekly parkrun takes place in the Quarry.[288]

Notable Salopians edit

There have been a number of notable Salopians, including Charles Darwin, the biologist and evolutionary theorist.[289] Darwin, one of the most important thinkers of the 19th century,[290] was born in Shrewsbury on 12 February 1809 at the Mount House, baptised at St Chad's Church and educated at Shrewsbury School. The town's river and proximity to the countryside inspired his interest in the natural world, while its abundant ice-age boulders sparked his interest in geology.[291] Classicist Mary Beard, Cambridge professor and television presenter, was educated in Shrewsbury where her father was a prominent architect.[292]

 
Wilfred Owen

Shrewsbury has been home to many contributors to literature. Thomas Churchyard (c. 1523–1604) son of a farmer, was an author of autobiographical or semi-autobiographical verse collections.[293] In the early years of the 18th century, the Irish dramatist George Farquhar resided in the town while acting as a recruiting officer for the Army. He drew on this experience in writing the comedy The Recruiting Officer.[140] The romantic novelist Mary Webb lived in and around Shrewsbury and was buried there upon her death. Before the First World War, the poet Wilfred Owen lived in the town and there is a memorial to Owen at Shrewsbury Abbey.[294] Comedian George Robey lived in the town, near Lord Hill's Column, before and during the Second World War.[295]

 
Statue of Robert Clive

Politicians with connections with the town include Sir William Pulteney, 5th Baronet, once Britain's richest man, he was MP for Shrewsbury from 1768 to 1805.[296] He lived in apartments at Shrewsbury Castle. Robert Clive was MP for Shrewsbury and also the mayor.[297][298] Leo Blair, the father of former Prime Minister Tony Blair, was a resident of the town.[299]

Ian Hunter, the lead singer of the 1970s pop group Mott the Hoople, was a resident of 23a Swan Hill in the town centre and wrote a song of the same name.[300] The 1980s pop group T'Pau was formed in the town and the band's vocalist Carol Decker was educated in the town, along with other members of the band.[301] Notable music historian and composer Charles Burney was born and educated in the town.[302] Lange, a DJ and dance music producer, was born in Shrewsbury.[303]

Sporting Salopians include four FA Cup Final winning players who took part in the first decade of the Cup's history were born in or lived in Shrewsbury: John Hawley Edwards, Henry Wace and John Wylie, of the Wanderers and Clopton Lloyd-Jones of Clapham Rovers.[304] Arthur Rowley, the Football League's highest scoring player, settled in Shrewsbury, having first come to the town as a Shrewsbury Town player, where he died in 2004.[305] More recent players are Danny Guthrie of Newcastle United,[306] Shrewsbury Town youth academy graduate and England goalkeeper Joe Hart[307] and Wales midfielder David Edwards were born in the town, as was Sheffield Wednesday and Scotland striker Steven Fletcher whose serviceman father was stationed there.[308] Sandy Lyle, a professional golfer, was born in the town.[309] Neville Cardus spent some of his formative years as assistant cricket coach at Shrewsbury School.[310]

Other notable people of the town include; John Gwynn, an 18th-century architect, who designed the English Bridge and the bridge at Atcham, was born in the town;[311] comic book artist Charlie Adlard was born in Shrewsbury and is known for illustrating The Walking Dead; Robert Cadman, a performer and steeplejack, is buried in the town, at St Mary's Church;[312] Simon Gosling, a visual effects designer, was born in the town and was resident there until 1994;[313] Percy Thrower, the gardener and broadcaster lived in Shrewsbury, where he set up the garden centre near Meole Brace and just down the road from the football club.[314] Justin Pearson, an award-winning stunt performer and stunt coordinator currently lives in the town.[315]

Flight Lieutenant Eric Lock DSO, DFC and Bar was born in nearby Bayston Hill and was educated at Prestfelde preparatory school on London Road. Lock became internationally recognised as a high scoring fighter ace of the Royal Air Force in the Second World War with 26 victories before his death in combat at the age of 21. He was the RAF's most successful British-born pilot in the Battle of Britain.[316][317] One Victoria Cross recipient is known to have lived in Shrewsbury; Arthur Herbert Procter, who was decorated in 1916 during World War I and retired from his later full-time clergy ministry in 1964 to briefly live at Mytton Oak Road, Copthorne, before relocating to Sheffield.[318]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ the Annales Cambriae merely refers to "The devastation of the South Britons by Offa." in that year.[27]
  2. ^ Tim Clarkson's biography has a detailed discussion of Æthelflæd' burhs.[33]
  3. ^ This story is also attributed to Charles I
  4. ^ RAF Shawbury is located approximately 7 miles (11 km) NE of Shrewsbury, and 12 miles (19 km) NW of Telford.

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shrewsbury, other, uses, disambiguation, shrohz, bər, also, shrooz, market, town, civil, parish, county, town, shropshire, england, sited, river, severn, miles, north, west, london, 2021, census, parish, population, county, townclockwise, from, skyline, castle. For other uses see Shrewsbury disambiguation Shrewsbury ˈ ʃ r oʊ z b er i SHROHZ ber ee also ˈ ʃ r uː z SHROOZ 1 2 is a market town civil parish and the county town of Shropshire England It is sited on the River Severn 150 miles 240 km north west of London At the 2021 census the parish had a population of 76 782 3 ShrewsburyCounty townClockwise from top Shrewsbury skyline Shrewsbury Castle English Bridge and The SquareShrewsburyLocation within ShropshirePopulation76 782 2021 Census OS grid referenceSJ 4915 1253Civil parishShrewsburyDistrictShropshireShire countyShropshireRegionWest MidlandsCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomAreas of the townList BattlefieldBictonBowbrookCherry OrchardDitheringtonFrankwellKingslandMeole BraceMonkmoorMountfieldsNoboldSheltonSundorneSuttonSutton FarmSweet LakeTown CentreUnderdalePost townSHREWSBURYPostcode districtSY1 SY2 SY3Dialling code01743PoliceWest MerciaFireShropshireAmbulanceWest MidlandsUK ParliamentShrewsbury and AtchamList of places UK England Shropshire 52 42 29 N 2 45 14 W 52 708 N 2 754 W 52 708 2 754 Shrewsbury has Saxon roots and institutions whose foundations dating from that time represent a cultural continuity possibly going back as far as the 8th century 4 5 The centre has a largely undisturbed medieval street plan and over 660 listed buildings 6 including several examples of timber framing from the 15th and 16th centuries Shrewsbury Castle a red sandstone fortification and Shrewsbury Abbey were founded in 1074 and 1083 respectively by the Norman Earl of Shrewsbury Roger de Montgomery 7 The town is the birthplace of Charles Darwin 8 It has had a role in nurturing aspects of English culture including drama 9 ballet dance 10 and pantomime 10 Located 9 miles 14 km east of the Welsh border Shrewsbury serves as the commercial centre for Shropshire and parts of mid Wales with a retail output of over 299 million per year and light industry and distribution centres such as Battlefield Enterprise Park on the outskirts The A5 and A49 trunk roads come together as the town s by pass and five railway lines meet at Shrewsbury railway station Contents 1 Toponymy 2 History 2 1 Prehistory 2 2 Roman and Post Roman 2 3 Saxon 2 4 Norman 2 5 Middle Ages 2 6 Reformation 2 7 Council of Wales and the Marches 2 8 Early Modern 2 9 Civil War 2 10 Georgian and Victorian 2 11 20th and 21st centuries 3 Governance 3 1 Town Council 3 1 1 Coat of arms 3 2 Affiliations 4 Geography 4 1 Geology 4 2 Climate 5 Demography 6 Economy 7 Culture 7 1 Literary and performance heritage 7 2 In modern popular culture 7 3 Contemporary performance 8 Royal visits 9 Festivals and events 10 Museums and attractions 11 Media 12 Food 13 Architecture 14 Transport 14 1 Railway 14 2 Buses 14 3 Road 14 4 Cycling 15 Education 15 1 Independent sector 15 2 State sector 15 3 University 16 Religious sites 16 1 Community and charity projects 17 Sport 17 1 Football 17 2 Rowing 17 3 Rugby 17 4 Motor sports 17 5 Other sports 18 Notable Salopians 19 See also 20 Notes 21 References 21 1 Bibliography 22 External linksToponymy editIn Old English the settlement was known as Scrobbesburh dative Scrobbesbyrig which may mean either Scrobb s fort or the fortified place in the bushes or shrubs the modern derivate 11 This name gradually evolved in three directions into Sciropscire which became Shropshire into Sloppesberie which became Salop Salopia an alternative name for both town and county and into Schrosberie which eventually became the town s name Shrewsbury 12 Its later Welsh name Amwythig means fortified place 13 History editMain article History of Shrewsbury Prehistory edit Evidence of Neolithic occupation of a religious form dating back before 2 000 BC was discovered in 2017 in the grounds of the medieval Church of the Holy Fathers in Sutton Farm making it Britain s oldest place of worship 14 An Early Bronze Age urned burial was excavated at Crowmeole in 2015 15 An Iron Age double ring ditch has been excavated at Meole Brace Amongst other finds parts of an iron age sword and scabbard were recovered 16 17 Roman and Post Roman edit At Meole Brace an extensive roadside settlement along the line of the Roman military road connecting Viroconium Cornoviorum and Caersws was uncovered 18 with evidence of trading of amphorae and mortaria 19 A major discovery was the finding of the Shrewsbury Hoard of more than 9000 Roman coins in a field near the town in 2009 20 21 Prior to the late 8th century there is little in the way of reliable records There