Nuneaton | |
Nuneaton Town Centre |
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Nuneaton
Nuneaton shown within Warwickshire |
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Population | 70,721 (2001) |
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OS grid reference | SP361918 |
District | Nuneaton and Bedworth |
Shire county | Warwickshire |
Region | West Midlands |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | NUNEATON |
Postcode district | CV10, CV11, CV13 |
Dialling code | 024 |
Police | Warwickshire |
Fire | Warwickshire |
Ambulance | West Midlands |
EU Parliament | West Midlands |
UK Parliament | Nuneaton |
List of places: UK • England • Warwickshire |
Nuneaton is the largest town in the Borough of Nuneaton and Bedworth and in the English county of Warwickshire.[1]
Nuneaton is most famous for its associations with the 19th century author George Eliot, who was born on a farm on the Arbury Estate just outside Nuneaton in 1819 and lived in the town for much of her early life. In her novel Scenes of Clerical Life (1858), "Milby" is the thinly disguised market town of Nuneaton.[2]
The Nuneaton Urban Area is a conurbation based around Nuneaton and several surrounding towns and villages.
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The town is located 9 miles (14 km) north of Coventry, 20 miles (32 km) east of Birmingham and 103 miles (166 km) northwest of London. The River Anker runs through the town. Nuneaton (as defined by the Office for National Statistics) had a population of 70,721 according to the 2001 census, though the 2008 estimate is closer to 73,000 inhabitants. However, both of these figures exclude the Camp Hill area of the town, which is deemed to be in the Hartshill subdivision of the Nuneaton urban area by the Office for National Statistics (ONS), as can be seen from the map included in its report on Key Statistics for urban areas[3] and the dataset of this report, which cites a population of 12,207 for the Hartshill subdivision [1] (by comparison, the population of the civil parish of Hartshill in 2001 was just 3,611 [2]). A more representative figure is given by the combined population of Nuneaton's 11 wards, which was 78,403 in 2001 according to the ONS (see table below).
Towns close to Nuneaton include Bedworth, Atherstone and Hinckley, with Tamworth and Lutterworth a little further afield. The nearest city is Coventry, sited 9 miles (14 km) from the centre of Nuneaton. Leicester and thereafter Birmingham are next closest major cities. A local landmark is Mount Judd, which is a large mound of quarry residue that was formed when Judkins Quarry was dug out. Mount Judd lies in the northwest of the town and can be seen for miles around.[4] The town lies 3 miles from the Leicestershire border, 8 miles from Staffordshire and 12 miles from Derbyshire.
There are various Ordnance Survey-recognised viewpoints at the extremities of the town. One of the most noteworthy is in the west of Hartshill Hayes Country Park from where looking north Atherstone can be seen and looking northeast Leicester can be seen, depending on favourable visibility.
Nuneaton's name came from a 12th century Benedictine nunnery (parts of which still survive) around which much of the town grew. Prior to this it was a settlement known as 'Etone', which translates literally as 'water-town'. Nuneaton was listed in the Domesday Book as a small hamlet.[5] A market was established in 1233 (and is still held today). The first recorded use of the modern name was in 1247 when a document recorded it as 'Nonne Eton'. The Nunnery fell into disrepair after 1539 (with Henry VIII's Dissolution of the Monasteries). King Edward VI School was established by a royal charter in 1552.[6] From 1944 it became a grammar school for boys and, although it was locally known as KEGS, it never included the word "grammar" in its name. In 1974 it became a sixth form college. Other grammar schools in Nuneaton during the 1944 to 1974 period were Nuneaton High School for Girls and Manor Park. Additionally Nicholas Chamberlaine School in Bedworth was an early comprehensive school that had a grammar school stream.
Nuneaton grew gradually from the 17th century onwards, due to its position at the centre of the Warwickshire coalfields. At the time of the first national census in 1801 Nuneaton was already one of the largest towns in Warwickshire, with a population of 5,000.[7] During the Industrial Revolution in the 19th century, Nuneaton developed a large textile industry. Other industries which developed in the town included brick and tile making and brewing. By 1901 the population of Nuneaton had grown to 25,000.[7]
Nuneaton became an urban district in 1894, and was upgraded to the status of a municipal borough in 1907.[8]
Due largely to munitions factories located in Nuneaton, the town suffered heavy bombing damage during World War II. The heaviest bombing raid on Nuneaton took place on 17 May 1941, when 100 people were killed, 380 houses were destroyed, and over 10,000 damaged,[9] a few smaller raids took place on the town, most notably on 25 June 1942. As a result of the bombing, much of the town centre was rebuilt in the post-war years.
On 6 June 1975, six people died and 38 were injured when a train crashed just south of Nuneaton railway station.
An ancient abbey church founded at 'Eaton' in the 1150s was home to Benedictine nuns and gave the present town the name 'Nuneaton'.
Very little survives today of the original building. The cruciform church was sold after the Dissolution and converted into a mansion. Abandoned in the 17th century it was quarried away until all that survived by the 1860s were the foundations, some low walls and the battered crossing piers of the former central tower.
