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Stratford-upon-Avon

Stratford-upon-Avon (/-ˈvən/), commonly known as just Stratford, is a market town and civil parish in the Stratford-on-Avon district, in the county of Warwickshire,[2] in the West Midlands region of England. It is situated on the River Avon, 91 miles (146 km) north-west of London, 22 miles (35 km) south-east of Birmingham and 8 miles (13 km) south-west of Warwick.[3] The town is the southernmost point of the Arden area on the edge of the Cotswolds.[4] In the 2021 census Stratford had a population of 30,495.[5]

Stratford-upon-Avon
The centre of Stratford-upon-Avon, from High Street
Stratford-upon-Avon
Location within Warwickshire
Population30,495 (2021 census)
OS grid referenceSP1955
Civil parish
  • Stratford-upon-Avon[1]
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townStratford-upon-Avon
Postcode districtCV37
Dialling code01789
PoliceWarwickshire
FireWarwickshire
AmbulanceWest Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Warwickshire
52°11′34″N 01°42′23″W / 52.19278°N 1.70639°W / 52.19278; -1.70639Coordinates: 52°11′34″N 01°42′23″W / 52.19278°N 1.70639°W / 52.19278; -1.70639

Stratford was originally inhabited by Britons before Anglo-Saxons and remained a village before the lord of the manor, John of Coutances, set out plans to develop it into a town in 1196. In that same year, Stratford was granted a charter from King Richard I to hold a weekly market in the town, giving it its status as a market town. As a result, Stratford experienced an increase in trade and commerce as well as urban expansion.

Stratford is a popular tourist destination, owing to its status as the birthplace and burial place of playwright and poet William Shakespeare; it receives approximately 2.7 million visitors a year.[6] The Royal Shakespeare Company resides in Stratford's Royal Shakespeare Theatre.

Etymology

The name is a combination of the Old English strǣt (from Latin stratum), meaning 'street', ford, indicating a shallow part of a river or stream, allowing it to be crossed by walking or driving and avon which is the Celtic word for river.[7][8] The 'street' was a Roman road which connected Icknield Street in Alcester to the Fosse Way. The ford, which has been used as a crossing since Roman times, later became the location of Clopton Bridge.[9][10][11] A survey of 1251–52 uses the name Stratford for the first time to identify Old Stratford and the newer manors.[10][12] The name was used after that time to describe the area specifically surrounding the Holy Trinity Church and the street of the Old Town.[10]

History

 
Historic map of Stratford in 1902

Roman

The Stratford area was settled during the Roman period as the area was crossed by a Roman road: archaeological remains of a small Roman town have been found, about 1 mile (1.6 km) northeast of Stratford town centre at Tiddington, now part of Stratford, which was occupied from the 1st to the 5th century AD.[13] The remains of two further probable Roman settlements have been found within a few miles of modern-day Stratford.[14][15]

Medieval

The settlement which later became known as Stratford was first inhabited by Anglo-Saxons following their 7th-century invasion of what would become known as Warwickshire, but was then part of the Kingdom of Mercia.[7][16] It is likely that an Anglo-Saxon monastery existed at the site of what is now Holy Trinity Church, which was founded after the land was acquired by Egwin, the third Bishop of Worcester (693-714).[17] The monastery was likely destroyed by Viking invaders in 1015.[18] The land remained in the ownership of the Bishops of Worcester until the 16th century.[19] The area around Holy Trinity Church is still known as Old Town as it was the original area of settlement around the monastery. The focus of the settlement at Stratford was later moved north, closer to the river crossing, which was better positioned for trade.[10]

Stratford (then referred to as strete ford) remained a village until the late 12th century when it was developed into a town by lord of the manor, Bishop John of Coutances.[10] Coutances laid out a new town plan in 1196 around half a mile (0.8 km) north of the original settlement, based on a grid system to expand Stratford and allow people to rent property in order to trade within the town.[7][11][20] Coutances granted his new tenants the right to rent property and transmit it at death. This was called burgage tenure. Each development plot or "burgage" consisted of around 0.25 acres (0.10 hectares). Additionally, a charter was granted to Stratford by King Richard I in 1196 which allowed a weekly market to be held in the town, giving it its status as a market town. These two charters, which formed the foundations of Stratford's transformation from a village to a town, make the town of Stratford over 800 years old, the town celebrated its 800th anniversary in 1996.[11][21]

 
The early-15th century Guildhall and Almshouses on Church Street

John of Coutances' plans to develop Stratford into a town meant Stratford became a place of work for tradesmen and merchants.[11] By 1252 the town had approximately 240 burgages (town rental properties owned by a king or lord), as well as shops, stalls and other buildings.[10] Stratford's tradesmen established a guild known as the Guild of the Holy Cross for their business and religious requirements. The guild developed into the town's main institution of local government, and included the most important townsmen, who elected officials to oversee local affairs. They built a Guild Chapel in the 13th century, and a Guildhall and almshouses on Church Street in around 1417. The guild also established an educational institution in the late 13th century.[11][22][23]

Many of the town's earliest and most important buildings are located along what is known as Stratford's Historic Spine, which was once the main route from the town centre to the parish church. The route of the Historic Spine begins at Shakespeare's Birthplace in Henley Street. It continues through Henley Street to the top end of Bridge Street and into the High Street where many Elizabethan buildings are located, including Harvard House. The route carries on through Chapel Street where Nash's House and New Place are sited. The Historic Spine continues along Church Street where the Guild buildings are located dating back to the 15th century, as well as 18th- and 19th-century properties. The route then finishes in the Old Town, which includes Hall's Croft and the Holy Trinity Church.[20]

 
Clopton Bridge allowed trade to flourish in Stratford

During Stratford's early expansion into a town, the only access across the River Avon into and out of the town was over a wooden bridge, which was first mentioned in 1235.[10] However, the bridge could not be crossed at times due to the river rising and was described by antiquarian John Leland as "a poor bridge of timber and no causeway to it, whereby many poor folks and other refused to come to Stratford when the Avon was up, or coming thither stood in jeopardy of life." In 1484, a new masonry arch bridge was built to replace it called Clopton Bridge, named after Hugh Clopton, a wealthy local man who later became the Lord Mayor of London, who paid for its construction. The new bridge made it easier for people to trade within Stratford and for passing travellers to stay in the town.[10][24][25]

Tudor period

The medieval structures of local governance underwent significant changes during the Tudor period: The Guild of the Holy Cross was abolished in 1547 under King Edward VI's suppression of religious guilds, and the inhabitants of Stratford petitioned the Crown for a charter of incorporation as a borough, which they received in 1553. This allowed the formation a new Town Council which inherited the property and responsibilities of the abolished guild. The Charter of Incorporation refounded Stratford's school as the King Edward VI School[22][11]

The Cotswolds, located close to Stratford, was a major sheep-producing area up until the latter part of the 19th century, with Stratford one of its main centres for the processing, marketing, and distribution of sheep and wool. Consequently, Stratford also became a centre for tanning during the 15th–17th centuries.[16] Glove making was also an important industry, which was at its zenith in the 15th and 16th centuries. As was malting (the processing of grain to turn it into malt).[26]

John Shakespeare, originally a farmer, had moved to Stratford in 1551, from the nearby village of Snitterfield and became a successful glover (glove maker) and businessman, and an official on the Town Council. He met and married Mary Arden a member of the local gentry in around 1557, and together they had eight children, including Stratford's most famous son William Shakespeare in 1564, believed to be at the house now known as Shakespeare's Birthplace.[27]

17th and 18th centuries

Stratford was the centre of considerable activity and some fighting during the English Civil War. Being located at the junction of several main roads, it was strategically important for both the Royalist and Parliamentarian armies. Due to its close proximity to the Parliamentarian stronghold of Warwick, Stratford remained under Parliamentarian control for the majority of the conflict, although it was only directly occupied by troops for sporadic intervals. In February 1643, Stratford was occupied by Royalist forces under Colonel Wagstaffe, but was recaptured by Parliamentarians under Lord Brooke on 25 February after an engagement on the nearby road to Warwick. Having secured the town, Brooke returned to Warwick. In one notable incidence in February 1643, Stratford's Market Hall (at the site of the current Town Hall) was destroyed after three barrels of gunpowder which were being stored there blew up. From March 1644, until part of the following year, Stratford appears to have been continuously occupied by Parliamentarian troops. There was however one further Royalist raid in April 1645.[26]

A number of famous people passed through Stratford during the conflict: In April 1643, Prince Rupert passed through, he was at Stratford again in July, where he met the Queen Henrietta Maria, who was travelling through the Midlands, and she was the guest of honour of Susanna Hall, William Shakespeare's daughter, at New Place. Oliver Cromwell was at Stratford in December 1646, and again in 1651, before the Battle of Worcester.[26]

Despite Stratford's increase in trade, it barely grew between the middle of the 13th century and the end of the 16th century, with a survey of the town showing 217 houses belonged to the lord of the manor in 1590. Growth continued to be slow throughout the 17th century, with hearth tax returns showing that at most there were approximately 429 houses in the town by 1670. However, more substantial expansion began following several enclosure acts in the late 18th century, with the first and largest development by John Payton who developed land on the north side of the old town, creating several streets including John Street and Payton Street.[10][28]

In 1769, the actor David Garrick staged a major Shakespeare Jubilee over three days which saw the construction of a large rotunda and the influx of many visitors. This contributed to the growing phenomenon of Bardolatry which made Stratford a tourist destination.[29][30]

Before the dominance of road and rail, Stratford was an important gateway to the network of British canals.[31] The River Avon was made navigable through Stratford in 1639, by the construction of locks and weirs, providing Stratford with a navigable link to the River Severn to the south-west and to near Warwick to the north-east, this allowed, in the words of Daniel Defoe "a very great Trade for Sugar, Oil, Wine, Tobacco, Iron, Lead and in a word, all heavy goods which are carried by water almost as far as Warwick; and in return the corn, and especially the cheese, is brought back from Gloucestershire and Warwickshire to Bristol".[26]

19th century to present

Between 1793 and 1816 the Stratford-upon-Avon Canal was built, linking the Avon at Stratford with Birmingham.[32] By the early 19th century, Stratford was a flourishing inland port, and an important centre of trade, with many canal and river wharves along what is now Bancroft Gardens.[26]

The first railway in Warwickshire; the Stratford and Moreton Tramway was opened to Stratford in 1826: this was a horse-drawn wagonway, 16 miles (26 km) long, which was intended to carry goods between the Stratford-upon-Avon Canal, the rural districts of south Warwickshire and Moreton-in-Marsh. The tramway fell into disuse by the early 1900s, and the tracks were lifted in 1918.[33][34] A surviving remnant of this is the Tramway Bridge over the River Avon, a brick arch bridge which now carries pedestrians.[35] The first steam railway to reach Stratford was a branch of the Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway from Honeybourne to the south, which opened on 12 July 1859. This was soon followed by the Stratford on Avon Railway's branch from Hatton from the north, which opened on 9 October 1860. Both branches initially had separate termini, but they soon agreed to join the two branches and open the current Stratford-upon-Avon railway station, which was opened on 24 July 1861. Both branches later came under the control of the Great Western Railway. The connection of Stratford to the growing national railway network, helped enable the development of the modern tourism industry.[36]

 
The original Shakespeare Memorial Theatre of 1879

Stratford did not become a major centre of industry during the industrial revolution, but some industries did grow up locally: Edward Fordham Flower opened a large canal side brewery in Stratford in 1831; the Flower & Sons Brewery, on Clopton Road survived until 1967, when the company was taken over by Whitbread.[37] Several lime kilns were opened locally, and the manufacture of tarpaulin and oilcloth flourished. The advent of rail transport in the middle of the century caused a major decline in river and canal transport, and the River Avon navigation through Stratford was abandoned in 1875.[26] It was restored as a navigation by volunteers almost a century later in 1974.[38]

Victorian Stratford's growth as a tourist destination was further enhanced by Edward Fordham Flower and his son Charles Edward Flower, owners of a local brewery business, and important figures in local affairs: Through their campaigning and fundraising efforts, the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre was opened on the banks of the Avon in 1879.[11] The original theatre was destroyed by fire in 1926, and its replacement was opened in 1932 to the designs of Elisabeth Scott, making it the first important building erected in Britain from the designs of a woman architect.[39]

In 1974, the old borough of Stratford was abolished and merged into the much larger Stratford-on-Avon District, The area of the borough became a successor parish with a Town Council.

