Chipping Sodbury
Chipping Sodbury | |
The wide main street of Chipping Sodbury. Cars are parked where market stalls would once have been. |
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Chipping Sodbury |
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Population | 5,045 (2011)[1] |
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OS grid reference | ST726822 |
Civil parish | Sodbury |
Unitary authority | South Gloucestershire |
Ceremonial county | Gloucestershire |
Region | South West |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | BRISTOL |
Postcode district | BS37 |
Dialling code | 01454 |
Police | Avon and Somerset |
Fire | Avon |
Ambulance | South Western |
EU Parliament | South West England |
UK Parliament | Thornbury and Yate |
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Coordinates: 51°32′17″N 2°23′38″W / 51.538°N 2.394°W
Chipping Sodbury is a market town in the unitary authority of South Gloucestershire, south-west England, founded in the 12th century by William Crassus (or le Gros). The villages of Old Sodbury and Little Sodbury are nearby. At the 2001 census the population of Chipping Sodbury was 5,066, but in the last decade the town has become part of a much larger built-up area due to the rapid expansion of nearby Yate, with which it is contiguous to the west. At the census the combined population of Yate and Chipping Sodbury was 26,855.
Chipping Sodbury is the principal settlement in the civil parish of Sodbury, which also includes the village of Old Sodbury. Little Sodbury is a separate civil parish. Sodbury parish council has elected to be known as Sodbury Town Council.
Governance
An electoral ward in the same name (not Sodbury) exists. This ward starts in the north at Chipping Sodbury Golf Course and stretches south to Dodington. The total population of the ward taken at the 2011 census was 6,834.[2]
Transport
East of the town is the Chipping Sodbury Tunnel, a railway tunnel under the Cotswolds 2 miles 924 yards (4.06 km) long, which was opened by the Great Western Railway in 1902. The tunnel is notorious for flooding in wet weather, often leading to disruption of services on the main railway line to and from South Wales. Chipping Sodbury had a railway station from 1903 to 1961. Yate station, on the Bristol to Birmingham main line, closed in January 1965 but reopened in May 1989.
Cultural activities
Chipping Sodbury hosts a twice yearly Mop Fair, usually the last weekends of March and September. The town holds a Festival Week in early June. There is a farmers' market twice a month, on the second and fourth Saturdays.
A Victorian Evening is held on the first Friday in December. The event starts in the afternoon when school choirs perform in the street. The evening's events begin with the arrival of Father Christmas when snow is guaranteed (from a blower). The streets are lined with stalls from local charities and organisations and old time amusements, including a Ferris wheel, Helter Skelter and two children's rides. Choirs sing, bands play, and stalls bring a market feel. A Hog Roast is held.
The town is served by a community radio station, GLOSS FM which broadcasts 365 days a year on its webcasts and twice a year on 87.7 MHz FM.
Education
Chipping Sodbury has two government funded primary schools and a secondary school.
Chipping Sodbury School, the secondary school, caters for children aged 11 to 18 and describes itself as a 'Specialist Technology School'.[3] The School shares Sixth Form provision with Brimsham Green School. The School obtained a 'Satisfactory' status from Ofsted in 2011.[4]
St John's Mead Primary School is named after the local CoE church. The other Primary School is Raysfield Infants and Junior schools. Also within the parish boundary is Old Sodbury Primary School.
Toponymy
The town's name is recorded in Old English (in the dative case) as Soppanbyrig = "Soppa's fort". "Chipping" (from Old English cēping) means that a market was held there.
Notable people
Edward Jenner, in the 18th century, started his medical training in Sodbury, observing people catching cowpox and then not catching smallpox.
RC "Jack" Russell: former England cricket wicket keeper and artist owns an art gallery in the town.[5]
Chris Sawyer: creator of the Rollercoaster Tycoon and Transport Tycoon games and Chris Sawyer's Locomotion.
Dr Alfred Grace, brother of England cricketer W. G. Grace, was a resident of Chipping Sodbury in the late 19th century. He captained Chipping Sodbury Cricket Club, as did his son Alfie (W.G. played some of his early cricket for the club).
Sir James Dyson, inventor of the Dual Cyclone bagless vacuum cleaner, lives at Dodington Park just outside Chipping Sodbury.
J.K. Rowling, author of the Harry Potter fantasy series, was born in 1965 at the Chipping Sodbury Maternity Hospital (later the Chipping Sodbury Memorial Day Centre), on Station Road, Yate. Until the age of four, she lived with her parents in Sundridge Park, Yate.[6][7][8]
References
- ↑ "Civil Parish population 2011.Retrieved 19 March 2015".
- ↑ "Ward population 2011.Retrieved 19 March 2015".
- ↑ http://www.chippingsodburyschool.com/
- ↑ http://www.chippingsodburyschool.com/Ofsted-Inspection-Report-December-2011/
- ↑ http://www.jackrussell.co.uk/ Retrieved September 2013
- ↑ Connie Ann Kirk, J.K. Rowling: A Biography, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2003, pp.11–12
- ↑ C. D. Miller, Harry Potter Places: Snitch-Seeking in Southern England and Wales, Book 3, First Edition Design Pub., 2012, pp.110–113
- ↑ Lynne Hutchinson, Concerns raised about future of former Chipping Sodbury cottage hospital site, Gazette Series, 6 September 2012. Retrieved 6 April 2013
- David Verey, Gloucestershire: the Vale and the Forest of Dean, The Buildings of England edited by Nikolaus Pevsner, 2nd ed. (1976) ISBN 0-14-071041-8, pp. 155–157
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chipping Sodbury. |
Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Chipping Sodbury. |