Ware, Hertfordshire
Ware | |
---|---|
Riverside gazebos | |
Location within Hertfordshire | |
Population | 18,799 (Parish, 2011 Census)[1] |
OS grid reference | TL495215 |
Civil parish |
|
District | |
Shire county | |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | WARE |
Postcode district | SG11, SG12 |
Dialling code | 01920 |
Police | Hertfordshire |
Fire | Hertfordshire |
Ambulance | East of England |
UK Parliament | |
Ware is a town in Hertfordshire, England close to the county town of Hertford. It is also a civil parish in East Hertfordshire district.
Location
The town lies on the north–south A10 road which is partly shared with the east–west A414 (for Hertford to the west and Harlow to the east). There is a large viaduct over the River Lea at Kings Meads. The £3.6m two-mile bypass opened on 17 January 1979. At the north end of the bypass is the Wodson Park Sports and Leisure Centre and Hanbury Manor, a hotel and country club. The former route of the A10 through the town is now the A1170. The railway station is on the Hertford East Branch Line and operated by Greater Anglia and is on a short single track section of the otherwise double track line.
History
Archaeology has shown that Ware has been occupied since at least the Mesolithic period (which ended about 4000 BC).[2] The Romans had a sizeable settlement here and foundations of several buildings, including a temple, and two cemeteries have been found.[3] Ware was on Ermine Street, the Roman road from London to Lincoln. A well-preserved Roman skeleton of a teenage girl was found beside the road and nicknamed 'Ermintrude'.[4] It has been said that Ware is one of the oldest continuously occupied sites in Europe.[5]
In the Domesday Book of 1086, the town was named Waras from the natural weirs in the River Lea.[6] The historic rivalry with nearby Hertford can be traced to 1090 when the Lady of Ware (Petronilla de Grandmesnil, Countess of Leicester) diverted Ermine Street from the Roman ford to create a High Street and new bridge over the Lea. The bailiff of Hertford tried to destroy the new bridge before it was recognised as part of the King's Highway by Henry III in person.[7] In 1381, during the so-called Peasants' Revolt, 42 prominent Ware townsmen, led by the Vicar, joined others in destroying Hertford Castle, then owned by John of Gaunt.[8] Many inns were established in the High Street, reflecting Ware's importance as a coaching stop on the Old North Road. Chaucer mentioned Ware twice in The Canterbury Tales. The Great Bed of Ware, cited by Shakespeare and other playwrights, was housed in a succession of Ware inns.
Mary I had Thomas Fust burned at the stake in Ware marketplace for refusing to convert to Catholicism.[9]
In the 17th century, Ware became the source of the New River, constructed to take fresh water into London. The Ware Mutiny occurred on 15 November 1647, between the First and the Second English Civil War at Corkbush Field, when soldiers were ordered to sign a declaration of loyalty to Thomas Fairfax, the commander-in-chief of the New Model Army (NMA), and the Army Council. When some with Leveller sympathies refused to do this they were arrested, and one of the ringleaders, Trooper Richard Arnold, was court-martialled and shot.[10] 62 children were sent to Ware after the Great Fire of London. In 1683, the Rye House Plot involved assassinating Charles II after he passed through Ware. It failed.
