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Dagenham - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dagenham

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dagenham
Location on map of Greater London
Location
OS grid reference: TQ485845
Latitude: 51.539796°
Longitude: 0.14228°
Administration
London borough: Barking & Dagenham
County level: Greater London
Region: London
Constituent country: England
Sovereign state: United Kingdom
Other
Ceremonial county: Greater London
Historic county: Essex (1965)
Services
Police force: Metropolitan Police
Fire brigade: London Fire Brigade
Ambulance service: London Ambulance
Post office and telephone
Post town: DAGENHAM
Postal district: RM9 and RM10
Dialling code: 020
Politics
UK Parliament: Dagenham
London Assembly: City and East
European Parliament: London
London | List of places in London

Dagenham is a town within the London Borough of Barking and Dagenham. It is a suburban development situated 12 miles (19.3 km) east north-east of Charing Cross.

Contents

[edit] History

Dagenham was still a village in the early-1920s when building of the vast Becontree Estate began. The Becontree estate was the largest social housing development in the world. It was to house the people from the slums of the east-end of London.All Saints School Dagenham is located in Dagenham. On the corner of Whalebone Lane and the Eastern Avenue, diagonally opposite the Moby Dick pub, is the site of a Saxon moot hall[citation needed]. The adjoining fields were used during World War II by the Royal Artillery as an anti-aircraft battery before being converted into a Prisoner of War camp for Germans. Further south down Whalebone Lane on the corner of the High Road is the Tollgate pub. This stands on the site of the milestone which marked the ten mile limit from the City of London and the turnpike toll-gate.

[edit] Industry and commerce

Dagenham is the home of an assembly plant owned by the Ford Motor Company. Originally an automobile body constructor named "Briggs Bodies" the plant was reorganised in 1931 for the purpose of producing Ford cars. On February 20, 2002, full production was discontinued due to the expense of manual labour in the United Kingdom, and the factory was downsized to produce engines and gearboxes.

Dagenham Dock was once a large coaling port and the Chequers pub (now closed, but Chequers Lane still exists) gained world wide fame due to the many merchant seamen of all nationalities who stopped off there for a last drink before regaining ship.

Other industrial names once known world wide were Ever Ready whose batteries could be found in shops throughout the Commonwealth, Bergers Paint and the chemical firm of May and Baker who in 1935 revolutionised the production of antibiotics with their synthetic sulfa-drug known as M&B693. The May and Baker plant, now owned and run by Sanofi-Aventis, occupies a large site near to Dagenham East station and its sports and social club has large grounds between Eastbrookend Country Park and the railway.

[edit] Local government and politics

In 1926 Dagenham was created an urban district and in further recognition of its development in 1938 it became a municipal borough. In 1965 the Municipal Borough of Dagenham was abolished and its former area became part of the present-day London Borough of Barking and Dagenham. Current MP for Dagenham constituency is Jon Cruddas.

[edit] Sport and recreation

Dagenham has a King George's Field in memorial to King George V. The park, which has been in existence for over a century, was renamed in 1953 by The Queen.

[edit] Transport

In 1885 a station was opened at Dagenham on the London Tilbury & Southend Railway. In 1932 the electrified District Line of the London Underground was extended to Upminster through Dagenham with stations opened as Dagenham and Heathway and today called Dagenham East and Dagenham Heathway. Dagenham was the location of the Dagenham East rail crash in 1858. Services on the London Tilbury & Southend line were withdrawn in 1962. Dagenham is served by the following Transport for London contracted London Bus routes: 5, 103, 145, 173, 174, 175 and 364.

[edit] Nearest places

[edit] Nearest stations

[edit] Natives

Famous Dagenham natives include Dr George Carey 103rd Archbishop of Canterbury, (he held his last communion before retiring as archbishop in the same parish church of Dagenham where he received his first communion at the age of 17), England's World Cup winning football coach Sir Alf Ramsey, England footballers Jimmy Greaves and Terry Venables, singer Sandie Shaw, Australian pop-star John Farnham, actor/musician/comedian Dudley Moore, 1952 Olympic games marathon hero and martyr Jim Peters, journalist and writer Neil Humphreys and Titanic survivor Eva Hart (died 14 February 1996).

[edit] External links


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