Leamington Spa

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Royal Leamington Spa


The Parade

Leamington Spa (Warwickshire)
Leamington Spa

Royal Leamington Spa shown within Warwickshire
Population 45,114
OS grid reference SP3165
Parish Royal Leamington Spa
District Warwick
Shire county Warwickshire
Region West Midlands
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town LEAMINGTON SPA
Postcode district CV31, CV32, CV33
Dialling code 01926
Police Warwickshire
Fire Warwickshire
Ambulance West Midlands
European Parliament West Midlands
UK Parliament Warwick and Leamington
List of places: UKEnglandWarwickshire

Coordinates: 52°17′N 1°32′W / 52.29, -1.54

Leamington Spa, properly Royal Leamington Spa but commonly just Leamington (pronounced /ˈlɛmɪŋtən/ Lemmington), listen  or even "Leam" to locals, is a spa town in central Warwickshire, England.

According to the 2001 census the town had a population of 45,114 making it the third largest town in the county after Nuneaton and Rugby. It is named after the River Leam which flows through the town. Leamington lies near the centre of England. Indeed, a young tree called the Midland Oak, at Lillington, just to the northeast of the town centre, is marked by a plaque claiming that it is at the very centre of the country.

Contents

[edit] Geography and character

The park and Dormer Place flooded (photo 21 July 2007)
The park and Dormer Place flooded (photo 21 July 2007)

Leamington is the most populous town in the southern half of Warwickshire (the county is almost split in two by the West Midlands). The town is split north and south by the river Leam, which can flood at times (notoriously so around Easter 1998 and to a lesser degree in July 2007). The town is extending rapidly, particularly to the south. Many people commute from Leamington to Coventry, 10 miles north and Birmingham, 25 miles northwest. As a result of the commuter rush, traffic during rush hour can be quite heavy in the town.

Royal Pump Rooms and Baths
Royal Pump Rooms and Baths

The town is noted for its parks and gardens, particularly the The Jephson Gardens, close to the Royal Pump Rooms and next to the River Leam. These were seriously damaged in the floods of 1998, but have been restored, and even improved with funding from the National Lottery. The other side of the River Leam, on Priory Terrace close to the Parish Church, features a 19th century slipway down to the river which was specifically constructed so that circus elephants in winter quarters in Leamington could be watered. Other well known parks include Newbold Comyn and The Dell. The central part of the town is the Parade, a street which hosts the Royal Priors shopping centre and a wide range of high street chains.

A large number of students and staff of the University of Warwick, which is on Coventry's southern outskirts, reside in Leamington, which as a result has a vibrant nightlife with a wide range of restaurants and bars, ranging from cheap to extravagant.

There is much Georgian and early Victorian architecture, including numerous Georgian townhouses, giving Leamington a somewhat grand appearance. It is generally considered as one of the most prosperous and affluent towns in the English Midlands. Population growth has led to Leamington forming a small conurbation in excess of 85,000 inhabitants with the neighbouring towns of Warwick and Whitnash and several sizeable satellite villages such as Cubbington and Radford Semele.

[edit] Industry

[edit] Tourism and retail

The popularity of the town's waters in the 19th century led to the town's initial growth and fuelled Leamington's main industry - tourism - until the late 19th century when the rise of passenger rail made seaside resorts more accessible to many, reducing the attraction of inland holiday destinations. Retail went hand in hand with the tourist industry, and the town centre remains dominated by high street shopping. [1],

[edit] Manufacturing

Meanwhile, the presence of the then Warwick and Napton Canal (later amalgamated into the Grand Union Canal) led to growth in other industries. Officially opened in 1799, the canal was the primary means of cargo transport until, beginning in the mid 19th century, rail gradually took over. [2]

The canal supplied coal to the gasworks on Tachbrook Road, providing gas to light the town from 1835 onwards. Pig iron, coke and limestone were delivered by canal, allowing a number of foundries to be established in Leamington, specialising in cast iron stoves. Today the Eagle Foundry, dating from at least 1851, continues to manufacture Rangemaster stoves. The Imperial Foundry, dating from at least 1925, was subsequently taken over by Ford, casting engine blocks until its closure in 2008.[2]

Throughout the 20th century, while tourism took a downturn, Leamington's industry prospered. Lockheed Corporation built a factory in the South of the town in 1928. The site is still running as Automotive Products, and the automotive industry is well represented in the area.[2]

[edit] Other industries

Commercial parks for light industry and offices are primarily located to the South of the town, where they are conveniently located for the M40 motorway.