In 1876-77 this desolate ruin was brought back to life as a place of worship after centuries of neglect, when four of the original seven bays of the nave were rebuilt on the old foundations in Neo-Romanesque style by the Gothic Revival architect C.C. Rolfe with the old crossing piers enclosed by a temporary brick structure for use as a chancel. The west wall was also left in plain brick to allow for possible completion of the nave on the ancient footings further west at a later date, though this retains its incomplete appearance to this day.
In 1904 the chancel was rebuilt in neo-gothic style on the old foundations east of the crossing by Harold Brakspear, followed by the north transept in 1930. The architect had drawn up plans to restore the south transept and central tower too, but sadly these were never realised, leaving the south transept as a ruin sealed off by the 1877 'temporary' brick wall and leaving the church in an odd truncated state today (comprising half the nave, the chancel, north transept and base of the crossing).
Inside the ruined crossing piers remain from the original church, as well as part of a fine medieval tiled floor and the bases of what remained of the walls. Outside, the ruins of the nave and south transept remain as they were, along with the base of what is thought to have been a chapter house.
The church (such as it stands) is used as the Parish Church of St. Mary and is known locally as the Abbey Church.
Despite this building's significance in Nuneaton's past and its extraordinary recent history, it is a relatively unknown and obscure place, with little promotion or signage.
Nuneaton's traditional industries like textiles and manufacturing have declined drastically in the post-war years. Due to its good transport links, Nuneaton is now largely a commuter town for nearby Coventry and Birmingham. However electronics and distribution remain major economic activities in the town. MIRA Limited, formerly the Motor Industry Research Association, is based on a disused wartime airfield on the A5, to the north of the town. One of the biggest developments in the town's history, the multi-million pound Ropewalk Shopping Centre, opened on 1 September 2005 in the hope that it will give the town extra income from the shopping, attract more visitors and retailers, and steer shoppers away from larger retail centres such as Birmingham, Coventry, Leicester and Solihull, with other shopping available at the longer established Abbeygate Shopping Centre located in the centre of the town. The town centre itself has undergone a successful transition from being an uninteresting 'dormitory town' service centre in the 1980s to a relatively thriving and well-planned retail and business district by the 2000s. Holland & Barrett has its headquarters based in the town while Bermuda Park, which is south of Nuneaton, is home of the national distribution centres of Dairy Crest and RS Components.
Nuneaton is part of the constituency of the same name in the House of Commons, which is currently represented by the Conservative Party Member of Parliament (MP), Marcus Jones. From 1935-1983 Nuneaton was a safe Labour seat, but it has since been a marginal. The local council, Nuneaton and Bedworth, currently has no party in overall control, with Labour as the largest party.[10] On 1 April 1974, Nuneaton's council was merged with the neighbouring Bedworth Urban District to form a new district council, originally named just "Nuneaton". Borough status was conferred on the new district on 15 November 1976. Following objections from Bedworth residents, the name of the borough was changed to "Nuneaton and Bedworth" in 1980.[11] The council was controlled by the Labour Party from 1973, when the shadow council was elected in preparation for the 1974 merger, until the 2008 local elections, when the Conservatives gained control, ending 35 years of Labour rule.[12] The official result was: Labour lost 6 seats, the Conservatives won 4 seats, and the BNP (British National Party) won 2 seats.[13] The Labour Party won two seats from the Conservative Party in the 2010 local elections, giving no party overall control of the council.[14]
Nuneaton is currently covered by 11 of the borough's 17 electoral wards (see table below). Each ward elects two councillors, who serve 4 year terms. There are elections every 2 years.
Ward name | Approximate coverage | Population (2001 census)[15] |
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Abbey | Abbey Green, town centre | 7,234 [3] |
Arbury | Heath End, Glendale, Bermuda, Arbury | 5,482 [4] |
Attleborough | Attleborough, Maple Park, SW Whitestone | 7,564 [5] |
Bar Pool | Black-a-Tree, Sunnyside, Stockingford (east) | 7,451 [6] |
Camp Hill | Camp Hill | 7,325 [7] |
Galley Common | Galley Common, Chapel End, Whittleford | 7,593 [8] |
Kingswood | Grove Farm, Robinson's End, Stockingford (west) | 6,878 [9] |
St Nicolas | Horeston Grange, Hinckley Road, The Long Shoot, St Nicolas Park (south) | 7,073 [10] |
Weddington | Weddington, St Nicolas Park (north) | 7,286 [11] |
Wem Brook | Hill Top, Caldwell, Chilvers Coton | 7,082 [12] |
Whitestone | Whitestone (except SW part), Attleborough Fields | 7,435 [13] |
TOTAL | NUNEATON | 78,403 |
Nuneaton's name reflects the part that Christianity has paid in the town's history. Although the Benedictine nunnery which gave the town its name was destroyed at the time of the reformation, the remaining fragments were incorporated into the Anglican church building now known as the Abbey Church of St Mary the Virgin in Manor Court Road. This is a Victorian construction. The original ruins are left to be an obvious feature of the new building and its immediate setting.