is a tradition that the town was founded in the 5th century on occasion of the decay of the Roman Uriconium The historian John Wacher suggests that Shrewsbury may have been refortified by refugees fleeing an outbreak of a plague in Viroconium around this time 22 It is claimed that Pengwern sometime capital of the Kingdom of Powis itself established by the 440s was at Shrewsbury 23 The first attested association of Pengwern with Shrewsbury is mentioned by Giraldus Cambrensis in the 12th century Alternative suggestions as to the location of Pengwern include Whittington Castle near Oswestry 24 and Berth a hillfort near Baschurch The Historia Divae Monacellae composed in the 14th or 15th century says that Brochwel Ysgithrog the 6th century king of Powis had a palace at Shrewsbury that became the site of the foundation of St Chad 25 Saxon edit In late 8th century it is claimed that Offa took the town for the Mercians in 778 26 a and he is associated by some sources with establishing the town s first church and dedicating it to St Chad 28 If so then there may have been an ecclesiastical foundation in the town within a century of the death of Chad of Mercia 29 By the beginning of the 10th century Shrewsbury was home to three moneyers who had permission to operate a mint in the town using dies supplied by the royal government 30 31 nbsp AEthelflaed Lady of the Mercians In 914 32 b AEthelflaed daughter of Alfred the Great and known as the Lady of the Mercians fortified Shrewsbury along with Hereford and two other fortresses at Scergeat a currently unknown location and Weardbyrig thought to be Whitchurch 34 which would make sense given the strategic importance of the Roman Road link via the Via Devana Viking raiders from the north were reaching as far south as Bridgnorth by 910 34 In the early tenth century the relics of St Alkmund were translated to the town from Derby this was probably the work of AEthelflaed 35 Later after St Alkmund s Church became the property of Lilleshall Abbey in about 1145 the relics were retranslated back to Derby 36 Norman edit nbsp Shrewsbury Castle built at around 1074 by Roger de Montgomery Roger de Montgomery was given the town as a gift from William the Conqueror and took the title of Earl of Shrewsbury He built at Shrewsbury Castle in 1074 7 though archaeological excavations at the site of Shrewsbury castle in 2019 have indicated that the location may have been a fortified site in the time of the Saxons 37 nbsp Shrewsbury Abbey founded 1083 He also founded Shrewsbury Abbey as a Benedictine monastery in 1083 38 The town s position just off Watling Street placed it within the Forest of Arden a thickly wooded area unpenetrated by Roman roads and somewhat dangerous in medieval times so that travellers would pray at Coughton before entering 39 In 1102 Robert of Belleme 3rd Earl of Shrewsbury was deposed and the title forfeited as a consequence of him rebelling against Henry I and joining the Duke of Normandy s invasion of England in 1101 William Pantulf Lord of Wem assisted Henry in putting down the rebellion To deal with the thickly wooded local forests ideal for the concealment of archers Pantulf brought in 6 000 foot soldiers to cut down trees and open up the roads 40 12 Henry subsequently took the government of the town into his own hands and in 1116 the nobility of England did homage to William AEtheling Henry s son at Shrewsbury and swore allegiance to his father 41 The early death of William AEtheling without issue led to the succession crisis known in history as the Anarchy and during this period in 1138 King Stephen successfully besieged the town s castle held by William FitzAlan for the Empress Maud 42 nbsp Part of the prologue of a life of St Winifred by Robert of Shrewsbury Bodleian Mss Laud c 94 In 1138 the relics of St Winifred were brought to Shrewsbury from Gwytheryn 43 following their purchase by the Abbot of Shrewsbury the abbey being ready for consecration but having no relics prior to that time 44 The popularity of St Winifred grew in the 14th and 15th centuries and a new shrine for her relics was built in the late 1300s Around this time the abbey illegally acquired the relics of St Beuno uncle of St Winifred by stealing them As a result the abbey was fined but allowed to keep the relics 45 From 1155 during the reign of Henry II there was a leper hospital dedicated to St Giles and associated with Shrewsbury Abbey From the 1220s there was also a general hospital dedicated to St John the Baptist 46 In January 1234 Prince Llywelyn ab Iorwerth of Wales and Richard Marshal 3rd Earl of Pembroke burned down the town and laid siege to its castle 47 In 1283 Edward I summoned a parliament in Shrewsbury later adjourned to Acton Burnell 48 to try and condemn Dafydd ap Gruffydd last of the native Princes of Wales to execution by hanging drawing and quartering within the town after Dafydd was captured ending his rebellion against the king 49 It is thought this parliament met in the Abbey 28 Middle Ages edit Shrewsbury was devastated by the Black Death which records suggest arrived in the spring of 1349 50 Examining the number of local church benefices falling vacant due to death 1349 alone saw twice as many vacancies as the previous ten years combined suggesting a high death toll in Shrewsbury 51 The Great Fire of Shrewsbury took place in 1394 St Chad s church was consumed by an accidental fire which spread to a great portion of the town then chiefly consisting of timber houses with thatched roofs The damage was so considerable that Richard II remitted the town s taxes for three years towards the repairs 28 In 1398 Richard summoned a Great Parliament in the town which is believed to have met in the Abbey 28 In 1403 the Battle of Shrewsbury was fought at Battlefield a few miles north of the town centre between King Henry IV and Henry Percy Hotspur with the king emerging victorious 52 Hotspur s body was taken by Thomas Neville to Whitchurch for burial However when rumours circulated that Percy was still alive the king had the corpse exhumed and displayed it propped upright between two millstones in the market place at Shrewsbury 53 That being done Percy was subjected to posthumous execution 54 nbsp The Two Princes Edward and Richard in the Tower 1483 by Sir John Everett Millais Richard of Shrewsbury was born in the town his older brother Edward was resident in the town and engaged in its government as Prince of WalesOne of the Princess in the Tower Richard of Shrewsbury was born in the town around 17 August 1473 55 the second son of King Edward IV of England and Elizabeth Woodville In 1480 Edward V then Prince of Wales and the other prince of the Princes in the Tower was resident in Shrewsbury On May 11 Edward V he confirmed the composition of the town s Mercer s Company which had merged with the guilds of the Ironmongers and Goldsmiths This fraternity were patrons of the Altar of St Michael in St Chad s Church and they kept a Mercers Hall on the site of the Sextry of Old St Chads 28 nbsp The building Henry Tudor stayed in before the Battle of Bosworth In 1485 ahead of the Battle of Bosworth Field Henry Tudor while not yet king marched his forces on a route that lay through Shrewsbury He was initially denied access to the town but on intervention by a member of the Stanley family he was admitted 56 57 Thomas Mytton the Bailiff of the town a supporter of Richard III had vowed that the only way he would get through was over his dead body Thomas then lay down and allowed Henry to step over him to free himself from his oath 58 Henry was accommodated in the building now known as Henry Tudor House on Wyle Cop 59 In 1490 Henry VII accompanied by his queen and his son Prince Arthur celebrated the feast of St George in the town 28 The town is recorded as having entertained Henry again in 1496 with attendants lodged in the Sextry of Old St Chads 28 more generally it is said of Henry VII s relations with the town that The intercourse which had begun thus favourably was kept up in after years by Henry who with his queen and son frequently visited this town upon which occasions they were feasted by the Bailiffs in a most royal and hospitable manner 28 Reformation edit Shrewsbury s monastic institutions were disbanded with the Dissolution of the Monasteries and the Abbey was closed in 1540 Henry VIII intended to make Shrewsbury one of his 13 new bishoprics serving Shropshire and Staffordshire and hence a cathedral city after the formation of the Church of England but the citizens of the town declined the offer which is the point of origin of the term Proud Salopians the town leadership preferring to be the most senior town in the country and not the most junior city 28 c As a consequence of the dissolution the monastic hospitals were closed and the incomes from their endowments were transferred to secular owners St Giles s leper hospital passed to the Prince family who were succeeded by their descendants the Earls of Tankerville St John the Baptist hospital passed to the Wood family and became almshouses 46 At this time the shrine and relics of St Winifred were destroyed 44 Council of Wales and the Marches edit nbsp Sir Rowland Hill nbsp Sir Henry SidneyPrincipal members of the Council of the Marches The Council of Wales and the Marches was established during the 1470s by Edward IV with a headquarters in the town 60 Its buildings partly survive near the castle and were later adapted to be an episcopal palace 61 the council also met at Ludlow Castle Members of this council included John Dudley Earl of Warwick Sir Henry Sidney William Herbert 1st Earl of Pembroke and Sir Rowland Hill publisher of the Geneva Bible and potential inspiration for a hero in Shakespeare s As You Like It 62 nbsp Gate house of the council headquarters in the town Its functions were interpreted widely It was to hear all suits civil and criminal which