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{{Short description|Coastal town in Kent, England}} | |||
'''Broadstairs''' is a ] in ], ]. Between ] and ], Broadstairs is one of the ]s on the ]. | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2018}} | |||
{{Use British English|date=August 2014}} | |||
{{infobox UK place | |||
|country = England | |||
|static_image_name = Broadstairs_aerial_image_(43480169685).jpg | |||
|static_image_caption = Viking Bay, Broadstairs | |||
|official_name = Broadstairs | |||
|civil_parish = ] | |||
|label_position = left | |||
|population = 24,903 | |||
|population_ref = (] parish 2011)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadKeyFigures.do?a=7&b=11121243&c=Broadstairs&d=16&e=62&g=6438917&i=1001x1003x1032x1004&m=0&r=1&s=1443796514190&enc=1|title=Civil Parish population 2011|access-date=2 October 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151006155031/http://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadKeyFigures.do?a=7&b=11121243&c=Broadstairs&d=16&e=62&g=6438917&i=1001x1003x1032x1004&m=0&r=1&s=1443796514190&enc=1|archive-date=6 October 2015|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
|shire_district = ] | |||
|shire_county = ] | |||
|region = South East England | |||
|constituency_westminster = ] | |||
|post_town = Broadstairs | |||
|postcode_district = CT10 | |||
|postcode_area = CT | |||
|dial_code = 01843 | |||
|os_grid_reference = TR395675 | |||
|london_distance = {{convert|81.6|mi|km}} | |||
|coordinates = {{coord|51.35888|1.43944|display=inline,title}} | |||
}} | |||
'''Broadstairs''' is a coastal town on the ] in the ] district of east ], England, about {{convert|80|mi|km}} east of London. It is part of the ] of ], which includes ], and had a population in 2011 of about 25,000. Situated between ] and ], Broadstairs is one of Thanet's ]s, known as the "jewel in Thanet's crown". The town's coat of arms' Latin motto is ''Stella Maris'' ("]"). The name derives from a former flight of steps in the chalk cliff, which led from the sands up to the 11th-century ] on the cliff's summit. | |||
The town lies above a ], historically known for ]. More recently, ] was a frequent visitor and the house he stayed in which he wrote '']'' and part of '']'' can be visited. <br> | |||
The town spreads from Haine Road in the west to ] (named after the landing of ] in 1683), a hamlet in St Peter parish<ref name="Kingsgate">{{Cite web |url=http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/place/place_page.jsp?p_id=21490 |title=''Kingsgate Kent'' – A vision of Britain through time |access-date=15 February 2013 |archive-date=5 November 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141105105728/http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/place/place_page.jsp?p_id=21490 |url-status=live }}</ref> in the north, and to Dumpton in the south (named after the yeoman Dudeman who farmed there in the 13th century). The hamlet of Reading (formerly ''Reden'' or ''Redyng'') Street was established by ] refugees in the 17th century. | |||
] <br> | |||
==History== | |||
<hr> | |||
The inland village of ] was established after the building of a ] in about 1080. | |||
The coastal confederation of ] during its mediæval period consisted of a confederation of 42 towns and villages in all. This included St Peter's, as a 'limb' of ].<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.villagenet.co.uk/history/1155-cinqueports.php |title=Cinque Ports 1155 to 1500 – History effecting Kent & Sussex<!-- Bot generated title --> |access-date=28 September 2012 |archive-date=17 July 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120717021637/http://www.villagenet.co.uk/history/1155-cinqueports.php |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
On the nearby coast was a cliff-top shrine, the ], at what was then called ''Bradstow(e)'', meaning "broad place" (perhaps referring to the wide bay).<ref>''Bygone Kent'', vol. 1 no. 6, 1980.</ref> | |||
A fishing settlement developed in the vicinity of the shrine in the 14th century.{{Citation needed|date=May 2011}} This came to be called "Broadstairs", after a flight of steps which was made in the cliff to give access to the shrine from the bay. Older forms of the name include ''Brodsteyr Lynch'' (1434 & 1494 <ref>Will of Richard Culmer, of St Peter, Thanet, proved 1494; Canterbury Cathedral Archives; PRC 17/6/81; line 10 of the registered will: "land lyyng & being at brodstayrlynch"</ref>), ''Brodestyr'' (1479), ''Broadstayer'' (1565) and ''{{not a typo|Brod stayrs}}'' (1610).<ref>Glover, Judith, ''The Place Names of Kent'', 1982, {{ISBN|0-905270-61-4}}</ref> Charles Culmer, son of Waldemar, is supposed to have reconstructed the stairs in 1350. | |||
==Broadstairs - a breif summary.== | |||
] | |||
===1400–1700=== | |||
Broadstairs is a very popular holiday and day triper resort with its close location to Dover and Canterbury, and is within a one hours drive of the M25, London's orbital motorway. | |||
In 1440, an archway was built by George Culmer across a track leading down to the sea, where the first wooden pier or jetty was built in 1460. A more enduring structure was to replace this in 1538, when the road leading to the seafront, known as Harbour Street, was cut into the rough chalk ground on which Broadstairs is built, by another George Culmer. Going further in defence of the town, he built the York Gate in 1540, a portal that still spans Harbour Street and which then held two heavy wooden doors that could be closed in times of threat from the sea. ] was the son of Sir Richard Culmer by his first wife and was born in 1640/41. | |||
Richard was buried in the parish church of ], on the Isle of Thanet. Of his legacies was the ] on Broadstairs of an area of six ]s (24,000 m<sup>2</sup>) of ground for the poor of the parish. The name survives to this day as "Culmer's Allotment" as does the allotment. | |||
Broadstairs has 7 bays of golden sand, the main bay being Viking bay, which has won many awards including the European 'Blue Flag'. People comment that Broadstairs has changed very little over the last century, an asset that brings visitors back time and again. Its wealth of history and good shopping as well as a variety of good pubs and restaurants makes it a fine all year round destination. | |||
===1700–1815=== | |||
Broadstairs has a small cinema in Harbour Street as well as a fine venue called the 'Pavillion on the sands', which hosts a summer show as well as all year entertainment and which offers an extensive view across the bay. | |||
In 1823, Broadstairs had a population of about 300.<ref name="History Of Broadstairs & St Peter's"> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100803073629/http://www.broadstairs.gov.uk/Core/Broadstairs/Pages/History_1.aspx |date=3 August 2010 }} at the Town Council website</ref> A brief outline of the history of Broadstairs ] is given in ''Broadstairs, past and present'', which mentions a storm in 1767, during which Culmer's work was all but destroyed. At this time, it was of considerable importance to the fishing trade with catches as far afield as ], ], ], ] and ] and elsewhere being landed. It had become so indispensable that the corporations of Yarmouth, Dover, ] and ] with assistance from the ] and ] subscribed to its restoration with a payment of £2,000 in 1774. | |||
By 1795, York Gate needed repair to repel any threat from the ]. The subsequent renovation was undertaken by Lord Hanniker in the same year as the first ] was placed on the ]. | |||
The towns water gala held in August has been a part of the summer calendar for over 117 years a full fun filled day of familly entertainment compliments a folk festival and a 'Dickens festival' held in June. | |||
On the occasion of the landing at Thanet of Major Henry Percy<!--do not wl until this person has an article, title is a dab page--> of the 14th Dragoon Guards, on 21 June 1815 with the captured French eagle standard taken at ], a tunnel stairway from the beach to the fields on the cliff tops above was excavated, and christened "Waterloo Stairs" to commemorate the event. Broadstairs was supposedly the first town in England to learn of this historic victory, although there is no written evidence of this. | |||
Queen Victoria spent many summers in broadstairs staying at Pierremont hall. | |||
Smuggling was an important industry in the area, and the men of Broadstairs and St Peter's became very good at outwitting ]s. This was very profitable because of the very high ] payable on tea, spirits and tobacco. There is a network of tunnels and caves strewn in the chalk strata which were used by ]s to hide their ]. | |||
==Notable residents.== | |||
===Development as a seaside resort=== | |||
One time Conservative leader and Prime Minister, Sir Edward Heath was born in Broadstairs. | |||
] | |||
By 1824 ]s were becoming more common, having begun to make over from the hoys and sailing ]s about 1814. These made trade with London much faster. The familiar sailing hoys took anything up to 72 hours to reach ] from London, whereas the new ]s were capable of making at least nine voyages in this time. Mixed feelings must have been strongly expressed by the Thanet boatmen in general, as the unrivalled speed of the ] was outmanoeuvring all other classes of vessel, but it brought a new prosperity to Thanet. | |||
Charles Dickens wrote many novels in the town. | |||