England's first turnpike (toll) road was established at Wadesmill, two miles north of Ware, in 1633 in an attempt to control the malting traffic into and from Ware. The town had become a major maltmaking centre during the Civil War and soon became the most important supplier of malt to the Common Brewers of London, with its own quoted price on the London grain market, particularly for brown malt, used in brewing porter beer. The Ordnance Survey First Edition of 1880 showed 107 malt kilns in Ware, more than twice as many as in any other Hertfordshire town [11] The last working malting in Ware, Pauls Malt at Broadmeads, closed in 1994. In November 1999, the bronze Maltmaker statue by Oxfordshire sculptor, Jill Tweed, was unveiled outside St Mary's Church to commemorate the end of the industry and the Millennium. The unveiling was done by Hugo Page Croft, member of a famous Ware malting family; others involved in the project were Guy Horlock, chairman of the Stanstead Abbots maltsters, French & Jupps Ltd, and David Perman, curator of the Ware Museum [12]
Two legends associated with the 17th century are sometimes mentioned. One is that bargemen born in Ware were given the "freedom of the River Thames" — avoiding the requirement of paying lock dues — as a result of their transport of fresh water and food in during the great plague of 1665–66. In fact, Ware barges were freed from having to carry a pilot in the Port of London as a result of their relieving the Dutch blockade of the Thames in 1667, by bringing in coal brought overland from the Wash. The other legend is that Ware bargemen brought plague bodies out of London in 1666 and interred them at the Buryfield. The truth is that the Burymead was mentioned as early as 1513 and referred to the present Glaxo site where a number of Roman cemeteries have been found; the Buryfield Recreation Ground was established in 1931 on charity land, the Bell Close, now partly covered by the GSK multi-storey car park.[13]
At the end of the 19th century, malt-making in Ware was joined by two other industries. In 1886, Dennis Wickham, member of a brewing family, established a bottling plant which in 1900 moved to Viaduct Road and became an engineering company. The world-famous firm of D. Wickham & Co. became manufacturers of railcars and construction equipment, closing eventually in 1991 [14] In 1898, the pharmaceutical company, Allen & Hanburys, acquired a lease on the Ware corn mill and began building a medicines, dried milk and health foods factory at the nearby Buryfield. A new plant for pharmaceutical research and development was built in Park Road during World War II. Allenburys, as it was known, was merged with Glaxo in 1958 and is now part of GlaxoSmithKline (GSK).
The Ware Town Council coat of arms was issued in 1956 by the College of Arms to Ware Urban District Council, and transferred to Ware Town Council in 1975. The arms are derived from matters with which Ware is associated — the barge rudders reference the bargemen of Ware, with the red and white striping on the rudders being the livery colours of the City of London, associating the Ware bargemen's free entry rights to that City (q.v.); the crossed coach horns reference the town's long history as a coaching town; and the sheaves of barley reference the malting history of Ware. The motto of the town, "cave" (Latin for "beware") was suggested by the College of Heralds, with the intent of its being a pun on the town's name.[15]
Features
Ware has 202 listed buildings including fourteen grade II* and three grade I,[16] one of which is the remains of a fourteenth-century friary,[17] now the offices of Ware Town Council[18] and a conference, wedding and function venue[19] called Ware Priory and Fletcher's Lea. Recent restoration work has shown that it dates from the thirteenth century. Opposite the priory is the large fourteenth-century parish church of St. Mary. It is known for its elaborate font with large carved stone figures. The town is also famous for its many 18th-century riverside gazebos, several of which have been restored recently.
Ware is also known for the Great Bed of Ware, which is mentioned in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night and is reputedly able to accommodate at least four couples.[20] It is in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, but from April 2012 until April 2013 it was loaned to the museum in Ware.[21]
Ware is mentioned in The Canterbury Tales[22] and was also the unintended destination of John Gilpin in William Cowper's comic poem.[23]
Some of the buildings along the High Street date back to the 14th century. Ware used to have many coaching inns and passageways between some shops lead to their stables. Many of these passageways also have former maltings. Crib Street has a good sequence of timber-framed buildings which have been restored since the 1970s.[24] Today the town's main employer is GlaxoSmithKline which has large manufacturing and research plants in the town. The Ware company was formerly Allen & Hanburys and has a long connection with the town, with many historical items on view in a section on the company in the Ware Museum. There are also many other small factories.
It is also a commuting town for London, with regular Abellio Greater Anglia services between Ware railway station and London Liverpool Street.
Fairport Convention's 1971 album "Babbacombe" Lee was inspired by an old newspaper story that fiddle player Dave Swarbrick bought in an antiques shop in the High Street of Ware when the band lived at The Angel former public house in nearby Little Hadham.
