Melton Mowbray

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Melton Mowbray

Coordinates: 52.7661° N 0.886° W

Melton Mowbray (United Kingdom)
Melton Mowbray
Population 25,554
OS grid reference SK751193
District Melton
Shire county Leicestershire
Region East Midlands
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town MELTON MOWBRAY
Postcode district LE13
Dial code 01664
Police Leicestershire
Fire Leicestershire
Ambulance East Midlands
UK Parliament Rutland and Melton
European Parliament East Midlands
List of places: UKEnglandLeicestershire

Melton Mowbray (or more commonly known as Melton) a town of around 26,000 people [1] in the borough of Melton in north-east Leicestershire, England, 15 miles from Leicester and 105 miles north of London. The town is on the River Eye/River Wreake and is served by Melton Mowbray railway station.

Melton Mowbray is perhaps best known for being the home of the Melton Mowbray pork pies.

Contents

[edit] Geography and administration

Melton shares a Member of Parliament (currently Alan Duncan from the Conservatives) with Rutland.

[edit] History

[edit] Etymology

The name Melton comes from the early English word Medeltone - meaning 'Middletown surrounded by small hamlets' (and therefore has the same origin as places called Milton and Middleton). Mowbray is a Norman family name - the name of early Lords of the Manor - namely Robert de Mowbray.

[edit] Early history

There are 28 scheduled ancient monuments, around 705 buildings listed as having special architectural or historical interest, 16 sites of special scientific interest, and at least 12 deserted village sites. There is industrial archeology including the Grantham canal, the remains of the Wreake navigation. Windmill sites, ironstone working and smelting archeological evidence suggest that Melton borough was densely populated in Bronze and Iron Ages. Many small village communities existed and strategic points at Burrough Hill and Belvoir were fortified. There is also evidence to suggest that the site of Melton Mowbray in the Wreake Valley was inhabited before Roman occupation (43A.D). In Roman times, due to the close proximity of the Fosse Way and other important Roman roads, military centres were set up at Leicester and Lincoln; and intermediate camps were also established, for example, Six Hills on the Fosse Way. Other Roman track ways in the locality passed north of Melton along the top of the vale of Belvoir scarp; they linked Market Harborough to Belvoir, and linked the Fosse Way to Oakham and Stamford. Evidence of settlement throughout Saxon and Dane Law period (8th/9th centuries)is reflected in many place names.

Along the Wreake Valley, the Danish suffix "by" is common, as is evident in Asfordby, Dalby, Frisby, Hoby, Rearsby and Gaddesby. In addition, a cemetery of 50-60 graves, of Pagan Saxon origin, was found in Melton Mowbray. Although most villages and their churches, had origins before the Norman Conquest of 1066, stone crosses at Asfordby and Sproxton churches and Anglo-Saxon cemeteries as found at Goadby Marwood, Sysonby and Stapleford, are certainly pre-Conquest.

The effects of the Norman invasion are recorded in the 1086 Domesday Survey. This document indicates that settlements at Long Clawson and Bottesford were of noteworthy size; and that Melton Mowbray (Medeltone - meaning 'Middletown surrounded by small hamlets') was a thriving market town of some 200 inhabitants, with weekly markets, two water mills and two priests.

Melton Mowbray has been a market town for over 1,000 years. Recorded as Leicestershire's only market in the 1086 Domesday Survey, it is the third oldest market in England. Tuesday has been market day ever since royal approval was given in 1324. The market is the only one mentioned in the Domesday Survey in Leicestershire; it was established with tolls before 1077. The water mills, still in use up to the 18th century, are remembered by the present names of Beckmill Court and Mill Street. Legacies from the Medieval period include consolidation of village and market town patterns; in Melton Mowbray, Bottesford, Wymondham, and Waltham-on-the-Wolds. The latter had a market in medieval times that continued until 1921, and an annual fair of horses and cattle. Many buildings in Melton Market Place, Nottingham Street, Church Lane, King Street and Sherrard Street have ancient foundations. Alterations to number 16 Church Street revealed a medieval circular stone wall subjected to considerable heat. This is probably the `Manor Oven' mentioned in 13th century documents. Surveys of 5 King Street show it to be part of an early medieval open-halled house. It may be part of the castle or fortified Manor of the Mowbrays, which existed in the 14th century.

King Richard and King John visited the town and may have stayed at an earlier castle. In 1549 following the Dissolution of the chantries, monasteries and religious guilds, church plate was sold and land purchased for the town. Resulting rents were used to maintain Melton School; first recorded in 1347 and one of the oldest educational establishments in Britain. Funds were also used to maintain roads, bridges and to repair the church clock. In the Civil War, Melton was a Roundhead garrison commanded by a Colonel Rossiter. Two battles were fought in the town: in November, 1643, Royalists caught the garrison unaware and carried away prisoners and booty; in February, 1645, Sir Marmaduke Langdale, commanding a Royalist force of 1,500 men, inflicted severe losses on the Roundheads. Around 300 men were said to be killed. Legend tells us that this battle left around 300 men dead and that the hillside was ankle deep in blood, hence the name 'Ankle Hill'. However, this name is mentioned in documents pre-dating the Civil War. Furthermore, in the past, the names of Dalby Road and Ankle Hill have been switched around, thus confusing the true site of the battle.

