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Billericay - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Billericay

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Billericay

Coordinates: 51.628° N 0.4184° E

Billericay (United Kingdom)
Billericay
Population 40,000
OS grid reference TQ675945
District Basildon
Shire county Essex
Region East
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town BILLERICAY
Postcode district CM11, CM12
Dial code 01277
Police Essex
Fire Essex
Ambulance East of England
UK Parliament Billericay
European Parliament East of England
List of places: UKEnglandEssex

Billericay is a small commuter town in Essex, England with a population of 40,000. Its name is pronounced 'bill-er-icky' (in IPA, /bɪləˈɹɪki/).

Contents

[edit] Geography and geology

Billericay is a semi-rural town, with many green spaces, including Norsey Wood, Mill Meadows Nature Reserve, Queen's Park Country Park, Sun Corner, Lake Meadows and South Green amongst others. Billericay contains Billericay School and Mayflower High School.

Billericay is within the London Basin and lies on a mixture of London Clay, Claygate Beds and Bagshot Beds. Near the high street, there is a change in soil type from sandy to clay, which gives rise to local underground springs.

[edit] History

One of the earliest records of human occupation of Billericay are the burial mounds, which still exist in Norsey Woods. This is evidence of occupation in the Bronze and Iron Ages. Evidence of Roman occupation has been found at a number of locations in the town and there may have been a small cavalry fort at Blunts Wall.

The Saxons did not settle in the centre of Billericay. They established themselves two miles south, at Great Burstead. In the late tenth century it was known as 'Burhstede.' Billericay was not mentioned in the Domesday Book, as it lay within Great Burstead. At this time the parish church for Billericay was at Great Burstead. In 1291 the name 'Byllyrica' is first recorded.

[edit] Middle Ages

In the 13th and 14th Centuries some of the Canterbury Pilgrims journeyed via Billericay. It is probable that some pilgrims spent the night in Billericay before crossing the River Thames at Tilbury. This may account for why there were so many inns in the town.

Billericay's most notable historical episode was on the 28th June, 1381, when King Richard II's soldiers defeated Essex rebels at Billericay's Norsey Woods. About 500 rebels were killed in the battle which ended the Peasants' Revolt.

The Wycliffe preachers influenced the town. Four local people (Thomas Watts, Joan Hornes, Elizabeth Thackwell, and Margaret Ellis) were burnt at the stake. Two other residents (Joan Potter and James Harris) were tortured for their faith during the reign of Queen Mary.

[edit] The Pilgrim Fathers

A meeting of the Pilgrim Fathers prior to their sailing in the Mayflower is said to have taken place in Billericay, and much local nomenclature and historical imagery reflects this: Mayflower House, Morris Men, Taxis, School, Hall. Sunnymede School's houses were called Mayflower, Pilgrim, Chantry and Martin (after Christopher Martin, a Billericay merchant who travelled on the Mayflower as Ship's Governor).

Four people from Billericay were on board, including Christopher Martin. He and his wife, Marie, along with Solomon Prowe and John Langemore perished shortly after their arrival at Cape Cod, Massachusetts.

The unfortunate fate of the would be pioneers did not deter other inhabitants of Billericay inhabitants from setting sail for the New World. The town of Billerica, Massachusetts was established in 1655 to commemorate the origins of some of the first settlers.

[edit] Georgian and Victorian era

In the Georgian period many excellent examples of the period's houses were built in Billericay. One of those remaining today is Burghsted Lodge in the High Street, which houses the library. The road from Billericay to Tilbury still had a reputation: with mention of "footpads" and highwaymen operating along the road where it passed through open country.

In the town, The Union Workhouse was built in 1840 to continue to implement the Poor Law. Parts of this building were later incorporated into what was St. Andrews Hospital. The railway arrived in Billericay in 1889, being on the Great Eastern Main Line between London and Southend-on-Sea.

[edit] The 20th Century

In 1916, during the First World War, one of the giant German Zeppelin airships (L32) was shot down during an aerial battle over Billericay. During its fiery demise, it narrowly missed the High Street, crashing into a nearby field.

St Andrew’s Hospital, which was formerly the site of the town’s Victorian workhouse, continued to function as an important communal building. From 1973, it housed the internationally renowned Regional Plastic Surgery and Burns unit until this was relocated at Broomfield Hospital, Chelmsford in April 1998. After the relocation most of the hospital was redeveloped into housing, but the listed buildings remain intact but are now residential.