were brought by individuals too poor to sue at common law it was to try all cases of murder felony piracy wrecking and such crimes as were likely to disturb the peace it was to investigate charges of misgovernment by officials and the false verdicts of juries it was to enforce the laws against livery and maintenance to punish rumour mongers and adulterers and to deal with disputes concerning enclosures villein service and manorial questions it heard appeals from the common law courts and it was responsible for administering the legislation dealing with religion 63 According to historian John Davies at its peak in the mid 16th Century the Council represented a remarkable experiment in regional government It administered the law cheaply and rapidly it dealt with up to twenty cases a day and George Owen stated that the oppressed poor flocked to it 64 nbsp Dr John Caius In 1551 there was a notable outbreak of sweating sickness in the town which Dr John Caius was in the town to attend to at the command of the council 65 The following year after his return to London Caius published A Boke or Counseill Against the Disease Commonly Called the Sweate or Sweatyng Sicknesse The president of the council was the dedicatee of the book and the dedicatory epistle explains his appointment This text became the main source of knowledge of this disease now understood to be influenza 66 In 1581 Sir Henry Sidney celebrated the feast of St George on April 23 in this town with great splendour a solemn procession went from the Council House to St Chad s Church the choir of which was fitted up in imitation of St George s Chapel Windsor with the stalls decorated with the arms of the Knights of the Garter on the conclusion of divine service Sir Henry devoted the afternoon to feasting the burgesses 28 Early Modern edit Shrewsbury thrived throughout the 16th and 17th centuries a period when the town was at the height of its commercial importance This success was largely due to the town s location which allowed it to control the Welsh wool trade a major industry at the time with the rest of Britain and Europe with the River Severn and Watling Street acting as trading routes 67 This trade was dominated by the Shrewsbury Drapers Company for many years 68 As a result a number of grand edifices including the Ireland s Mansion built 1575 and Draper s Hall 1658 were constructed It was in this period that Edward VI gave permission for the foundation of a free school which was later to become Shrewsbury School 69 Civil War edit nbsp Prince Rupert During the English Civil War Shrewsbury was a Royalist stronghold under the command of Sir Francis Ottley 70 In the autumn of 1642 Charles I had a temporary base in the town 71 Prince Rupert established his headquarters in the town on 18 February 1644 being welcomed by Shrewsbury s aldermen He was billeted in a building then the home of the family of Thomas Jones 72 in the precincts of what is now the Prince Rupert Hotel 73 Shrewsbury only fell to Parliament forces after they were let in by a parliamentarian sympathiser at the St Mary s Water Gate now also known as Traitor s Gate 74 After Thomas Mytton captured Shrewsbury in February 1645 in following with the ordnance of no quarter a dozen Irish prisoners were selected to be killed after picking lots 75 76 This prompted Rupert to respond by executing Parliamentarian prisoners in Oswestry 77 Georgian and Victorian edit By the 18th century Shrewsbury had become an important market town and stopping point for stagecoaches travelling between London and Holyhead with passengers on their way to Ireland this led to the establishment of a number of coaching inns many of which such as the Lion Hotel are extant to this day nbsp The former Shire Hall since demolished and Old Market Hall 1796 A town hall was built in the Market Place on the site of an ancient guildhall in 1730 78 it was demolished and a new combined guildhall and shirehall was erected on the site in 1837 79 Local soldier and statesman Robert Clive served as the town s mayor in 1762 and was Shrewsbury s MP from 1762 until his death in 1774 80 St Chad s Church collapsed in 1788 after attempts to expand the crypt compromised the structural integrity of the tower above Now known as Old St Chad s the remains of the church building and its churchyard are on the corner of Princess Street College Hill and Belmont A new St Chad s Church was built just four years after the collapse but as a large neo classical round church and in a different and more elevated location at the top of Claremont Hill close to the Quarry 31 In the Industrial Revolution the Shrewsbury Canal opened in 1797 initially connecting the town to Trench By 1835 it had been linked up to the Shropshire Canal and thence to the rest of the canal network 81 In the period directly after Napoleon s surrender after the Waterloo the town s own 53rd Shropshire Regiment of Foot was sent to guard him in his exile on St Helena A locket containing a lock of the emperor s hair presented to an officer of the 53rd remains to this day in the collections of the Soldiers of Shropshire Museum at Shrewsbury Castle 82 nbsp Shrewsbury s Georgian prison HM Prison Shrewsbury when new in the Georgian period was considered a national example of improved conditions and more enlightened penal policy Times change and a 2005 report on prison population found that it was the most overcrowded in England and Wales despite a major expansion in Victorian times 83 The prison which was also known as the Dana because it was built near the site of the medieval Dana gaol was closed in 2013 and then sold by the Ministry of Justice to private property developers in 2014 84 In 1821 the county purchased a building in College Hill which was adapted to become the judge s lodgings providing accommodation for the judges and their retinue during their attendance at the Assizes 28 20th and 21st centuries edit nbsp BT Telephone Exchange Town Walls The town suffered very little from air raids in the Second World War the worst case was in 1940 when a woman and her two grandchildren were killed when a cottage was destroyed on Ellesmere Road the only local air raid deaths 85 Therefore many of its ancient buildings remain intact and there was little redevelopment in the 1960s and 1970s However some historic buildings were demolished to make way for the brutalist architectural style of the 1960s though the town was saved from a new inner ring road due to its challenging geography 86 A notable example of 1960s 70s construction in Shrewsbury was Telecom House on Smithfield Road demolished in the 2000s 87 Between 1962 and 1992 there was a hardened nuclear bunker built for No 16 Group Royal Observer Corps Shrewsbury who provided the field force of the United Kingdom Warning and Monitoring Organisation and would have sounded the four minute warning alarm in the event of war and warned the population of Shrewsbury in the event of approaching radioactive fallout 88 The building was staffed by up to 120 volunteers who trained on a weekly basis After the breakup of the communist bloc in 1989 the Royal Observer Corps was disbanded between September 1991 and December 1995 However the nuclear bunker still stands just inside Holywell Street near the Abbey as a lasting reminder of the Cold War but is now converted and used as a veterinary practice 89 The town was targeted by the IRA in 1992 One bomb was detonated at Shrewsbury Castle causing severe damage to the regimental museum of the Shropshire Light Infantry 90 estimated to be in the region of 250 000 and many artefacts were lost A second bomb detonated in the Darwin Shopping Centre was put out by the sprinkler system before any major damage was caused Finally a third bomb was discovered elsewhere in the town centre but failed to do any serious damage 91 nbsp Flooding in Shrewsbury 2000 From the late 1990s the town experienced severe flooding problems from the Severn and Rea Brook In the autumn of 2000 large swathes of the town were underwater notably Frankwell which flooded three times in six weeks 92 The Frankwell flood defences were completed in 2003 along with the new offices of Shrewsbury and Atcham Borough Council More recently such as in 2005 and 2007 but not 2020 flooding has been less severe and the defences have generally held back floodwaters from the town centre areas However the town car parks are often left to be flooded in the winter which reduces trade in the town most evidenced in the run up to Christmas in 2007 93 Shrewsbury won the West Midlands Capital of Enterprise award in 2004 94 The town has two large expanding business parks Shrewsbury Business Park by the A5 in the southeast and Battlefield Enterprise Park in the north There are many residential developments currently under construction in the town to cater for the increasing numbers of people wishing to live in the town which is a popular place to commute to Telford Wolverhampton and Birmingham from 95 In 2009 Shrewsbury Town Council was formed and the town s traditional coat of arms was returned to everyday use 96 In 2021 the lost seal of the town dating from 1425 was discovered 97 Governance editThe Borough of Shrewsbury s first charter was granted by Henry I allowing the collection of rents Richard I granted another early charter in 1189 Further charters were granted in 1199 John 1495 Henry VII 1638 Charles I and 1685 James II In 1974 a charter from Elizabeth II incorporated the Borough of Shrewsbury and Atcham under the auspices of which the town remained until 2009 98 Shrewsbury is the administrative centre for the new Shropshire Council the unitary authority covering most of Shropshire but excluding the Borough of Telford and Wrekin a separate unitary authority area Shropshire Council have their headquarters at the Shirehall on Abbey Foregate 99 Shrewsbury is in the Shrewsbury and Atcham constituency and