Wigston Magna

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Great Wigston
Wigston Magna (Leicestershire)
Wigston Magna

Great Wigston shown within Leicestershire
Population 2
OS grid reference SP6197
District Oadby and Wigston
Shire county Leicestershire
Region East Midlands
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town WIGSTON
Postcode district LE18
Dialling code 0116
Police Leicestershire
Fire Leicestershire
Ambulance East Midlands
European Parliament East Midlands
UK Parliament Harborough
List of places: UKEnglandLeicestershire

Coordinates: 52°34′52″N 1°05′35″W / 52.5812, -1.093

Great Wigston (archaic: Wigston Magna; see Wigston Parva), is a town within Leicestershire, England just to the south of Leicester, on the A5199 road which leads to Northampton.

It runs directly into Oadby to the east, with which it shares Oadby and Wigston district council, and Leicester to the north. An area known as South Wigston is actually to the west. The town is part of the Leicester Urban Area.

Contents

[edit] History

One of the earliest mentions of this place is in the Domesday book where it is listed amongst the lands held by Hugh de Grandmesnil [1] for the King.

In the Middle Ages it was known as Wigston Two Spires as, unusually, there were two mediaeval churches there, All Saints and St. Wistans.

St Wistan's is known as that because it was one of the places where the body of St Wistan rested before burial. First, he was buried at Repton and finally in Evesham. St Wistan was a Mercian Prince who was assassinated but was regarded as a Martyr.

It was the birthplace of George Davenport, a notorious highwayman and Abigail Herrick, the mother of Jonathan Swift, author of Gulliver's Travels and former Leicester Sound and BBC Radio Leicester presenter, Mark Hayman. Graham Chapman, of Monty Python fame, also did much of his growing up in Wigston.

There is a Framework Knitting Museum here, as it was an important occupation in this area.

Wigston was the subject of W. G. Hoskins's pioneering historical study, The Midland Peasant (London: Macmillan, 1965), which traced the social history of this village from earliest recorded history into the 19th century.

[edit] Local economy

MacFisheries' MacMarkets was the town's major supermarket for many years. It became a branch of International Stores in the late 1970s and was later successively a Gateway Foodmarket, Kwik Save, Somerfield and Kwik Save once again before becoming vacant. There is a Sainsbury's in the centre of the town, and Tesco on Blaby Road in neighbouring South Wigston.

[edit] Education

Abington High School (built 1952, former secondary modern, ages 10-14), Bushloe High School (ages 10-14, completely rebuilt September 2006), Guthlaxton College (built late 1950s, ages 14-18, former grammar school), and South Leicestershire College (formerly Wigston College) are all very near each other on Station Road. The schools' results are average for Leicestershire, but below average for the UK. Close by, on the same road are the headquarters of the Oadby and Wigston Borough Council.

South Leicestershire College is set to be rebuilt on Canal Street, South Wigston and should be completed in 2009.

1461 (Wigston) Squadron of the Air Training Corps is located in South Wigston, and recruits many members from the schools in Wigston.

[edit] Transport Links

South Wigston railway station lies on the Birmingham to Peterborough Line. Trains to Leicester run every two hours and take five minutes. Connections are frequent from Leicester Railway Station to London St Pancras, where Eurostar international services have operated since November 2007.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Domesday Book: A Complete Transliteration. London: Penguin, 2003. p. 652 ISBN 0-14-143994-7

[edit] External links