Governance

 
Stratford-upon-Avon Town Hall, home to Stratford-upon-Avon Town Council

Stratford-upon-Avon is within the Stratford-on-Avon parliamentary constituency which has been represented by Nadhim Zahawi since 2010.[40] Stratford was within the West Midlands Region constituency of the European Parliament which was represented by seven Members of the European Parliament (MEPs).[41] Stratford is governed by three tiers of local government:

Party Seats Stratford-upon-Avon
town councillors (as of 2019)[46]
Liberal Democrats 15                              
Independent 1    

Geography

 
Map of Stratford

Stratford is 22 miles (35 km) south-east of Birmingham.[16] It is close to the northern edge of the Cotswolds, with Chipping Campden 10 miles (16 km) to the south. Stratford is around 6 miles (9.7 km) to the north-east of the borders with both Worcestershire and Gloucestershire. Other than those already mentioned, significant towns and villages nearby include Alcester, Wellesbourne, Evesham, Reddich and Henley-in-Arden.[10][46][48]

Stratford is divided by the River Avon, with the majority of the town being on the west side of the river, its riverside location means it is susceptible to flooding, including flash floods.[49][50]

Stratford has several suburbs: The town's urban area encompasses the contiguous sub-villages of Alveston, Shottery and Tiddington, which were formerly independent, but now form part of the civil parish of Stratford, other distinct suburbs of the town include Bishopton, Bridge Town, Clopton and Old Town.[48][10][46]

Compass

Climate

Stratford has a temperate maritime climate, as is usual for the British Isles, meaning extremes of heat and cold are rare.[51] Sunshine hours are low to moderate, with an average of 1512.3 hours of sunshine annually. Rainfall is spread evenly throughout the year, with an annual average of 614.8 mm (24 in), with over 1 millimetre (0.039 inches) of rain recorded on 114.1 days per year according to the 1981–2010 observation period.[52][53] Stratford's warmest month is July, with an average maximum temperature of 22.8 °C (73 °F) and January is the coldest month with an average high of 7.4 °C (45 °F). The average summer maximum temperature is 22.7 °C (73 °F), with a winter average high of 7.5 °C (45 °F).[53]

Climate data for Stratford-upon-Avon, elevation 49 metres (161 feet), 1971–2000
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 6.9
(44.4)
7.5
(45.5)
10.2
(50.4)
12.8
(55.0)
16.5
(61.7)
19.4
(66.9)
22.2
(72.0)
21.7
(71.1)
18.5
(65.3)
14.3
(57.7)
9.9
(49.8)
7.7
(45.9)
14.0
(57.2)
Average low °C (°F) 0.7
(33.3)
0.5
(32.9)
2.0
(35.6)
3.2
(37.8)
5.8
(42.4)
8.8
(47.8)
10.9
(51.6)
10.7
(51.3)
8.7
(47.7)
6.0
(42.8)
2.8
(37.0)
1.5
(34.7)
5.2
(41.4)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 55.6
(2.19)
40.6
(1.60)
45.6
(1.80)
46.5
(1.83)
48.8
(1.92)
55.3
(2.18)
44.0
(1.73)
61.1
(2.41)
55.0
(2.17)
56.2
(2.21)
52.0
(2.05)
61.4
(2.42)
622.3
(24.50)
Mean monthly sunshine hours 48.7 61.3 95.2 132.0 177.0 167.1 189.4 177.9 129.6 98.0 60.6 42.5 1,379.2
Source: Met Office[54]

Demography

In the 2021 census Stratford had a population of 30,495; an increase from 27,894 in the 2011 census and 22,338 in the 2001 census.[5] The town's population has undergone expansion in recent years years following government approval to build 800 new homes in Shottery, which also included plans for a new relief road,[55][56] up to 500 new homes planned in the Bishopton area of the town,[57] and 270 homes on the Loxley Road.[58]

In terms of ethnicity in 2021; 92.7% of Stratford residents were White, 3.3% were Asian, 0.6% were Black, 2.4% were Mixed, 0.2% were Arab and 0.8% were from another ethnic group.[5]

In terms of religion, 58.4% of Stratford residents identified as Christian, 38.2% said they had no religion, 1.0% were Muslim, 0.8% were Hindu, 0.5% were Sikh, 0.5% were Buddhists, 0.2% were Jewish, and 0.5% were from another religion.[5]

Economy

 
Hotel Indigo (historically The Falcon Hotel)[59] is one of many employers in the hospitality industry within Stratford.

Apart from tourism, which is a major employer, especially in the hotel, hospitality industry and catering sectors,[60] other industries in the town include boat building and maintenance, bicycles, mechanical and electrical engineering, food manufacture, Information Technology, call centre and service sector activities, a large motor sales sector, industrial plant hire, building suppliers, market gardening, farming, storage and transport logistics, finance and insurance, and a large retail sector. Major employers in the town include the NFU Mutual Insurance Company (and Avon Insurance), Amec Foster Wheeler, Sitel, Tesco, Morrisons, Marks & Spencer, B&Q and Pashley Cycles. There are, nominally, three theatres run by the prestigious Royal Shakespeare Company, which attract large audiences and income for the town.

Tourism

The regular large influx of tourists is the major source of the town's prosperity,[60] receiving between 2.5 million and 3 million visitors annually.[61][62] Stratford is a major English tourist town due to it being the birthplace of William Shakespeare, whom many consider the greatest playwright of all time.[60][63] In 2010 the District Council spent £298,000 on tourism promotion[64] and supports an official open-top tour bus service. In 2010 Stratford-on-Avon District Council launched a re-branded official tourism website for the Stratford area called Discover Stratford[65] after opening a new tourist information centre on Henley Street in May 2010,[66] which has since moved back to the original location on Bridgefoot.[67]

Shopping centres

 
High Street, Stratford-Upon-Avon

Apart from the town centre, Maybird Shopping Park, usually referred to locally as "The Maybird Centre" or simply "The Maybird", is a large shopping centre situated on Birmingham Road, approximately a five-minute drive from the town centre. The Rosebird Centre is a much smaller shopping centre located on Shipston Road, consisting of Waitrose, a pet shop and a pharmacy/GP surgery. Bell Court Shopping Centre is in the centre of the town with entrances from Wood St, Ely St, High St & Rother Street. it has several restaurants and shopping offers.

Culture

Theatre

 
The Royal Shakespeare Theatre showing the embedded Swan Theatre

The first real theatre in Stratford was a temporary wooden affair built in 1769 by the actor David Garrick for his Shakespeare Jubilee celebrations of that year to mark William Shakespeare's birthday. The theatre, built not far from the site of the present Royal Shakespeare Theatre, was almost washed away in two days of torrential rain that resulted in terrible flooding.[29][30] To celebrate the 300th anniversary of Shakespeare's birth in 1864, brewer Charles Edward Flower instigated the building of a temporary wooden theatre, known as the Tercentenary Theatre, which was built in a part of the brewer's large gardens on what is today the site of the new, and temporary, Courtyard Theatre. After three months the Tercentenary Theatre was dismantled, with the timber used for house-building purposes.[68]

In the early 1870s, Flower gave several acres of riverside land to the local council on the understanding that a permanent theatre be built in honour of Shakespeare's memory, and by 1879 the first Shakespeare Memorial Theatre had been completed. It proved to be a huge success, and by the early 20th century it was effectively being run by the actor/manager Frank Benson.[68] The theatre burned down in 1926, with the then artistic director, William Bridges-Adams, moving all productions to the local cinema. An architectural competition was arranged to elicit designs for a new theatre, with the winner, English architect Elisabeth Scott, creating the Royal Shakespeare Theatre. The new theatre, adjoining what was left of the old theatre, was opened by the then Prince of Wales, later Edward VIII, in 1932. The new theatre had many illustrious artistic directors, including the actor Anthony Quayle. Sir Peter Hall was appointed artistic director (designate) in 1959, and formed the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) in 1961.

The Royal Shakespeare Company also runs two smaller theatres, the Swan Theatre, which was created in the 1980s out of the shell of the remains of the original Memorial Theatre and is modelled on an Elizabethan theatre, quickly becoming one of the finest acting spaces in the United Kingdom, and The Other Place theatre. Along with the Royal Shakespeare Theatre (RST), the Swan Theatre closed in 2007 for refurbishment and reopened in November 2010. The Other Place, a Black box theatre, was extended to become the temporary RSC Courtyard Theatre, opening in July 2006 and was the home of the RSC while the RST was being refurbished – its interior is similar to the interior of the refurbished RST. The Courtyard Theatre closed in 2015 and was replaced by The Other Place in March 2016, which returned as a 200-seat studio theatre within the steel extension in which the Courtyard Theatre was located.[69][70]

Stratford is also home to The Bear Pit Theatre which was founded in 2008 as a voluntary organisation. It has 100 seats and is part of the Little Theatre Guild.[71][72][73] The Attic Theatre is Stratford-upon-Avon's premiere fringe theatre. Established by husband-and-wife team John and Catherine Partridge and in 2009, who also run the award-winning Tread The Boards Theatre Company.[74] The venue is located next door to Cox's Yard and hosts an intimate 90-seat auditorium in the Grade 2 listed Attic space.[74][75] The Waterside Theatre (which is not part of the Royal Shakespeare Theatre complex) re-opened in December 2004, then closed again in September 2008. During this span, the theatre housed the Shakespearience visitor attraction.[76] This has now been turned into the Clore Learning Centre, the Royal Shakespeare Company's education and events venue. In 1988, Stratford-upon-Avon was the venue for the disastrous provincial try-out of the ill-fated musical Carrie, based on the Stephen King novel.

Filming and television

 
View over Stratford with the River Avon and the Royal Shakespeare Theatre

The town is also the setting of the 2018 BBC detective show Shakespeare & Hathaway: Private Investigators.