is the only large settlement in the constituency At the most recent general election in 2019 Daniel Kawczynski of the Conservative Party was elected with a majority of 11 217 The 19th century Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli was MP for Shrewsbury 100 Town Council edit Main article Shrewsbury Town Council Shrewsbury Town Council Year Lab Lib Con Grn 2009 3 2 12 0 2010 4 2 11 0 2012 4 3 10 0 2013 7 5 5 0 2017 7 3 6 1 2021 7 6 2 2 The changing political make up of the town council by election Until 2009 Shrewsbury was an unparished area with neither town or parish council Instead the mayor of Shrewsbury and Atcham based in the Guildhall in Dogpole 101 was also the mayor of the town However as part of wider changes to local government in Shropshire the town was parished on 13 May 2008 with a single parish created covering the entire town and previously unparished area At the time of creation Shrewsbury was the second most populous civil parish in England though further creations of large town councils mean it is now the fourth The area of the parish is 3 799 hectares 9 390 acres The town council first convened on 1 April 2009 and its chair is the mayor of Shrewsbury For the interim period before the first elections the existing county councillors who represented electoral divisions covering Shrewsbury were the town councillors On 4 June 2009 the first election was held to the town council with councillors elected from 17 single member wards coterminous with Shropshire Council electoral divisions The political make up of the town council as of the 2021 local elections sees Labour as the largest party with 7 seats the Liberal Democrats with 6 the Conservatives with 2 and the Green Party with 2 The town council was based at the Guildhall on Frankwell Quay a facility which had originally been built in 2004 as the headquarters of Shrewsbury and Atcham Borough Council however the town council moved to Riggs Hall in 2017 102 Riggs Hall is one of the original buildings on the former site of Shrewsbury School on Castle Gates 103 Since 2023 the town council have their offices at Livesey House on St John s Hill and the council itself meets in the Shirehall 104 Coat of arms edit nbsp Coat of arms The coat of arms of the former Shrewsbury Borough Council and now of the Town Council depicts three loggerheads leopards with the motto Floreat Salopia a Latin phrase that can be translated to May Shrewsbury Flourish 105 106 The coat of arms of the now abolished Shrewsbury and Atcham Borough Council was Shrewsbury s shield with the addition of Atcham Bridge running above the leopards The flag of Shropshire and other county crests also uses the three loggerheads Affiliations edit Shrewsbury was twinned with Zutphen Netherlands from 1977 107 until 2018 108 The Royal Navy submarine HMS Talent decommissioned in 2022 was affiliated with Shrewsbury 109 Geography edit nbsp The River Severn at the English Bridge Shrewsbury is about 14 miles 23 km west of Telford 43 miles 69 km west of Birmingham and the West Midlands conurbation and about 153 miles 246 km north west of the capital London More locally the town is to the east of Welshpool with Bridgnorth and Kidderminster to the south east The border with Wales is 9 miles 14 km to the west The town centre is partially built on a hill whose elevation is at its highest 246 feet 75 m above sea level The longest river in the United Kingdom the River Severn flows through the town forming a meander around its centre 12 The Rea Brook is a small river that has its confluence with the Severn at Shrewsbury just upstream from the English Bridge and much of the Rea Brook Valley within the town is a country park and local nature reserve encompassing 36 hectares 89 acres 110 The town is subject to flooding from these rivers Areas of Shrewsbury nbsp Atcham Bayston Hill Hanwood Bicton R Severn UptonMagna A5 TELFORD gt Uffington Abbey Foregate TC Underdale Belvidere Monkmoor Belle Vue Meole Brace Sutton Farm Emstrey Kingsland Porthill Frankwell Shelton BictonHeath Copthorne Radbrook Nobold Castlefields Bagley Ditherington Harlescott Sundorne Battlefield A clickable link map of Shrewsbury showing suburbs and surrounding villages Geology edit The town lies to the west of Haughmond Hill a site where Precambrian rocks some of the oldest rocks in the county can be found 111 and the town itself is sited on an area of largely Carboniferous rocks 112 A fault the Hodnet Fault starts approximately at the town and runs north east into the Stoke on Trent area 113 Climate edit nbsp The Quarry is often busy during spring and summer The climate of Shrewsbury is similar to that of the rest of Shropshire generally moderate Rainfall averages 76 to 100 cm 30 to 39 in influenced by being in the rainshadow of the Cambrian Mountains from warm moist frontal systems of the Atlantic Ocean which bring generally light precipitation in autumn and spring 114 The nearest weather station is at Shawbury about 6 5 miles 10 5 km north east of Shrewsbury town centre The local topography being that of a low lying plain surrounded by higher ground to the west south and east gives the Shrewsbury area its own microclimate the absolute maximum at Shawbury of 34 9 C 94 8 F and absolute minimum of 25 2 C 13 4 F represents the largest temperature range of any individual weather station in the British Isles although the maximum range of average temperatures tends to peak to the south east of the Shrewsbury area particularly in the south east midlands inland East Anglia and inland south east England In an average year the warmest day is 28 4 C 83 1 F 115 giving a total of 8 9 days 116 of 25 1 C 77 2 F or above The absolute maximum of 34 9 C 94 8 F 117 was recorded in August 1990 Conversely the coldest night of the year typically falls to 9 6 C 14 7 F 118 in total 61 7 air frosts are recorded in an average year The absolute minimum of 25 2 C 13 4 F 119 was recorded in 1981 Annual average rainfall averages around 650 millimetres 26 in with over 1 millimetre 0 04 in falling on 124 days of the year Climate data for Shawbury d WMO ID 03414 coordinates 52 47 41 N 2 39 53 W 52 79469 N 2 66473 W 52 79469 2 66473 Met Office Shawbury elevation 72 m 236 ft 1991 2020 normals extremes 1960 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year Record high C F 14 6 58 3 17 4 63 3 21 5 70 7 25 2 77 4 26 7 80 1 31 2 88 2 35 7 96 3 34 9 94 8 29 6 85 3 28 1 82 6 18 4 65 1 15 4 59 7 35 7 96 3 Mean daily maximum C F 7 5 45 5 8 1 46 6 10 3 50 5 13 2 55 8 16 3 61 3 19 1 66 4 21 1 70 0 20 7 69 3 18 1 64 6 14 2 57 6 10 3 50 5 7 7 45 9 13 9 57 0 Daily mean C F 4 3 39 7 4 6 40 3 6 3 43 3 8 6 47 5 11 5 52 7 14 4 57 9 16 3 61 3 16 0 60 8 13 7 56 7 10 4 50 7 6 9 44 4 4 5 40 1 9 8 49 6 Mean daily minimum C F 1 2 34 2 1 2 34 2 2 3 36 1 3 9 39 0 6 8 44 2 9 6 49 3 11 5 52 7 11 4 52 5 9 3 48 7 6 6 43 9 3 5 38 3 1 3 34 3 5 7 42 3 Record low C F 21 4 6 5 12 9 8 8 12 2 10 0 5 9 21 4 3 3 26 1 0 5 31 1 2 5 36 5 0 8 33 4 2 5 27 5 5 9 21 4 12 5 9 5 25 2 13 4 25 2 13 4 Average precipitation mm inches 57 4 2 26 43 3 1 70 43 4 1 71 47 1 1 85 53 6 2 11 59 0 2 32 57 6 2 27 64 2 2 53 61 1 2 41 68 8 2 71 60 8 2 39 66 3 2 61 682 5 26 87 Average snowfall mm inches 26 1 0 19 0 7 3 0 1 4 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 27 1 1 80 3 1 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 12 1 10 8 10 2 10 4 10 0 10 1 10 5 10 5 10 0 11 3 12 5 13 1 131 6 Average snowy days 3 0 2 9 1 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 6 9 1 Average relative humidity 90 87 84 83 82 84 83 83 86 88 90 90 86 Mean monthly sunshine hours 52 8 74 9 114 6 158 1 194 9 187 5 193 3 168 0 134 7 97 5 61 8 49 9 1 487 8 Mean daily daylight hours 8 3 9 9 11 9 14 0 15 8 16 8 16 3 14 7 12 7 10 6 8 7 7 7 12 3 Average ultraviolet index 2 2 2 3 4 4 4 4 3 3 2 2 3 Source 1 Met Office 120 European Climate Assessment and Dataset 121 Source 2 WeatherAtlas 122 Demography editIn 2021 the town of Shrewsbury had a population of 76 782 This represents an increase of 0 69 since 2011 The ethnic distribution was as follows White 72 975 Asian 1755 Black 348 Arab 122 Mixed 1 267 Other 308 123 Religious affiliations were as follows Christian 52 7 Muslim 0 5 Sikh 0 5 Buddhist 0 3 Hindu 0 2 Jewish 0 1 Other 0 1 No religion 39 1 No answer 6 4 124 Economy edit nbsp Pride Hill one of the town s main shopping streets Throughout the medieval period Shrewsbury was a centre for the wool trade 125 and later used its position on the River Severn to transport goods across England via the canal system Unlike many other towns in this period Shrewsbury never became a major centre for heavy industry Though in 1915 the Sentinel Waggon Works at Shrewsbury was opened for the building of steam rail and road locomotives Later it converted to the production of diesel locomotives before being taken over in 1958 by Rolls Royce Limited for the manufacture of their range of diesel industrial engines so that the Derby facility could concentrate on aero engines 126 By the early 1900s the town became focused on transport services and the general service and professional sector owing to its position on the A5 part of the strategic route to North Wales 127 The town is the location of both town and county councils and a number of retail complexes both in and out of the town centre These provide significant employment Shrewsbury is home to a high number of independent businesses including shops cafes and restaurants Wyle Cop in Shrewsbury is said to have the longest uninterrupted row of independent shops 128 Four in five jobs in the town are in the service industry Within this sector the largest employers are the administration and distribution sectors which includes retail food and accommodation 129 nbsp The Parade Shopping Centre is housed in the former premises of the Royal Salop Infirmary Shrewsbury has two shopping centres The Darwin Shopping Centre