Local notable families seem to have had divided loyalties, although the War ended with great rejoicings outside the "Limes" in Sherrard Street, home of Sir Henry Hudson. His father, Robert Hudson founded the "Maison Dieu" almshouses opposite the Church in 1640, which complement the stone built "Anne of Cleves House" opposite. This was built in 1384 and housed chantry priests until the Dissolution. It was then included in the estates of Anne of Cleves by Henry VIII, as a divorce settlement in the 16th century, although there is local debate about whether she ever stayed there or not.

[edit] Melton cloth

Melton Mowbray is home to Melton cloth (first mentioned in 1823), which is the familiar tight-woven woollen cloth which is heavily milled, and a nap raised so as to form a short, dense, non-lustrous pile. Sailors' peacoats are traditionally made of Melton cloth, the universal workmans' donkey jackets of Britain and Ireland and in North America, loggers' "cruising jackets" and Mackinaws.

[edit] Other history

The phrase painting the town red is said to have originated in Melton back in 1837. At the time Melton Mowbray was home to a highly fashionable fox hunting scene. Out celebrating a successful hunt, the Marquess of Waterford and his hunting party found several tins of red paint which they daubed liberally on to the buildings of the High Street, some traces of which can still be seen on doors of older buildings in the town.

Melton Mowbray is home to a rare example of early town government. The Melton Mowbray Town Estate was founded at the time of the reformation, in 1549, when two townsfolk sold gold sequestered from the church and bought land to be held in trust for all inhabitants. The Town Estate provided early forms of education, the first street lighting, and today owns and operates the town's parks and sportsgrounds, and the town's market.

The round corner of a blue Stilton cheese, made in the traditional cylindrical shape.
The round corner of a blue Stilton cheese, made in the traditional cylindrical shape.

Stilton cheese originated near Melton Mowbray, and is still made in the town today. Stilton cheese takes its name from the village of Stilton, 80 miles north of London, where it was marketed to travellers on the Great North Road, though no Stilton was ever made there.

[edit] Recent history

In 1964, the Production Engineering Research Association of Great Britain (PERA) came to the town on Nottingham Road and employed around four hundred people in supporting research and development in industry. It is also home to the East Midlands Manufacturing Advisory Service. In 2000, the East Midlands Regional Assembly (EMRA) was based in a building also on Nottingham Road. Petfoods came to the town in 1951 as Chappie Ltd, employing over two thousand people, and now employs around one thousand. It became Petfoods in 1957, and became Masterfoods in January 2002. At Melton, it makes four million items of petfood every day, which is less than it used to. Masterfoods now have their UK headquarters close to Melton at Waltham-on-the-Wolds.

[edit] Landmarks

St.Mary's church. The largest Parish Church in Leicestershire
St.Mary's church. The largest Parish Church in Leicestershire

Melton's St. Mary's Church is the largest and "stateliest" Parish Church in Leicestershire, with visible remains dating mainly from the 13th-15th centuries. Sir Malcolm Sargent was a former organist of this church. Some of the visible stonework of the cathedral-sized St. Mary's Church dates from 1170 [lowest section of the tower, with Norman windows] although there was certainly one or more Anglo-Saxon churches on this site before the Norman one [Domesday Book records TWO priests for Melton]. Its 100 foot tower dominates the town, and is a rare example of a parish church with aisled transepts [one of only five in the country] a feature usually reserved for cathedrals.

This church forms part of the Framland church trail along with 14 other churches in the 'Framland area'. Copies of this leaflet are available from Melton Tourist Information Centre, Melton Mowbray. Outside the town, the Borough has a rural feel: its peaceful countryside rivalling the Cotswolds with well-treed rolling green hills, valleys, unspoilt villages, hamlets, gated roads and old village churches, constructed in mellow local ironstone. Melton Borough has benefited from the development of towns to the west, itself avoiding large scale industrial activity, resulting in an area with an attractive historical background.

[edit] Present day

Its museum famously displays a dead two-headed calf.

[edit] Education

Melton's largest school is King Edward VII with around 2,000 pupils, aged between 11 and 19. The school was founded in 1908. King Edward VII Upper School, also boasts the first school-based Eco-Centre and a large computer-based learning centre (ILIAD).

[edit] Notable residents

[edit] See also

[edit] References

    http://www.melton.co.uk/about.htm

      [edit] External links

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