The young ] and her mother, ], were summer visitors 1826–1836, staying at '''Pierremont Hall''' (in present-day Pierremont Park). The house was built in 1785 by ] for ], and later used as a school and an events venue.<ref>{{cite web |title=About our history |url=https://pierremonthall.co.uk/about/ |website=Pierremont Hall |access-date=16 June 2020 |archive-date=16 June 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200616142959/https://pierremonthall.co.uk/about/ |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
Oliver Postgate, creator of the childrens TV puppet shows, the "Clangers" and "Bagpuss" is reported as a c21st resident. | |||
In the middle of the 19th century, the professional classes began to move in. By 1850, the population had reached about 3,000, doubling over the previous 50 years. Due to the fresh ], many convalescent homes for children opened towards the end of the 19th century.<ref name="History Of Broadstairs & St Peter's"/> | |||
==History of Broadstairs.== | |||
Although numerous ] were attracted to Broadstairs and to other ] seaside towns during the ], it was not directly served by the railways until 1863. This was a time of great expansion for railways in the ]; in 1860 ] had been completed, followed by ] and ]. Rail access to Broadstairs had previously relied heavily upon coach links to other railway stations in the district or region; with firms such as ''Bradstowe Coachmasters'', operated by William Sackett and John Derby, principally involved. Their coaches connected Broadstairs to ] where a railway service had begun as early as 1830 (one of the first in England, with its pioneering ]'s engine ]). | |||
Reference to the ] is found in the pages of a Thanet history book: "Mockett's Journal" (1836) its author being Churchwarden, John Mockett (1775~1848). Mention is made by Mockett of the will of a Richard Culmer, who was, in 1434, a carpenter. Shortly thereafter in 1440 an archway was built by George Culmer, across a track leading down to the sea, where the first wooden pier or jetty was built in 1460. A more enduring structure was to replace this in 1538. | |||
In 1841, 44 ] were recorded as resident in Broadstairs; nine of these being specified as fishermen, and of course the residual ] activity that remained after the Culmer White yard closed in 1824 (under pressure from the steamships), still continued (though there were only four ]s recorded in the census: Solomon Holbourn and Joseph Jarman among them). Others may have been at sea on census day: Steamer Point, as the pier head at Broadstairs was then known, would have been fairly busy with shipping movements since ]s of ] and other produce would have been traded along the coast and there would have been regular work on the steam packet to and from ]. By the 1840s, the smuggling had ceased.<ref name="History Of Broadstairs & St Peter's"/> | |||
The Culmers nestled their boatyard on these protected sands. It was in 1538 that the road leading onto the seafront, known as Harbour Street, was cut into the rough chalk ground Broadstairs is built upon. This was accomplished by the local shipwright, George Culmer. Going further in defence the town, he then built the 'York Gate' in 1540, this being a portal that still spans Harbour Street, and which then held two heavy wooden doors that could be closed in times of threat from beyond the sea. By 1795, 'York Gate' was in need of some repair on account of worries over the French Revolutionary Wars, the subsequent renovation was undertaken by Lord Hanniker in the same year as the first ] was placed on the Goodwin Sands. | |||
] | |||
A brief outline of the history of Broadstairs Pier is given in ''Broadstairs, past and present'', in which mention of a storm is made that occurred in 1767 during which Culmer's work was all but destroyed. At this time it was of considerable importance to the fishing trade with catches as far afield as ], ], ], ] and ] and elsewhere being landed. It had become so indispensable that the Corporations of Yarmouth, Dover, Hythe and Canterbury with assistance from the ] and ] subscribed to its restoration with a payment of £2000/~ in 1774. | |||
By 1910, the population had reached about 10,000. A "]" of the 1930s by A.H. Simison (the photographic chemist) entitled ''Ramsgate (The Kent Coast at its best) Pictorially Presented'', describes Broadstairs town as having approached modernisation and urban development "always with a consistent policy of retaining those characteristics for which it has for so long been renowned". The town has retained many aspects of historical interest, besides its ]. Amongst these is its notable ], evoked by places such as the ]. | |||
==Governance== | |||
==Maritime history== | |||
Broadstairs is within the Thanet ]. The town contains the five electoral ] of Bradstowe, St Peter's, Beacon Road, Viking and Kingsgate. These wards have eleven of the fifty six seats on the ]. The ] saw major changes in the political make-up of Broadstairs, with the Conservative Party retaining only four of their previously held eight seats. Four seats were won by the Labour Party, two by the Greens with an Independent taking the remaining seat. Broadstairs and St Peter's Town Council has 15 members, who are elected every four years, led by the mayor.<ref>{{cite web | title = Council — People | publisher = Broadstairs and St Peter's Town Council | url =http://www.broadstairs.gov.uk/council/people.asp | access-date = 11 June 2007 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070404161635/http://www.broadstairs.gov.uk/council/people.asp |archive-date = 4 April 2007}}</ref> | |||
The ] (MP) for ] is ] of the ]. She has been the constituency's MP since the ]. | |||
1): On the occasion of the landing at Thanet, of Major ], on ], ] with the captured French Eagle Standard taken at ], a tunnel stairway from the beach to the fields on the clifftops above, was excavated, and christened 'Waterloo Stairs' to commemorate the event. Broadstairs being the first town in England to learn of this now historic victory. | |||
Broadstairs and St Peter's have been twinned with ] in northern France since the early 1980s.<ref>{{cite web | title = Twinning Town| publisher = Broadstairs and St Peter's Town Council | url =http://www.broadstairs.gov.uk/events/twinning.asp| access-date = 29 May 2007 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070314215249/http://www.broadstairs.gov.uk/events/twinning.asp |archive-date = 14 March 2007}}</ref> | |||
2): With the closure of the Culmer~White boatyard at Broadstairs in 1824 boatbuilding operations were transferred to the Isle of White where the firm of ] became established. | |||
==Geography== | |||
It has been suggested that news of the loss of the Irish Packet 'Royal Adelaide' with 250 lives, on the tong of the sands off ] on ], 1850 prompted old Thomas White to present one of his lifeboats to his home town of Broadstairs that summer. As recited in Song of the Mary White a ballad was written to celebrate the occasion, the then unnamed Lifeboat which had only recently (July 1850) been presented to Broadstairs by the Shipwright Thomas White, saw its first use on March 6, 1851. On this occasion, the brig "]" became trapped upon the Goodwin Sands during a very severe gale blowing from the north. | |||
] | |||
The town lies above a harbour with cliffs on either side. It has seven bays of golden sand, which are (from south to north) Dumpton Gap, Louisa Bay, Viking Bay, Stone Bay, Joss Bay, Kingsgate Bay and ]. ] rises between Stone Bay and Joss Bay. | |||
On the cliffs above Kingsgate Bay is ], formerly part of the estate of Lord Holland but now converted into private residences. | |||
3):In 1841, forty four mariners were recorded as resident, then in Broadstairs, nine of these being specified as fishermen, and of course the residual boat building activity that remained after the Culmer~White yard closed was of necessity still continued, although there were only four Shipwrights recorded in the Census, Solomon Holbourn and Joseph Jarman amongst them. | |||
Broadstairs has a very mild ]. | |||
Others may have been elsewhere on census day. 'Steamer Point', as the pier head at Broadstairs was then known, would have been fairly busy with shipping movements, with consignments of coal and other produce traded thereabouts. There were also the regular visits of the steam packet from Ramsgate. | |||
] | |||
<br>Mixed feelings must have been strongly expressed by the Thanet boatmen in general, as the unrivaled speed of the steam packet was outmanoeuvring all other classes of vessel, but brought a new prosperity to Thanet. | |||
==Demography== | |||
The Steamboats had begun to take over from the Hoys and sailing packets around 1814 and like all "new-fangled devices" were accepted readily by some and despised by others. However the sailing Hoys might take anything up to 72 hours to reach Margate from London, whilst Steam ships were capable of making at least nine voyages in this time! | |||
{| id="toc" style="float: right; margin-left: 2em; width: 40%; font-size: 90%;" cellspacing="3" | |||
|- | |||
!colspan="3"|'''Broadstairs and St Peter's''' | |||
|- | |||
|'''2001 UK census'''||'''Broadstairs and St Peter's'''||'''Thanet District'''||'''England''' | |||
|- | |||
|Total population||24,370||126,702||49,138,831 | |||
|- | |||
|Foreign born||5.3%||5.1%||9.2% | |||
|- | |||