Places of interest
Ware Museum
Ware has its own museum which in 2008 received full accreditation from the Museums, Archives and Libraries Council.[25] The museum is independent and run completely by volunteers. In 2012–2013 Ware Museum was home to the Great Bed of Ware on loan for one year from The Victoria and Albert Museum in London. The bed is reputedly haunted by the ghost of its alleged maker, Jonas Fosbrooke, who is said to harass any non-royal person who attempts to sleep in the bed.[26]
The museum is partially housed in the former Priory Lodge and partly inside a Second World War Command Bunker used to co-ordinate local defences and respond to air-raids; this part was refurbished for 2010. The museum contains many interesting items from the history of Ware, including Roman archaeology, exhibits relating to the Second World War and Allen & Hanburys pharmaceuticals. There are also a number of exhibits for children and many special activity days throughout the year.
Scott's Grotto
Ware is home to Scott's Grotto,[27] built for John Scott, an 18th-century poet who owned Amwell House from 1768. The grotto, the largest in the UK, is a series of chambers extending over 65 ft into the chalk hillside. The chambers are decorated with shells, stones such as flint and coloured glass. The grotto was restored in 1990 by the Ware Society and is now owned and managed by the Scott's Grotto Trust; it is Grade 1 listed.
Bluecoat Yard
In Bluecoat Yard is Place House, Ware's oldest extant surviving building. It dates from the early 14th century, with additions in the 16th and 17th centuries, and was once Ware's Manor House. It has a crown post roof.[28]
Governance
Ware has three tiers of local government, at parish (town), district and county level: Ware Town Council, East Hertfordshire District Council, and Hertfordshire County Council.
Historically, the parish of Ware was included in the hundred of Braughing.[29] Prior to the sixteenth century Ware was sometimes called a borough, but it never had a borough charter from the monarch nor sent members to Parliament.[30]
In 1835 Ware became the centre of a poor law union, and the Ware Union Workhouse was built in 1839–1840 on Collett Road (then called Musley Lane).[31]
Ware | |||
---|---|---|---|
Local Board of Health District (1849–1894) Urban District (1894–1974) | |||
Council offices: Ware Priory | |||
| |||
Population | |||
• 1891 | 5,256[32] | ||
• 1971 | 14,340[33] | ||
History | |||
• Created | 1 August 1849 (Local Board) 31 December 1894 (Urban District) | ||
• Abolished | 31 March 1974 | ||
• Succeeded by | East Hertfordshire | ||
• HQ | Ware | ||
Contained within | |||
• County Council | Hertfordshire | ||
The town was made a local board of health district on 1 August 1849. The local board of health district covered the built-up part of the parish of Ware plus an area known as Amwell End, a southern suburb of the town which was in the neighbouring parish of Great Amwell.[34][35] After elections, the Ware Local Board held its first meeting on 1 September 1849 at the boardroom of the Ware Union Workhouse, when William Parker was appointed the first chairman of the board.[36]
Under the Local Government Act 1894, the Ware Local Board became Ware Urban District Council on 31 December 1894. The Act also directed that parishes could not straddle urban and rural districts, and so the parish of Ware was split with effect from 4 December 1894 into two parishes: Ware Urban for the part within the urban district, and Ware Rural for the part outside it. Ware Rural parish was included in the Ware Rural District and was renamed Wareside in 1991.[37]
Ware Urban District Council was initially based at the Town Hall at 8 West Street[38] (not to be confused with the former cornmarket that had previously been called Town Hall at 70 High Street overlooking the market place).[39] The Town Hall on West Street comprised an early eighteenth house on the street frontage, behind which were a large public hall and meeting rooms which had been built in 1867, initially as a Corn Exchange.[40] The Corn Exchange business failed in 1875.[41] The following year the building was bought by a new company called the Ware Town Hall and Assembly Rooms Company. The urban district council rented rooms there to serve as its offices and meeting place.[42]
In 1920 the urban district council was effectively given Ware Priory; its owner, Anne Elizabeth Croft, gave the council a 999–year lease at a nominal rent of 3 shillings a year.[43] The council then used Ware Priory as its offices and meeting place until its abolition. Most of the former Town Hall at 8 West Street was demolished in the 1950s, retaining only the original house at the front, which is now known as Rankin House.[38]
Ware Urban District Council was granted a coat of arms on 26 March 1956.[44]
Ware Urban District was abolished under the Local Government Act 1972, merging with other districts to become East Hertfordshire on 1 April 1974. A successor parish was created covering the former urban district of Ware, with its parish council taking the name Ware Town Council.[45] Ware Town Council is now based at The Priory.[46]
Education facilities
Secondary
The town's secondary schools include Presdales School for girls, a former grammar school, which is a successful language college, and Chauncy School, a co-educational semi-independent academy. There are two independent schools (both co-educational) nearby: Haileybury and Imperial Service College (ages 11–18), located between the town and Hoddesdon to the west of the A10 and St Edmund's College (prep to Sixth Form), a Catholic school near Puckeridge to the north.