Near the town centre, but unusually not actually a part of it and outside the ring road, lies the mediaeval church of St Nicolas- Nuneaton's only grade 1 listed building.[16] Chilvers Coton contains All Saints' Church where Mary Ann Evans (George Eliot) worshipped. This was badly damaged by bombing during the Second World War, and rebuilt largely by German prisoners of war. There are also Anglican churches in Weddington (St James's), Attleborough (Holy Trinity), Stockingford (St Paul's), Galley Common (St Peter's), Abbey Green (St Mary's), more recently built, Camp Hill (St John's).
Roman Catholicism is represented by Our Lady of the Angels Church on Coton Road, whose building was largely remodelled in the 1930s, and St Anne's, Chapel End, Nuneaton whose current building dates from 2000.
Other Christian traditions in the town include Baptist, Methodist, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and United Reformed churches.
Immigration from the Indian subcontinent has, like many British towns, brought with it believers in Islam, Sikhism and Hinduism, and Nuneaton has a substantial ethnic minority population. There is a mosque on Frank Street, Chilvers Coton, and two gurdwaras (Sikh temples): the Nuneaton Guru Nanak Gurdwara in Park Avenue, Attleborough, and the Shri Guru Tegh Bahadur Gurdwara in Marlborough Road, Chilvers Coton.
The local radio stations are Mercia FM and BBC Coventry & Warwickshire, all are based in the nearby city of Coventry and also Oak FM (formerly Fosseway Radio) which is broadcast from the nearby town of Hinckley. Parts of Nuneaton can also receive BBC Radio Leicester. Within Nuneaton itself there is Anker Radio which serves the George Eliot Hospital.
The main local newspaper is the Nuneaton Tribune, which is a free paper delivered to most homes in the area weekly on a Thursday or Friday, taking in Nuneaton, Bedworth and Atherstone. There is also the Nuneaton Telegraph, a localised version of the Coventry Telegraph (but mostly focuses on Coventry). The Nuneaton News circulated free every Wednesday, was formerly the Heartland Evening News daily paper .
The Nuneaton area is covered by BBC West Midlands TV News Show BBC Midlands Today and ITV Central's Central Tonight but gets limited coverage from both, with some areas of the town receiving the East Midlands transmission of BBC East Midlands Today.
The town is near the M6, the M42 and M69 motorways and the main A5 trunk road (Watling Street), which also acts as a border with Leicestershire and the neighbouring town of Hinckley. The A444 provides a high-speed dual-carriageway route into the town from the south and also acts as the often busy town centre ring road. The A47 links the town with neighbouring Hinckley and onwards to Leicester, and the A4254 - Eastern Relief Road - provides direct access from the east of Nuneaton to the south, avoiding the town centre.
Nuneaton railway station near the town centre is an important railway junction, served by the West Coast Main Line, the Birmingham to Leicester railway line and by a line to Coventry via Bedworth. It offers direct rail services to those destinations. There are plans to build a new station at Bermuda Park in the south of the town on the line towards Coventry[17].
Its importance as a railway junction is underlined by the fact that Nuneaton has the third highest level of interchange passengers (after Birmingham New Street and Wolverhampton), of any railway station in the Midlands.[18] This changed in December 2008 when a new Very High Frequency (VHF) timetable was introduced by Virgin Trains on the West Coast Main Line. Very few Virgin services now stop in Nuneaton. Instead, London Midland operate an hourly daytime service between London Euston and Crewe via Northampton, Stafford and Stoke-on-Trent with journey times increased significantly, e.g. 81 minutes to Crewe versus 40 minutes on Virgin. The December 2008 timetable has been the source of much outrage locally.[19]
The Coventry Canal passes through the town.
The main operator for buses in Nuneaton is Stagecoach in Warwickshire
Nuneaton has two non-league football teams of note: Nuneaton Town who play in the Conference North and Nuneaton Griff who play in the Midland Combination Premier Division. There is also a thriving Sunday League football scene in the town, with teams from Nuneaton, Bedworth and North Warwickshire competing in the Nuneaton & District Sunday Football League (NDSFL).
There are three rugby union clubs in the town: Nuneaton R.F.C. (nicknamed "the Nuns"), who play in National Division 1, Nuneaton Old Edwardians of Midlands 3 West (South) division and Manor Park of the Midlands 5 West (South) league.
The town is also home to Nuneaton Bowling club, where flat green bowls is played.[20]
There are three main leisure centres in the town owned by Nuneaton and Bedworth Leisure Trust and maintained by Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough Council:
Nuneaton has a museum and art gallery in the grounds of Riversley Park adjacent to the town centre.[21]
Primary:
Secondary:
Colleges:
Many locations in George Eliot's works were based on places in or near her native Nuneaton, including:
The borough of Nuneaton and Bedworth is twinned with the following towns:
Shane Phelan and Daniel Campbell AKA The Hornet Brothers, exiled after one isolated incident.
Within the borough boundaries:
Outside the borough boundaries but often considered to be part of the town:
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