|White||98%||98%||91% | |||
|- | |||
|Asian||1.0%||0.6%||4.6% | |||
|- | |||
|Black||0.2%||0.3%||2.3% | |||
|- | |||
|Christian||75%||74%||72% | |||
|- | |||
|Muslim||0.4%||0.5%||3.1% | |||
|- | |||
|Hindu||0.3%||0.2%||1.1% | |||
|- | |||
|No religion||14%||16%||15% | |||
|- | |||
|65+ years old||24%||22%||16% | |||
|- | |||
|Unemployed||2.9%||4.4%||3.3% | |||
|} | |||
At the ], the parish of ] had 24,370 residents in 10,597 households. Of those households, 34.2% were married couples, 6.7% were ] couples and 8.3% were lone parents. 31.8% of all households were made up of individuals, and 20.9% had someone living alone at pensionable age. 25.7% of households included children aged under 16, or a person aged 16 to 18 who was in full-time education.<ref name="Statistics.gov.uk">{{cite web | title = Neighbourhood Statistics | publisher = Statistics.gov.uk | url = http://neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadHome.do;jsessionid=ac1f930bce6a711447e60ba4446bb56c21648d42c51.e38PbNqOa3qRe38OaNeKahqMai1ynknvrkLOlQzNp65In0?bhcp=1 | access-date = 29 March 2007 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110525195139/http://neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadHome.do;jsessionid=ac1f930bce6a711447e60ba4446bb56c21648d42c51.e38PbNqOa3qRe38OaNeKahqMai1ynknvrkLOlQzNp65In0?bhcp=1 | archive-date = 25 May 2011 | url-status = dead | df = dmy-all }}</ref> | |||
The parish has a low proportion of non-white people compared with national figures; the ethnicity recorded in the 2001 census was 97.9% white, 0.7% mixed race, 0.3% Chinese, 0.7% other Asian, 0.2% black and 0.2% other.<ref name="Statistics.gov.uk" /> The number of foreign-born residents is relatively low; the place of birth of residents in 2001 was 94.7% United Kingdom, 0.7% Republic of Ireland, 0.5% Germany, 0.9% other Western Europe countries, 0.3% Eastern Europe, 0.8% Africa, 0.6% South Asia, 0.5% Far East, 0.3% North America, 0.2% Middle East, 0.2% Oceania and 0.1% South America.<ref name="Statistics.gov.uk" /> Religion was recorded as 75.3% Christian, 0.4% Muslim, 0.3% Hindu, 0.3% Buddhist and 0.3% Jewish. 14.3% were recorded as having no religion, 0.5% had an alternative religion and 8.6% did not state their religion.<ref name="Statistics.gov.uk" /> | |||
''] (The Kent Coast at its best) Pictorially Presented'' a "guide book" of the 1930's, by A.H.Simison, a photographic chemist, in its section on Broadstairs describes the town as having developed 'always with a consistent policy of retaining those characteristics for which it has for so long been renowned.' | |||
The age distribution was 5% aged 0–4 years, 14% aged 5–15 years, 5% aged 16–19 years, 26% aged 20–44 years, 27% aged 45–64 years and 24% aged 65 years and over. There was a high percentage of residents over 65, compared with the national average of 16%, mainly due to seaside towns being popular retirement destinations. For every 100 females, there were 87.1 males.<ref name=autogenerated1>{{cite web | title = Neighbourhood Statistics | publisher = Statistics.gov.uk | url = http://neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadHome.do;jsessionid=ac1f930bce6a711447e60ba4446bb56c21648d42c51.e38PbNqOa3qRe38OaNeKahqMai1ynknvrkLOlQzNp65In0?bhcp=1 | access-date = 29 May 2007 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110525195139/http://neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadHome.do;jsessionid=ac1f930bce6a711447e60ba4446bb56c21648d42c51.e38PbNqOa3qRe38OaNeKahqMai1ynknvrkLOlQzNp65In0?bhcp=1 | archive-date = 25 May 2011 | url-status = dead | df = dmy-all }}</ref> | |||
Although there were numerous holiday makers staying in all three of the Thanet towns during the ], their was to be no railway link until 1863. Whilst William Sackett and John Derby operated as the Bradstowe Coachmasters, nearby ] had begun its railway service as early as 1830, one of the first in England, with its pioneering ]'s engine ''The Invicta'' and by 1851 the basic local rail network had been put in place. This largely comprised the London to South Coast route with a coastal link from ] to ], the cross country service between ] and ] and the mid Kent route linking Redhill, Tonbridge and ], with a new terminal at Waterloo having been opened in 1848. It was not until 1860 that ] was completed, followed by ] and ]. | |||
===Employment=== | |||
The ] is another important topic in the town's history. | |||
At the 2001 census, the economic activity of residents aged 16–74 was 34.1% in full-time employment, 12.8% in part-time employment, 10.0% self-employed, 2.9% unemployed, 2.3% students with jobs, 4.1% students without jobs, 20.0% retired, 6.5% looking after home or family, 4.9% permanently sick or disabled and 2.4% economically inactive for other reasons. The percentage of retired people was significantly higher than the national figure of 14%. The percentage of unemployed people was low compared with the national rate of 3.4% and the district rate of 4.4%. Only 12% of residents aged 16–74 had a ] qualification or the equivalent, compared with 20% nationwide. The ] estimated that during the period of April 2001 to March 2002, the average gross weekly income of households was £522 (£27,219 per year).<ref name="Statistics.gov.uk"/> | |||
The industry of employment of residents, at the 2001 census, was 15% retail, 14% health and social work, 13% manufacturing, 13% education, 10% real estate, 8% construction, 7% transport and communications, 6% public administration, 5% hotels and restaurants, 3% finance, 1% agriculture and 5% other community, social or personal services. Compared with national figures, there was a relatively high number of workers in the education and health/social care industries and a relatively low number in finance and real estate.<ref name="Statistics.gov.uk"/> Many residents commute to work outside the town; at the 2001 census, the town had 9,842 employed residents, but there were only 9,049 jobs within the town.<ref name="Statistics.gov.uk"/> | |||
<hr> | |||
==Economy== | |||
] | |||
As a seaside resort, the economy is mainly based around tourism; there are hotels and guest houses on and near the seafront to accommodate the influx of all-year-round visitors. Although the number of hotels in recent years has declined because of the high land redevelopment values, this has resulted in an improvement in quality of the existing premises. The High Street has a wide variety of independent shops and services and there are several factories, mainly situated on the small industrial estates on the town's borders. The above-average population age has led to many health- and social-care jobs at local care homes. At the 2001 UK census, 1.8% of the population resided in a medical or care establishment, which is more than double the national average of only 0.8%.<ref name="Statistics.gov.uk"/> Many jobs in education are provided by the town's relatively high number of schools and colleges. | |||
] | |||
*Broadstairs' & St Peter's Chamber of Commerce has existed for over 100 years and has been instrumental in establishing links between traders and authority and raising money for projects including the town's CCTV scheme.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.broadstairschamber.org.uk/|title=Broadstairs & St. Peters Chamber of Commerce -|website=www.broadstairschamber.org.uk}}</ref> It organises events and promotes tourism to benefit the town economy, the local customer and visitors. | |||
*The largest of Broadstairs' industrial estates is at Pyson's Road. | |||
*Residential building land is now scarce and property prices within Broadstairs tend to be higher than the rest of ]. | |||
*Broadstairs has seen major development in its area recently with a large out-of-town shopping development at ] called ]. This has attracted national retailers, a new ] hotel a bingo club, a casino, a ] cinema, a new fitness centre, and an ], ], ] restaurants. | |||
*Land is currently being redeveloped to extend the existing ] shopping centre. | |||
*Within the Broadstairs boundary there are three large supermarkets: ], ] and a ], which, before redevelopment, was the home of a large ] store (one of the first ]s built in the UK). ] has a metro store in the town. Tesco also has a convenience store (]) in the town and there is a small Co-op in St Peter's village. | |||
*Motor and household insurance claims of ] are managed in Broadstairs (as an extension of their main offices in Folkestone). | |||
== Culture and community == | |||
There is a small cinema, "]" (formerly known as The Windsor), in Harbour Street. | |||
*]The ''Broadstairs Dickens Festival'' is held annually in honour of the novelist ] around the second or third week of June. The festival includes a production of one of Dickens' novels, with people about the town wearing Victorian dress. The festival first took place in 1937, when Captain Miles Conway Robson conceived the idea of commemorating the centenary of the publication of The Pickwick Papers by creating a festival to draw people to the town including a grand ball and a production of ''The Pickwick Papers'', a novel partly written in the town.<ref>{{cite web |date=July 2023 |title=The Dickens! Uncovering the true origins of the worlds longest running Dickensian Festival |url=http://bornin1808.blogspot.com/2023/07/the-dickens-uncovering-true-origins-of.html |access-date=31 July 2023 |website=Born in 1808}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
