Barking and Dagenham

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Barking and Dagenham

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Barking and Dagenham , outer borough (1991 pop. 139,900) of Greater London, SE England. The borough has a power plant and an automobile manufacturing plant as well as engineering, chemical, paint, wood, and other industries. The remains of a Benedictine abbey (c.670) are there.

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Essex

A Dictionary of British History | 2004 | | © A Dictionary of British History 2004, originally published by Oxford University Press 2004. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Essex originated as a kingdom. Cunobelinus moved the capital of the Catuvellauni from Verulamium to Colchester, subduing the Trinovantes before Caesar's invasion. The Romans took over the site and made it the provincial capital, Camulodunum, sacked in Boudicca's rebellion in AD 61. In the 5th cent. the area fell to the Saxons, and a kingdom of the East Saxons was in existence by the early 7th cent. It maintained a somewhat precarious existence, and by the 9th cent. had become a client state, first of Mercia, then of Wessex. In the late 9th cent. it was overrun by the Danes and allotted to them at the peace of Wedmore in 878. It was reconquered by Edward the Elder, and shired. The county town was Chelmsford rather than Colchester, perhaps because it was more central. For centuries Essex remained something of a backwater. Colchester was a sizeable town, the centre for a vigorous cloth trade, but most of the other towns—Saffron Walden, Thaxted, Braintree, Romford, Waltham Abbey, Dunmow, Halstead, and Ongar—were of only local importance. The shire provided London with fresh vegetables, but for many years the marshes remained a barrier to urban expansion. As late as 1907, the Victoria County History could write that Essex was ‘one of the purely agricultural counties of England, depending almost entirely upon tillage for its prosperity’.

The chief characteristic of the shire was religious nonconformity. Proximity to the continent made for easy access to reforming ideas in the Tudor period and the Essex towns provided a number of protestant martyrs during Mary's reign. Its puritan sympathies made it come down heavily in the 1640s for Parliament against the king. In 1698 Celia Fiennes noted that Colchester was ‘a town full of dissenters, besides Anabaptists and Quakers’.

Economic transformation came in the 19th cent. with the overflowing of London, first along the docks of the Thames, then following the railway from Shoreditch to Romford in 1839, which built an important junction and repair works at Stratford. Dockers and railwaymen replaced farmers in the streets of south‐west Essex. In 1801, Dagenham, Barking, Ilford, Walthamstow, East and West Ham were still separate villages or small towns. But for a time the increase in population was the fastest in the whole country. West Ham had fewer than 5,000 inhabitants in 1801 but 267,000 in 1901, dwarfing the county town, which had 13,000. The taste for sea‐bathing gave prosperity to Southend, which became Londoners' favourite resort. The arrival of the Ford Motor Company at Dagenham in 1929 created a great new borough. Though suburban growth declined after the Second World War, the new towns at Harlow and Basildon and the airport at Stansted kept numbers increasing, while Epping, Braintree, and Chelmsford became commuter towns, disgorging into Liverpool Street. In the 1980s the concept of ‘Essex man’, upwardly mobile, fast‐driving,Tory‐minded, brought the shire back into national consciousness.

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Essex

The Oxford Companion to British History | 2002 | | © The Oxford Companion to British History 2002, originally published by Oxford University Press 2002. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Essex is one of the larger counties and originated as a kingdom. Its southern boundary is the Thames, the Stour separates it from Suffolk, and the Stort and the Lea from Hertfordshire and Middlesex to the west. For many centuries the marshes along the Lea valley and dense forests around Epping and Waltham protected it from interference. Cunobelinus moved the capital of the Catuvellauni from Verulamium to Colchester, subduing the Trinovantes before Caesar's invasion. The Romans took over the site and made it the provincial capital, Camulodunum, sacked in Boudicca's rebellion in ad 61. In the 5th cent. the area fell to the Saxons, moving up the coastal creeks, and a kingdom of the East Saxons was in existence by the early 7th cent. It maintained a somewhat precarious existence, sometimes trying to extend its influence into Middlesex, Kent, and Surrey, sometimes trying to hold at bay the superior forces of Mercia and Wessex. Mellitus was appointed bishop of London in 604 with the duty of converting the East Saxons and made some progress, but the area lapsed into paganism until mid-century. By the 9th cent. Essex had become a client state, first of Mercia, then of Wessex. In the late 9th cent. it was overrun by the Danes and allotted to them at the peace of Wedmore in 878. Danish settlement was not heavy, however, and the region was used mainly as a base, with camps at Maldon and at Mersea. It was reconquered by Edward the Elder. By the time Cnut took the whole kingdom, in the early 11th cent., Essex was emerging as a shire, with roughly its present dimensions. The county town was Chelmsford rather than Colchester, perhaps because it was more central.

