Barking

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For other uses, see Barking (disambiguation).
Barking
Location on map of Greater London
Location
OS grid reference: TQ440840
Latitude: 51.536469°
Longitude: 0.077226°
Administration
London borough: Barking & Dagenham
County level: Greater London
Region: London
Constituent country: England
Sovereign state: United Kingdom
Other
Ceremonial county: Greater London
Historic county: Essex (1965)
Services
Police force: Metropolitan Police
Fire brigade: London Fire Brigade
Ambulance service: London Ambulance
Post office and telephone
Post town: BARKING
Postal district: IG11
Dialling code: 020
Politics
UK Parliament: Barking
London Assembly: City and East
European Parliament: London
London | List of places in London

Barking is the principal town in the London Borough of Barking and Dagenham. It is a suburban development with a large retail and commercial centre situated to the west of the borough and 9.1 miles (14.6 km) east north-east of Charing Cross.


Contents

[edit] History

The manor of Barking was the site of Barking Abbey, a nunnery founded in 666 by Eorcenwald, bishop of London, destroyed by the Danes and reconstructed about a hundred years later in 970 by King Edgar. At the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1536, Barking Abbey was demolished: the parish church, St Margaret's stands upon its site, where some walling and foundations are all that otherwise remain. The Norman church of St Margaret was where Captain James Cook married Elizabeth Batts of Shadwell in 1762.

Barking was an urban district from 1894 and became a municipal borough in 1931. The Municipal Borough of Barking was abolished in 1965 along with the Municipal Borough of Dagenham and the area became part of the London Borough of Barking (renamed Barking and Dagenham in 1980 [1], although this expression circulated unofficially from the beginning of the fusion to console Dagenham residents). [citation needed]

Its name came from Anglo-Saxon Berecingas, meaning either "the settlement of the followers or descendants of a man called Bereca" or "the settlement by the birch trees".

[edit] William the Conqueror

Throughout his life, William's greatest fear was that of rebellion. To counter this threat, when he distributed land to his nobles their estates were always separated by many miles obliging his barons to occupy themselves with their personal administration rather than have time free to group amongst themselves to plot treason. At the same time, although Rouen is the capital of Normandy, William's court was equally always on the move from one city to another. After his coronation in Westminster Abbey on Christmas Day 1066, he established his very first council as King of England in Barking Abbey before quickly moving on to Epping Forest.


[edit] Fishing

Barking was a fishing village attached to Barking Abbey but independent at least from the Tudor period. Fisher Street was named after the fishing community there. From about 1775 welled and dry smacks were used, mostly as cod boats. Fishermen sailed as far as Iceland in the summer. They served Billingsgate Fish Market in the City of London, and moored up at home in Barking Pool. Samuel Hewett, born on 7 December 1797, founded the Short Blue Fleet (England's biggest fishing fleet) based in Barking, and using smacks out of Barking and east coast ports. This fleet used gaff ketches which stayed out at sea for months, using ice for preservation of fish. This ice was produced by flooding local fields in winter. Fleeting involved fish being ferried from fishing smacks to steamer-carriers by little wooden ferry-boats. The rowers had to stand as the boats were piled high with fish-boxes. Rowers refused to wear their bulky cork lifejackets because it slowed down their rowing. At first the fast fifty-foot gaff cutters with great booms projecting beyond the sterns were employed to race the fish to port to get the best prices.

There was also a trade in live fish, using the welled smacks in which the central section of the hull, between two watertight bulkheads, was pierced to create a 'well' in which seawater could circulate. Cod caught live were lowered into this well, with their swim bladders pierced, and remained alive until the vessel returned to port, when they were transferred to semi-submerged 'chests,' effectively cages, which kept them alive until they were ready for sale. At this point they were pulled out and killed with a blow on the head before being despatched to market, where because of their freshness they commanded a high price. People who practised this method of fishing were known as 'codbangers.'

However, the opening of direct rail links between the North Sea ports and London meant it was quicker to transport fish by train from these ports straight to the capital rather than waiting for ships to take the longer route down the east coast and up the River Thames to Barking. In addition, by the 1850s the Thames was so severely polluted that fish kept in chests quickly died. Consequently, the Barking fishery slipped into decline in the second half of the nineteenth century. Many of its leading figures, including Hewett & Co, moved to Great Yarmouth and to Grimsby. By 1900, Barking had ceased to exist as a working fishing port, leaving only a few street and pub names as a reminder of its former importance to the town.

[edit] Natives

[edit] Transport

The town is situated north of the A13 road and east of the River Roding near its junction with the River Thames in East London. Barking station is a local transport hub and is served by the London Underground, National Rail operators and many London Bus routes. The east of Barking is served by Upney tube station.

[edit] Nearest places

[edit] Nearest stations


[edit] Schools

[edit] Primary Schools

  • Beam Primary School
  • Becontree Primary School
  • Five Elms Primary School
  • Gascoigne Primary School
  • Godwin Primary School
  • Henry Green Primary School
  • Hunters Hall Primary School
  • John Perry Primary School
  • Leys Primary School
  • Manor Infant/Junior school
  • Marsh Green Primary School
  • Monteagle Primary School
  • Parsloes Primary School
  • Richard Alibon Primary School
  • Ripple Infants School/Junior School
  • Roding Primary School
  • Southwood Primary School
  • St. Joseph's Primary School
  • St. Margaret's Primary School
  • St. Peter's Primary School
  • St. Teresa Primary School
  • St. Vincent's Primary School
  • Thomas Arnold Primary School
  • Trinity School


[edit] Secondary Schools

  • All Saints RC Secondary School
  • Barking Abbey Secondary School
  • Dagenham Park Secondary School
  • Eastbrook Secondary School
  • Eastbury Secondary School
  • Jo Richardson Secondary School
  • Robert Clack Secondary School
  • Sydney Russell Secondary School
  • Trinity School
  • Warren Secondary School

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


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