Saint Helier

Saint Helier
Saint-Hélier
—  Parish  —

Coat of arms
Location of Saint Helier
Saint-Hélier in Jersey
Coordinates:
Crown Dependency Jersey, Channel Islands
Area
 • Total 10.6 km2 (4.1 sq mi)
Population
 • Total 28,310
 • Density 2,670.8/km2 (6,917.2/sq mi)
Time zone GMT
 • Summer (DST) UTC+01 (UTC)
Website parish.gov.je/st_helier

Saint Helier (French language: Saint-Hélier, Jèrriais: St Hélyi) is one of the twelve parishes of Jersey, the largest of the Channel Islands in the English Channel. St. Helier has a population of about 28,000, roughly 31.2% of the total population of Jersey, and is the capital of the Island (although Government House is situated in St. Saviour). The urban area of the parish of St. Helier makes up most of the largest town in Jersey, although some of the town area is situated in adjacent St. Saviour, with suburbs sprawling into St. Lawrence and St. Clement. The greater part of St. Helier is predominantly rural.

The parish covers a surface area of 4.1 square miles (10.6 km2), being 9% of the total land area of the Island (this includes reclaimed land area of 494 acres (2.00 km2) or 200 ha).

The parish crest is two crossed gold axes on a blue background, symbolising the martyrdom of Helier and the sea.

Contents

History

It is thought that the site of St. Helier was settled at the time of the Roman control of Gaul.

The medieval hagiographies of Helier, the patron saint martyred in Jersey and after whom the parish and town are named, suggest a picture of a small fishing village on the dunes between the marshy land behind and the high-water mark.

Although the Parish Church of St Helier is now some considerable distance from the sea, at the time of its original construction it was on the edge of the dunes at the closest practical point to the offshore islet called the Hermitage (site of Helier's witness and martyrdom). Before land reclamation and port construction started, boats could be tied up to the churchyard wall on the seaward side.

An Abbey of St. Helier was founded in 1155 on L'Islet, a tidal island adjacent to the Hermitage. Closed at the Reformation, the site of the abbey was fortified to create the castle that replaced Mont Orgueil as the Island's major fortress. The new Elizabeth Castle was named after the Queen by the Governor of Jersey 1600-1603, Sir Walter Raleigh.

Until the end of the 18th century, the town consisted chiefly of a string of houses, shops and warehouses stretching along the coastal dunes either side of the Church of St. Helier and the adjacent marketplace (since 1751, Royal Square). La Cohue (a Norman word for courthouse) stood on one side of the square, now rebuilt as the Royal Court and States Chamber (called collectively the States Building). The market cross in the centre of the square was pulled down at the Reformation, and the iron cage for holding prisoners was replaced by a prison gatehouse at the western edge of town.

George II gave £200 towards the construction of a new harbour - previously boats would be beached on a falling tide and unloaded by cart across the sands. A statue of the king (by John Cheere) was erected in the square in 1751 in gratitude, and the market place was renamed Royal Square, although the name has remained Lé Vièr Marchi (the old market) to this day in Jèrriais. Many of St. Helier's road names and street names are bilingual English/French or English/Jèrriais, some having only one name though, although the names in the various languages are not usually translations: distinct naming traditions survive alongside each other.

The Royal Square was also the scene of the Battle of Jersey on January 6, 1781, the last attempt by French forces to seize Jersey. John Singleton Copley's epic painting The Death of Major Pierson captures an imaginative version of the scene.

As harbour construction moved development seaward, a growth in population meant that marshland and pasture north of the ribbon of urban activity was built on speculatively. Settlement by English immigrants added quarters of colonial-style town houses to the traditional building stock.

Continuing military threats from France spurred the construction of a citadel fortress, Fort Regent, on the Mont de la Ville, the crag dominating the shallow basin of St. Helier.

Military roads linking coastal defences around the island with St. Helier harbour had the effect of enabling farmers to exploits Jersey's temperate micro-climate and get their crops onto new fast sailing ships and then steamships to get their produce into the markets of London and Paris before the competition. This was the start of Jersey's agricultural prosperity in the 19th century.

From the 1820s, peace with France and better communications enabled by steamships and railways to coastal ports encouraged an influx of English-speaking residents. Speculative development covered the marshy basin north of the central coastal strip as far as the hills within a period of about 40 years, providing the town with terraces of elegant town houses.

In the second half of the 19th century, the need to facilitate access to the harbour for hundreds of trucks laden with potatoes and other produce for export prompted a programme of road-widening which swept away many of the ancient buildings of the town centre. Pressure for redevelopment has meant that very few buildings remain in urban St. Helier which date to before the 19th century, giving the town primarily a Regency or Victorian character.

Pierre Le Sueur, reforming Constable of St. Helier, was responsible for installing sewerage and provision of clean water in St. Helier following outbreaks of cholera in the 1830s. An obelisk with fountain in the town centre was raised to his memory following his premature death in office from overwork.

In the 1970s, a programme of pedestrianisation of the central streets was undertaken.

In 1995, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Jersey being liberated from Nazi occupation, and thus 50 years of peace, a sculpture was erected in what is now called Liberation Square, in front of the Pomme d'Or Hotel, the focal point for the celebrations when the island was originally liberated.

The sculpture was originally to depict islanders releasing doves of peace, but this came under fierce criticism, with some islanders remarking that had any doves been on the island during the occupation, they would have been eaten by starving German soldiers. Therefore the sculpture was revised to show islanders raising the British flag, as they had done on the day of liberation 50 years previous.

Liberation Square is now a focal point in the town - the former terminus of the Jersey Railway housed the Jersey Tourism office until 2007.