Music

Stratford ArtsHouse, previously the Civic Hall, is home to Orchestra of the Swan, a professional chamber orchestra staging up to 10 orchestral concerts with international soloists per year.[77] Kempe Studio of The Rudolf Kempe Society, whose patron is Dame Judi Dench, is based in a house at 58 Waterside called The Muses and hosts musical events and masterclass lessons.[78][79] No. 1 Shakespeare Street holds regular evenings of live music.[80]

Museums and Shakespeare's houses

Tudor World is a museum which explores the time when Shakespeare lived. It is based in a Grade II* listed town centre Tudor building and is the only museum in the country dedicated to Tudor times. Every week there is a walk around the town with Shakespeare.[81] The Mechanical Art and Design museum, but better known as MAD museum, is a museum in Henley Street of "brilliant-but-bonkers machines" made by Kinetic artists. Items on show include mechanised flipbooks and a musical typewriter.[82]

There are five houses relating to William Shakespeare's life which are owned and cared for by the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust. These include Hall's Croft (the one-time home of Shakespeare's daughter, Susanna, and her husband Dr. John Hall) and Nash's House, which stands alongside the site of New Place which was owned by Shakespeare himself, wherein he died. In Shottery is Anne Hathaway's Cottage, the home of Shakespeare's wife's family prior to her marriage. Mary Arden's House (Palmer's Farm), the family home of his mother, is in Wilmcote. Elsewhere in the district are farms and buildings at Snitterfield, that belonged to the family of Shakespeare's father. In addition, King Edward VI School, located on the corner of Church Street and Chapel Lane, is a grammar school thought to have been attended by Shakespeare. In 2016, the school room where Shakespeare is believed to have studied opened to visitors.[83]

Literature

Stratford has one library, located in Henley Street within a medieval building.[20] Since 2008, Stratford has hosted the Stratford-upon-Avon Literary Festival, which holds two literary events a year, with one event in spring and a shorter festival in autumn.[84][85] The festival has talks from celebrity guests, workshops and educational programmes and has become one of the most noted literary festivals in the country,[86] with speakers including: Kirsty Wark, Alan Johnson MP, Baroness Shirley Williams, Tom Kerridge, Sir Tim Rice, John McCarthy, Michael Rosen, Howard Jacobson, Jeffrey Archer, Michael Palin, Jeremy Paxman, Alastair Campbell and Paul Merton.[87]

Shakespeare's celebrations

Every year, Shakespeare's birthday is celebrated in Stratford. The celebration takes place over two days on the weekend closest to 26 April, the date of his christening, and includes musical performances, drama and a parade through the town.[88] In 2016, events were held in Stratford to mark the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare's death.[89]

Pubs

The Garrick Inn is reputedly the oldest pub in Stratford, with an inn existing on the site since medieval times.[90][91] The Dirty Duck, located along Waterside, is a popular pub for actors performing at the nearby RSC theatres.[92] A Wetherspoon pub is situated on Sheep Street. For the last ten years, the Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA) has held a cider and beer festival in the town.[93]

Streets

Henley Street

Henley Street, one of the town's oldest streets, underwent substantial architectural change between the sixteenth and nineteenth centuries. John Shakespeare's large half-timbered dwelling, purchased by him in 1556, was in 1564 the birthplace of his son William. According to a descriptive placard provided for tourists there:

The property remained in the ownership of William Shakespeare's direct descendants until 1670, when his granddaughter, Elizabeth Barnard, died. As she had no children, Elizabeth left the estate to her relative Thomas Hart, Shakespeare's great-nephew. The main house became a tenanted inn called the Maidenhead (later the Swan and Maidenhead) following the death of John Shakespeare in 1601. Members of the Hart family continued living in the small adjoining cottage throughout the century.

At the end of the 19th century, Edward Gibbs "renovated" the building to more closely represent the original Tudor farmhouse. Adjacent to Shakespeare's Birthplace stands the Shakespeare Centre, completed in 1964 and not far from the Carnegie Library, opened in 1905. The large half-timbered building, which now comprises numbers 19, 20 and 21, was formerly the White Lion Inn.[94] It is first mentioned in 1603.[95] and was adjoined on the east by a smaller inn called the "Swan". In 1745 the latter was purchased by John Payton, who also acquired the "Lion" five years later and rebuilt the whole premises on a greatly enlarged scale. The work was completed by James Collins of Birmingham, builder, in 1753. Payton "brought the house into great vogue"[96] though Byng in 1792 complained that "at the noted White Lion, I met with nothing but incivility" (cited from Torrington Diaries (ed. Andrews), iii, 152).[94]

Payton was succeeded as innkeeper by his son John, and its reputation as one of the best inns on the Holyhead Road must have contributed not a little to the prosperity of the town. David Garrick stayed at the "White Lion Inn" during the Shakespeare Jubilee of 1769.[94] and George IV, as Prince Regent, visited it when he came to Stratford in 1806.[97] Its great days came to an end after John Payton the younger sold it to Thomas Arkell in 1823.[94] The building is now home to the Enchanted Manor Museum at the Creaky Cauldron and Magic Alley; the Box Brownie Café; Doug Brown's Really Good Gift Company; and the Not Just Shakespeare Tourist Information Centre. Henley Street is now a major tourist and shopping precinct with many al fresco cafés and street entertainers.

Sheep Street

 
Some of the many cafés and restaurants along Sheep Street

Sheep Street runs from Ely Street eastwards to the Waterside. It was a residential quarter in the 16th century, some of the buildings were rebuilt following the fire of 1595, although many, such as Number 40, date from 1480. Formerly a two-story building that was extended in the early twentieth century has a lower story of substantial close-set studding: the upper is of more widely spaced thin vertical timbers.[98] As the name suggests Sheep Street, which leads down from the Town Hall to Waterside and the Royal Shakespeare Theatre, was from early times and until the late 19th century, the area where sheep, brought from the neighbouring Cotswold Hills to be bought and sold.[16] Today it is the restaurant centre of the town.

The Shrieves House is one of the oldest still lived in houses in the town and William Shakespeare is said to have based his character of Sir John Falstaff on one of the residents, his godson's uncle. Oliver Cromwell is thought to have stayed here in 1651. He wrote a letter from the town to Lord Wharton on 27 August 1651,[99] before the Battle of Worcester. Behind The Shrieves House is a museum called "Tudor World" with recreations of 16th-century life in theatrical settings. Just off Sheep Street is Shrieves Walk, a very quaint walkway with several small independent stores. A Wetherspoons is also on Sheep Street.

Waterside and Southern Lane

This area of Stratford, which runs from the foot of Bridge Street to Holy Trinity Church (and leads directly off Sheep Street and Chapel Lane) runs alongside the River Avon and offers access to the Waterside Theatre and all areas of the Royal Shakespeare Theatre. The Bancroft Gardens[100] and river area is a very popular place for people watching, enjoying picnics and river activities. In the summer the River Avon is busy with rowing boats, motor boats and river cruises. The Stratford-upon-Avon Canal is busy with colourful narrowboats passing through or mooring up in the canal basin. There are often jugglers, fire-eaters and magicians entertaining the public on the lawns.

On the edge of the gardens is a water fountain, known as the Swan Fountain. It was unveiled in 1996 by the Queen Elizabeth II to recognise that Stratford has been a market town since 1196. It is from here the Stratford Town Walk meet every day (even Christmas Day), to offer a guided walking tour of the town. The tour passes the Shakespeare houses, Royal Shakespeare Theatre’s, 15th-century timber-framed buildings, William Shakespeare's school and visits Holy Trinity Church where Shakespeare was baptised and is buried. Waterside is also the location of The Dirty Duck pub which is frequented by actors from the nearby RSC theatres, theatre critics and theatregoers.[92]

Other attractions

 
Some of the recently uncovered wall paintings

Harvard House is located at 26 High Street. Other attractions include the Stratford Butterfly Farm, which is on the eastern side of the river Avon and the Bancroft Gardens and Stratford Armouries located three miles (4.8 km) from the centre of Stratford on Gospel Oak Lane. Each year on 12 October (unless this is a Sunday, in which case 11 October) Stratford hosts one of the largest mop fairs in the country. Ten days later, the smaller Runaway fair is held.[101] The Guild Chapel, at the intersection of Church Street and Chapel Lane, had a long association with William Shakespeare's family. The chapel offers a view of fine paintings from the early 1500s which had been covered up during the Reformation to save them from destruction. Centuries later, they were uncovered and are now visible.[102][103]

Transport

Road

Stratford is 22 miles (35 km) from the United Kingdom's second largest city, Birmingham, and is easily accessible from junction 15 of the M40 motorway. The A46 road links Stratford with the M40, Warwick and Coventry to the north-east, and Evesham and Ashchurch to the south-west, where it joins the M5 motorway.

Bus Services are mostly provided by Stagecoach in Warwickshire (formerly Midland Red South) and Diamond West Midlands.

Railway

Stratford now has two railway stations. The main town centre station, Stratford-upon-Avon railway station, has regular direct rail links with Birmingham (Snow Hill station and Moor Street station) and also with Kidderminster, Solihull, Warwick and Leamington Spa; some direct trains travel daily to/from London Marylebone. In 2013, an out-of-town station, Stratford-upon-Avon Parkway, opened on the town's north-western outskirts with park and ride facilities.

Stratford station is now the southern terminus of two branch lines from Birmingham and Hatton; up to 1976, the line formerly continued south of the town to join the Cotswold Line at Honeybourne, until this link was closed and dismantled.[104] There has been a campaign in recent years to restore the Honeybourne link, which would entail rebuilding 6 miles (9.7 km) of track.[105]

Stratford-upon-Avon's train service has been criticised by the Royal Shakespeare Company and others for its limited direct services to London, which consists of a handful of daily direct trains, with connections available from Leamington Spa. In 2018, the RSC described the services to the station as "woefully inadequate" for an international tourist destination.[106]

Until 1952, Stratford was also served by Stratford Old Town railway station of the former Stratford-upon-Avon and Midland Junction Railway.[107]

Water

 
A boat tour of the Avon in a converted barge

Several companies offer sightseeing cruises along the river Avon and the canal, some using old river barges that have been converted for this use.[108] The town is the terminus of the Stratford-upon-Avon Canal where it meets the river Avon.

The manually-powered Stratford-upon-Avon chain ferry was opened in 1937 and links Waterside, roughly halfway between the Royal Shakespeare Theatre and Holy Trinity Church, with the water meadows on the opposite side of the river. It was the last of its kind to be built in Britain.[109]

Cycling

The town has numerous cycle paths, such as the Stratford greenway, a 5 miles (8.0 km) traffic free cycle path, which used to be part of the rail network until the early 1960s; it is now part of the Sustrans National Cycle Network (routes National Cycle Route 5 and National Cycle Route 41). Starting from town, it heads along the river Avon and racecourse towards Welford-on-Avon and Long Marston with a cycle hire and café available at the start of the Greenway at Seven Meadows Road.[110]

Air

Birmingham Airport is 18 miles (29 km) to the north-west, with scheduled flights to many national and international destinations.