*In the second week of August each year, the town holds Broadstairs Folk Week music festival. The main acts perform at the Concert Marquee in the town's main park (Pierremont Park), with smaller musical events held in public houses, restaurants, cafés, and at the town's bandstand. Itinerant musicians and ]rs perform along the bay promenade. A school and playing field becomes an organization centre and campsite for entertainers. The town's population significantly increases with tourists, day-trippers and holiday makers.<ref>{{cite web | title = Broadstairs Folk Week | publisher = BroadstairsFolkWeek.org.uk | url = http://www.broadstairsfolkweek.org.uk/about.htm | access-date = 29 May 2007 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070614064946/http://www.broadstairsfolkweek.org.uk/about.htm | archive-date = 14 June 2007 | url-status = dead }}</ref> | |||
*During the summer season, and on 5 November, there are firework displays every Wednesday evening on Viking Bay.{{citation needed|date=September 2017}} | |||
* In August the town holds an annual Water Gala. In the past this has included a visit by the ], a ] and lifeboats. Beach-based competitions and shows continue through the day. A funfair is on the cliff-top gardens, and a small air display takes place.{{citation needed|date=September 2017}} | |||
* In the village of St Peter's, tours are held throughout the summer. | |||
More recently, a new event has been added to the mix – the Big Broadstairs Weekend. Starting the season in May, the event is themed, comprises a dance at the Pavilion on the Friday night, Film on the Beach on the Saturday night and a Guinness World Record Attempt on the Sunday. Broadstairs currently holds the record for biggest remote dance class.<ref>{{cite web|title=Largest remote dance class|url=http://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/world-records/largest-remote-dance-class-|website=Guinness World Records|access-date=24 September 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924000735/http://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/world-records/largest-remote-dance-class-|archive-date=24 September 2015|location=Wayback Machine|quote=22 May 2011 Largest remote dance class, Dancing Queens, Broadstairs}}</ref> | |||
== Landmarks == | |||
].|alt=Botany Bay]] | |||
The beaches at ] and Joss Bay were awarded the ] rural beach award in 2005. Viking Bay beach, the main beach in Broadstairs, won the Blue Flag in 2006.{{citation needed|date=September 2018}} In summer, this bay is often very busy with tourists enjoying cafes and ice-cream outlets. On Harbour Street, the Pavilion on the Sands hosts a summer show and all-year entertainment, with extensive views across the bay. Its location and facilities make the Pavilion a popular wedding venue. | |||
The Dickens House Museum on the seafront, displays many artefacts relating to Charles Dickens and his life in Broadstairs. Crampton Tower by the railway station houses a museum containing ]'s working drawings, models, graphics, patents, awards and artefacts connected to his life and works. Other galleries illustrate the history and development of the railways, the electric tramways, road transport and other aspects of local industry. The original Broadstairs stagecoach, built in 1860, is displayed alongside seven working model railways in gauges N, OO, O and Gauge One.{{citation needed|date=September 2018}} | |||
] church]] | |||
== Transport == | |||
The town is situated {{convert|20|mi|km}} from both ] and ], and about {{convert|67|mi|km}} from the ], London's orbital motorway. | |||
In 1851, the region's rail network was supplemented by the London to ] route, including the coastal link from ] to ], the ] service between London and ] and the ] that linked ], ] and ] to London's first Eurostar terminal at ] (opened in 1848). ] (unlike neighbouring Margate) is a 10-minute walk from the beach. Although rebuilt in the 1920s, electricity was not installed at the station until well into the 1970s, and the buildings and platforms remained illuminated by ] until then. | |||
Since 2009 ] have been operating a ] train service between ] and ] which then runs on to Broadstairs at conventional speed cutting about 40 minutes from what was once a two-hour journey to other termini in London. It is unusual in that trains to London can run either way through the station. | |||
===Lifeboats=== | |||
]s arrived in Broadstairs in 1851. News of the loss of the Irish packet {{RMS|Royal Adelaide|1838|2}} with 250 lives, on the sands off Margate on 6 April 1850, may have been the prompt that led old Thomas White to present one of his lifeboats to his home town of Broadstairs that summer. The lifeboat saw its first use on 6 March 1851, when the ] ] became trapped on the ] during a severe gale blowing from the north. A ballad was written to celebrate the occasion, "]". | |||
Solomon Holbourn of Broadstairs, ] of the '']'', had an aunt, Sophia, who married William Stevenson at ] in 1813. Their eldest son, also William, became a mariner and boatman and in 1839 married Elizabeth Wellard at St Peter's, Broadstairs. In 1848 they had a son, again named William, who in adult life was better known as Bill "Floaty" Stevenson, and became a member of the ''Frances Forbes Barton'' lifeboat crew. The "Frances Forbes Barton" was originally, in 1897, the legacy of a Miss Webster to the boatmen of Broadstairs. It is recorded as having remained at that station until 1912, when it was moved to ] when the Broadstairs station closed. In its time at Broadstairs it had been launched 77 times and saved 115 lives, by far the most effective of the ] craft stationed there. | |||
Broadstairs' lifeboats were further supported by a fund established in the 1860s by ]. | |||
== Education == | |||
] in Broadstairs|alt=Two three-story gabled towers of East Kent College, in late sun]] | |||
===State schools=== | |||
'''Infant and Primary''' | |||
*St Mildred's Infant School | |||
*Upton Junior School | |||
*St Peter in Thanet CE Junior School | |||
*St Joseph's RC Primary School | |||
*Bromstone County Primary School | |||
'''Secondary Modern and Grammar''' | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
===Special schools=== | |||
*Bradstow School | |||
*Stone Bay School <ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.goodschoolsguide.co.uk/schools/103664/stone-bay-school |title=Stone Bay School, Broadstairs {{!}} The Good Schools Guide<!-- Bot generated title --> |access-date=20 September 2013 |archive-date=4 March 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140304191822/http://www.goodschoolsguide.co.uk/schools/103664/stone-bay-school |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
===Independent schools=== | |||
'''Junior and Preparatory''' | |||
*St Lawrence College, Junior School | |||
*] (merger of Haddon Dene School and Wellesley House School in 2022)<ref>{{cite web|title= Wellesley Haddon Dene School:Short Visit 2023 |url= https://www.isi.net/school/wellesley-haddon-dene-school-7218 |publisher= isi.net |access-date= 24 June 2024}}</ref> | |||
*] (now demolished; merged with ] in 1969)<ref>{{cite book|last1 =Wooton|first1 =Barrie|title =Early Broadstairs and St Peters in Old Photographs|publisher=Alan Sutton Publishing Ltd|isbn =0-7509-0054-7|year =1992|pages =1-160}}{{rp|75}}</ref> | |||
'''Senior schools''' | |||
*St Lawrence College | |||
===Colleges and universities=== | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
== Religious sites == | |||
The original ] is believed to date back to at least the 11th century.<ref name=HThistory>{{cite web | url=https://www.holytrinitybroadstairs.com/ourhistory | title=About us | publisher=Holy Trinity, Broadstairs | access-date=18 December 2019 | archive-date=18 December 2019 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191218193716/https://www.holytrinitybroadstairs.com/ourhistory | url-status=live }}</ref> The chapel on what is now Albion St was destroyed by a storm in the 16th century but was restored in 1601. It gives its name to the Roman Catholic Church of Our Lady Star of the Sea in Broadstairs. | |||
The Anglican parish church is Holy Trinity, dating from 1830,<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.holytrinitybroadstairs.com/aboutus | title=About us | publisher=Holy Trinity, Broadstairs | access-date=18 December 2019 | archive-date=18 December 2019 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191218193718/https://www.holytrinitybroadstairs.com/aboutus | url-status=live }}</ref> and which was described by Dickens as "a hideous temple of flint, like a petrified haystack".<ref name=HThistory /> The church of St. Peter-in-Thanet has one of the longest churchyards in England.{{citation needed|date=May 2013}} | |||
== Sport == | |||
] | |||
*] Rugby Union Football Club is based in Broadstairs at St. Peter's Recreation Ground. | |||
*Sandcastle building competition takes place annually. | |||
*Broadstairs has a Green bowling club. | |||
*Broadstairs & St Peter's Lawn Tennis Club | |||
*Beach Volleyball is held on the beach in the summer. | |||
*Broadstairs is home to the ] Golf Club. | |||
*Broadstairs Sailing Club in Harbour Street once had former prime minister ] as a member. | |||
*Broadstairs squash club. | |||
=== Sea swimming === | |||