For centuries Essex remained a rural county and something of a backwater. It had no mineral resources and its harbours were shallow. It was on no great national route, though the roads to Norwich and Ipswich brought some traffic. It could have been of strategic importance in relation to London but few invasion forces ventured up its muddy creeks. Colchester remained a sizeable town, the centre for a vigorous cloth trade, and with a reputation for oysters, but most of the other towns—Saffron Walden, Thaxted, Braintree, Romford, Waltham Abbey, Dunmow, Halstead, and Ongar—were of only local importance. Chelmsford, the shire town, was unusual in having no parliamentary representation, though Maldon, Harwich, and Colchester had two members apiece. Harwich profited from the Hanoverian connection in the 18th cent. to build up its position as a port for the continent. The shire provided London with fresh vegetables, particularly potatoes, but for many years the marshes remained a barrier to urban expansion. As late as 1907, the Victoria County History could write that Essex was ‘one of the purely agricultural counties of England, depending almost entirely upon tillage for its economic prosperity’.

The chief characteristic of the shire was religious nonconformity. Proximity to the continent made for easy access to reforming ideas in the Tudor period and the Essex towns provided a number of protestant martyrs during Mary's reign. Its puritan sympathies made it come down heavily in the 1640s for Parliament against the king and it saw little fighting, save for the siege of Colchester during the second civil war in 1648, which ended with the two royalist commanders being shot after surrendering. In 1698 Celia Fiennes noted that Colchester was ‘a town full of dissenters, besides Anabaptists and Quakers’.

Economic transformation came in the later 19th cent. with the overflowing of London into the old hundred of Becontree, first along the docks of the north bank of the Thames, then following the railway from Shoreditch to Romford in 1839, which built an important junction and repair works at Stratford. Dockers and railwaymen replaced farmers in the streets of south-west Essex. In 1801, Dagenham, Barking, Ilford, Walthamstow, East and West Ham were still separate villages or small towns. But for a time the increase in population was the fastest in the whole country. West Ham had fewer than 5,000 inhabitants in 1801 but 267,000 in 1901, dwarfing the county town, which had 13,000. While the population of Becontree hundred in the south-west rose from 21,000 to 650,000 that of Dunmow hardly changed and Freshwell hundred in the north actually declined. The taste for sea-bathing gave prosperity to Southend, which became Londoners' favourite resort: from the 1820s paddle-steamers brought day trippers, the pier was opened in 1830, extended in 1889, and the rail link in 1856 brought more: by 1991 its population was 153,000. The arrival of the Ford Motor Company at Dagenham in 1929 created a great new borough. Though suburban growth declined after the Second World War, the new towns at Harlow and Basildon and the airport at Stansted kept numbers increasing, while Epping, Braintree, and Chelmsford became commuter towns, disgorging into Liverpool Street. By 1991, Essex, with a population of 1,400,000, was third only to Hampshire and Kent among counties. In the 1980s the concept of ‘Essex man’, upwardly mobile, fast-driving, Tory-minded, brought the shire back into national consciousness. The recommendations of the Banham commission report on local government (1994) were implemented, Essex retaining county status, and Southend constituting a unitary authority.