Education

Stratford is also home to several institutions set up for the study of Shakespeare, including the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, which holds books and documents related to the playwright, and the Shakespeare Institute. William Shakespeare is believed to have studied at King Edward VI School. Previously an all-boys school, from September 2013 up to 25% of the year 12 intake can be girls.[111] It is one of the few remaining grammar schools in England, selecting its pupils exclusively using the 11-plus examination. There is also an all-girls grammar school, Stratford-upon-Avon Grammar School for Girls, colloquially known as 'Shottery School' after its location in the village of Shottery, a short distance from the town centre.

Finally, there is a non-selective secondary school, Stratford-upon-Avon School, formerly known as the Hugh Clopton Secondary Modern School, which was demolished to make way for the new high school. There are no independent secondary schools in the town, but there are many primary schools, including St. Gregory's Catholic Primary School, Stratford-upon-Avon Primary School (often known locally as "Broad Street" due to its location), Bishopton Primary School, Willows Church of England Primary School and Thomas Jolyffe Primary School both state and independent, as well as Stratford-upon-Avon College.

Sport

Stratford-upon-Avon Rugby Club is situated on Loxley Road at their home ground Pearcecroft.[112] The club fields three senior sides and a colts under 18 team with the 1st XV currently playing in Midlands 1 (West).[113] The club also has a large mini and junior section.[114] Stratford-upon-Avon Cricket Club Ground is by the river Avon opposite the Royal Shakespeare Theatre. The first match recorded there was in 1880; it has hosted first-class games since 1951 and women's One Day Internationals since 2005. Stratford Town F.C. are based at the DCS Stadium in Tiddington; they won the Midland Alliance in the 2012–3 season and were promoted to Division One South & West of the Southern Football League.

The town's 5k parkrun event started in February 2016 and operates on the Recreation Ground every Saturday at 9 am. A junior parkrun started in June 2019 and takes place every Sunday at 9 am for children aged 4 to 14. Stratford Racecourse is located along the Luddington Road, about one mile from the centre of town which holds 18 meetings every year. It is a National Hunt course with an oval track of approximately a mile and a quarter and is considered to be one of the UK's leading small racecourses.[115] Adventure Bike Rider (established in 2010) is United Kingdom bimonthly motorcycling newspaper.

Churches

Notable people

With the Royal Shakespeare Company in the town, many famous actors have at some point lived or stayed in Stratford or the surrounding villages. Some of these include:

Other notable residents include:

Twin towns

Freedom of the Town

The following people have received the Freedom of the Town of Stratford-upon-Avon.

See also

References

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External links

  •   Media related to Stratford-upon-Avon at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Stratford-upon-Avon travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • Town Council official website
  • Stratford-upon-Avon Archives - Our Warwickshire