houses many high street retailers such as Marks amp Spencer H amp M Topshop and Primark 130 The Parade Shopping Centre is a second centre exclusively housing independent retailers citation needed There are two retail warehouse clusters at Meole Brace Retail Park to the south and at Sundorne Retail Park to the north Major supermarkets in the town are the Tesco Extra at Harlescott Morrisons on Whitchurch Road Asda on Old Potts Way and Sainsbury s at Meole Brace nbsp Wyle Cop The visitor economy of Shrewsbury and Atcham was worth about 115 million in 2001 with about 2 500 people employed directly in the visitor industry and 3 400 indirectly There were about 3 1 million visitors both day visitors and staying visitors to the borough in 2001 with 88 being day visitors and 12 being staying visitors staying visitors accounted for 42 of spending 131 Shrewsbury s position of being the only sizeable town for a large area especially to the west in Mid Wales allows it to attract a large retail base beyond that of its resident population This is not only evident in the retail sector but also in the healthcare sector where the Royal Shrewsbury Hospital has the only A amp E department westwards until Aberystwyth about 75 miles 121 km away 132 Businesses in Shrewsbury voted in favour of a Business Improvement District in late 2013 and Shrewsbury BID started operating in April 2014 Shrewsbury BID delivers on a five year business plan of projects which include major destination marketing campaigns significant cost savings for businesses and strategic work ensuring the best possible town centre environment in which business can flourish The company is governed by a board of directors and employed three staff full time in 2017 133 In terms of social and economic deprivation according to the Overall Index of Multiple Deprivation of 2004 one Super Output Area SOA in the town is in the bottom 15 of all areas nationally This area is in the ward of Harlescott 134 A further four SOAs fall into the bottom 30 nationally these being in the wards of Monkmoor Sundorne Battlefield and Heathgates and Meole Brace The most affluent areas of the town are generally to the south and west around the grounds of Shrewsbury School and the Copthorne area citation needed Culture editLiterary and performance heritage edit nbsp A surviving 1679 arbour that of the Shoemakers GuildPrior to the Reformation there are accounts of major festivals in Kingsland In ancient times while the Romish religion prevailed all the companies united once a year in celebrating the day of Corpus Christi with great pomp and splendour At the reformation this ceremony was commuted for another held on the second Monday after Trinity Sunday which is still continued though with less pomp and circumstance than formerly The Companies form themselves into processions headed severally by men on horseback in gaudy apparel called kings probably as representatives of the monarchs who granted their charters They move in marshalled array to Kingsland where they are met by the mayor and corporation and the day is spent in festivity 135 The town s Quarry Park has been the site of cultural activity since before the Reformation a bank there cut in the form of an amphitheatre was used by the friars of the adjacent convent who performed the ancient religious mystery plays or miracle plays 28 this continued in the mid 16th century when the plays of Thomas Ashton s Shrewsbury School attracted royal attention 136 On several occasions the school put on pageants for the visiting Council of Wales and the Marches In 1581 the Lord President Sir Henry Sidney leaving the town by barge was greeted by several scholars on an island downstream of the castle dressed as green nymphs with willow branches tied to their heads reciting verses across the water 137 nbsp Quarto edition of Henry IV Part 1 William Shakespeare set the last two acts of his play Henry IV Part 1 written around 1596 near the town 138 It has been suggested placing reliance on a record of a performance by his company the King s Men in the town between 1603 and 1605 and supposed familiarity with the landscape that Shakespeare performed in the town and knew the area 139 The playwright George Farquhar s 1706 play The Recruiting Officer is set in the town 140 In the later Renaissance period the land at Kingsland was devoted to elaborate performances with grand arbours being built by the various town guilds 141 Some of the arbours survive such as that for the Shoemakers Guild 142 nbsp John Weaver s 1718 production of Orpheus and Eurydice Known as the father of English ballet 143 as well as the originator of pantomime 144 John Weaver developed his art in Shrewsbury A second generation dancing master in the town 145 he also wrote on the philosophy theology statecraft and biology embedded in his era s understating of dance which he located in a wider understanding of his culture as representing a component of Ptolemaic harmony and an earnest part of the statecraft of his time 146 In modern popular culture edit Pioneering early 18th century travel writers Daniel Defoe and Celia Fiennes wrote about their visits to Shrewsbury in A Tour thro the Whole Island of Great Britain 147 and Through England on a Side Saddle in the Time of William and Mary 148 respectively In the 19th century Charles Dickens made three visits to the town The first in 1838 was while he was travelling to Wales On this occasion he stayed at the Lion Hotel In 1852 he again visited this time as part of a theatrical tour staging benefit performances to raise money for the Guild of Literature and Art His final visit in 1858 was as part of a nationwide reading tour Once again he stayed at the Lion 149 The town appears in the Brother Cadfael novels by Ellis Peters The novels take Shrewsbury Abbey for their setting and have made medieval Shrewsbury familiar to a wide readership 150 Shrewsbury was used as the setting for the 1984 television film A Christmas Carol which filmed many of its interior and exterior shots in and around the town 149 nbsp The Magnum Photos Evolution Explored exhibition in The Square In early 2017 Shrewsbury BID The Hive and GRAIN Photography Hub organised an outdoor Magnum Photos exhibition 151 Inspired by Shrewsbury s links to Charles Darwin this exhibition considered the theme of evolution through the eyes of international photographers The 10 week exhibition was free to the public and staged at St Mary s Churchyard and The Square In 2022 the BBC production of Great Expectations with Olivia Colman and Tom Hardy was filmed in the town 152 The same year episodes of The Apprentice and Celebrity Hunted were filmed in Shrewsbury The prison was used for the BBC TV series Time as well appearing in the ITV remake of The Ipcress File 153 Contemporary performance edit Theatre Severn is the town s main performing arts complex it is situated in Frankwell next to the Welsh Bridge on the bank of the River Severn The theatre includes two performance spaces the 635 seat Main Auditorium and a smaller studio space the Walker Theatre which can accommodate 250 seating or 500 standing The venue includes a full sized dance studio function rooms and a restaurant 154 The new complex replaced the old theatre the Music Hall which has been refurbished and expanded in preparation for its current use as home to Shrewsbury Museum and Art Gallery opened 2014 155 Royal visits editThe following royal visits have been made to Shrewsbury in modern times The Duchess of Kent and Princess Victoria visited in 1832 69 Princess Louise visited in 1898 156 HRH the Duke of Teck later Marquess of Cambridge visited the town in 1911 157 George V visited the town in 1914 158 In 1925 Princess Helena Victoria visited the town 1925 saw a shopping visit to Shrewsbury by Queen Mary who arrived in Yorton The future Edward VIII then Prince of Wales visited in 1932 159 In 1929 the Sultan of Zanzibar and the Sultan of Muscat made visits to Shrewsbury Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh visited in 1952 160 Elizabeth II and Prince Philip returned in 1967 to open Shirehall As Princess Elizabeth Elizabeth also visited in 1949 161 Charles III then Prince of Wales opened a new hospital building for the Royal Shrewsbury Hospital in 1978 162 In 1981 The Prince of Wales returned 163 Princess Margaret came in 1984 while officially visiting a new library in the town 159 The Queen Mother came in the 1990s 164 King Charles III still Prince of Wales visited in 2001 165 HRH The Princes Royal visited Shrewsbury in 2011 166 HRH Princess Alexandra visited in 2022 167 Queen Camilla visited in 2024 168 Festivals and events edit nbsp The Shropshire Horticultural Society organises the town s annual flower show in August The town is home to the longest running flower show in the world The annual Shrewsbury Flower Show is a two day event which takes place in mid August has been running for more than 125 years 169 The event attracts around 100 000 visitors each year and offers a multitude of events exhibitions and gardens with a fireworks display at the end of each day nbsp The Shrewsbury Folk Festival is held at the West Mid Showground The Shrewsbury Folk Festival has been held in Shrewsbury since 2006 Held annually over the August bank holiday the event is very popular with people travelling from across the UK to attend 170 The town celebrates its links to Darwin with an annual Darwin Festival in February The two and a half week multi media event celebrates the town as the Origin of Independent Thinking with activities including lectures dance performances and live music 171 Other events held in Shrewsbury s busy spring and summer of events include the Shrewsbury Bookfest Shrewsbury Regatta Cycle Grand Prix Shrewsbury Carnival Food Festival Dragon Boat Race and the Coracle World Championships 172 Since 2016 Shrewsbury International Comedy Festival has been