Dursley

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Dursley
Dursley is located in Gloucestershire
Dursley
Dursley
 Dursley shown within Gloucestershire
Population 6,697 (2011 Census)
OS grid reference ST756981
Civil parish Dursley
District Stroud
Shire county Gloucestershire
Region South West
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town DURSLEY
Postcode district GL11
Dialling code 01453
Police Gloucestershire
Fire Gloucestershire
Ambulance South Western
EU Parliament South West England
UK Parliament Stroud
List of places
UK
England
Gloucestershire

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Dursley is a market town in Gloucestershire, England. It is under the North East flank of Stinchcombe Hill, and about 3¾ miles (6 km) south east of the River Severn. The town is adjacent to Cam which, though a village, is a community in its own right.

Governance

An electoral ward in the same name exists. The population and area of this ward are identical to that of the parish.

History

Dursley Market House

Dursley gained borough status in 1471 and lost it in 1886. From then until 1974 it was the administrative centre of Dursley Rural District (RDC). In 1974 the RDC became part of Stroud District.

The Parish Church of St. James the Great dates from the 13th century, which also carries the Tudor coat of arms on the outside of the building below the guttering linking it to the Tudor royals its seen as a signature of the funder who built it. The modern building is largely of 14th and 15th century construction. The original church spire collapsed in January 1699 during a bell-ringing session, causing casualties. The current bell tower, in an imposing 'Gothic Survival' style was built by Thomas Sumsion of Colerne in the years 1708-09.

The town has long been associated with the Seymour family, having been home to Sheriff Sir John Seymour in the 15th century and the 18th century politician Henry Seymour. It is now the Home Of Howard Jeans-Seymour, Descendant of Sir John Seymour and 9th nephew to Queen Jane Seymour who married Henry VIII

The pillared market house, complete with statue of Queen Anne and bell turret, dates from 1738, when the town's markets attracted farmers and traders from miles around. It is now maintained by the Dursley Town Trust who also look after Jacob's House and the Heritage Centre.[1]

In 1856 a short branch line railway opened,[2] called the "Dursley Donkey" by locals, linking Dursley and Cam to the Bristol - Gloucester main line at Coaley Junction. The branch line was closed in 1968. Coaley Junction railway station was also closed at about this time. However, in 1994 a new railway station called Cam and Dursley was opened on the main line 330 yards north of the site of Coaley Junction.

In the 19th and 20th centuries, Dursley was a large-scale manufacturing town, and the engines built here by Lister stationary engine company were seen and used around the world. That company's successor, Lister-Petter, was based in the town until 2014, though much of the original 92-acre (370,000 m2) factory site was acquired in 2000 by the South West Regional Development Agency and later in 2011 by Stroud District Council. It is now being developed as a large housing development with some industrial units.[3] The Towers, a large gothic-style house, formerly part of the Lister Petter estate, still overlooks the town and the site has been converted into flats and a residential care home.[4]

Church of St James the Great

Historically, other large factories based in the town included Mawdsley's, an electrical equipment manufacturer, Bymack's an upholsterers and the Bailey Newspaper Group, a newspaper printer, all of which have reduced or closed operations in recent years.

Ancient historical sites in the vicinity give evidence of earlier occupation. Uley Bury, in nearby Uley, is an Iron Age hill fort dating from around 300BC, and the village also has neolithic long barrows, (one of which, called "Hetty Pegler's Tump" can be entered) which are evident further afield at Selsley Common and Nympsfield to the north. Notable Roman remains exist at Frocester, West Hill near Uley, Woodchester and Calcot Manor.

Character and amenities

The town sits on the edge of the Cotswolds escarpment where it drops off towards the Severn Vale and the River Severn. It is adjacent with Cam which, though a village, is a community of double the size. The two communities (combined population about 12,000) share many facilities.

Dursley's main watercourse is the River Ewelme which becomes the River Cam when it enters Cam. The town is surrounded by beautiful woodland and countryside and the Cotswold Way long distance trail passes through Dursley town centre.

In March 2010 Sainsbury's opened a newly built 20,000 sq ft supermarket located within walking distance of the town centre.[5] Other recent arrivals include Lidl (November 2009, in premises on Kingshill Road previously occupied by the Regal Cinema and then Kwik Save[6]) and Iceland (July 2010, replacing Somerfield in the town centre[7]). The Co-op has operated a smaller store in Rosebery Road since 2002. Although some people dismiss Dursley as the "supermarket and charity shop" district of Gloucestershire, the town centre also hosts a wide range of other shops including a traditional ironmonger's, a haberdashery, an old fashioned sweet shop, a florist, a butcher, a baker and a greengrocer. A quality camera shop is proving a great success in the town, and a vintage clothing shop opened in June 2014. There are a number of cafes.

A range of markets are held at the Market Place in the centre of the town; a farmers' market is held there on the second Saturday of every month and a craft market on the fourth Saturday of each month. There is an active Transition group in Cam and Dursley (part of the global Transition network) which looks after Dursley's Secret Garden, among other projects. Continuing urban sprawl now joins Dursley and the nearby village of Cam.

Dursley has a number of licensed premises and the Old Spot pub is regularly voted Gloucestershire 'Pub of the Year'. The pub was also named as 2007 CAMRA National Pub of the year.[8]

Around 1496, the famous Christian writer and martyr, William Tyndale was born near here, probably at Slimbridge.

Railways

The nearest railway station is at Cam and Dursley on the Bristol and Gloucester Railway with trains run by First Great Western.

Trivia

  • Mikael Pedersen invented the Pedersen bicycle in Dursley in the 19th century.[9]
  • Dursley once had a castle, built by Roger de Berkeley in 1153.[1]
  • Harry Potter author JK Rowling, born in nearby Yate, named the Dursley family in the Potter books after the town.
  • It is claimed that William Shakespeare may have spent part or all of the eight years between 1582 and 1590, a period of his life of which little is known, in Dursley, possibly working as a school teacher. In Richard II act II scene 3 there is reference to "the wolds of Gloucestershire",and when Bolingbrook asks how far it is to Berkeley as "these wild hills and rough uneven ways draw out for miles", the reply given is "there stands the castle beyond that tuft of trees". Many people understand this as a conversation taking place on Stinchcombe Hill overlooking the Vale of Berkeley and its castle.
  • The writer Evelyn Waugh lived in nearby Stinchcombe between 1937 and 1956.
  • The writer Peter Currell Brown wrote the cult classic 1965 surrealist novel, Smallcreep's Day, while working in Dursley.

References

External links

Following the Cotswold Way
Towards
Bath
Towards
Chipping Campden
11km (7 miles) to
Wotton-under-Edge
14km (9 miles) to
Stroud