Everything about Kidderminster totally explained
Kidderminster is a town in the
Wyre Forest district of
Worcestershire,
England. It is located approximately seventeen miles south-west of
Birmingham city centre. The 2001
census recorded a population of 55,182 in the town. The town is
twinned with the town of
Husum, Germany.
The town centre area has undergone substantial redevelopment in recent years, with the commercial retail area of 'Weaver's Wharf' attracting many visitors and shoppers. 'Slingfield Mill', a Grade II
listed building, has been converted into a retail outlet and incorporated into 'Weaver's Wharf'.
History
A parliamentary report of
1777 listed Kidderminster Borough as having a
parish workhouse accommodating up to 70 inmates. Under the so-called
Gilbert's Act of
1782 Kidderminster Union was established for the purpose of relieving the indigent poor.
Kidderminster has two so-called
"Commissioner Churches". The first was
St. George's
church, on Radford Avenue. This was designed by
Francis Goodwin and built in 1821-1824, finally being consecrated in April 1824. It had the third largest grant by the Commission, of just over £17,000.00, of any church outside London. The second church was
St. John's church, on the Bewdley Road. This church was built in
1843 and the architect was
Gordon Alexander, although the grant in this case was just over £4,000.
Under the
Local Government Act 1972, it was proposed for Kidderminster to be part of the
West Midlands metropolitan county, but it was scrapped after the proposed county boundary was trimmed back to
Stourbridge.
Geography
The
River Stour and the
Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal both flow through Kidderminster town centre.
Economy
The modern
carpet industry was founded in the area in
1785 by
Brintons, and the carpet industry became extremely important to the local economy, so much so that the local newspaper is still named
The Shuttle after the shuttles used on the carpet
looms. Although much declined in recent years, the industry is still a significant employer in the area, with Brintons still employing several hundred people and the biggest employer of the town.
Kidderminster is also the home of Victoria Carpets plc. The "Vic" has factories in
Munster,
Ireland and in
Dandenong,
Australia and is a worldwide exporter of bespoke carpets for hotels and large commercial venues. One notable user of Victoria carpet is the
Eiffel Tower.
The local commercial radio station is
The Wyre, which started broadcasting on
12 September 2005, and broadcasts from studio's in Kidderminster. It competes alongside
Wyvern FM, whose presence is minimal in the town, Sunshine Radio, and
BBC Hereford & Worcester.
There are several things which are key parts of the unique make-up of the town, one of these are the huge former
British Sugar Corporation silos sited in their now redundant site on the Stourport Road, these silos can be seen from the
Malvern Hills, nearly thirty miles away.
There is
Co-op and a doctors surgery on Franche Road (
A442) in Franche, a
Morrisons on Oxford Street in the centre of the town, a
Sainsburys on Carpet Trades Way near the river,
Tesco and
Aldi are in the town centre on either side of New Road.
In Summerfield on the outskirts of Kidderminster is the ROXEL site where solid rocket motors are manufactured. The site has manufactured the motors for the
Rapier missile,
Seawolf missile, Starstreak and ASRAAM missile systems. Over the years the site has been owned by IMI,
Royal Ordnance and
British Aerospace but is now part of the Roxel Group, headquartered in
Paris and with a sister site outside
Bordeaux.
The SEALINE
yacht company manufactures boats for the luxury market and is Kidderminster's second largest single employer.
Politics
The Wyre Forest District Council is currently run by a minority
Conservative Party group, who hold eighteen of the council's forty two seats. In addition there are still
Kidderminster Health Concern candidates on the council.
Kidderminster is an
unparished area within Wyre Forest District, but
Charter Trustees maintain the traditions of the town and elect a Mayor.
It is notable that in the
United Kingdom general election, 2001, the town returned Dr
Richard Taylor as an independent
MP for the Wyre Forest parliamentary constituency. Only a handful of independent MPs have been elected since
World War II and Taylor had fought the election to protest against the proposed reduction in services at Kidderminster Hospital. He held his seat at the
2005 election, the first independent MP to do so since
1949.
Famous residents
The
Puritan minister
Richard Baxter, (born
November 12,
1615 - died
December 8,
1691) began his ministry in Kidderminster in April 1641 and spent the next 19 years in the town. There is a statue to him outside the parish church where he was based. It states his wish 'for unity and comprehension in religion'.
Kidderminster was the birthplace of
Lant Carpenter on
September 2,
1780.
Sir Josiah Mason, an English pen-manufacturer, was born in Mill Street on
February 23 1795.
Sir Rowland Hill, the inventor of the
Penny Black and the modern postal system, was born in Blackwell Street on
December 3,
1795 . There is a statue, sculpted by
Sir Thomas Brock, to him in Vicar Street outside the Town Hall. There is a pub in the Bull Ring called
The Penny Black in his honour.
Edward Bradley, the English humorist of the mid-Victorian era, was born in Kidderminster in
1827. He died on
December 11 1889.