held over the third weekend of July in multiple venues across town 173 Comics Salopia formerly the Cartoon Festival was a large biannual festival of the comics arts attracting over a quarter of a million visitors In format and scope it aimed to emulate on a smaller scale the Angouleme International Comics Festival in France In June 2023 It was announced that after making substantial losses in 2022 it would not be continued 174 Museums and attractions edit nbsp Shrewsbury Museum and Art Gallery The Shrewsbury Museum and Art Gallery is in the town square occupying the former music hall and the 13th century Vaughan s mansion and is part of Shropshire Museums 175 The Old Market Hall cinema opened in 2004 in the prominent Tudor market hall positioned in The Square The independent cinema features daily screens of films from around the world along with a cafe and bar 176 Further museums in the town include the Shropshire Regimental Museum renamed in 2019 as Soldiers of Shropshire Museum 177 based at Shrewsbury Castle 7 and the restored 19th century steam powered Coleham Pumping Station 178 which opens for tours on specific days each year There are various private galleries and art shops around the town including the Gateway Education and Arts Centre 179 The National Trust owns the last remaining Town Walls Tower which dates from the 14th century It is now available to rent as a one bedroom holiday cottage 180 nbsp The Golden Cross The town has some very old public houses and coaching inns The Golden Cross is reputed to be the oldest licensed public house in Shrewsbury and records show that it was used as an inn as far back as 1428 its original name was the Sextry because it began as the sacristy of Old St Chad s Church 181 The King s Head in Mardol contains a 14th century wall painting 182 and its timbers have been dated to c 1404 183 The Dun Cow in Abbey Foregate dates to the 16th century 184 Media editTwo newspapers are published for Shrewsbury the local edition of the county s Shropshire Star and the more traditional Shrewsbury Chronicle which is one of the oldest weekly newspapers in the country having produced its first edition in 1772 185 The forerunner of Private Eye was a school magazine edited by Richard Ingrams Willie Rushton Christopher Booker and Paul Foot at Shrewsbury School in the mid 1950s 186 Local news and television programmes are provided by BBC West Midlands and ITV Central Television signals are received from the Wrekin TV transmitter 187 There are three radio stations that specifically serve either the Shrewsbury area or encompass it as part of a Shropshire wide broadcast They are Free Radio Black Country amp Shropshire 188 BBC Radio Shropshire which is based in Shrewsbury 189 and as of September 2020 Greatest Hits Radio Black Country amp Shropshire which previously broadcast from the Shropshire Star building in Telford 190 In 2009 an online independent media company Shropshire Live launched covering Shrewsbury and Shropshire 191 Food editShrewsbury cakes or biscuits are typically crisp and brittle creations that may incorporate fruit They can be small in size for serving several at a time or large for serving as a dessert in their own right Traditionally they have a distinct hint of lemon 192 The playwright William Congreve mentioned Shrewsbury cakes in his play The Way of the World in 1700 as a simile 193 Witwoud Why brother Wilfull of Salop you may be as short as a Shrewsbury cake if you please But I tell you tis not modish to know relations in town The recipe is also included in several early cookbooks including The Compleat Cook of 1658 194 A final reference to the cakes can be seen to this day as the subject of a plaque affixed to a building close to Shrewsbury s town library by the junction of Castle Street and School Gardens The aforementioned plaque marks the spot where the Shrewsbury Cake s recipe is said to have been pioneered in 1760 by Mr Pailin 192 a further quote drawn from Richard Harris Barham s Ingoldby Legends reads Oh Pailin Prince of Cake Compounders The mouth liquifies at the very name Shrewsbury is the origin of a popular Simnel cake recipe Different towns had their own recipes and shapes of the Simnel cake Bury Devizes and Shrewsbury produced large numbers to their own recipes but it is the Bury version that became most well known 195 The town is alleged to be the origin of Shrewsbury sauce made from Worcester sauce red wine and mustard thickened with flour which is typically served with lamb Only known from the 1960s when it appeared in the J Salmon County Series Cookbooks 196 nbsp Ditherington Flax Mill Beer brewed in Shrewsbury was celebrated as early as about 1400 when the bard Iolo Goch praised the supply of Crwg Amwythig dispensed at the Sycharth palace of Owain Glyndŵr 197 In 1900 there were eight breweries in the town chief among them being Southam s and Trouncer s which had their own maltings and owned many local public houses as well as five other maltsters 198 but the conventional brewing industry gradually closed after takeovers in the 1960s The last maltings at Ditherington closed in 1987 199 Completed in 1797 these maltings known as the Ditherington Flax Mill from its original purpose was the world s first iron framed building and commonly regarded as the grandfather of the skyscraper Its importance was recognised in the 1950s resulting in it becoming a Grade I listed building 200 201 After the biggest heritage project ever undertaken by Historic England the building was restored and opened as a museum in 2022 202 A real ale brewery The Salopian Brewery was established in the town in 1995 203 It was based in the Old Dairy on Mytton Oak Road before relocating in 2014 to Hadnall a few miles north of the town 204 Architecture edit nbsp Fish Street and Grope Lane Shrewsbury The historic town centre still retains its medieval street pattern and many narrow passages Some of the passages especially those that pass through buildings from one street to the next are called shuts the word deriving from to shoot through from one street to another 205 Many specialist shops traditional pubs and local restaurants can be found in the hidden corners squares and lanes of Shrewsbury Many of the street names have remained unchanged for centuries and there are some more unusual names such as Longden Coleham Dogpole Mardol Frankwell Roushill Grope Lane Gullet Passage Murivance the Dana Portobello Bear Steps Shoplatch and Bellstone 206 The public library in the pre 1882 Shrewsbury School building 207 is on Castle Street Above the main entrance are two statues bearing the Greek inscriptions Philomathes and Polymathes These portray the virtues Lover of learning and Much learning to convey the lesson that it is good to gain knowledge through a love of learning 208 In the centre of the town lies The Quarry This 29 acres 12 ha 209 riverside park attracts thousands of people throughout the year and is enjoyed as a place of recreation Shrewsbury has traditionally been known as the Town of Flowers a slogan incorporated into many of the signs on entrance to the town via major roads although this was replaced in 2007 with The birthplace of Charles Darwin 8 nbsp Lord Hill s Column The British Army s Light Infantry has been associated with Shrewsbury since the 17th century when the first regiments were formed and many more regiments have been raised at Shrewsbury before being deployed all over the world from the American Revolutionary War to the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan Today after several major reorganisations the Light Infantry now forms part of the regiment known simply as the Rifles Shrewsbury s Copthorne Barracks spiritual home of the Light Division ultimately housed the Headquarters of the British Army s 143 West Midlands Brigade before it moved in 2014 while that of the 5th Division disbanded in April 2012 as part of the reorganisation of the Army s Support Command 210 Another notable feature of the town is Lord Hill s Column sited outside the Shirehall At 133 ft 6 in 40 7 m it is the tallest Doric column in England 211 It was erected as a monument to Rowland Hill commander of II Corps at Waterloo and the man who led the charge against the Imperial Guard towards the end of the battle 212 The Quantum Leap is an abstract sculpture unveiled in the town centre in 2009 to mark the bicentenary of the birth of Shrewsbury biologist Charles Darwin 213 Shrewsbury s town centre is almost entirely encircled by the River Severn and there are nine bridges across the river In addition there are several that cross the Rea Brook Working downstream they are in order Frankwell Bridge a modern pedestrian footbridge which spans the River Severn between Frankwell and the town centre nbsp The medieval St George s Bridge c 1776 nbsp The current Welsh Bridge The Welsh Bridge which was built in 1793 95 to replace the medieval St George s Bridge featured in Thomas Pennant s A Tour through Wales published in 1781 The old bridge was sketched by J M W Turner in 1794 as the basis for a later water colour painting 214 Further along from the Welsh Bridge is the Porthill Bridge a pedestrian suspension bridge running between the Quarry and Porthill built in 1922 215 216 nbsp Kingsland Bridge the town s only toll bridge The next bridge along the river is Kingsland Bridge a privately owned toll bridge The subsequent bridge is the Greyfriars Bridge a pedestrian bridge between Coleham and the town centre nbsp The English Bridge Following the Greyfriars Bridge is the English Bridge historically called Stone Bridge which was rebuilt in the 1920s The bridge was also sketched by Turner 217 Beyond it is the railway station which is partly built over the river After the station is Castle Walk Footbridge another modern pedestrian footbridge 218 219 The last bridge to cross the river within the Shrewsbury bypass area is the