stratford, upon, avon, this, article, about, town, district, stratford, avon, district, constituency, stratford, avon, parliament, constituency, commonly, known, just, stratford, market, town, civil, parish, stratford, avon, district, county, warwickshire, wes. This article is about the town For the district see Stratford on Avon District For the constituency see Stratford on Avon UK Parliament constituency Stratford upon Avon ˈ eɪ v en commonly known as just Stratford is a market town and civil parish in the Stratford on Avon district in the county of Warwickshire 2 in the West Midlands region of England It is situated on the River Avon 91 miles 146 km north west of London 22 miles 35 km south east of Birmingham and 8 miles 13 km south west of Warwick 3 The town is the southernmost point of the Arden area on the edge of the Cotswolds 4 In the 2021 census Stratford had a population of 30 495 5 Stratford upon AvonThe centre of Stratford upon Avon from High StreetStratford upon AvonLocation within WarwickshirePopulation30 495 2021 census OS grid referenceSP1955Civil parishStratford upon Avon 1 DistrictStratford on AvonShire countyWarwickshireRegionWest MidlandsCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townStratford upon AvonPostcode districtCV37Dialling code01789PoliceWarwickshireFireWarwickshireAmbulanceWest MidlandsUK ParliamentStratford on AvonList of places UK England Warwickshire 52 11 34 N 01 42 23 W 52 19278 N 1 70639 W 52 19278 1 70639 Coordinates 52 11 34 N 01 42 23 W 52 19278 N 1 70639 W 52 19278 1 70639Stratford was originally inhabited by Britons before Anglo Saxons and remained a village before the lord of the manor John of Coutances set out plans to develop it into a town in 1196 In that same year Stratford was granted a charter from King Richard I to hold a weekly market in the town giving it its status as a market town As a result Stratford experienced an increase in trade and commerce as well as urban expansion Stratford is a popular tourist destination owing to its status as the birthplace and burial place of playwright and poet William Shakespeare it receives approximately 2 7 million visitors a year 6 The Royal Shakespeare Company resides in Stratford s Royal Shakespeare Theatre Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Roman 2 2 Medieval 2 3 Tudor period 2 4 17th and 18th centuries 2 5 19th century to present 3 Governance 4 Geography 4 1 Compass 5 Climate 6 Demography 7 Economy 7 1 Tourism 7 2 Shopping centres 8 Culture 8 1 Theatre 8 2 Filming and television 8 3 Music 8 4 Museums and Shakespeare s houses 8 5 Literature 8 6 Shakespeare s celebrations 8 7 Pubs 9 Streets 9 1 Henley Street 9 2 Sheep Street 9 3 Waterside and Southern Lane 10 Other attractions 11 Transport 11 1 Road 11 2 Railway 11 3 Water 11 4 Cycling 11 5 Air 12 Education 13 Sport 14 Churches 15 Notable people 16 Twin towns 17 Freedom of the Town 18 See also 19 References 20 External linksEtymology EditThe name is a combination of the Old English strǣt from Latin stratum meaning street ford indicating a shallow part of a river or stream allowing it to be crossed by walking or driving and avon which is the Celtic word for river 7 8 The street was a Roman road which connected Icknield Street in Alcester to the Fosse Way The ford which has been used as a crossing since Roman times later became the location of Clopton Bridge 9 10 11 A survey of 1251 52 uses the name Stratford for the first time to identify Old Stratford and the newer manors 10 12 The name was used after that time to describe the area specifically surrounding the Holy Trinity Church and the street of the Old Town 10 History Edit Historic map of Stratford in 1902 Roman Edit The Stratford area was settled during the Roman period as the area was crossed by a Roman road archaeological remains of a small Roman town have been found about 1 mile 1 6 km northeast of Stratford town centre at Tiddington now part of Stratford which was occupied from the 1st to the 5th century AD 13 The remains of two further probable Roman settlements have been found within a few miles of modern day Stratford 14 15 Medieval Edit The settlement which later became known as Stratford was first inhabited by Anglo Saxons following their 7th century invasion of what would become known as Warwickshire but was then part of the Kingdom of Mercia 7 16 It is likely that an Anglo Saxon monastery existed at the site of what is now Holy Trinity Church which was founded after the land was acquired by Egwin the third Bishop of Worcester 693 714 17 The monastery was likely destroyed by Viking invaders in 1015 18 The land remained in the ownership of the Bishops of Worcester until the 16th century 19 The area around Holy Trinity Church is still known as Old Town as it was the original area of settlement around the monastery The focus of the settlement at Stratford was later moved north closer to the river crossing which was better positioned for trade 10 Stratford then referred to as strete ford remained a village until the late 12th century when it was developed into a town by lord of the manor Bishop John of Coutances 10 Coutances laid out a new town plan in 1196 around half a mile 0 8 km north of the original settlement based on a grid system to expand Stratford and allow people to rent property in order to trade within the town 7 11 20 Coutances granted his new tenants the right to rent property and transmit it at death This was called burgage tenure Each development plot or burgage consisted of around 0 25 acres 0 10 hectares Additionally a charter was granted to Stratford by King Richard I in 1196 which allowed a weekly market to be held in the town giving it its status as a market town These two charters which formed the foundations of Stratford s transformation from a village to a town make the town of Stratford over 800 years old the town celebrated its 800th anniversary in 1996 11 21 The early 15th century Guildhall and Almshouses on Church Street John of Coutances plans to develop Stratford into a town meant Stratford became a place of work for tradesmen and merchants 11 By 1252 the town had approximately 240 burgages town rental properties owned by a king or lord as well as shops stalls and other buildings 10 Stratford s tradesmen established a guild known as the Guild of the Holy Cross for their business and religious requirements The guild developed into the town s main institution of local government and included the most important townsmen who elected officials to oversee local affairs They built a Guild Chapel in the 13th century and a Guildhall and almshouses on Church Street in around 1417 The guild also established an educational institution in the late 13th century 11 22 23 Many of the town s earliest and most important buildings are located along what is known as Stratford s Historic Spine which was once the main route from the town centre to the parish church The route of the Historic Spine begins at Shakespeare s Birthplace in Henley Street It continues through Henley Street to the top end of Bridge Street and into the High Street where many Elizabethan buildings are located including Harvard House The route carries on through Chapel Street where Nash s House and New Place are sited The Historic Spine continues along Church Street where the Guild buildings are located dating back to the 15th century as well as 18th and 19th century properties The route then finishes in the Old Town which includes Hall s Croft and the Holy Trinity Church 20 Clopton Bridge allowed trade to flourish in Stratford During Stratford s early expansion into a town the only access across the River Avon into and out of the town was over a wooden bridge which was first mentioned in 1235 10 However the bridge could not be crossed at times due to the river rising and was described by antiquarian John Leland as a poor bridge of timber and no causeway to it whereby many poor folks and other refused to come to Stratford when the Avon was up or coming thither stood in jeopardy of life In 1484 a new masonry arch bridge was built to replace it called Clopton Bridge named after Hugh Clopton a wealthy local man who later became the Lord Mayor of London who paid for its construction The new bridge made it easier for people to trade within Stratford and for passing travellers to stay in the town 10 24 25 Tudor period Edit The medieval structures of local governance underwent significant changes during the Tudor period The Guild of the Holy Cross was abolished in 1547 under King Edward VI s suppression of religious guilds and the inhabitants of Stratford petitioned the Crown for a charter of incorporation as a borough which they received in 1553 This allowed the formation a new Town Council which inherited the property and responsibilities of the abolished guild The Charter of Incorporation refounded Stratford s school as the King Edward VI School 22 11 The Cotswolds located close to Stratford was a major sheep producing area up until the latter part of the 19th century with Stratford one of its main centres for the processing marketing and distribution of sheep and wool Consequently Stratford also became a centre for tanning during the 15th 17th centuries 16 Glove making was also an important industry which was at its zenith in the 15th and 16th centuries As was malting the processing of grain to turn it into malt 26 John Shakespeare originally a farmer had moved to Stratford in 1551 from the nearby village of Snitterfield and became a successful glover glove maker and businessman and an official on the Town Council He met and married Mary Arden a member of the local gentry in around 1557 and together they had eight children including Stratford s most famous son William Shakespeare in 1564 believed to be at the house now known as Shakespeare s Birthplace 27 17th and 18th centuries Edit Stratford was the centre of considerable activity and some fighting during the English Civil War Being located at the junction of several main roads it was strategically important for both the Royalist and Parliamentarian armies Due to its close proximity to the Parliamentarian stronghold of Warwick Stratford remained under Parliamentarian control for the majority of the conflict although it was only directly occupied by troops for sporadic intervals In February 1643 Stratford was occupied by Royalist forces under Colonel Wagstaffe but was recaptured by Parliamentarians under Lord Brooke on 25 February after an engagement on the nearby road to Warwick Having secured the town Brooke returned to Warwick In one notable incidence in February 1643 Stratford s Market Hall at the site of the current Town Hall was destroyed after three barrels of gunpowder which were being stored there blew up From March 1644 until part of the following year Stratford appears to have been continuously occupied by Parliamentarian troops There was however one further Royalist raid in April 1645 26 A number of famous people passed through Stratford during the conflict In April 1643 Prince Rupert passed through he was at Stratford again in July where he met the Queen Henrietta Maria who was travelling through the Midlands and she was the guest of honour of Susanna Hall William Shakespeare s daughter at New Place Oliver Cromwell was at Stratford in December 1646 and again in 1651 before the Battle of Worcester 26 Despite Stratford s increase in trade it barely grew between the middle of the 13th century and the end of the 16th century with a survey of the town showing 217 houses belonged to the lord of the manor in 1590 Growth continued to be slow throughout the 17th century with hearth tax returns showing that at most there were approximately 429 houses in the town by 1670 However more substantial expansion began following several enclosure acts in the late 18th century with the first and largest development by John Payton who developed land on the north side of the old town creating several streets including John Street and Payton Street 10 28 In 1769 the actor David Garrick staged a major Shakespeare Jubilee over three days which saw the construction of a large rotunda and the influx of many visitors This contributed to the growing phenomenon of Bardolatry which made Stratford a tourist destination 29 30 Before the dominance of road and rail Stratford was an important gateway to the network of British canals 31 The River Avon was made navigable through Stratford in 1639 by the construction of locks and weirs providing Stratford with a navigable link to the River Severn to the south west and to near Warwick to the north east this allowed in the words of Daniel Defoe a very great Trade for Sugar Oil Wine Tobacco Iron Lead and in a word all heavy goods which are carried by water almost as far as Warwick and in return the corn and especially the cheese is brought back from Gloucestershire and Warwickshire to Bristol 26 19th century to present Edit Between 1793 and 1816 the Stratford upon Avon Canal was built linking the Avon at Stratford with Birmingham 32 By the early 19th century Stratford was a flourishing inland port and an important centre of trade with many canal and river wharves along what is now Bancroft Gardens 26 The first railway in Warwickshire the Stratford and Moreton Tramway was opened to Stratford in 1826 this was a horse drawn wagonway 16 miles 26 km long which was intended to carry goods between the Stratford upon Avon Canal the rural districts of south Warwickshire and Moreton in Marsh The tramway fell into disuse by the early 1900s and the tracks were lifted in 1918 33 34 A surviving remnant of this is the Tramway Bridge over the River Avon a brick arch bridge which now carries pedestrians 35 The first steam railway to reach Stratford was a branch of the Oxford Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway from Honeybourne to the south which opened on 12 July 1859 This was soon followed by the Stratford on Avon Railway s branch from Hatton from the north which opened on 9 October 1860 Both branches initially had separate termini but they soon agreed to join the two branches and open the current Stratford upon Avon railway station which was opened on 24 July 1861 Both branches later came under the control of the Great Western Railway The connection of Stratford to the growing national railway network helped enable the development of the modern tourism industry 36 The original Shakespeare Memorial Theatre of 1879 Stratford did not become a major centre of industry during the industrial revolution but some industries did grow up locally Edward Fordham Flower opened a large canal side brewery in Stratford in 1831 the Flower amp Sons Brewery on Clopton Road survived until 1967 when the company was taken over by Whitbread 37 Several lime