Sea swimming is popular, especially on the beach at Viking Bay, which is patrolled by lifeguards during the summer.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Lewis |first1=Tim |title=Baywatch meets Shameless: a day with the lifeguards on one British beach |url=https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2022/aug/13/baywatch-meets-shameless-a-day-with-the-lifeguards-on-one-british-beach |publisher=The Observer |date=13 August 2022}}</ref> Dickens swam here<ref>''Letters'' V, to John Forster, </ref> and British comedian Frank Muir grew up as a 'Beach Boy' in the town, describing his experience in the sea and on 'the sands' in a chapter of his autobiography.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Muir |first1=Frank |title=A Kentish Lad |date=2012 |publisher=Random House |isbn=978-1-4481-0910-4 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=y68fr7kEgtEC}}</ref> | |||
There are public toilets at the beach level in Viking Bay, but no changing facilities and one very basic freshwater shower (summer only). There is a freshwater tap at the bottom of the steps at the north end of the bay. | |||
The bay is marked by striped posts on rocks at either end. The bay is alternately full of water at high tide or completely dry at low tide. At high tide, the beach shelf drops off quickly and a swimmer can be out of their depth within a few feet of the shore. At middle and low tides, the shelf is much more gently sloping and it is possible to play in the surf, and even swim, in water that is only waist high. At high tide and middle tide, swimmers that stay within the bay (within the posts) are completely sheltered from the tidal stream of the English Channel. At any tide, swimmers venturing out beyond the striped posts may encounter a strong tidal current running parallel to the coast, flowing either from south to north or north to south, depending on whether the tide is coming up the English Channel or draining out through it. ''Even strong experienced swimmers will find it difficult to make progress against this tidal stream at its greatest flow'',<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.thisiskent.co.uk/Swimmer-drowns-rough-sea-Broadstairs/story-16283416-detail/story.html |title=Swimmer drowns in rough sea off Broadstairs | This is Kent |access-date=10 December 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120613050953/http://www.thisiskent.co.uk/Swimmer-drowns-rough-sea-Broadstairs/story-16283416-detail/story.html |archive-date=13 June 2012 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }}</ref> and swimmers in difficulty should swim directly towards the nearest part of the shore, rather than try to return to the point where they originally entered. | |||
Stone Bay to the north of Viking Bay also has a lifeguard in summer and attracts swimmers at all times of the year. | |||
== Media == | |||
Broadstairs has only one paid-for newspaper, the ''Isle of Thanet Gazette''. Its sister publication, the ''Thanet Times'', closed in October 2012 after 116 years; both were owned by ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.northcliffemedia.co.uk/our-regions/south-east |archive-url=https://archive.today/20120904175608/http://www.northcliffemedia.co.uk/our-regions/south-east |url-status=dead |archive-date=4 September 2012 |title=Northcliffe Media |work=Archive.is |date=4 September 2012 |access-date=10 September 2018}}</ref> Free newspapers for the town include the ''Thanet Extra'', part of the ]; and ''{{propername|yourthanet}}'', part of ]. ''Isle'' magazine is published quarterly and includes listings of events as well as accommodation and tourist information.''The Broadstairs Beacon'' magazine has been published three times a year since 2019 and is available online or in printed form for free at several places in the town. | |||
Local radio stations are ], owned by the KM Group, ] station ]; and the county-wide stations ], ] and ]. Thanet Community Radio also offer an online community podcasting service for Ramsgate, Broadstairs, Margate and the wider areas of Thanet.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.thanetcommunityradio.co.uk/ |title=Thanet Community Radio Signature |access-date=16 June 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140517002654/http://thanetcommunityradio.co.uk/ |archive-date=17 May 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
National broadcasting channels include ] and ] (East) | |||
== Notable people == | |||
{{Alumni|people|date=August 2018}} | |||
<!--Any non-notable people in this list will be removed (red-linked or not) - if an editor considers someone is notable, write a Misplaced Pages article on them first, or provide multiple reputable independent sources to show they deserve an article and are associated with Broadstairs to avoid removal. Those here with Misplaced Pages articles need added citations to prove a link with Broadstairs to avoid removal... unreferenced mention of Broadstairs in their articles is not enough... WP does not self-reference.--> | |||
{{Main|List of people from Thanet}} | |||
People from Broadstairs are called Bradstonians. | |||
]'' in a study overlooking the harbour and the sea]] | |||
*], locomotive engineer and inventor of the ], died at Broadstairs in 1872 and was buried at St Peter's Church. | |||
*], composer and pianist, was born in Broadstairs in 1936. | |||
*] apparently based the title of his novel, '']'' after the set of steps on the beach at a house called St Cuby, Cliff Promenade at North Foreland, Broadstairs, where he was recuperating from illness in 1915. | |||
*], railway engineer, was born in Broadstairs in 1816. | |||
*] visited Broadstairs regularly from 1837 until 1859 and described the town as "Our English Watering Place". He wrote '']'' while staying at ]. | |||
*], multi-instrumentalist and composer, grew up in Broadstairs.<ref name="Heywood">{{cite web | url=http://www.livingtradition.co.uk/articles/timedey | title=Tim Edey | work=The Living Tradition | date=2012 | access-date=11 August 2018 | author=Heywood, Fiona | archive-date=11 August 2018 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180811163508/http://www.livingtradition.co.uk/articles/timedey | url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
*], ] from 1970 to 1974, was born in Broadstairs in 1916 and lived there until going to study at ] in 1935. | |||
*] (E. O. Higgins), fiction writer, podcaster and performer lived in Broadstairs for two years from 2009, whose novel ''Conversations with Spirits'' is based in the town<ref>, ''Isle of Thanet Gazette'', 16 May 2014, referencing the ''Canterbury Times''. Archived at the ]. Retrieved 19 October 2018</ref> | |||
*], writer of the '']'' animated TV series, was a longtime resident of Broadstairs and his life is commemorated by a mosaic of the Clangers and a blue plaque on the front of his home in Chandos Square. | |||
*Writer and filmmaker ] set his first full-length novel '']'' in Broadstairs and included characters from his childhood in Broadstairs.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/features/bruce-robinson-i-started-drinking-again-because-of-the-rum-diary-2216721.html |title=Bruce Robinson: 'I started drinking again because of The Rum Diary' |work=The Independent |date=20 February 2011 |access-date=10 September 2018 |archive-date=17 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180717115110/https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/features/bruce-robinson-i-started-drinking-again-because-of-the-rum-diary-2216721.html |url-status=live }}</ref> Robinson is from the town and the novel is semi-autobiographical. | |||
* ], DJ who studied catering at East Kent College. | |||
{{clear left}} | |||
== See also == | |||
* ] – the Dickens novel is set in St Albans. | |||
*] | |||
== References == | |||
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{{Reflist}} | |||
== External links == | |||
{{Commons category|Broadstairs}} | |||
{{Wikivoyage|Broadstairs}} | |||
{{EB1911 poster|Broadstairs}} | |||
* (1901–1991) | |||
* | |||
{{Thanet}} | |||
{{Kent}} | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
] | |||
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Latest revision as of 19:37, 6 December 2024
Coastal town in Kent, EnglandHuman settlement in England
Broadstairs | |
---|---|
Viking Bay, Broadstairs | |
BroadstairsLocation within Kent | |
Population | 24,903 (Broadstairs and St Peter's parish 2011) |
OS grid reference | TR395675 |
• London | 81.6 miles (131.3 km) |
Civil parish | |
District | |
Shire county | |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | Broadstairs |
Postcode district | CT10 |
Dialling code | 01843 |
Police | Kent |
Fire | Kent |
Ambulance | South East Coast |
UK Parliament | |
51°21′32″N 1°26′22″E / 51.35888°N 1.43944°E / 51.35888; 1.43944 |
Broadstairs is a coastal town on the Isle of Thanet in the Thanet district of east Kent, England, about 80 miles (130 km) east of London. It is part of the civil parish of Broadstairs and St Peter's, which includes St Peter's, and had a population in 2011 of about 25,000. Situated between Margate and Ramsgate, Broadstairs is one of Thanet's seaside resorts, known as the "jewel in Thanet's crown". The town's coat of arms' Latin motto is Stella Maris ("Star of the Sea"). The name derives from a former flight of steps in the chalk cliff, which led from the sands up to the 11th-century shrine of St Mary on the cliff's summit.