A5112 Telford Way which has separate lanes for vehicles bicycles and pedestrians A E Housman wrote of the area in A Shropshire Lad which mentions the bridges of the town in part XXVIII The Welsh Marches 220 High the vanes of Shrewsbury gleam Islanded in Severn stream The bridges from the steepled crest Cross the water east and west Transport editRailway edit nbsp The main station building Shrewsbury railway station is served by three train operating companies Transport for Wales Rail operates services running north to Wrexham General Crewe Chester and Manchester Piccadilly southbound trains go to Hereford Cardiff Central and Swansea and westbound to Aberystwyth 221 West Midlands Trains run services to Birmingham New Street via Telford and Wolverhampton 222 Avanti West Coast operates one daily service to and from London Euston 223 The main railway station building was built in a mock Tudor architectural style it includes a clock tower imitation Tudor chimneys and carved heads in the frames of every window and is Grade II listed 224 There is a small British Transport Police station within the building The station is known as the Gateway to Wales 225 Shrewsbury Abbey was the terminus of the Shropshire and Montgomeryshire Railway which connected Shrewsbury with Llanymynech Shrewsbury West was the railway s other station in the town The line and the stations closed in 1960 226 Abbey Foregate was built by the Shrewsbury and Birmingham Railway and closed in 1912 227 Buses edit nbsp An Arriva park amp ride bus at the Oxon site in November 2023 Bus services in the town are operated primarily by Arriva Midlands routes are centred around Shrewsbury bus station adjacent to the Darwin Shopping Centre and is a short walk from the railway station Arriva also operate county services both independently and on behalf of Shropshire Council Key routes connect the town with Telford Market Drayton and Newport 228 There are other bus companies operating around the Shrewsbury area including Boultons of Shropshire Minsterley Motors 229 and Tanat Valley Coaches with the latter operating services across the Welsh border from nearby towns including Llanfyllin and Montgomery 230 Shrewsbury has a park amp ride bus scheme in operation with three car parks on the edge of town these are at Harlescott to the north colour coded blue Oxon to the west colour coded pink and Meole Brace to the south colour coded green 231 Road edit nbsp A map of Shrewsbury showing suburbs surrounding villages rivers blue roads red and rail routes green Shrewsbury has been an important centre for road traffic In 1815 Thomas Telford designed a new coaching route from London to Holyhead in order to improve communications with Ireland He routed the new road via Shrewsbury which opened in 1830 The road is now the A5 232 The road connects the town north west to Oswestry and east towards Telford where it joins the M54 The A5 once ran through the town centre until a bypass was built in the 1930s Subsequently in 1992 a 17 mile 27 km dual carriageway was completed at a cost of 79 million to the south of the town and was made to form part of the A5 route This dual carriageway was built further out of the town to act as a substantial link to Telford as well as a bypass for the town 233 The A49 goes to Shrewsbury joining the A5 at the south of the town coming from Ludlow and Leominster At this point the road merges with the A5 for 3 miles 4 8 km before separating again to the east of the town From there it runs north passing Sundorne then Battlefield before heading out towards Whitchurch At Battlefield the A53 route begins and heads north east towards Shawbury and Market Drayton then onwards towards Newcastle under Lyme and Stoke on Trent The A458 Mallwyd Quinton runs through the town centre entering in the west and leaving to the south east The A528 begins in the town centre and heads north heading for Ellesmere The A488 begins just west of the town centre in Frankwell and heads out to Bishop s Castle Clun and Knighton crossing the border in the southwest of Shropshire Major roads within the town include the A5112 A5191 and A5064 The A5191 goes north south via the town centre while the A5112 runs north south to the east of the town centre The A5064 is a short one mile 1 6 km stretch of road to the south east of the town centre called London Road Additionally the A5124 the most recent bypass was completed in 1998 and runs across the northern edge of the town at Battlefield connecting the A49 A53 to the A528 though it did exist before as Harlescott Lane which has since become unclassified Construction of a major new artery referred to as the North West Relief Road NWRR was granted central government funding in April 2019 Together with the existing A5 and A49 by passes the Battlefield Link Road A5124 and the Oxon Link Road this will result in the completion of the ring road around the outskirts of the town Construction is expected to be completed by 2026 234 The NWRR will involve the construction of a new bridge over the River Severn upstream from the town centre 235 Cycling edit Shrewsbury has a comprehensive network of on road and traffic free cycle routes 236 In 2008 the town was awarded Cycling Town status by Cycling England 237 as a result it benefited from 1 8 million of grant funding from the Department for Transport between 2008 and 2011 The funding was used to make improvements to the cycle network in Shrewsbury and to provide cycle training information and advice to people to help encourage them to cycle to school and work 238 Education edit nbsp Shrewsbury Library Castle Gates formerly Shrewsbury School Prior to the reformation Shrewsbury Abbey and the Collegiate Churches of St Mary established by King Edgar in the 10th century and St Chad established in the 13th were providing education in the town citation needed Remains of the college of St Chad can be traced in the land adjoining the south western extremity of the church on the old site with portions of the wall traceable to a considerable distance in the neighbouring gardens 28 better source needed These were closed by the dissolutions 69 There is mention of a grammar school at Shrewsbury in a court case of 1439 239 An effort was made to found a university in the 1600s during the Commonwealth which followed the execution of Charles I Richard Baxter a puritan minister from Shropshire suggested the establishment of a university for Wales at Shrewsbury in the belief that he could obtain the support of Cromwell and Parliament for the scheme 240 Independent sector edit nbsp Shrewsbury School s main building on the site it moved to in 1882 was built c 1765 Shrewsbury School is a public school on a large site in Kingsland just south of the town centre overlooking the loop of the Severn The school was located in the town centre between 1552 and 1882 The buildings it formerly occupied then are now occupied by the main county library on Castle Street 241 Opposite it on the other side of the river is Shrewsbury High School an independent girls day school 242 Prestfelde School is an independent preparatory school on London Road close to the Lord Hill s Column As part of the Woodard Schools group it is affiliated to the largest group of Church of England schools in the country Whilst originally a school for boys it started accepting girls between the ages of three and thirteen The school is set in 30 acres 12 ha of grounds on the outskirts of the town 243 The town s other long established boys preparatory school is Kingsland Grange on Old Roman Road in Kingsland In 2007 it merged with the junior department of Shrewsbury Girls High School sharing the two sites with some classes remaining single sex but others switching to a co educational format 244 State sector edit nbsp The Main Grade II listed building of Shrewsbury Sixth Form College built circa 1910 The majority of the town s pupils attend one of the several comprehensive schools The Priory School formerly a grammar school for girls 245 Meole Brace School The Grange School Sundorne School and Belvidere School In 2016 The Grange and Sundorne schools were amalgamated to form Shrewsbury Academy The school has two campuses however it is planned in the next few years for all pupils to move to the Corndon Crescent site of the former Sundorne School 246 The Wakeman School which was geographically the closest school to the town centre loop next to the English Bridge was previously the Shrewsbury Technical School and was attended by the First World War poet Wilfred Owen It closed as part of reorganisation in July 2013 247 The site is now utilised by the Shrewsbury Colleges Group 248 Further education is provided by Shrewsbury Sixth Form College previously the Priory School for Boys 249 ranked 17th in the top 20 of sixth form colleges nationally by the Sunday Times newspaper in November 2012 250 and Shrewsbury College which handles primarily vocational courses In 2016 the two establishments were merged into the Shrewsbury Colleges Group 251 University edit University Centre Shrewsbury has been offering postgraduate courses since autumn 2014 and undergraduate courses from autumn 2015 It was established by the University of Chester and Shropshire Council The main campus is located in the renovated Guildhall 252 Religious sites edit nbsp Ruins of Old St Chad s nbsp The spire of St Alkmund s Church and the tower of St Julian s Church There are two Saxon foundations of Collegiate Churches that of St Chad since resited after the collapse of the original church and rebuilt in 1792 and St Mary replaced by what is described as the most complete medieval church in Shrewsbury dating back to the 12th century 253 The Norman Shrewsbury Abbey was founded in 1083 254 nbsp John Wesley first preached here According to legend the spire of St Alkmund s Church was damaged by the Devil in 1553 and climbed four times by a drunken