Primary and Nursery
There are eight primary schools in Ware,[47] the two largest being St Mary's School and Christ Church CofE (VA) Primary School and Nursery.[48]
Pre-school
There are also many preschools and nurseries,[49] including long established Orchard House Preschool[50] and the newest Riverside Nursery School.[51]
Further Education
Ware is also home to the Ware Campus of the Hertford Regional College (HRC)[52] which in 2015 was extensively modernised with a substantial new building. The new £10.5-million building houses the Creative & Enterprise Campus including 3D Design, Graphic Design, Fashion Design, Visual Merchandising, SetDesign, Photography, Art & Design, Fine Art, Animation & Multimedia and Creative & Digital Media.[53]
Culture
Sports and leisure
Wodson Park Sports and Leisure Centre
Wodson Park Sports and Leisure Centre is located on the north side of Ware. It is owned and operated by the Wodson Park Trust which is a community based charity providing sports and recreation facilities for the people of East Hertfordshire.[54] It has an extensive range of sports and entertainment facilities including indoor sports halls, restaurants and an external athletics facility. It is also the home to the Ware Football Clubs.
The Ware Drill Hall
The Ware Drill Hall was constructed in 1899 at a cost of £5,250 and is a Grade II listed building[55] in the centre of Ware. The building was listed due to its early use of a steel parabolic roof structure.[55] It is home to many sporting clubs and community facilities and hosts many sporting, cultural and music events throughout the year. The facility is currently operated by The Ware Drill Hall Association (WDHA).[56]
Cricket
There is evidence to suggest that cricket has been played in Ware since before 1770.[57] The present Ware Cricket Club has its grounds at Bell Lane in Widford.[58]
Bowls
The Ware Bowling Club[59] was founded in 1926 and is located in grounds behind the Ware Priory. In 2008 it became Bowls England Club of the Year.[citation needed]
Football
Ware has two non-League football teams. Ware FC was founded in 1892 and play their home games at Wodson Park sports centre in the north of the town.[60] The other non-League team is Wodson Park F.C., founded in 1997, who also play their games at the sports centre but on a separate pitch.
Ware Youth FC, founded in 1973, based on Fanhams Hall Road, Trinity Playing Fields, is the towns largest Youth Football Club (Charter Standard)
Ware Lions FC which was founded in 1968 and based at Cold Christmas Lane, is the oldest football club in Ware. Notable players who have played for them include Julian Snelling (who now plays for FC Krasnodar).[61]
American flag football
The Ware Wolves flag football team, the most popular flag football team in Hertfordshire, [citation needed] takes its name from the town although it actually plays in Hertford.
Golf
The Chadwell Springs Golf centre is located in Ware and completed a major refurbishment programme in 2019.[62]
Rugby
Hertford Rugby Football Club was formed in 1932 as the Old Hertfordians by a group of enthusiasts from Hertford Grammar School. The club played at six different venues until moving to their present location at Hoe Lane in Ware in 1949.[63] It is also home to the Old Hertfordians Squash Club which has two courts there.
Running
Ware Joggers[64] is a successful running club with opportunities for all abilities. They organise annual 10 mile and 10 km races [65] at the beginning of July as part of the Ware Festival.