The town spreads from Haine Road in the west to Kingsgate (named after the landing of King Charles II in 1683), a hamlet in St Peter parish in the north, and to Dumpton in the south (named after the yeoman Dudeman who farmed there in the 13th century). The hamlet of Reading (formerly Reden or Redyng) Street was established by Flemish refugees in the 17th century.
History
The inland village of St Peter's was established after the building of a parish church in about 1080. The coastal confederation of Cinque Ports during its mediæval period consisted of a confederation of 42 towns and villages in all. This included St Peter's, as a 'limb' of Dover. On the nearby coast was a cliff-top shrine, the Shrine of Our Lady, at what was then called Bradstow(e), meaning "broad place" (perhaps referring to the wide bay).
A fishing settlement developed in the vicinity of the shrine in the 14th century. This came to be called "Broadstairs", after a flight of steps which was made in the cliff to give access to the shrine from the bay. Older forms of the name include Brodsteyr Lynch (1434 & 1494 ), Brodestyr (1479), Broadstayer (1565) and Brod stayrs (1610). Charles Culmer, son of Waldemar, is supposed to have reconstructed the stairs in 1350.
1400–1700
In 1440, an archway was built by George Culmer across a track leading down to the sea, where the first wooden pier or jetty was built in 1460. A more enduring structure was to replace this in 1538, when the road leading to the seafront, known as Harbour Street, was cut into the rough chalk ground on which Broadstairs is built, by another George Culmer. Going further in defence of the town, he built the York Gate in 1540, a portal that still spans Harbour Street and which then held two heavy wooden doors that could be closed in times of threat from the sea. Richard Culmer was the son of Sir Richard Culmer by his first wife and was born in 1640/41.
Richard was buried in the parish church of Monkton, on the Isle of Thanet. Of his legacies was the endowment on Broadstairs of an area of six acres (24,000 m) of ground for the poor of the parish. The name survives to this day as "Culmer's Allotment" as does the allotment.
1700–1815
In 1823, Broadstairs had a population of about 300. A brief outline of the history of Broadstairs Pier is given in Broadstairs, past and present, which mentions a storm in 1767, during which Culmer's work was all but destroyed. At this time, it was of considerable importance to the fishing trade with catches as far afield as Great Yarmouth, Hastings, Folkestone, Dover and Torbay and elsewhere being landed. It had become so indispensable that the corporations of Yarmouth, Dover, Hythe and Canterbury with assistance from the East India Company and Trinity House subscribed to its restoration with a payment of £2,000 in 1774.
By 1795, York Gate needed repair to repel any threat from the French Revolutionary Wars. The subsequent renovation was undertaken by Lord Hanniker in the same year as the first lightvessel was placed on the Goodwin Sands.
On the occasion of the landing at Thanet of Major Henry Percy of the 14th Dragoon Guards, on 21 June 1815 with the captured French eagle standard taken at Waterloo, a tunnel stairway from the beach to the fields on the cliff tops above was excavated, and christened "Waterloo Stairs" to commemorate the event. Broadstairs was supposedly the first town in England to learn of this historic victory, although there is no written evidence of this.
Smuggling was an important industry in the area, and the men of Broadstairs and St Peter's became very good at outwitting customs agents. This was very profitable because of the very high duty payable on tea, spirits and tobacco. There is a network of tunnels and caves strewn in the chalk strata which were used by smugglers to hide their contraband.
Development as a seaside resort
By 1824 steamboats were becoming more common, having begun to make over from the hoys and sailing packets about 1814. These made trade with London much faster. The familiar sailing hoys took anything up to 72 hours to reach Margate from London, whereas the new steamships were capable of making at least nine voyages in this time. Mixed feelings must have been strongly expressed by the Thanet boatmen in general, as the unrivalled speed of the steam packet was outmanoeuvring all other classes of vessel, but it brought a new prosperity to Thanet.
The young Princess Victoria and her mother, the Duchess of Kent, were summer visitors 1826–1836, staying at Pierremont Hall (in present-day Pierremont Park). The house was built in 1785 by Samuel Pepys Cockerell for Thomas Douglas Forsyth, and later used as a school and an events venue.
In the middle of the 19th century, the professional classes began to move in. By 1850, the population had reached about 3,000, doubling over the previous 50 years. Due to the fresh sea air, many convalescent homes for children opened towards the end of the 19th century.
Although numerous holidaymakers were attracted to Broadstairs and to other Thanet seaside towns during the Victorian era, it was not directly served by the railways until 1863. This was a time of great expansion for railways in the South East; in 1860 Victoria Station had been completed, followed by Charing Cross and Cannon Street. Rail access to Broadstairs had previously relied heavily upon coach links to other railway stations in the district or region; with firms such as Bradstowe Coachmasters, operated by William Sackett and John Derby, principally involved. Their coaches connected Broadstairs to Whitstable station where a railway service had begun as early as 1830 (one of the first in England, with its pioneering Stephenson's engine Invicta).
In 1841, 44 mariners were recorded as resident in Broadstairs; nine of these being specified as fishermen, and of course the residual boat-building activity that remained after the Culmer White yard closed in 1824 (under pressure from the steamships), still continued (though there were only four shipwrights recorded in the census: Solomon Holbourn and Joseph Jarman among them). Others may have been at sea on census day: Steamer Point, as the pier head at Broadstairs was then known, would have been fairly busy with shipping movements since consignments of coal and other produce would have been traded along the coast and there would have been regular work on the steam packet to and from Ramsgate. By the 1840s, the smuggling had ceased.
By 1910, the population had reached about 10,000. A "guide book" of the 1930s by A.H. Simison (the photographic chemist) entitled Ramsgate (The Kent Coast at its best) Pictorially Presented, describes Broadstairs town as having approached modernisation and urban development "always with a consistent policy of retaining those characteristics for which it has for so long been renowned". The town has retained many aspects of historical interest, besides its maritime history. Amongst these is its notable religious history, evoked by places such as the Shrine of Our Lady, Bradstowe.
Governance
Broadstairs is within the Thanet local government district. The town contains the five electoral wards of Bradstowe, St Peter's, Beacon Road, Viking and Kingsgate. These wards have eleven of the fifty six seats on the Thanet District Council. The 2023 Local Elections saw major changes in the political make-up of Broadstairs, with the Conservative Party retaining only four of their previously held eight seats. Four seats were won by the Labour Party, two by the Greens with an Independent taking the remaining seat. Broadstairs and St Peter's Town Council has 15 members, who are elected every four years, led by the mayor.
The Member of Parliament (MP) for East Thanet is Polly Billington of the Labour Party. She has been the constituency's MP since the 2024 general election.
Broadstairs and St Peter's have been twinned with Wattignies in northern France since the early 1980s.
Geography
The town lies above a harbour with cliffs on either side. It has seven bays of golden sand, which are (from south to north) Dumpton Gap, Louisa Bay, Viking Bay, Stone Bay, Joss Bay, Kingsgate Bay and Botany Bay. North Foreland rises between Stone Bay and Joss Bay.
On the cliffs above Kingsgate Bay is Kingsgate Castle, formerly part of the estate of Lord Holland but now converted into private residences.
Broadstairs has a very mild maritime climate.
Demography
Broadstairs and St Peter's | |||
---|---|---|---|
2001 UK census | Broadstairs and St Peter's | Thanet District | England |
Total population | 24,370 | 126,702 | 49,138,831 |
Foreign born | 5.3% | 5.1% | 9.2% |
White | 98% | 98% | 91% |
Asian | 1.0% | 0.6% | 4.6% |
Black | 0.2% | 0.3% | 2.3% |
Christian | 75% | 74% | 72% |
Muslim | 0.4% | 0.5% | 3.1% |
Hindu | 0.3% | 0.2% | 1.1% |
No religion | 14% | 16% | 15% |
65+ years old | 24% | 22% | 16% |
Unemployed | 2.9% | 4.4% | 3.3% |
At the 2001 UK census, the parish of Broadstairs and St Peter's had 24,370 residents in 10,597 households. Of those households, 34.2% were married couples, 6.7% were cohabiting couples and 8.3% were lone parents. 31.8% of all households were made up of individuals, and 20.9% had someone living alone at pensionable age. 25.7% of households included children aged under 16, or a person aged 16 to 18 who was in full-time education.