steeplejack in 1621 255 There are a number of other Anglican churches in Shrewsbury Shrewsbury All Saints in Castlefields The Church of the Holy Spirit in Harlescott Holy Trinity St George of Cappadocia St Giles Greenfields United Church and St Peter in Monkmoor 256 Methodists 257 Baptists 258 and the United Reformed Church are also represented alongside newer church groups including Elim Pentecostal 259 and two Newfrontiers 260 261 Shrewsbury Evangelical Church met in the former Anglican parish church of St Julian at the Wyle Cop end of Fish Street 262 later moving into the Springfield estate in the eastern suburbs 263 One of the houses in Fish Street facing St Alkmund s Church was the site of John Wesley s first preaching in Shrewsbury a wall plaque records the date as 16 March 1761 The Grade II listed Shrewsbury Unitarian Church was founded in 1662 according to the inscription above the main door The current building was built between 1839 and 1840 264 Shrewsbury has a Roman Catholic Cathedral by the Town Walls 265 Designed by Edward Pugin after the death of his father Augustus it was consecrated in 1856 266 There are two other parishes in Harlescott and Monkmoor within the Roman Catholic Diocese of Shrewsbury Shrewsbury s Greek Orthodox Church a former Anglican church building is off Sutton Road to the south 267 Shrewsbury s first dedicated non Christian place of worship a Muslim prayer centre was approved in 2013 It is in the Column Lodge the former registry office in Preston Street Before then the local Muslim community had been hosted by the United Reformed Church on English Bridge 268 Community and charity projects edit Many community projects in Shrewsbury are based in or have been started by local churches including the Isaiah 58 project which is the primary work amongst homeless people in the town whilst Churches Together in Shrewsbury works to help homeless people through the Ark project 269 270 Shrewsbury Food Bank based at Barnabas Community Church Centre and part of Food Bank PLUS provides a wide range of social action initiatives including Money Advice a confidential not for profit debt benefits and financial help service and Eclipse Child Bereavement which works with local schools to help children who have experienced losses to overcome their situation Also run by Barnabas are projects including 360 Journey to Work which help people gain skills in applying for jobs including basics like CV writing Cage football is an initiative that is lent out to local community groups youth clubs and other churches 271 Sport editFootball edit nbsp New Meadow stadium home of Shrewsbury Town The town has a claim on the emergence of the formally codified game of association football via Shrewsbury School which published a set of ten rules in about 1856 agreed with Eton Harrow and Rugby schools and Cambridge University This predated the Football Association s initial rule book by seven years 272 Shrewsbury is home to a professional football club Shrewsbury Town As of 2024 they compete in Football League One 273 and since 2007 has played their home games at New Meadow from 1910 to 2007 the club played at the Gay Meadow stadium The town is also home to a semi professional football club Haughmond who take their name from the nearby Haughmond Hill They currently compete in the Midland Football League and play their home games at the Shrewsbury Sports Village in Sundorne 274 Rowing edit nbsp An eight rowing on the Severn in Shrewsbury The River Severn in the town is used for rowing by both the Pengwern Boat Club 275 founded in 1871 and using an ancient name for the town 276 and the Royal Shrewsbury School Boat Club RSSBC founded in 1866 277 278 The Pengwern brick and timber club house was built in 1881 and is a Grade II listed building 276 279 The club house was expanded around 2013 280 More recently the two clubs have been joined by students of Harper Adams University University Centre Shrewsbury and crews from other local schools There is an annual rowing regatta in the town in May It is one of the oldest events in the rowing calendar having first been held in 1871 281 282 A head of the river race was run annually between 1936 and the 1990s 283 Rugby edit There is a local rugby club Shrewsbury Rugby Club 284 Motor sports edit The local motorsports heritage includes the Loton Park Hillclimb and Hawkstone Park Motocross Circuit near Shrewsbury Shrewsbury Motocross Club has staged motocross events in the area for over 30 years 285 Other sports edit Shrewsbury Sports Village is a sports centre in the Sundorne district of the town aimed at providing a wide range of sports facilities for townspeople 286 There are a number of golf facilities including Meole Brace Municipal Golf Course in the area Shrewsbury holds its own annual Sprint Triathlon which takes place each September at the West Midlands Country Showground organised by SYTri Shrewsbury Triathlon Club which is affiliated to the British Triathlon Federation 287 A free weekly parkrun takes place in the Quarry 288 Notable Salopians editFor alumni of Shrewsbury School see List of Old Salopians There have been a number of notable Salopians including Charles Darwin the biologist and evolutionary theorist 289 Darwin one of the most important thinkers of the 19th century 290 was born in Shrewsbury on 12 February 1809 at the Mount House baptised at St Chad s Church and educated at Shrewsbury School The town s river and proximity to the countryside inspired his interest in the natural world while its abundant ice age boulders sparked his interest in geology 291 Classicist Mary Beard Cambridge professor and television presenter was educated in Shrewsbury where her father was a prominent architect 292 nbsp Wilfred Owen Shrewsbury has been home to many contributors to literature Thomas Churchyard c 1523 1604 son of a farmer was an author of autobiographical or semi autobiographical verse collections 293 In the early years of the 18th century the Irish dramatist George Farquhar resided in the town while acting as a recruiting officer for the Army He drew on this experience in writing the comedy The Recruiting Officer 140 The romantic novelist Mary Webb lived in and around Shrewsbury and was buried there upon her death Before the First World War the poet Wilfred Owen lived in the town and there is a memorial to Owen at Shrewsbury Abbey 294 Comedian George Robey lived in the town near Lord Hill s Column before and during the Second World War 295 nbsp Statue of Robert Clive Politicians with connections with the town include Sir William Pulteney 5th Baronet once Britain s richest man he was MP for Shrewsbury from 1768 to 1805 296 He lived in apartments at Shrewsbury Castle Robert Clive was MP for Shrewsbury and also the mayor 297 298 Leo Blair the father of former Prime Minister Tony Blair was a resident of the town 299 Ian Hunter the lead singer of the 1970s pop group Mott the Hoople was a resident of 23a Swan Hill in the town centre and wrote a song of the same name 300 The 1980s pop group T Pau was formed in the town and the band s vocalist Carol Decker was educated in the town along with other members of the band 301 Notable music historian and composer Charles Burney was born and educated in the town 302 Lange a DJ and dance music producer was born in Shrewsbury 303 Sporting Salopians include four FA Cup Final winning players who took part in the first decade of the Cup s history were born in or lived in Shrewsbury John Hawley Edwards Henry Wace and John Wylie of the Wanderers and Clopton Lloyd Jones of Clapham Rovers 304 Arthur Rowley the Football League s highest scoring player settled in Shrewsbury having first come to the town as a Shrewsbury Town player where he died in 2004 305 More recent players are Danny Guthrie of Newcastle United 306 Shrewsbury Town youth academy graduate and England goalkeeper Joe Hart 307 and Wales midfielder David Edwards were born in the town as was Sheffield Wednesday and Scotland striker Steven Fletcher whose serviceman father was stationed there 308 Sandy Lyle a professional golfer was born in the town 309 Neville Cardus spent some of his formative years as assistant cricket coach at Shrewsbury School 310 Other notable people of the town include John Gwynn an 18th century architect who designed the English Bridge and the bridge at Atcham was born in the town 311 comic book artist Charlie Adlard was born in Shrewsbury and is known for illustrating The Walking Dead Robert Cadman a performer and steeplejack is buried in the town at St Mary s Church 312 Simon Gosling a visual effects designer was born in the town and was resident there until 1994 313 Percy Thrower the gardener and broadcaster lived in Shrewsbury where he set up the garden centre near Meole Brace and just down the road from the football club 314 Justin Pearson an award winning stunt performer and stunt coordinator currently lives in the town 315 Flight Lieutenant Eric Lock DSO DFC and Bar was born in nearby Bayston Hill and was educated at Prestfelde preparatory school on London Road Lock became internationally recognised as a high scoring fighter ace of the Royal Air Force in the Second World War with 26 victories before his death in combat at the age of 21 He was the RAF s most successful British born pilot in the Battle of Britain 316 317 One Victoria Cross recipient is known to have lived in Shrewsbury Arthur Herbert Procter who was decorated in 1916 during World War I and retired from his later full time clergy ministry in 1964 to briefly live at Mytton Oak Road Copthorne before relocating to Sheffield 318 See also editList of mayors of Shrewsbury Listed buildings in ShrewsburyNotes edit the Annales Cambriae merely refers to The devastation of the South Britons by Offa in that year 27 Tim Clarkson s biography has a detailed discussion of AEthelflaed 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