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Uxbridge - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Uxbridge

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For other places with the same name, see Uxbridge (disambiguation).
Uxbridge
Location on map of Greater London
Location
OS grid reference: TQ055835
Latitude: 51.540489°
Longitude: -0.477851°
Administration
London borough: Hillingdon
County level: Greater London
Region: London
Constituent country: England
Sovereign state: United Kingdom
Other
Ceremonial county: Greater London
Historic county: Middlesex (1965)
Services
Police force: Metropolitan Police
Fire brigade: London Fire Brigade
Ambulance service: London Ambulance
Post office and telephone
Post town: UXBRIDGE
Postal district: UB8
Dialling code: 01895
Politics
UK Parliament: Uxbridge
London Assembly: Ealing and Hillingdon
European Parliament: London
London | List of places in London

Uxbridge is a place in the London Borough of Hillingdon in West London, England. It is a suburban development situated 21 miles (33.6 km) west of Charing Cross and near to the boundary with Buckinghamshire which is locally the River Colne.

The name is derived from "Wuxen Bridge" which was likely to have been near the bottom of Oxford Road where the "Swan and Bottle" now stands. The Wuxen were a 7th-century Saxon tribe.

Contents

[edit] Modern Uxbridge

The town centre today comprises retail outlets and major office buildings, including the main European offices of several international companies including Xerox, Arri, APL, Herbalife Europe Ltd and the Anadarko Algeria Oil Company. Other employers include Apple, Parexel International Ltd, Unisys, F. Hinds, The Coca-Cola Company, WMS Gaming, Manpower, Heinz, AIB and General Mills.

[edit] History

Archaeologists found Bronze age remains (before 700 BC) and medieval remains when the new shopping mall The Chimes was being built. Two miles away at Denham, Upper Paleolithic remains have been found.

Uxbridge is not mentioned in the Domesday Book of the 11th century, but a hundred years later the existing church, St Margaret's, was built. The pub presently called "The Queens Head" has a sign depicting Anne Boleyn, wife of Henry VIII. The pub was previously called "The Axe" and possibly dates from the 1540s. A tunnel connects the pub to the church. At the bottom of Windsor Street there is a cemetery with an archway. It was here on Lynch Green that three heretics were burned to death in 1555. Foxe's Book of Martyrs gives the names as John Denley, Robert Smith and Patrick Packingham, but other sources call the last one Patrick Rockingham. He was found guilty of denying the trinity.

Under Elizabeth I, Roman Catholics were subject to severe constraints. Edmund Campion was a Catholic priest, trained in Douai in the Netherlands, to give covert support to Catholics. He travelled around England on horseback, giving sermons in secret and pretending to be a diamond merchant. In 1580 he came to Uxbridge and hid for a couple of weeks, in a house owned by William Catesby. In 1581 Campion was caught. He was hanged, drawn and quartered in London. The 40 or so Catholics who died in this period are called the "Douai martyrs" which is also the name of the local Catholic secondary school, in Ickenham.

In 1605 the Gunpowder Plot was uncovered. The flamboyant six-foot leader, Robert Catesby (son of William), escaped and hid in his house in Uxbridge. He was later shot. There were negotiations between Charles I and the Parliamentary side in Uxbridge, January 30 to February 22, 1645, commemorated in the name of a local pub and restaurant, the Crown and Treaty. This latter is on the A4020 Oxford Road where it leaves the town, at the canal overbridge.

The covered market was built in 1788, but the previous building was about twice as big, creating big problems for traffic.

In the early 19th century, Uxbridge had an unsavoury reputation. The jurist William Arabin said of it residents "They will steal the very teeth out of your mouth as you walk through the streets. I know it from experience."

Uxbridge originally formed a chapelry within the parish of Hillingdon. It was split out as a separate civil parish in 1866, and became part of the Uxbridge Urban District in 1894 under the Local Government Act 1894.

In the 1930s George Orwell was a teacher at Frays College, now Frays Adult Education Centre. His novel A Clergyman's Daughter was based on his experiences there.

For about 200 years most of London's flour was produced in the Uxbridge area. There were also breweries, but the last one was closed down in the 1930s. Near here Ellen Terry the Shakespearean actress spent her final years, as a pub landlady.

[edit] Transport

Uxbridge station, fronted by a pedestrian high street is served by the Metropolitan and Piccadilly underground lines.

The station is connected to a bus terminus with connections to Hillingdon, Hayes, Ealing, Ruislip, and Slough.

In 2013, the West London Tram Service will be completed providing a faster link into central London. The 427, 207, and 607 bus services will be replaced by the tram, which will run every 10-15 minutes along the 12-mile track on the Uxbridge Road from Uxbridge to Shepherd's Bush. The tram will connect into the Westfield London development in White City, due to open in 2008.

There were once three railway stations - Uxbridge Vine Street (originally just Uxbridge Station), Uxbridge High Street, and Uxbridge Belmont Road. All three have now closed, replaced by the underground and bus services.

The former Grand Junction Canal now Grand Union Canal, which connects London with Birmingham, passes immediately to the west of Uxbridge, and forms the borough boundary. The first stretch was built in the late eighteenth century from Brentford to Uxbridge. Further upstream is Uxbridge Lock, and nearby is a flourmill belonging to Allied Mills. A Mister King, who called it “Kingsmill”, bought this in the nineteenth century. This brand name is one of the best-selling bread-makers in the UK, though most of the milling is now done on Tyneside.

[edit] Shopping

A view of The Chimes, Costa Coffee, Abbey Bank and Starbucks at Uxbridge High Street
Enlarge
A view of The Chimes, Costa Coffee, Abbey Bank and Starbucks at Uxbridge High Street

The town centre is pedestrianised, and popular for shopping in West London. Uxbridge boasts two shopping centres, The Pavilions and The Chimes. Both contain a variety of shops, such as GAP, Next, BHS, TopShop and many more. The Chimes also is home to the 12 Screen Uxbridge Odeon. In addition, just off the High Street is Windsor Street, a short road still populated by old, traditional, independent shops. Interestingly, the department store Randall's is owned by the family of the Conservative MP for Uxbridge, John Randall, who was elected in a 1997 by-election when the sitting MP, Sir Michael Shersby, died shortly after the 1997 general election. John Randall is a strong supporter of independent shop-keepers (somewhat unsurprisingly).

[edit] Nearest places

[edit] References


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Section 11: London Outer Orbital Path Section 12:
Hayes Uxbridge Harefield


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