J. A. Cannon

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JOHN CANNON. "Essex." The Oxford Companion to British History. Oxford University Press. 2002. Retrieved July 10, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O110-Essex.html

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Free newspaper and magazine articles

Free Article CybIT provides tracking capabilities for Barking and Dagenham minibuses.(Brief Article)
Newspaper article from: Telecomworldwire; 5/15/2002
Free Article Docklands Light Railway has proposed a 5.5km extension from Gallions Reach to Dagenham Dock, via Barking Reach, with five stations. (Transit Briefs: London).
Magazine article from: International Railway Journal; 3/1/2003
Free Article RUGBY: Tim Douglas only Lions leaver.
Newspaper article from: Rugby Advertiser (Rugby, England); 7/5/2007

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CybIT provides tracking capabilities for Barking and Dagenham minibuses.(Brief Article)
Newspaper article from: Telecomworldwire; 5/15/2002; 115 words ; ...May 2002-CybIT provides tracking capabilities for Barking and Dagenham minibuses (C)1994-2002 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD http...tracking and fleet management solution chosen by Barking and Dagenham Council in the UK. The council now has a method... Read more
Docklands Light Railway has proposed a 5.5km extension from Gallions Reach to Dagenham Dock, via Barking Reach, with five stations. (Transit Briefs: London).
Magazine article from: International Railway Journal; 3/1/2003; 34 words ; Docklands Light Railway has proposed a 5.5km extension from Gallions Reach to Dagenham Dock, via Barking Reach, with five stations. It would cost about o150 million and could be in service by 2009 if work starts in 2006. Read more
RUGBY: Tim Douglas only Lions leaver.
Newspaper article from: Rugby Advertiser (Rugby, England); 7/5/2007; 434 words ; ...announced. Last time Rugby met Barking, it was at the East Londoners...from the giant Ford plant at Dagenham. Lions took a rather thin...47-12 defeat for Lions set Barking on their way to promotion...who played in that game for Barking, who suffered relegation themselves...trial games is: August ... Read more
Paddlers neck and neck in race for league title.
Newspaper article from: Leighton Buzzard Observer (Leighton Buzzard, England); 6/24/2008; 673 words ; ...Division. Leighton played hosts to the top clubs in the region last week with Norwich, Bishops Stortford, Chelmsford, Barking and Dagenham all putting out strong teams. The league this year has not been all plain sailing for the club and going into this... Read more
Luton's rapid baby birth rise.
Newspaper article from: Herald & Post (Luton, England); 8/13/2007; 221 words ; ...2005. Only two London boroughs - Newham (90.4) and Barking & Dagenham (85.5) - and Slough (85) are currently ahead in...in 2006, compared with 5,523 in Newham, 3,208 in Barking & Dagenham, and 2,317 in Slough. The only other East of England... Read more
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Magazine article from: The Historian; 6/22/2000; ; 574 words ; ...political entities: Ilford Urban District, Barking Urban District, and Romford Rural District (Dagenham). The socioeconomic composition of estate...Although Ford Motor Company planned its Dagenham plant in the early 1920s, it wasn't until... Read more
Jubilant Cameron celebrates as Tories capture 10 councils.
Newspaper article from: The Star (Sheffield) (Sheffield, England); 5/5/2006; 700+ words ; ...BNP won 11 seats from Labour in Barking and Dagenham after campaigned tirelessly that...voters likely to opt for the BNP. Barking MP Margaret Hodge said last month...Labour has controlled Barking and Dagenham Council for decades and had no... Read more
Teenage pregnancies still on rise.
Newspaper article from: Herald & Post (Luton, England); 8/26/2006; 256 words ; ...teenage pregnancy are the London Boroughs of Southwark (85.2 per 1,000 15- to 17-year-old girls), Lambeth (84), Barking and Dagenham (71.8) and Lewisham (70.2), together with Kingston upon Hull (79), Nottingham (72.8) and Blackpool (72.3). The... Read more
Stark warning over 'migration tension' - what do you think?
Newspaper article from: Peterborough Evening Telegraph (Peterborough, England); 7/16/2008; 700+ words ; ...MP Phyllis Starkey, paid a visit to the city in January during a fact-finding tour, which also took in Burnley, Barking and Dagenham. During the six-hour trip, committee members spoke to political leaders, service chiefs and migrant groups to establish... Read more
Young paddlers are setting the pace.
Newspaper article from: Leighton Buzzard Observer (Leighton Buzzard, England); 4/1/2008; 470 words ; ...were rewarded with 11th. More points were gained higher up the divisions. Dan Slight partnered Ben Bradshaw of Barking and Dagenham and won in the division 2/3 K2. Stephen White won division 5 followed by Adam Murphy in 3rd place. In the combined... Read more

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