kilns were opened locally and the manufacture of tarpaulin and oilcloth flourished The advent of rail transport in the middle of the century caused a major decline in river and canal transport and the River Avon navigation through Stratford was abandoned in 1875 26 It was restored as a navigation by volunteers almost a century later in 1974 38 Victorian Stratford s growth as a tourist destination was further enhanced by Edward Fordham Flower and his son Charles Edward Flower owners of a local brewery business and important figures in local affairs Through their campaigning and fundraising efforts the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre was opened on the banks of the Avon in 1879 11 The original theatre was destroyed by fire in 1926 and its replacement was opened in 1932 to the designs of Elisabeth Scott making it the first important building erected in Britain from the designs of a woman architect 39 In 1974 the old borough of Stratford was abolished and merged into the much larger Stratford on Avon District The area of the borough became a successor parish with a Town Council Governance Edit Stratford upon Avon Town Hall home to Stratford upon Avon Town Council Stratford upon Avon is within the Stratford on Avon parliamentary constituency which has been represented by Nadhim Zahawi since 2010 40 Stratford was within the West Midlands Region constituency of the European Parliament which was represented by seven Members of the European Parliament MEPs 41 Stratford is governed by three tiers of local government Warwickshire County Council is a non metropolitan county council responsible for education highways and other strategic matters Stratford on Avon District Council is responsible for housing planning rubbish collection and other local matters in Stratford and neighbouring towns and villages The council is based at Elizabeth House Church Street 42 Stratford upon Avon Town Council is a parish council responsible for crime prevention cemeteries public conveniences litter river moorings parks grants via the Town Trust and the selection of the town s mayor 43 The Town Council is based at the Town Hall in Sheep Street 44 The Stratford upon Avon Town Trust is based in the Civic Hall Rother Street 45 The council serves the civil parish and is split into nine wards Avenue Bishopton Bridgetown Clopton Guildhall Hathaway Shottery Tiddington and Welcombe with two councillors representing each ward 46 The parish absorbed Old Stratford and Drayton on 31 March 2015 47 Party Seats Stratford upon Avon town councillors as of 2019 46 Liberal Democrats 15 Independent 1 Geography Edit Map of Stratford Stratford is 22 miles 35 km south east of Birmingham 16 It is close to the northern edge of the Cotswolds with Chipping Campden 10 miles 16 km to the south Stratford is around 6 miles 9 7 km to the north east of the borders with both Worcestershire and Gloucestershire Other than those already mentioned significant towns and villages nearby include Alcester Wellesbourne Evesham Reddich and Henley in Arden 10 46 48 Stratford is divided by the River Avon with the majority of the town being on the west side of the river its riverside location means it is susceptible to flooding including flash floods 49 50 Stratford has several suburbs The town s urban area encompasses the contiguous sub villages of Alveston Shottery and Tiddington which were formerly independent but now form part of the civil parish of Stratford other distinct suburbs of the town include Bishopton Bridge Town Clopton and Old Town 48 10 46 Compass EditClimate EditStratford has a temperate maritime climate as is usual for the British Isles meaning extremes of heat and cold are rare 51 Sunshine hours are low to moderate with an average of 1512 3 hours of sunshine annually Rainfall is spread evenly throughout the year with an annual average of 614 8 mm 24 in with over 1 millimetre 0 039 inches of rain recorded on 114 1 days per year according to the 1981 2010 observation period 52 53 Stratford s warmest month is July with an average maximum temperature of 22 8 C 73 F and January is the coldest month with an average high of 7 4 C 45 F The average summer maximum temperature is 22 7 C 73 F with a winter average high of 7 5 C 45 F 53 Climate data for Stratford upon Avon elevation 49 metres 161 feet 1971 2000Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 6 9 44 4 7 5 45 5 10 2 50 4 12 8 55 0 16 5 61 7 19 4 66 9 22 2 72 0 21 7 71 1 18 5 65 3 14 3 57 7 9 9 49 8 7 7 45 9 14 0 57 2 Average low C F 0 7 33 3 0 5 32 9 2 0 35 6 3 2 37 8 5 8 42 4 8 8 47 8 10 9 51 6 10 7 51 3 8 7 47 7 6 0 42 8 2 8 37 0 1 5 34 7 5 2 41 4 Average precipitation mm inches 55 6 2 19 40 6 1 60 45 6 1 80 46 5 1 83 48 8 1 92 55 3 2 18 44 0 1 73 61 1 2 41 55 0 2 17 56 2 2 21 52 0 2 05 61 4 2 42 622 3 24 50 Mean monthly sunshine hours 48 7 61 3 95 2 132 0 177 0 167 1 189 4 177 9 129 6 98 0 60 6 42 5 1 379 2Source Met Office 54 Demography EditIn the 2021 census Stratford had a population of 30 495 an increase from 27 894 in the 2011 census and 22 338 in the 2001 census 5 The town s population has undergone expansion in recent years years following government approval to build 800 new homes in Shottery which also included plans for a new relief road 55 56 up to 500 new homes planned in the Bishopton area of the town 57 and 270 homes on the Loxley Road 58 In terms of ethnicity in 2021 92 7 of Stratford residents were White 3 3 were Asian 0 6 were Black 2 4 were Mixed 0 2 were Arab and 0 8 were from another ethnic group 5 In terms of religion 58 4 of Stratford residents identified as Christian 38 2 said they had no religion 1 0 were Muslim 0 8 were Hindu 0 5 were Sikh 0 5 were Buddhists 0 2 were Jewish and 0 5 were from another religion 5 Economy Edit Hotel Indigo historically The Falcon Hotel 59 is one of many employers in the hospitality industry within Stratford Apart from tourism which is a major employer especially in the hotel hospitality industry and catering sectors 60 other industries in the town include boat building and maintenance bicycles mechanical and electrical engineering food manufacture Information Technology call centre and service sector activities a large motor sales sector industrial plant hire building suppliers market gardening farming storage and transport logistics finance and insurance and a large retail sector Major employers in the town include the NFU Mutual Insurance Company and Avon Insurance Amec Foster Wheeler Sitel Tesco Morrisons Marks amp Spencer B amp Q and Pashley Cycles There are nominally three theatres run by the prestigious Royal Shakespeare Company which attract large audiences and income for the town Tourism Edit The regular large influx of tourists is the major source of the town s prosperity 60 receiving between 2 5 million and 3 million visitors annually 61 62 Stratford is a major English tourist town due to it being the birthplace of William Shakespeare whom many consider the greatest playwright of all time 60 63 In 2010 the District Council spent 298 000 on tourism promotion 64 and supports an official open top tour bus service In 2010 Stratford on Avon District Council launched a re branded official tourism website for the Stratford area called Discover Stratford 65 after opening a new tourist information centre on Henley Street in May 2010 66 which has since moved back to the original location on Bridgefoot 67 Shopping centres Edit High Street Stratford Upon Avon Apart from the town centre Maybird Shopping Park usually referred to locally as The Maybird Centre or simply The Maybird is a large shopping centre situated on Birmingham Road approximately a five minute drive from the town centre The Rosebird Centre is a much smaller shopping centre located on Shipston Road consisting of Waitrose a pet shop and a pharmacy GP surgery Bell Court Shopping Centre is in the centre of the town with entrances from Wood St Ely St High St amp Rother Street it has several restaurants and shopping offers Culture EditTheatre Edit The Royal Shakespeare Theatre showing the embedded Swan Theatre The first real theatre in Stratford was a temporary wooden affair built in 1769 by the actor David Garrick for his Shakespeare Jubilee celebrations of that year to mark William Shakespeare s birthday The theatre built not far from the site of the present Royal Shakespeare Theatre was almost washed away in two days of torrential rain that resulted in terrible flooding 29 30 To celebrate the 300th anniversary of Shakespeare s birth in 1864 brewer Charles Edward Flower instigated the building of a temporary wooden theatre known as the Tercentenary Theatre which was built in a part of the brewer s large gardens on what is today the site of the new and temporary Courtyard Theatre After three months the Tercentenary Theatre was dismantled with the timber used for house building purposes 68 In the early 1870s Flower gave several acres of riverside land to the local council on the understanding that a permanent theatre be built in honour of Shakespeare s memory and by 1879 the first Shakespeare Memorial Theatre had been completed It proved to be a huge success and by the early 20th century it was effectively being run by the actor manager Frank Benson 68 The theatre burned down in 1926 with the then artistic director William Bridges Adams moving all productions to the local cinema An architectural competition was arranged to elicit designs for a new theatre with the winner English architect Elisabeth Scott creating the Royal Shakespeare Theatre The new theatre adjoining what was left of the old theatre was opened by the then Prince of Wales later Edward VIII in 1932 The new theatre had many illustrious artistic directors including the actor Anthony Quayle Sir Peter Hall was appointed artistic director designate in 1959 and formed the Royal Shakespeare Company RSC in 1961 The Royal Shakespeare Company also runs two smaller theatres the Swan Theatre which was created in the 1980s out of the shell of the remains of the original Memorial Theatre and is modelled on an Elizabethan theatre quickly becoming one of the finest acting spaces in the United Kingdom and The Other Place theatre Along with the Royal Shakespeare Theatre RST the Swan Theatre closed in 2007 for refurbishment and reopened in November 2010 The Other Place a Black box theatre was extended to become the temporary RSC Courtyard Theatre opening in July 2006 and was the home of the RSC while the RST was being refurbished its interior is similar to the interior of the refurbished RST The Courtyard Theatre closed in 2015 and was replaced by The Other Place in March 2016 which returned as a 200 seat studio theatre within the steel extension in which the Courtyard Theatre was located 69 70 Stratford is also home to The Bear Pit Theatre which was founded in 2008 as a voluntary organisation It has 100 seats and is part of the Little Theatre Guild 71 72 73 The Attic Theatre is Stratford upon Avon s premiere fringe theatre Established by husband and wife team John and Catherine Partridge and in 2009 who also run the award winning Tread The Boards Theatre Company 74 The venue is located next door to Cox s Yard and hosts an intimate 90 seat auditorium in the Grade 2 listed Attic space 74 75 The Waterside Theatre which is not part of the Royal Shakespeare Theatre complex re opened in December 2004 then closed again in September 2008 During this span the theatre housed the Shakespearience visitor attraction 76 This has now been turned into the Clore Learning Centre the Royal Shakespeare Company s education and events venue In 1988 Stratford upon Avon was the venue for the disastrous provincial try out of the ill fated musical Carrie based on the Stephen King novel Filming and television Edit View over Stratford with the River Avon and the Royal Shakespeare Theatre The town is also the setting of the 2018 BBC detective show Shakespeare amp Hathaway Private Investigators Music Edit Stratford ArtsHouse previously the Civic Hall is home to Orchestra of the Swan a professional chamber orchestra staging up to 10 orchestral concerts with international soloists per year 77 Kempe Studio of The Rudolf Kempe Society whose patron is Dame Judi Dench is based in a house at 58 Waterside called The Muses and hosts musical events and masterclass lessons 78 79 No 1 Shakespeare Street holds regular evenings of live music 80 Museums and Shakespeare s houses Edit Tudor World is a museum which explores the time when Shakespeare lived It is based in a Grade II listed town centre Tudor building and is the only museum in the country dedicated to Tudor times Every week there is a walk around the town with Shakespeare 81 The Mechanical Art and Design museum but better known as MAD museum is a museum in Henley Street of brilliant but bonkers machines made by Kinetic artists Items on show include mechanised flipbooks and a musical typewriter 82 There are five houses relating to William Shakespeare s life which are owned and cared for by the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust These include Hall s Croft the one time home of Shakespeare s daughter Susanna and her husband Dr John Hall and Nash s House which stands alongside the site of New Place which was owned by Shakespeare himself wherein he died In Shottery is Anne Hathaway s Cottage the home of Shakespeare s wife s family prior to her marriage Mary Arden s House Palmer s Farm the family home of his mother is in Wilmcote Elsewhere in the district are farms and buildings at Snitterfield that belonged to the family of Shakespeare s father In addition King Edward VI School located on the corner of Church Street and Chapel Lane is a grammar school thought to have been attended by Shakespeare In 2016 the school room where Shakespeare is believed to have studied opened to visitors 83 Literature Edit Stratford has one library located in Henley Street within a medieval building 20 Since 2008 Stratford has hosted the Stratford upon Avon Literary Festival which holds two literary events a year with one event in spring and a shorter festival in autumn 84 85 The festival has talks from celebrity guests workshops and educational programmes and has become one of the most noted literary festivals in the country 86 with speakers including Kirsty Wark Alan Johnson MP Baroness Shirley Williams Tom Kerridge Sir Tim Rice John McCarthy Michael Rosen Howard Jacobson Jeffrey Archer Michael Palin Jeremy Paxman Alastair Campbell and Paul Merton 87 Shakespeare s celebrations Edit Every year Shakespeare s birthday is celebrated in Stratford The celebration takes place over two days on the weekend closest to 26 April the date of his christening and includes musical performances drama and a parade through the town 88 In 