In 2006, it was reported[1] that the Connétable, with the backing of the Chief Minister of Jersey, was to seek city status for St. Helier.

Now a much-contested waterside development area around the harbour is in the making, which will take this neglected area up market, with new hotels, office and apartment blocks and shopping arcades.

Demographics

Saint Helier is the most populated of Jersey's parishes, with 28,310 residents as of 2001.

Historical populations
Year Pop. ±%
1991 28,123
1996 27,523 −2.1%
2001 28,310 +2.9%

Administration

Subdivisions

The parish is divided into vingtaines for administrative purposes:

For electoral purposes, the parish is divided into 4 districts.

votes from polling stations in Nos. 3 and 4 are combined into one district electing 4 Deputies. This district is the largest constituency in the Island.

Politics

With the Constable, the parish therefore has 11 representatives in the States of Jersey (out of 53 elected members).

The Parish also has its own responsibilities and elections to the Municipality of St Helier take place to elect honorary officials who fulfill a variety of roles for Parishioners under the overall control of the Constable, two Procureurs du Bien Public and the Parish Assembly.

Five members of the Roads Committee and ten Roads Inspectors are also elected by parishioners and ensure that the roads of the parish are kept in good repair.

The Assessment Committee are elected to agree the rate chargeable to each property in the Parish.

The Accounts Committee are elected to ensure that the accounts of the Parish represent a 'true and fair view' of the state of the Parish finances in order that the Parish Assembly may rely upon the information to set the Parish Rate.

Elected officials are supported by a paid administration within the Parish.

St Helier Honorary Police

The Administration Civile includes elected Honorary Police; 16 Constable's Officers, 10 Vingteniers and 12 Centeniers. The Honorary Police work alongside the States of Jersey Police (also referred to as the Paid Police) and Centeniers undertake the charging and prosecution of all suspects in the criminal justice system of Jersey.

The Honorary Police form an integral part of the Parish of St Helier[2]. They work closely with the Constable of St Helier, the States of Jersey Police and the Parishioners, and consequently provide a service that is unique to the British Isles.

St Helier Honorary Police consists of 10 Centeniers, 11 Vingteniers and 33 Constable's Officers, all of whom work entirely on an unpaid voluntary basis.

The elected term of office for all Police ranks is three years, with Centeniers, Vingteniers and Constable's Officers being elected by the whole Parish.

Members of the St Helier Honorary Police (as at June 2011) are:

Centeniers and their Role

Each Centenier, after appropriate training, undertakes a duty week approximately every ten weeks. The duty week may involve the following:

Vingteniers and their Role

The Vingtenier is required to attend the two Visites du Branchage each year, and the Visit Royale every six years.

Constable's Officers and their Role

The Constable's Officers undertake a number of duties similar to the Vingteniers listed above, and form the Honorary Police workforce.

Saint

Saint Helier is named for Helier (or Helerius), a 6th century ascetic hermit. The traditional date of his martyrdom is AD 555. His feast day, marked by an annual municipal and ecumenical pilgrimage to the Hermitage, is on July 16.

Sites of Special Interest

Many places in St. Helier have been formally listed as Sites of Special Interest by the Planning and Environment department of Jersey.[3] Not all are mentioned on this page, only those which are most prominent.

Central Market & Beresford Market

The Central Market, in Beresford Street, St. Helier, is an indoor market which was opened in 1882.[4] It is an official Site of Special Interest,[5] and is popular with tourists and locals. It features Victorian architecture including cast iron structures, and an ornamental fountain in the centre. The market comprises stalls selling flowers, fruit, and vegetables, as well as small shops and cafés.

Beresford Market is a separate building next to the Central Market, and specialises in fish mongery.[6]

Culture

Saint Helier contains cultural facilities at the Jersey Museum, the Maritime Museum, the Jersey Opera House, the Jersey Arts Centre, the performance venue of St James, the sports and entertainment facilities at Fort Regent, the Jersey Library and the library of La Société Jersiaise.

Sports facilities include Springfield Stadium, swimming pools, pétanque pitches, and badminton. Motor sports events take place on roads in the Parish as well as an annual Town Criterium, and the start and finish of the Jersey Marathon.

Twin towns

Saint Helier is twinned with:

Climate

St Helier has mild, wet winters and cool summer with moderate rainfall. January is the coldest month with an average high of 8 C (46 F), and a low of 4 C (39 F). August is the warmest month, with an average high of 22 C (72 F), and a low of 14 C (57 F). December is the wettest month with 111 mm (4.37 in) of rain, and July is the dryest month with 37 mm (1.46 in) of rain. Snow is rare.

Climate data for St Helier, United Kingdom
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 8
(46)
9
(48)
11
(52)
13
(55)
17
(63)
19
(66)
21
(70)
22
(72)
19
(66)
16
(61)
12
(54)
10
(50)
14.8
(58.6)
Average low °C (°F) 4
(39)
4
(39)
5
(41)
7
(45)
9
(48)
12
(54)
14
(57)
14
(57)
13
(55)
11
(52)
7
(45)
6
(43)
8.8
(47.9)
Precipitation mm (inches) 90
(3.54)
74
(2.91)
71
(2.8)
54
(2.13)
52
(2.05)
49
(1.93)
37
(1.46)
46
(1.81)
70
(2.76)
92
(3.62)
108
(4.25)
111
(4.37)
854
(33.62)
Avg. rainy days 19 16 16 13 12 11 10 10 13 17 19 20 176
Source: World Meteorological Organisation (UN)[7]

See also

References

Bibliography

External links