Although not born in the town the front man of
Led Zeppelin,
Robert Plant has close association with Kidderminster, particularly Kidderminster College of Further Education. Drummer
Andy Edwards was born in Kidderminster, and worked with Plant between 1999 and 2001 before becoming a member of well known
progressive rock band
IQ in 2005. Solo guitarist
Robbie Blunt, another Robert Plant collaborator, also has association with Kidderminster. Birmingham DJ
Tony De Vit was born in Kidderminster.
Noted
film director and
screenwriter Robert Hamer, perhaps best known for his celebrated 1949 comedy
Kind Hearts and Coronets, starring
Dennis Price and
Alec Guinness, was born in Kidderminster on
31 March,
1911.
Former
Formula One driver
Peter Collins was born in Kidderminster on
November 6,
1931. During his career Collins drove for the
HWM,
Vanwall,
Maserati and
Ferrari teams and won 3 of his 33 Grands Prix. Tragically his promising career was cut short during the
1958 German Grand Prix, when Collins spun off the track and sustained a fatal head injury in the accident that followed.
Tom Watson (born
8 January,
1967), is the
Labour Party Member of Parliament (MP) for
West Bromwich East. He was educated at King Charles I High School in Kidderminster. In September 2006 Watson was the subject of national media attention after resigning his junior ministerial post in an effort to force Prime Minister
Tony Blair to name the date he'd step down from office.
Jon Turley (born
April 26,
1971), an author who writes children's books, has lived in Kidderminster since the mid 1990s and was born some fifteen miles away in Worcester.
The film actress
Sammi Davis was born in Kidderminster in 1964.
Rachel Jones, the current live producer of
BBC Radio 1's
The Chris Moyles Show, was born in the town.
Celebrity chef Rustie Lee also lives in the town.
Transport
There are two railway stations in the town, sharing the same approach road. The main
Network Rail station is just called
Kidderminster with trains to
Birmingham,
Worcester and
London. The other station is that of the preserved Heritage Railway line,
Severn Valley Railway, and their station is called
Kidderminster Town. The Severn Valley Railway runs from the town to
Bridgnorth.
Kidderminster is on the
A456 which runs from
Birmingham to
Woofferton,
Shropshire, a few miles south of
Ludlow.
Kidderminster is on the
A449 road which runs from
Newport in south Wales to
Stafford and crosses the A456 at the Land Oak. It is also on the
A448 road which runs to
Bromsgrove.
A major change in the town centre road infrastructure was the construction of the ring road in the
1970s and
1980s, which relieved the town's growing congestion problem. Unusually, the final phase of the ring road was never completed.
The
Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal passes through the town.
There are direct bus links with towns including
Halesowen,
Bewdley,
Stourport and
Bromsgrove. There is also a direct bus link with
Birmingham city centre.
Education
As part of educational restructuring in the
Wyre Forest district, Kidderminster's schools are currently (2007) changing from a three-tier system of first, middle and high schools to the two-tier system more common in the UK as a whole with
primary schools and
secondary schools. (Several first and middle schools are being closed or merged into new primaries, but the three high schools will all continue as secondaries). These are
King Charles I School,
Wolverley C E Secondary School,and
Baxter College (formerly Harry Cheshire High School). All these schools have, and will retain,
sixth forms.
Independent schools include
Heathfield School(External Link
) in Wolverley and the girls-only
Holy Trinity School on the A456 Birmingham Road.
Kidderminster College(External Link
) is based on Market Street in the town centre, having moved from older premises in Hoo Road in 2003.
Sport
Cricket
Kidderminster Victoria CC is a local
cricket club.
Football
Formed in
1886,
Kidderminster Harriers F.C. is the town's professional
football club. Local rivals of the Harriers are
Cheltenham Town and
Hereford United, although currently both Cheltenham and Hereford are in divisions above Kidderminster. In
2005 the Harriers were relegated to the
Conference National after five years in the
Football League Two division.
Rugby
Kidderminster Carolians RFC
is a local
rugby union club, currently playing in Midlands Division 3 West Northern Section.
Field Hockey
Kidderminster Hockey club
was founded in 1892 and in 2006 was still going strong. There are five men's
hockey teams, a ladies and a junior team.
Food & drink
There are many
pubs and drinking establishments in Kidderminster. There are also several
nightclubs, with 'Mirage' being the longest-standing in the town, having opened in the early-mid
1990s, while the recently renamed and relaunched
DY10 (formerly 'Redwoods') takes its name from the postcode for the town; there's also a newly established pool bar 'Q2' situated above Rachels Bar on Green Street. There are also longer licensed bars such as the Watermill and NU Bar, which are very popular places in the town. Players Bar recently closed following poor profits since opening almost 2 years previously. It's to be replaced by Rachel's Bar before the end of 2007.
Closest cities, towns and villages
Further Information
Get more info on 'Kidderminster'.
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