2016 events were held in Stratford to mark the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare s death 89 Pubs Edit The Garrick Inn is reputedly the oldest pub in Stratford with an inn existing on the site since medieval times 90 91 The Dirty Duck located along Waterside is a popular pub for actors performing at the nearby RSC theatres 92 A Wetherspoon pub is situated on Sheep Street For the last ten years the Campaign for Real Ale CAMRA has held a cider and beer festival in the town 93 Streets EditHenley Street Edit Shakespeare s Birthplace Henley Street one of the town s oldest streets underwent substantial architectural change between the sixteenth and nineteenth centuries John Shakespeare s large half timbered dwelling purchased by him in 1556 was in 1564 the birthplace of his son William According to a descriptive placard provided for tourists there The property remained in the ownership of William Shakespeare s direct descendants until 1670 when his granddaughter Elizabeth Barnard died As she had no children Elizabeth left the estate to her relative Thomas Hart Shakespeare s great nephew The main house became a tenanted inn called the Maidenhead later the Swan and Maidenhead following the death of John Shakespeare in 1601 Members of the Hart family continued living in the small adjoining cottage throughout the century At the end of the 19th century Edward Gibbs renovated the building to more closely represent the original Tudor farmhouse Adjacent to Shakespeare s Birthplace stands the Shakespeare Centre completed in 1964 and not far from the Carnegie Library opened in 1905 The large half timbered building which now comprises numbers 19 20 and 21 was formerly the White Lion Inn 94 It is first mentioned in 1603 95 and was adjoined on the east by a smaller inn called the Swan In 1745 the latter was purchased by John Payton who also acquired the Lion five years later and rebuilt the whole premises on a greatly enlarged scale The work was completed by James Collins of Birmingham builder in 1753 Payton brought the house into great vogue 96 though Byng in 1792 complained that at the noted White Lion I met with nothing but incivility cited from Torrington Diaries ed Andrews iii 152 94 Payton was succeeded as innkeeper by his son John and its reputation as one of the best inns on the Holyhead Road must have contributed not a little to the prosperity of the town David Garrick stayed at the White Lion Inn during the Shakespeare Jubilee of 1769 94 and George IV as Prince Regent visited it when he came to Stratford in 1806 97 Its great days came to an end after John Payton the younger sold it to Thomas Arkell in 1823 94 The building is now home to the Enchanted Manor Museum at the Creaky Cauldron and Magic Alley the Box Brownie Cafe Doug Brown s Really Good Gift Company and the Not Just Shakespeare Tourist Information Centre Henley Street is now a major tourist and shopping precinct with many al fresco cafes and street entertainers Sheep Street Edit Some of the many cafes and restaurants along Sheep Street Sheep Street runs from Ely Street eastwards to the Waterside It was a residential quarter in the 16th century some of the buildings were rebuilt following the fire of 1595 although many such as Number 40 date from 1480 Formerly a two story building that was extended in the early twentieth century has a lower story of substantial close set studding the upper is of more widely spaced thin vertical timbers 98 As the name suggests Sheep Street which leads down from the Town Hall to Waterside and the Royal Shakespeare Theatre was from early times and until the late 19th century the area where sheep brought from the neighbouring Cotswold Hills to be bought and sold 16 Today it is the restaurant centre of the town The Shrieves House is one of the oldest still lived in houses in the town and William Shakespeare is said to have based his character of Sir John Falstaff on one of the residents his godson s uncle Oliver Cromwell is thought to have stayed here in 1651 He wrote a letter from the town to Lord Wharton on 27 August 1651 99 before the Battle of Worcester Behind The Shrieves House is a museum called Tudor World with recreations of 16th century life in theatrical settings Just off Sheep Street is Shrieves Walk a very quaint walkway with several small independent stores A Wetherspoons is also on Sheep Street Waterside and Southern Lane Edit This area of Stratford which runs from the foot of Bridge Street to Holy Trinity Church and leads directly off Sheep Street and Chapel Lane runs alongside the River Avon and offers access to the Waterside Theatre and all areas of the Royal Shakespeare Theatre The Bancroft Gardens 100 and river area is a very popular place for people watching enjoying picnics and river activities In the summer the River Avon is busy with rowing boats motor boats and river cruises The Stratford upon Avon Canal is busy with colourful narrowboats passing through or mooring up in the canal basin There are often jugglers fire eaters and magicians entertaining the public on the lawns On the edge of the gardens is a water fountain known as the Swan Fountain It was unveiled in 1996 by the Queen Elizabeth II to recognise that Stratford has been a market town since 1196 It is from here the Stratford Town Walk meet every day even Christmas Day to offer a guided walking tour of the town The tour passes the Shakespeare houses Royal Shakespeare Theatre s 15th century timber framed buildings William Shakespeare s school and visits Holy Trinity Church where Shakespeare was baptised and is buried Waterside is also the location of The Dirty Duck pub which is frequented by actors from the nearby RSC theatres theatre critics and theatregoers 92 Other attractions Edit Some of the recently uncovered wall paintings Harvard House is located at 26 High Street Other attractions include the Stratford Butterfly Farm which is on the eastern side of the river Avon and the Bancroft Gardens and Stratford Armouries located three miles 4 8 km from the centre of Stratford on Gospel Oak Lane Each year on 12 October unless this is a Sunday in which case 11 October Stratford hosts one of the largest mop fairs in the country Ten days later the smaller Runaway fair is held 101 The Guild Chapel at the intersection of Church Street and Chapel Lane had a long association with William Shakespeare s family The chapel offers a view of fine paintings from the early 1500s which had been covered up during the Reformation to save them from destruction Centuries later they were uncovered and are now visible 102 103 Transport EditRoad Edit Stratford is 22 miles 35 km from the United Kingdom s second largest city Birmingham and is easily accessible from junction 15 of the M40 motorway The A46 road links Stratford with the M40 Warwick and Coventry to the north east and Evesham and Ashchurch to the south west where it joins the M5 motorway Bus Services are mostly provided by Stagecoach in Warwickshire formerly Midland Red South and Diamond West Midlands Railway Edit Stratford upon Avon railway station Stratford now has two railway stations The main town centre station Stratford upon Avon railway station has regular direct rail links with Birmingham Snow Hill station and Moor Street station and also with Kidderminster Solihull Warwick and Leamington Spa some direct trains travel daily to from London Marylebone In 2013 an out of town station Stratford upon Avon Parkway opened on the town s north western outskirts with park and ride facilities Stratford station is now the southern terminus of two branch lines from Birmingham and Hatton up to 1976 the line formerly continued south of the town to join the Cotswold Line at Honeybourne until this link was closed and dismantled 104 There has been a campaign in recent years to restore the Honeybourne link which would entail rebuilding 6 miles 9 7 km of track 105 Stratford upon Avon s train service has been criticised by the Royal Shakespeare Company and others for its limited direct services to London which consists of a handful of daily direct trains with connections available from Leamington Spa In 2018 the RSC described the services to the station as woefully inadequate for an international tourist destination 106 Until 1952 Stratford was also served by Stratford Old Town railway station of the former Stratford upon Avon and Midland Junction Railway 107 Water Edit A boat tour of the Avon in a converted barge Several companies offer sightseeing cruises along the river Avon and the canal some using old river barges that have been converted for this use 108 The town is the terminus of the Stratford upon Avon Canal where it meets the river Avon The manually powered Stratford upon Avon chain ferry was opened in 1937 and links Waterside roughly halfway between the Royal Shakespeare Theatre and Holy Trinity Church with the water meadows on the opposite side of the river It was the last of its kind to be built in Britain 109 Cycling Edit The town has numerous cycle paths such as the Stratford greenway a 5 miles 8 0 km traffic free cycle path which used to be part of the rail network until the early 1960s it is now part of the Sustrans National Cycle Network routes National Cycle Route 5 and National Cycle Route 41 Starting from town it heads along the river Avon and racecourse towards Welford on Avon and Long Marston with a cycle hire and cafe available at the start of the Greenway at Seven Meadows Road 110 Air Edit Birmingham Airport is 18 miles 29 km to the north west with scheduled flights to many national and international destinations Education Edit Part of King Edward VI Grammar School Stratford is also home to several institutions set up for the study of Shakespeare including the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust which holds books and documents related to the playwright and the Shakespeare Institute William Shakespeare is believed to have studied at King Edward VI School Previously an all boys school from September 2013 up to 25 of the year 12 intake can be girls 111 It is one of the few remaining grammar schools in England selecting its pupils exclusively using the 11 plus examination There is also an all girls grammar school Stratford upon Avon Grammar School for Girls colloquially known as Shottery School after its location in the village of Shottery a short distance from the town centre Finally there is a non selective secondary school Stratford upon Avon School formerly known as the Hugh Clopton Secondary Modern School which was demolished to make way for the new high school There are no independent secondary schools in the town but there are many primary schools including St Gregory s Catholic Primary School Stratford upon Avon Primary School often known locally as Broad Street due to its location Bishopton Primary School Willows Church of England Primary School and Thomas Jolyffe Primary School both state and independent as well as Stratford upon Avon College Sport Edit Stratford Racecourse Stratford upon Avon Rugby Club is situated on Loxley Road at their home ground Pearcecroft 112 The club fields three senior sides and a colts under 18 team with the 1st XV currently playing in Midlands 1 West 113 The club also has a large mini and junior section 114 Stratford upon Avon Cricket Club Ground is by the river Avon opposite the Royal Shakespeare Theatre The first match recorded there was in 1880 it has hosted first class games since 1951 and women s One Day Internationals since 2005 Stratford Town F C are based at the DCS Stadium in Tiddington they won the Midland Alliance in the 2012 3 season and were promoted to Division One South amp West of the Southern Football League The town s 5k parkrun event started in February 2016 and operates on the Recreation Ground every Saturday at 9 am A junior parkrun started in June 2019 and takes place every Sunday at 9 am for children aged 4 to 14 Stratford Racecourse is located along the Luddington Road about one mile from the centre of town which holds 18 meetings every year It is a National Hunt course with an oval track of approximately a mile and a quarter and is considered to be one of the UK s leading small racecourses 115 Adventure Bike Rider established in 2010 is United Kingdom bimonthly motorcycling newspaper Churches Edit Holy Trinity Church Holy Trinity Church Stratford upon Avon 116 St Gregory s Catholic Church 117 St Andrew s Church Shottery 118 Stratford upon Avon United Reformed Church 119 Stratford upon Avon Methodist Church 120 First Church of Christ scientist Stratford upon Avon 121 Christadelphian church 122 Guild Chapel 102 Notable people EditWith the Royal Shakespeare Company in the town many famous actors have at some point lived or stayed in Stratford or the surrounding villages Some of these include William Shakespeare 1564 1616 English playwright and poet David Bradley actor known for his role in the Harry Potter films Craig Charles 1964 actor presenter and DJ known for playing Dave Lister in Red Dwarf and Lloyd Mullaney in Coronation Street has lived in Stratford Jeffery Dench actor lived just outside Stratford in Clifford Chambers until his death in 2014 Sarah Douglas 1952 actress best known for her film and TV career was born and raised in the town Marc Elliott actor born in Stratford played Syed Masood on EastEnders Labour Party MP and actor Andrew Faulds lived in Old Town Stratford until his death in 2000 aged 77 Actress and animator Sarah Ann Kennedy who grew up in Stratford She is the voice of Miss Rabbit in Peppa Pig and Nanny Plum in Ben and Holly s Little Kingdom She is also responsible for the creation of Crapston Villas an animated soap on Channel 4 Simon Pegg actor studied at Stratford upon Avon College was born in Gloucestershire England Patrick Robinson 1963 Casualty actor and Strictly Come Dancing contestant lives in Stratford Mark Strickson actor famous for playing alien Vislor Turlough on Doctor WhoOther notable residents include Daniel Brocklebank actor who plays Billy Mayhew on Coronation Street Arthur C Clarke author of 2001 A Space Odyssey served with the RAF at RAF Stratford during the 1940s Clarke later wrote the short story The Curse which takes place in a post apocalyptic Stratford upon Avon From 1901 to 1924 the romantic novelist Marie Corelli real name Minnie Mackay daughter of Charles Mackay made her home with her companion Miss Vyver at Mason s Croft Church Street Stratford Claire Darke 161st Mayor of Wolverhampton Lord Digby Jones 1955 lives near Stratford upon Avon and is Chairman of Governors at Stratford upon Avon College and Chairman of Grove Industries which is based in the town David Domoney 1963 gardener co host of Love Your Garden lives in Stratford English footballer Dion Dublin who