[edit] Video Game Industry

Leamington Spa plays host to a large number of game developers, with well-known development studios including Blitz Games, bigBig Studios, FreeStyle Games, Supersonic Software and Aqua Pacific all in the town itself. Very close to Leamington are Codemasters, CustomPlay Games and fishinabottle. [3]

[edit] Population census

[citation needed]

Year Population
1801 315
1811 543
1821 2183
1831 6269
1841 12812
1851 15723
1861 17402
1871 20917
1881 22976
1891 23124
1901 26888
1911 26713
1921 28954
1931 29669
1941
1951 36344
1961 42561
1971 43424
1981 42953
1991 42304
2001 45114

[edit] Transport

Leamington is close to the M40 motorway which links it to Birmingham and London. It is also served by the A46 which links it to Coventry.

For rail Leamington railway station is served by the Chiltern Main Line which links London (Marylebone) to Birmingham (Snow Hill). Fast train services on this route are operated by Chiltern Railways. London Midland operate local services to Birmingham and onwards to Worcester.

There is also a line connecting Leamington Spa to Coventry which is used by Arriva CrossCountry services to Reading and Oxford to the south. And to Coventry, Birmingham (New Street), Manchester, Newcastle and Edinburgh to the north.

The Grand Union Canal also runs through the town.

Regular bus services to Kenilworth, the University of Warwick and Coventry are operated competitively by Stagecoach in Warwickshire and National Express Coventry. Services to Warwick, Banbury, Stratford Upon Avon and Rugby are operated by Stagecoach in Warwickshire and other independent companies.

[edit] Education

Its main secondary schools are North Leamington Community School and Arts College, Campion School, Trinity Catholic School and Kingsley School, an independent school for girls. Myton School, Warwick School and King's High School in Warwick also have substantial numbers of pupils from Leamington who attend them. The main campus of Warwickshire College is also in Leamington. The college also has centres in Moreton Morrell, Rugby and Henley-in-Arden, and the newest Trident Park centre just outside of Leamington.

[edit] History

[edit] Village

The Parish Church of All Saints
The Parish Church of All Saints

Leamington is a relatively modern town. Until the beginning of the 1800s Leamington was a village named Leamington Priors, Leamington was first mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Lamintone. For 400 years the settlement was under the control of Kenilworth Priory, whence the older suffix.[4].

Leamington would have probably remained as a small village near Warwick, had it not been for the rediscovery of the healing properties of spa waters (they had been known about in Roman times). The first spring to be used for commercial purposes was discovered in Leamington in 1784 by William Abbotts and Benjamin Satchwell, and steps were soon underway to develop the town.[4]

Its name came from Anglo-Saxon Leman-tūn or Lemen-tūn = "farm on the River Leam".

[edit] Old Town

The town centre "Old Town" was originally located on the southern bank of the River Leam. At first, development only took place south of the river. Soon however speculative builders, tired of building around the old village concentrated much of their effort on the land north of the river, resulting in the current Georgian centre "New Town" north of the river, with the Leam flowing through the centre of the modern town.

[edit] New Town

In 1814 the Royal Pump Rooms and Baths were opened close to the River Leam.[4] This grand structure attracted many visitors, hoping to soothe various aches, pains and ailments by bathing in pools filled with the salty spa water. It also included the world's first gravity fed piped hot water system in modern times, which was designed and installed by the engineer William Murdoch. Leamington soon became a popular spa resort which attracted the wealthy and famous, and construction began of numerous Georgian townhouses to accommodate visitors.

The town hall with Queen Victoria's statue
The town hall with Queen Victoria's statue

Leamington's reputation soon spread. The town gained its "Royal" prefix in 1838,[4] granted by Queen Victoria, who visited the town as a Princess in 1830 and as Queen in 1858, and whose statue still stands in the town. The statue was almost destroyed by a German bomb during World War II, and was actually moved by an inch on its plinth in the blast. The statue was not returned to its original position, and in fact a small plaque on the statue's plinth makes note of this incident.

The function of the Royal Pump Rooms changed several times over the following years. While retaining its assembly rooms and medical facilities, around 1863 it was extended to include a Turkish Bath and swimming pool. A further swimming pool was added in 1890. In 1997 the local district council, which now owns the building, closed the facility for redevelopment, reopening it in 1999 as a cultural centre. It now contains Leamington Spa Art Gallery & Museum, Library, Tourist Information Centre, refurbished assembly rooms and a cafe. Spa water can still be sampled outside the building. Further information about the history of the building and the services it now contains can be found in the Royal Pump Roomswebsite.