The parish has a low proportion of non-white people compared with national figures; the ethnicity recorded in the 2001 census was 97.9% white, 0.7% mixed race, 0.3% Chinese, 0.7% other Asian, 0.2% black and 0.2% other. The number of foreign-born residents is relatively low; the place of birth of residents in 2001 was 94.7% United Kingdom, 0.7% Republic of Ireland, 0.5% Germany, 0.9% other Western Europe countries, 0.3% Eastern Europe, 0.8% Africa, 0.6% South Asia, 0.5% Far East, 0.3% North America, 0.2% Middle East, 0.2% Oceania and 0.1% South America. Religion was recorded as 75.3% Christian, 0.4% Muslim, 0.3% Hindu, 0.3% Buddhist and 0.3% Jewish. 14.3% were recorded as having no religion, 0.5% had an alternative religion and 8.6% did not state their religion.
The age distribution was 5% aged 0–4 years, 14% aged 5–15 years, 5% aged 16–19 years, 26% aged 20–44 years, 27% aged 45–64 years and 24% aged 65 years and over. There was a high percentage of residents over 65, compared with the national average of 16%, mainly due to seaside towns being popular retirement destinations. For every 100 females, there were 87.1 males.
Employment
At the 2001 census, the economic activity of residents aged 16–74 was 34.1% in full-time employment, 12.8% in part-time employment, 10.0% self-employed, 2.9% unemployed, 2.3% students with jobs, 4.1% students without jobs, 20.0% retired, 6.5% looking after home or family, 4.9% permanently sick or disabled and 2.4% economically inactive for other reasons. The percentage of retired people was significantly higher than the national figure of 14%. The percentage of unemployed people was low compared with the national rate of 3.4% and the district rate of 4.4%. Only 12% of residents aged 16–74 had a higher education qualification or the equivalent, compared with 20% nationwide. The Office for National Statistics estimated that during the period of April 2001 to March 2002, the average gross weekly income of households was £522 (£27,219 per year).
The industry of employment of residents, at the 2001 census, was 15% retail, 14% health and social work, 13% manufacturing, 13% education, 10% real estate, 8% construction, 7% transport and communications, 6% public administration, 5% hotels and restaurants, 3% finance, 1% agriculture and 5% other community, social or personal services. Compared with national figures, there was a relatively high number of workers in the education and health/social care industries and a relatively low number in finance and real estate. Many residents commute to work outside the town; at the 2001 census, the town had 9,842 employed residents, but there were only 9,049 jobs within the town.
Economy
As a seaside resort, the economy is mainly based around tourism; there are hotels and guest houses on and near the seafront to accommodate the influx of all-year-round visitors. Although the number of hotels in recent years has declined because of the high land redevelopment values, this has resulted in an improvement in quality of the existing premises. The High Street has a wide variety of independent shops and services and there are several factories, mainly situated on the small industrial estates on the town's borders. The above-average population age has led to many health- and social-care jobs at local care homes. At the 2001 UK census, 1.8% of the population resided in a medical or care establishment, which is more than double the national average of only 0.8%. Many jobs in education are provided by the town's relatively high number of schools and colleges.
- Broadstairs' & St Peter's Chamber of Commerce has existed for over 100 years and has been instrumental in establishing links between traders and authority and raising money for projects including the town's CCTV scheme. It organises events and promotes tourism to benefit the town economy, the local customer and visitors.
- The largest of Broadstairs' industrial estates is at Pyson's Road.
- Residential building land is now scarce and property prices within Broadstairs tend to be higher than the rest of Thanet.
- Broadstairs has seen major development in its area recently with a large out-of-town shopping development at Westwood called Westwood Cross. This has attracted national retailers, a new Travelodge hotel a bingo club, a casino, a vue cinema, a new fitness centre, and an Ask, Nando's, Frankie & Benny's restaurants.
- Land is currently being redeveloped to extend the existing Westwood Cross shopping centre.
- Within the Broadstairs boundary there are three large supermarkets: Asda, Sainsbury's and a Tesco Extra, which, before redevelopment, was the home of a large Co-op store (one of the first hypermarkets built in the UK). Tesco has a metro store in the town. Tesco also has a convenience store (Tesco Express) in the town and there is a small Co-op in St Peter's village.
- Motor and household insurance claims of Saga Insurance Ltd. are managed in Broadstairs (as an extension of their main offices in Folkestone).
Culture and community
There is a small cinema, "The Palace Cinema" (formerly known as The Windsor), in Harbour Street.
- The Broadstairs Dickens Festival is held annually in honour of the novelist Charles Dickens around the second or third week of June. The festival includes a production of one of Dickens' novels, with people about the town wearing Victorian dress. The festival first took place in 1937, when Captain Miles Conway Robson conceived the idea of commemorating the centenary of the publication of The Pickwick Papers by creating a festival to draw people to the town including a grand ball and a production of The Pickwick Papers, a novel partly written in the town.
- In the second week of August each year, the town holds Broadstairs Folk Week music festival. The main acts perform at the Concert Marquee in the town's main park (Pierremont Park), with smaller musical events held in public houses, restaurants, cafés, and at the town's bandstand. Itinerant musicians and Morris dancers perform along the bay promenade. A school and playing field becomes an organization centre and campsite for entertainers. The town's population significantly increases with tourists, day-trippers and holiday makers.
- During the summer season, and on 5 November, there are firework displays every Wednesday evening on Viking Bay.
- In August the town holds an annual Water Gala. In the past this has included a visit by the Red Arrows, a hovercraft and lifeboats. Beach-based competitions and shows continue through the day. A funfair is on the cliff-top gardens, and a small air display takes place.
- In the village of St Peter's, tours are held throughout the summer.
More recently, a new event has been added to the mix – the Big Broadstairs Weekend. Starting the season in May, the event is themed, comprises a dance at the Pavilion on the Friday night, Film on the Beach on the Saturday night and a Guinness World Record Attempt on the Sunday. Broadstairs currently holds the record for biggest remote dance class.
Landmarks
The beaches at Botany Bay and Joss Bay were awarded the Blue flag rural beach award in 2005. Viking Bay beach, the main beach in Broadstairs, won the Blue Flag in 2006. In summer, this bay is often very busy with tourists enjoying cafes and ice-cream outlets. On Harbour Street, the Pavilion on the Sands hosts a summer show and all-year entertainment, with extensive views across the bay. Its location and facilities make the Pavilion a popular wedding venue.
The Dickens House Museum on the seafront, displays many artefacts relating to Charles Dickens and his life in Broadstairs. Crampton Tower by the railway station houses a museum containing Thomas Russell Crampton's working drawings, models, graphics, patents, awards and artefacts connected to his life and works. Other galleries illustrate the history and development of the railways, the electric tramways, road transport and other aspects of local industry. The original Broadstairs stagecoach, built in 1860, is displayed alongside seven working model railways in gauges N, OO, O and Gauge One.
Transport
The town is situated 20 miles (32 km) from both Dover and Canterbury, and about 67 miles (108 km) from the M25, London's orbital motorway.
In 1851, the region's rail network was supplemented by the London to south coast route, including the coastal link from Chichester to Ramsgate, the cross-country service between London and Dover and the Mid-Kent line that linked Redhill, Tonbridge and Ashford to London's first Eurostar terminal at Waterloo (opened in 1848). Broadstairs station (unlike neighbouring Margate) is a 10-minute walk from the beach. Although rebuilt in the 1920s, electricity was not installed at the station until well into the 1970s, and the buildings and platforms remained illuminated by gaslight until then.
Since 2009 Southeastern have been operating a high speed train service between London St Pancras and Ashford International which then runs on to Broadstairs at conventional speed cutting about 40 minutes from what was once a two-hour journey to other termini in London. It is unusual in that trains to London can run either way through the station.