has played for Manchester United Aston Villa Celtic and Coventry City as well as the national team lived with his wife and family in Stratford Susan Fletcher novelist winner of Whitbread Prize now Costa Book Award and Betty Trask Award Simon Gilbert and Neil Codling of the band Suede lived and were educated in Stratford Members of indie bands Klaxons and Pull Tiger Tail all grew up and went to schools in Stratford before they moved to New Cross London John Krasinski 1979 studied at The Royal Shakespeare Company Brad Moran a former Australian Rules Footballer grew up in Stratford before moving to Australia when he was 15 Adrian Newey famous Formula 1 designer designed championship winning cars for Williams F1 McLaren and Red Bull F1 teams Andrew Pozzi 1992 110m hurdler born in Stratford upon Avon J B Priestley died in Stratford Former Secretary of State for War John Profumo was the MP for Stratford upon Avon 1950 1963 W W Quatremain local landscape painter Gordon Ramsay noted celebrity chef and star of several cooking related shows moved to Stratford Upon Avon with his family in 1976 when he was nine years old The historic Stratford family who took their name from the town George Macaulay Trevelyan historian Quentin Willson 1957 motoring expert journalist and ex Top Gear presenter lives in Stratford Twin towns EditTown CountryStratford Victoria 123 AustraliaStratford Ontario CanadaStratford Prince Edward Island CanadaStratford Taranaki New ZealandStratford Connecticut United StatesFreedom of the Town EditThe following people have received the Freedom of the Town of Stratford upon Avon Sir Kenneth Branagh 22 April 2022 Dame Judi Dench 22 April 2022 124 125 126 See also EditStratford Hospital Avon Park FL a town in the United States named after Stratford upon AvonReferences Edit Stratford Town Council Stratford tc gov uk Retrieved 28 February 2019 Stratford upon Avon Mapit Retrieved 12 February 2018 Stratford on Avon District Council Living in the District Stratford gov uk Archived from the original on 6 June 2012 Retrieved 31 May 2013 Stratford upon Avon the Cotswolds Guide a b c d Stratford upon Avon Parish in West Midlands City Population Retrieved 15 February 2022 Economic Impact of Tourism Stratford Town 2018 PDF stratford gov uk Retrieved 16 March 2022 a b c Lambert Tim A History of Stratford Upon Avon Localhistories org Retrieved 9 November 2016 Reverting back to another language no no OxfordWords blog OxfordWords blog 28 February 2011 Archived from the original on 30 June 2012 Retrieved 10 February 2017 Stratford Upon Avon York Tutors York Tutors Retrieved 14 November 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k The borough of Stratford upon Avon Introduction and architectural description British History Online British history ac uk Retrieved 10 November 2016 a b c d e f g Gillingham John Stratford upon Avon 800th Anniversary Guide Stratford upon avon co uk Retrieved 9 November 2016 Holt Richard Rosser Gervase 23 June 2014 The Medieval Town in England 1200 1540 Routledge ISBN 9781317899815 Retrieved 11 November 2016 Tiddington Roman Settlement A Scheduled Monument in Stratford upon Avon Warwickshire Ancient Monuments Retrieved 26 January 2023 Site of Probable Roman Settlement Our Warwickshire Retrieved 14 March 2022 Site of Poss Roman Settlement 300m S of Orchard Fm Our Warwickshire Retrieved 14 March 2022 a b c d Stratford upon Avon Tourist Information and Travel Guide England UK Cotswolds info Retrieved 9 November 2016 Site of Early Medieval Monastery at Stratford Our Warwickshire Retrieved 10 March 2022 legacy reports PDF Cotswold Archaeology Retrieved 10 March 2022 The borough of Stratford upon Avon Manors British History Online Retrieved 10 March 2022 a b c Historic Spine Webpage Stratfordsociety co uk Retrieved 9 November 2016 About Stratford Upon Avon Markets Stratford Markets Stratfordmarkets co uk Retrieved 9 November 2016 a b The borough of Stratford upon Avon Borough British History Online Retrieved 11 August 2021 Almshouse in Stratford upon Avon Our Warwickshire Retrieved 10 March 2022 Heritage Locations Transportheritage com Retrieved 11 November 2016 Morris Sylvia Shakespeare s Avon Act 1 Clopton Bridge The Shakespeare blog theshakespeareblog com Retrieved 11 November 2016 a b c d e f The borough of Stratford upon Avon Historical account British History Online Retrieved 11 August 2021 The Parents of William Shakespeare Retrieved 10 February 2022 The borough of Stratford upon Avon Commons inclosures and mills British History Online British history ac uk Retrieved 14 November 2016 a b Smith Roz 6 December 2010 Garrick s Jubilee Finding Shakespeare Retrieved 9 November 2016 a b Shakespeare On Tour Who can we thank for Shakespeare s popularity BBC Retrieved 9 November 2016 Stratford Upon Avon Area Guides Relocate to Birmingham Relocatetobirmingham co uk Retrieved 9 November 2016 Slater Terry 1997 A History of Warwickshire Phillimore p 99 ISBN 0 85033 991 X GWR Route Moreton in Marsh to Stratford upon Avon Tramway Warwickshire Railways Retrieved 8 August 2021 Slater Terry 1997 A History of Warwickshire Phillimore p 109 ISBN 0 85033 991 X Tramway Bridge Stratford upon Avon Our Warwickshire Retrieved 8 August 2021 Stratford on Avon Station Warwickshire Railways Retrieved 8 August 2021 Flower s Brewery Stratford upon Avon Our Warwickshire Retrieved 20 March 2022 Squires Roger 2008 Britain s Restored Canals Landmark Publishing ISBN 978 1 84306 331 5 Pringle Marian J 1994 The Theatres of Stratford upon Avon 1875 1992 an architectural history Stratford upon Avon Society p 29 ISBN 978 0 9514 1781 2 General Election Zahawi holds Stratford on Avon Leamingtoncourier co uk Retrieved 9 November 2016 West Midlands Region 7 MEPs Europarl org uk Retrieved 9 November 2016 Council Stratford on Avon District Get to Stratford on Avon District Council Head Office Stratford on Avon District Council Stratford gov uk Retrieved 9 November 2016 Responsibilities Stratford tc gov uk Retrieved 9 November 2016 Town Hall History Stratford tc gov uk Retrieved 9 November 2016 Contact Stratford Town Trust Retrieved 9 November 2016 a b c d Stratford upon Avon Town Council Stratford tc gov uk Retrieved 9 November 2016 Bulletin of change to local authority arrangements areas and names in England PDF Lgbce org uk Archived from the original PDF on 12 January 2018 Retrieved 15 March 2018 a b OS Explorer Map 205 Stratford Upon Avon amp Evesham Lugg Ben 19 March 2016 Counting the costs of Stratford s floods Stratford Herald Retrieved 10 November 2016 Woodings Simon 13 June 2016 Flash flooding in Stratford Stratford Herald Retrieved 10 November 2016 Climate of the World England and Scotland weatheronline co uk Weatheronline co uk Retrieved 9 November 2016 Kingdom Met Office FitzRoy Road Exeter Devon EX1 3PB United Midlands climate Met Office Retrieved 9 November 2016 a b Office Met Stratford upon Avon climate Metoffice gov uk Retrieved 9 November 2016 Climate Normals 1971 2000 MetOffice Retrieved 1 March 2011 Shottery 800 homes plan given go ahead BBC News 25 October 2012 Retrieved 10 November 2016 Shakespeare trust votes to sell land for houses BBC News 4 October 2015 Retrieved 10 November 2016 Smith Chris 18 August 2016 Five hundred homes at Bishopton get go ahead Stratford Herald Retrieved 10 November 2016 Arden Heath Farm Stratford upon Avon David Tucker Associates dtatransportation co uk 20 January 2016 Retrieved 25 August 2017 Refurbishment of Stratford s iconic Falcon Hotel to begin Stratford upon Avon Herald 24 March 2017 Retrieved 13 August 2021 a b c Council Stratford on Avon District Tourism Stratford on Avon District Council Stratford gov uk Retrieved 13 November 2016 Case Study Stratford upon Avon PDF ocr org uk Retrieved 18 November 2016 PDF 4 November 2013 https web archive org web 20131104020507 http www stratford gov uk localplan ELECTRONIC Section7 pdf Archived from the original PDF on 4 November 2013 Retrieved 28 February 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help William Shakespeare BBC Retrieved 21 May 2015 Stratford District Council still committed to tourism Media release 31 March 2010 Stratford District Council launches new initiatives to promote tourism Media release 8 November 2010 Tourist Office Opens Media release 12 May 2010 Stratford Tourist Information Centre moving back to Bridgefoot Media release 19 October 2011 a b Royal Shakespeare Theatre and Swan Theatre The Theatres Trust Theatrestrust org uk Retrieved 9 November 2016 Chalmers Amanda Celebration brings down curtain at Courtyard Stratford herald com Archived from the original on 26 January 2016 Retrieved 9 January 2016 Shakespeare s The Other Place in Stratford begins revamp BBC News 10 February 2015 Retrieved 9 January 2016 Local arts centre stage Stratford Town Trust Stratford Town Trust Retrieved 15 November 2016 The Bear Pit Theatre Stratford upon Avon Ambleside News and Reviews 30 March 2016 Retrieved 15 November 2016 History of The Bear Pit Bear Pit Theatre Retrieved 25 March 2019 a b Our history The Attic Theatre Retrieved 25 March 2019 Tread the Boards Theatre Attic Theatre Stratford Upon Avon Shakespeare s England shakespeares england co uk Retrieved 15 November 2016 Theatre shuts in Shakespeare town BBC News 4 September 2008 Retrieved 10 September 2008 ArtsHouse Stratford Upon Avon Theatre Tickets whats on and theatre information Theatresonline com Retrieved 15 November 2016 Society The Rudolf Kempe Society Rudolfkempesociety org Retrieved 15 November 2016 Smith Chris 12 August 2016 Learn from the best Stratford Herald Retrieved 15 November 2016 No 1 Shakespeare Street Stratford Upon Avon Skiddle com Retrieved 15 November 2016 Tudor World Day Out With The Kids Dayoutwiththekids co uk Retrieved 15 November 2016 Potter Claire 9 February 2016 Take the kids to the MAD museum Stratford upon Avon The Guardian Retrieved 15 November 2016 Kennedy Maev 20 April 2016 Shakespeare s school to open to visitors to celebrate 400th anniversary The Guardian Retrieved 16 November 2016 Sutherland Gill 1 September 2016 Great line up for autumn Stratford Literary Festival Stratford Herald Retrieved 16 November 2016 Sutherland Gill 25 January 2016 EXCLUSIVE Literary Festival line up revealed Stratford Herald Retrieved 16 November 2016 Stratford Upon Avon Literary Festival Dates details directions authors Literaryfestivals co uk Retrieved 16 November 2016 The Literary Festival Archive Stratford upon Avon Literary Festival Stratfordliteraryfestival co uk Retrieved 16 November 2016 Witts Preston A big party planned for Shakespeare s birthday Stratford herald com Retrieved 7 January 2016 Kennedy Maev January 2016 Shakespeare s 400th anniversary man of Stratford to be celebrated in 2016 The Guardian Retrieved 7 January 2016 Garrick Inn Stratford upon Avon Historic Stratford Guide Britain Express Retrieved 3 February 2017 Pubs in Stratford Upon Avon The Garrick Pub Old English Inns Oldenglishinns co uk Retrieved 3 February 2017 a b Arnot Chris UK Pub Guide The Dirty Duck Stratford upon Avon Warwickshire Telegraph co uk Retrieved 3 February 2017 Lugg Ben 10 June 2016 Mayor pulls first pint at Stratford Beer and Cider Festival Stratford Herald Retrieved 16 November 2016 a b c d The borough of Stratford upon Avon Introduction and architectural description in British History Online A History of the County of Warwick Volume 3 Barlichway hundred 1945 pp 221 34 Retrieved 23 August 2009 Book of Orders Misc Corporation Rec unbound xli no 2 Graves R The Spiritual Quixote bk xii ch 10 Graves R The Spiritual Quixote bk xii ch 10 pp 586 87 The borough of Stratford upon Avon Introduction and architectural description British History Online Retrieved 28 February 2019 Carlyle Robert 1861 Oliver Cromwell s letters and speeches with elucidations Volume 3 page 86 The War with Scotland Bernhard Tauchnitz ISBN 1402177194 Formerly the Bank Croft a piece of common land by the river used as pasture Lee Sydney 1890 Stratford on Avon From the Earliest Times to the Death of Shakespeare Cambridge University Press p 126 ISBN 978 1108048187 Morris Sylvia Stratford upon Avon s Mop Fair The Shakespeare blog theshakespeareblog com Retrieved 12 November 2016 a b The Chapel The Guild Chapel Retrieved 31 December 2018 Conservation begins at Guild Chapel Stratford Town Trust Retrieved 31 December 2018 The Restoration amp Archiving Trust Stratford Branch GWR archive Retrieved 16 March 2022 Stratford to Honeybourne Shakespeare Line Promotion Group Retrieved 24 March 2022 RSC urges GWR to provide Stratford improvements www railmagazine com Retrieved 18 July 2019 Warwickshire Railways Warwickshirerailways com Boat Trips on the River Visitstratforduponavon co uk Retrieved 31 December 2018 Shakespeare s Stratford Warwickshire The Guardian 6 June 2009 Stratford Greenway Warwickshire Country Parks countryparks warwickshire gov uk Retrieved 13 November 2016 Shakespeare s school enrols girls for first time BBC News 3 September 2013 Retrieved 9 November 2016 Contact Stratford upon Avon RFC Pitchero com Retrieved 13 November 2016 Stratford upon Avon RFC Pitchero com Retrieved 13 November 2016 Stratford Upon Avon RFC RugbyGear co Uk rugbygear co uk Retrieved 13 November 2016 Horse Racing Betting Tips Sportinglife com Retrieved 17 November 2016 Holy Trinity Church at Stratford upon Avon Cotswolds info Retrieved 16 November 2016 St Gregory the Great Stratford upon Avon The Catholic Archdiocese of Birmingham The Catholic Archdiocese of Birmingham Retrieved 16 November 2016 Shottery St Andrew Shottery A Church Near You Retrieved 16 November 2016 Stratford Upon Avon United Reformed Church Cylex Business Directory UK Retrieved 16 November 2016 Stratford Methodist Church Cylex Business Directory UK Retrieved 16 November 2016 About Spirituality4 me Retrieved 16 November 2016 About stratford christadelphians org Retrieved 23 January 2018 About Stratford Sister Cities Stratford Sister Cities Retrieved 9 May 2021 Dame Judi Dench and Sir Kenneth Branagh given Freedom of Stratford upon Avon BBC News 22 April 2022 Retrieved 24 April 2022 Suart Paul 23 March 2022 Famed duo Dame Judi Dench and Kenneth Branagh coming to Stratford upon Avon The Coventry Telegraph Retrieved 24 April 2022 STRATFORD UPON AVON TOWN COUNCIL SPECIAL TOWN COUNCIL MEETING 22 February 2022 PDF Stratford upon Avon Town Council Retrieved 24 April 2022 External links Edit Media related to Stratford upon Avon at Wikimedia Commons Stratford upon Avon travel guide from Wikivoyage Town Council official website Stratford upon Avon Archives Our Warwickshire Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stratford upon Avon amp oldid 1147398786, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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