View across the River Leam to the Parish Church from Jephson Gardens
View across the River Leam to the Parish Church from Jephson Gardens

[edit] Spa decline

In the mid-19th century, spa resorts went out of fashion. Whilst Leamington suffered something of a financial 'crash' as a result, it became a popular place of residence for retired people and for prosperous members of the middle-class moving out from Coventry and Birmingham.[5]. The spending-power of its wealthy residents led to the development of Leamington as a popular place for shopping.

By 1901 the population of Leamington had grown from a few hundred to nearly 27,000.[5] During the twentieth century, the population has grown further, to over 45,000.

Leamington has subsumed the villages of Lillington and New Milverton (though the village of Old Milverton still exists just outside of the town) to the north. The area of modern and more run-down housing, Sydenham, to the south-east is a major suburb of Leamington.

Leamington is closely associated with the foundation of the game of Lawn Tennis, and the first tennis club in the world was formed in 1872 just behind the former Manor House Hotel. It was in Leamington Tennis Club that the modern rules of Lawn Tennis were drawn up in 1874.

During the Second World War, Leamington Spa was home to the Free Czechoslovak Army. A memorial in the Jephson Gardens commemorates brave Czechoslovak parachutists from Warwickshire.

[edit] Administration

Leamington Spa is administered by several local authorities, each with different responsibilities, the two main authorities are Warwickshire County Council and Warwick District Council. Since 2002 Leamington has also been a civil parish and therefore has its own Town Council.[6]

Between 1875 and 1974 Leamington was a municipal borough.[7]. As part of the 1974 local government reform it was merged with Warwick, Kenilworth and surrounding rural areas into the Warwick district, the headquarters of which are based in Leamington.

Leamington is part of the Parliamentary constituency of Warwick and Leamington. Since the 1997 general election the sitting MP has been James Plaskitt of the Labour Party, but before then was considered a safe Conservative constituency, with former Prime Minister Anthony Eden once a Leamington MP. At the 2005 general election, James Plaskitt had a majority of just 266 votes.

[edit] Associations

See Category:People from Leamington Spa for a list of biographies of people from Leamington Spa.

The John Betjeman poem Death in Leamington portrays one view of Leamington's milieu.

Charles Dickens used the town for a scene in his story Dombey and Son, and gave readings from his work there in 1855 and 1862.[4] Nathaniel Hawthorne also lived in the town, in Lansdowne Circus.[4]

The occultist and mountain climber Aleister Crowley was born at 36 Clarendon Square in Royal Leamington Spa, between 11:00pm and midnight on October 12, 1875.

The inventor of the jet engine Frank Whittle, and the biographer Lytton Strachey both attended Leamington College for Boys on Binswood Avenue (now Binswood Hall part of North Leamington Community School and Arts College).[4]

The boxer Randolph Turpin was born in Leamington. He defeated Sugar Ray Robinson to become the world middleweight champion in 1951.[4]

The eminent police chief and police reformer Sir Arthur Young was Chief Constable of Leamington Spa from 1938 to 1941. When the Watch Committee selected him he was aged only 31 - the youngest anyone has ever been appointed as a chief constable in the UK. After the Coventry Blitz in 1940, he was seconded to help the daily running of their police force.

The theologian Leonard Hodgson lived at 34 Newbold Terrace, Leamington Spa.

[edit] Television

Leamington has been featured in a number of television series, including the 1990s BBC situation comedy Keeping Up Appearances - filmed in and around the area. Notable episodes included one with Walton Hall which had footage of the actual town in them, including the River Leam being featured as a fishing spot and boating spot. Other series include the drama Dangerfield, BBC's comedy children's show on CBBC ChuckleVision, Broke starring Timothy Spall, and comedy detective series Mayo.

[edit] Culture

[edit] Peace Festival

Leamington has held an annual Peace Festival since 1987, a celebration of alternative culture, at the Pump Room Gardens. Leamington Music, the successor organisation to the Warwick Arts Society, organises many classical music concerts in the Leamington area. The minimalist composer Howard Skempton resides there also. The separate Leamington Spa Competitive Festival for Music Dance and Drama, which has run annually since 1910 continues to thrive. There are two theatres in Leamington, the Spa Centre and The Loft, plus two cinemas.