[edit] Politics

A View of the High Street showing St Mary Magdalen church
A View of the High Street showing St Mary Magdalen church

[edit] Parliamentary

Since 2001 the MP for the Billericay constituency has been John Baron of the Conservative Party. The constituency is due to be reformed as Basildon and Billericay before the next election. It was previously represented by Teresa Gorman from 1987 to 2001, a Conservative rebel who had the whip withdrawn for opposing the Maastricht Treaty. Her predessesor, the conservative MP Harvey Proctor also has a significant place in the news in 1987, when he was charged with indecency.[1]

[edit] Local government

Billericay is part of the Basildon district, although occasional proposals have been made to add it to the nearby Brentwood district instead.[2] Basildon District Council is Conservative controlled. Billericay is also served by a town council of 20 members, elected in 3 wards and a youth town council, elected in schools around the town.[3] The town council has powers related to local planning and finance, while the youth council has an annual budget of £500 to spend or invest in local services or entertainment.[4]

The Billericay parish was not formed until 1937, before then the area had been part of the ancient Great Burstead parish.[5][6] In 1894 a Billericay Rural District was created which covered a wide area stretching as far as Brentwood and Pitsea.[7] In 1934 the core of this district around Basildon and Billericay was used to create Billericay Urban District and in 1937 a Billericay civil parish was created covering the same area. The urban district, but not the parish, was renamed Basildon in 1955. In 1974 the district was abolished and its former area was used to create the present-day Basildon district.

[edit] Transport

Billericay is a part of the London commuter belt. It is served by Billericay railway station on the 'one' route from Liverpool Street, in the City of London, to Southend. Billericay is near to the A127 road from London to Southend.

[edit] Sport and culture

The town is represented by local teams in a number of sports. The grounds of the local football and cricket teams and tennis club are located in the West of Billericay, along Blunts Wall Road.

Billericay Cricket Club is located at The Toby Howe Cricket Ground. The Club moved to this magnificent ground in 1996. The ground provides two county-sized playing areas and, apart from Billericay CC fixtures, also accommodates some Essex County Cricket Club Second XI, Essex Academy and ECCB Under 15/Under 16/Under 17 fixtures. Essex CCC provide a full-time groundsman who maintains the ground to a high level.

Formed in 1880, Billericay Town FC is the local football team and are currently in the Ryman Premier League. The stadium is called the New Lodge and has a capacity of 3,500. Whilst members of the Essex Senior League, the club won the F.A.Vase in 1976 when Stamford were beaten 1-0 after extra-time at Wembley Stadium. The following season, 1976/77, saw the club go to Wembley again and - after a 1-1 draw there - played at Nottingham Forest F.C. in the re-play and emerged victorious with a 2-1 victory over Sheffield, the oldest club in the world. Billericay Town became the first [and so far the only] club to win the F.A.Vase for a third time in 1979 when they defeated Almondsbury Greenway 4-1. This match was notable for a hat-trick by Doug Young - the first hat-trick in a Cup Final at Wembley Stadium since Geoff Hurst`s in the 1966 World Cup Final.

Billericay Rugby Football Club is the local rugby team, playing in Essex Division One. Their ground is the Willowbrook Sports Club to the North of the town off of Stock Road. They are the only team from Essex to play at Twickenham, the home of English Rugby, when they won the Tetley Bitter Vase in 1999. Billericay is the only town to have won both the football and rugby vases. The club was formed in 1969 (although evidence has been found dating back to 1905). There has been a tennis club in the town since c. 1930. The current club is the Billericay Lawn Tennis Club.

The town is now served by a small community radio station, Phoenix FM. The station allows local townsfolk and organisations to get involved with issues regarding local politics, fundraising, and promotion of art and music.

The town was immortalised in the Ian Dury and the Blockheads song 'Billericay Dickie.'

Billericay is also mentioned in George Orwell's novel 'Down And Out In Paris And London'.

The Cater Museum is a privately owned folk museum. It is housed in an 18th century building in the High Street.

[edit] Civil registration

Between 1 July 1837 and 1 July 1939 Billericay was a registration district. From 1974 until the present, the town falls under the Basildon district. However, the registry office is not located in Basildon, but in Billericay at Burghstead Lodge, adjacent to the town's library in the High Street. There is also the facility to register deaths in Basildon Hospital.[8]

[edit] Twinning

Billericay is twinned with Fishers, Indiana[9] Flag of United States and Billerica, Massachusetts[10] Flag of United States in the US. The town is also twinned with the French market town of Chauvigny, Vienne. Flag of France

[edit] Notable people from the area

[edit] References

  1. ^ BBC: On this day 16 April 1987, Retrieved 7 September 2006.
  2. ^ LGCE review for Basildon area Retrieved 23 December 2006.
  3. ^ Billericay Town Council. Retrieved 9 November 2006.
  4. ^ Billericay Youth Town Council. Retrieved 9 November 2006.
  5. ^ Vision of Britain - Great Burstead parish (historic map). Retrieved 9 November 2006.
  6. ^ Billericay History House - Billericay, White's Directory of Essex, 1848. Retrieved 9 November 2006.
  7. ^ Vision of Britain - Billericay RD (historic map). Retrieved 9 November 2006.
  8. ^ Basildon District - Essex County Council. Retrieved 22 September 2006.
  9. ^ Billericay Twinning Association. Retrieved 9 November 2006.
  10. ^ Billericay Mayflower Twinning Association. Retrieved 9 November 2006.

[edit] External links

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