Scouting and guiding
Ware was one of the first places out of London to take up the Scouting movement and now has many Scouts and Guide clubs.[66][67]
Swimming
Ware has two swimming pools, one indoor and one outdoor. The Fanshawe Pool and Gym is located in Park Road.[68] The Ware Priory Lido was built in 1934 and is one of the few remaining still in regular use in the country.[69] It was substantially altered in the 1970s with new changing rooms and is situated in the grounds of Ware Priory.
Following a meeting of "The Townsfolk of Ware" in May 1934, it was agreed that a "swimming club" be formed. This is still running today and is now based at Fanshawe Pool.[70]
Festivals and events
Ware Festival and Rock in the Priory
The Ware Festival Committee organises a wide range of events throughout July, from a lively Carnival Parade, through to an Over 60s Party, Raft Race, Teddy Bears' Picnic culminating in the 'Rock in the Priory' a one-day open-air music festival, performances have the late notable band 'box deluxe', with members including the drummer Chris Barlow. Visitors to Ware during July will find a packed programme of events throughout the four festival weekends, with something for everyone.[71]
Ware fireworks display
For over 30 years there has been an annual fireworks display in Ware on the nearest Saturday to Guy Fawkes Night. The display was originally organised by the Round Table organisation; however, in recent years it has been taken over by the three Rotary Clubs in Ware: The Rotary Club of Hertford Shires, The Rotary Club of Ware and The Rotary Club of Amwell. The event is held in a field off High Oak road and attracts many thousands of attendees. All the profits from the event are donated to local and international charities supported by Rotary.[72]
Dickensian Evening
Dickensian Evening is an annual event[73] that celebrates the work of Charles Dickens, in particular, his festive novella A Christmas Carol, and takes place on the first Friday in December each year.
The event is run through the town centre and the Drill Hall is also used for pitches and stalls. Some of the festivities include carol singing, fairground amusements and a craft market, making it an enjoyable event for all ages.[74]
Literature
Edward Lear makes reference to Ware in More Nonsense Pictures, Rhymes, Botany, etc:[75]
"There was an old person of Ware,
Who rode on the back of a bear:
When they ask'd, - 'Does it trot?'--
He said 'Certainly not!
He's a Moppsikon Floppsikon bear!'"
Religion
Ware has a number of churches,[76] the most prominent being St Mary the Virgin Church, located on the town's high street.
Twin towns
Notable residents
- Michael William Balfe — composer, owned the country estate Rowney Abbey, where he died in 1870
- Russ Ballard — musician and composer, lead singer and guitarist of Argent; lives between Ware and Thundridge
- Henry Coddington — vicar of Ware, 1832–45, FRS and optics inventor
- Richard John Carew Chartres, Baron Chartres, KCVO, ChStJ, PC - A retired bishop of the Church of England, was Bishop of London
- Samuel Herbert Dougal — notorious villain hanged for murdering a woman he had conned; was one time licensee of the Royston Crow public house in Baldock Street which he tried to burn down in an insurance scam
- Sir Richard Fanshawe — poet, translator, MP, ambassador to Spain 1662-66
- Nino Firetto — radio presenter, TV host and actor; born in Ware
- Richie Firth — Absolute Radio Drivetime co-host to Andy Bush
- William Godwin — philosopher; congregational minister in Dead Lane (now part of Church Street) 1778-9 and was said to have lost his faith here
- Sir Nigel Hawthorne — actor, lived in the nearby village of Cold Christmas
- Billy Lunn — singer, songwriter and guitarist of The Subways
- Marc North — professional footballer with Leicester City and Grimsby Town; born in Ware
- Henry Page Croft — maltster, soldier, 1st Baron Croft, Under-Secretary of State for War 1940-45
- John Pelly — cricketer and Royal Navy officer; born in Ware
- Stuart Storey — athlete and sports commentator; long associated with Ware and the Wodson Park Sports facility[77]
- Brian Wilde — played Foggy in Last of the Summer Wine and Mr Barrowclough in Porridge; lived in Myddleton Road, Ware
- William of Ware — Franciscan friar and philosopher 1290-1305
Nearby communities
References
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