[edit] Music

Leamington also has a thriving music scene. In the punk era, the most well-known band were The Shapes, led by singer Seymour Bybuss and bass guitarist Brian Helicopter, who released an E.P. called "Part Of The Furniture" in 1979, and went on to record a session for John Peel and played with bands such as The Cure and The Fall. Anti-establishment musical revolutionaries the Edgar Broughton Band hail from Warwick and after four decades are still going strong with their own brand of clever, counter-cultural rock. There is now a thriving local music scene with local bands playing most nights in the town's bars. In December 2005 the Leamington band Nizlopi, a product of the Leamington scene, reached Number 1 in the UK Singles Chart with The JCB Song. The Woodbine Street Recording Studios has been used by several well-known music acts such as Paul Weller, Ocean Colour Scene and The Specials. Also Bolt Thrower, an influential Death Metal band formed in 1986, are from Leamington. They too have recorded sessions with John Peel.

[edit] Colloquialisms

The town is colloquially referred to as "Leam" by some locals and is commonly thought to have a north–south divide. The "North" of Leam contains prestigious townhouses (and the new town centre), where the "South" (generally accepted as being South of the railway bridge) contains poorer quality, higher density housing often occupied by students from the University of Warwick, a major demographic group in the town. This supposed divide is underlined by the postcode - CV32 being north of the River Leam and CV31 south.

[edit] Nightlife

Leamington has many bars and three night clubs of note. There's a vibrant scene, especially in university term time. Smack, formerly Sugar, is popular on Tuesdays and Evolve on Thursdays. At the weekend the many bars and all the clubs are busy, as the Spa swells with revellers from neighbouring towns and villages. There is a small microbrewery called the Warwickshire Beer Company based in Cubbington which forms the north east side of the town.

[edit] Sport and leisure

There are a number of sports clubs and leisure facilities in Leamington Spa, including the football club Leamington F.C., a disc golf course Quarry Park, a leisure centre including swimming pool Newbold Comyn Leisure Centre, rugby grounds Leamington Rugby Union Football Club, Leamington Rugby Club - Youth Section and Old Leamingtonians Rugby Football Club, Leamington Cricket Club, municipal tennis courts, and an Ultimate Frisbee Team the Leamington Lemmings.

[edit] Suburbs

Lillington, Milverton and Sydenham are the main suburban districts within Leamington Spa.

The district of Myton, 3 km to the west, is a suburb of neighbouring Warwick.

Whitnash is a town which merges with Leamington directly to the south of the town and is generally considered as a suburb.

Similarly, Cubbington (comprising of the old village Cubbington and New Cubbington) is a sizeable village which merges with the Leamington urban area to the northeast and is often regarded as a suburb of the town.

The village of Radford Semele only 4 km to the east is occasionally referred to as one of the town's suburbs, however it does not merge with Leamington's urban area at any point and is distinctly separate.

[edit] Nearby places

  • Warwick - 4 km (2.5 miles) west (the two towns have become conjoined through growth)
  • Whitnash - 3 km (2 miles) south (a small town which has become a southern suburb)
  • Cubbington - 3 km (2 miles) northeast (a large village which has become a northern suburb)
  • Kenilworth - 7 km (4.5 miles) north.
  • Southam - 9.5 km (6 miles) east.
  • Kineton - 15 km (9 miles) south.
  • Coventry - 16 km (10 miles) north
  • Stratford-upon-Avon - 18 km (11 miles) southwest
  • Rugby 23 km (15 miles) northeast.

[edit] Twin towns

Leamington is twinned with:

Leamington has friendship agreements with:

[edit] References

  1. ^ Trinder, Barry, (2003) The Godfrey Edition Old Ordnance Survey Maps: Leamington Spa 1923, ISBN 9 781841 514888
  2. ^ a b c Trinder, Barry, (2003) The Godfrey Edition Old Ordnance Survey Maps: Leamington Spa (South) 1923, ISBN 9 781841 515175
  3. ^ [http://www.birminghampost.net/birmingham-business/tm_headline=computer-games-still-booming&method=full&objectid=18794544&siteid=50002-name_page.html "Computer Games Still Booming", The Birmingham Post] 22 March, 2007.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Allen, Geoff, (2000) Warwickshire Towns & Villages, ISBN 1 85058 642 X
  5. ^ a b Slater, Terry (1981) A History of Warwickshire, ISBN 0-85033-416-0
  6. ^ http://www.leamingtonspatowncouncil.gov.uk//?p=3 Leamington Town Council]
  7. ^ Vision of Britain

[edit] Further reading

  • Lyndon Fraser Cave (1988). Royal Leamington Spa: Its History and Development. Phillimore & Co Ltd. 

[edit] External links

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[edit] Commerce and business

[edit] Education

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