Lifeboats
Lifeboats arrived in Broadstairs in 1851. News of the loss of the Irish packet Royal Adelaide with 250 lives, on the sands off Margate on 6 April 1850, may have been the prompt that led old Thomas White to present one of his lifeboats to his home town of Broadstairs that summer. The lifeboat saw its first use on 6 March 1851, when the brig Mary White became trapped on the Goodwin Sands during a severe gale blowing from the north. A ballad was written to celebrate the occasion, "Song of the Mary White".
Solomon Holbourn of Broadstairs, coxswain of the Mary White, had an aunt, Sophia, who married William Stevenson at Folkestone in 1813. Their eldest son, also William, became a mariner and boatman and in 1839 married Elizabeth Wellard at St Peter's, Broadstairs. In 1848 they had a son, again named William, who in adult life was better known as Bill "Floaty" Stevenson, and became a member of the Frances Forbes Barton lifeboat crew. The "Frances Forbes Barton" was originally, in 1897, the legacy of a Miss Webster to the boatmen of Broadstairs. It is recorded as having remained at that station until 1912, when it was moved to the Walmer station when the Broadstairs station closed. In its time at Broadstairs it had been launched 77 times and saved 115 lives, by far the most effective of the RNLI craft stationed there.
Broadstairs' lifeboats were further supported by a fund established in the 1860s by Sir Charles Reed FSA.
Education
State schools
Infant and Primary
- St Mildred's Infant School
- Upton Junior School
- St Peter in Thanet CE Junior School
- St Joseph's RC Primary School
- Bromstone County Primary School
Secondary Modern and Grammar
- Dane Court Grammar School
- St Georges C of E Foundation School
- The Charles Dickens School
- Chatham House Grammar School
- Clarendon House Grammar School
Special schools
- Bradstow School
- Stone Bay School
Independent schools
Junior and Preparatory
- St Lawrence College, Junior School
- Wellesley Haddon Dene School (merger of Haddon Dene School and Wellesley House School in 2022)
- St Peter's Court (now demolished; merged with Wellesley House School in 1969)
Senior schools
- St Lawrence College
Colleges and universities
Religious sites
The original Shrine of Our Ladye Star of the Sea is believed to date back to at least the 11th century. The chapel on what is now Albion St was destroyed by a storm in the 16th century but was restored in 1601. It gives its name to the Roman Catholic Church of Our Lady Star of the Sea in Broadstairs.
The Anglican parish church is Holy Trinity, dating from 1830, and which was described by Dickens as "a hideous temple of flint, like a petrified haystack". The church of St. Peter-in-Thanet has one of the longest churchyards in England.
Sport
- Thanet Wanderers Rugby Union Football Club is based in Broadstairs at St. Peter's Recreation Ground.
- Sandcastle building competition takes place annually.
- Broadstairs has a Green bowling club.
- Broadstairs & St Peter's Lawn Tennis Club
- Beach Volleyball is held on the beach in the summer.
- Broadstairs is home to the North Foreland Golf Club.
- Broadstairs Sailing Club in Harbour Street once had former prime minister Edward Heath as a member.
- Broadstairs squash club.
Sea swimming
Sea swimming is popular, especially on the beach at Viking Bay, which is patrolled by lifeguards during the summer. Dickens swam here and British comedian Frank Muir grew up as a 'Beach Boy' in the town, describing his experience in the sea and on 'the sands' in a chapter of his autobiography.
There are public toilets at the beach level in Viking Bay, but no changing facilities and one very basic freshwater shower (summer only). There is a freshwater tap at the bottom of the steps at the north end of the bay.
The bay is marked by striped posts on rocks at either end. The bay is alternately full of water at high tide or completely dry at low tide. At high tide, the beach shelf drops off quickly and a swimmer can be out of their depth within a few feet of the shore. At middle and low tides, the shelf is much more gently sloping and it is possible to play in the surf, and even swim, in water that is only waist high. At high tide and middle tide, swimmers that stay within the bay (within the posts) are completely sheltered from the tidal stream of the English Channel. At any tide, swimmers venturing out beyond the striped posts may encounter a strong tidal current running parallel to the coast, flowing either from south to north or north to south, depending on whether the tide is coming up the English Channel or draining out through it. Even strong experienced swimmers will find it difficult to make progress against this tidal stream at its greatest flow, and swimmers in difficulty should swim directly towards the nearest part of the shore, rather than try to return to the point where they originally entered.
Stone Bay to the north of Viking Bay also has a lifeguard in summer and attracts swimmers at all times of the year.
Media
Broadstairs has only one paid-for newspaper, the Isle of Thanet Gazette. Its sister publication, the Thanet Times, closed in October 2012 after 116 years; both were owned by Northcliffe Media. Free newspapers for the town include the Thanet Extra, part of the KM Group; and yourthanet, part of KOS Media. Isle magazine is published quarterly and includes listings of events as well as accommodation and tourist information.The Broadstairs Beacon magazine has been published three times a year since 2019 and is available online or in printed form for free at several places in the town.
Local radio stations are KMFM Thanet, owned by the KM Group, community radio station Academy FM (Thanet); and the county-wide stations Heart Kent, Gold and BBC Radio Kent. Thanet Community Radio also offer an online community podcasting service for Ramsgate, Broadstairs, Margate and the wider areas of Thanet. National broadcasting channels include BBC South East and ITV Meridian (East)
Notable people
This article's list of people may not follow Misplaced Pages's verifiability policy. Please improve this article by removing names that do not have independent reliable sources showing they merit inclusion in this article AND are members of this list, or by incorporating the relevant publications into the body of the article through appropriate citations. (August 2018) |
People from Broadstairs are called Bradstonians.
- William Bridges Adams, locomotive engineer and inventor of the Adams Axle, died at Broadstairs in 1872 and was buried at St Peter's Church.
- Sir Richard Rodney Bennett, composer and pianist, was born in Broadstairs in 1936.
- John Buchan apparently based the title of his novel, The Thirty Nine Steps after the set of steps on the beach at a house called St Cuby, Cliff Promenade at North Foreland, Broadstairs, where he was recuperating from illness in 1915.
- Thomas Russell Crampton, railway engineer, was born in Broadstairs in 1816.
- Charles Dickens visited Broadstairs regularly from 1837 until 1859 and described the town as "Our English Watering Place". He wrote David Copperfield while staying at Bleak House.
- Tim Edey, multi-instrumentalist and composer, grew up in Broadstairs.
- Sir Edward Heath, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1970 to 1974, was born in Broadstairs in 1916 and lived there until going to study at Balliol College, Oxford in 1935.
- Edward Higgins (E. O. Higgins), fiction writer, podcaster and performer lived in Broadstairs for two years from 2009, whose novel Conversations with Spirits is based in the town
- Oliver Postgate, writer of the Clangers animated TV series, was a longtime resident of Broadstairs and his life is commemorated by a mosaic of the Clangers and a blue plaque on the front of his home in Chandos Square.
- Writer and filmmaker Bruce Robinson set his first full-length novel The Peculiar Memories of Thomas Penman in Broadstairs and included characters from his childhood in Broadstairs. Robinson is from the town and the novel is semi-autobiographical.
- Tallulah, DJ who studied catering at East Kent College.
See also
- Bleak House – the Dickens novel is set in St Albans.
- Thanet power station
References
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- Will of Richard Culmer, of St Peter, Thanet, proved 1494; Canterbury Cathedral Archives; PRC 17/6/81; line 10 of the registered will: "land lyyng & being at brodstayrlynch"
- Glover, Judith, The Place Names of Kent, 1982, ISBN 0-905270-61-4
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22 May 2011 Largest remote dance class, Dancing Queens, Broadstairs
- "Stone Bay School, Broadstairs | The Good Schools Guide". Archived from the original on 4 March 2014. Retrieved 20 September 2013.
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- Lewis, Tim (13 August 2022). "Baywatch meets Shameless: a day with the lifeguards on one British beach". The Observer.
- Letters V, to John Forster,
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- "Swimmer drowns in rough sea off Broadstairs | This is Kent". Archived from the original on 13 June 2012. Retrieved 10 December 2018.
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- "Novel is set in Thanet", Isle of Thanet Gazette, 16 May 2014, referencing the Canterbury Times. Archived at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 19 October 2018
- "Bruce Robinson: 'I started drinking again because of The Rum Diary'". The Independent. 20 February 2011. Archived from the original on 17 July 2018. Retrieved 10 September 2018.
External links
Towns and villages in the Thanet district of Kent, England | ||
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Civil parishes | ||
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List of places in Kent |