Hartlepool
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Template:Infobox England place with map UA Hartlepool (pronounced HART-le-pool) is a town and North Sea port in North East England. It is within the borough of Hartlepool and the ceremonial and traditional county of County Durham.
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History
Hartlepool was founded as a village in the 7th century AD, springing up around a convent founded in 640 on a headland overlooking a natural harbour. The convent became famous under St Hilda, who served as its abbess from 649-657, but it was destroyed by the Vikings in 800.
During the Middle Ages the village grew into an important (though still small) town, gaining a market and walls, and its harbour was improved to serve as the official port of the County palatine of Durham. Its harbour made it a convenient outlet for the coalfields of South Durham and in 1835 a railway was built to enable South Durham coal to be exported. A rival railway was built in 1847 and docks were established at its terminus, around which a new town, West Hartlepool, was founded.
The two communities grew very rapidly, from only a thousand at the start of the 19th century to a population of 64,000 in 1891. The modern town represents a joining together of "Old Hartlepool", locally known as the "headland", and West Hartlepool. What was West Hartlepool became the larger town and the two were formally joined in 1967. Today the term "West Hartlepool" is rarely heard outwith a sporting context, as a famous but rather unsuccessful Rugby Union team bears the name.
The area became heavily industrialised with an ironworks (established 1838) and shipyards in the docks (established in the 1870s). By 1913, no fewer than 42 ship-owning companies were located in the town, responsible for 235 ships. This made it a key target for Germany in the First World War. The first German offensive against Britain was mounted at Hartlepool between 8.10 and 9.30 am on the morning of 16 December 1914, when units of the Imperial German Navy bombarded Hartlepool, West Hartlepool, Whitby and Scarborough with a total of 1150 shells, killing 137 people and wounding 592. Two coastal defence batteries at Hartlepool returned fire, firing 143 shells, damaging three German ships including the battlecruiser SMS Blücher. An attempt by the German High Command to repeat the attack a month later led to the Battle of Dogger Bank on 24 January 1915.
Hartlepool suffered badly in the Great Depression of the 1930s and suffered high unemployment until the start of the Second World War, during which its shipbuilding and steelmaking industries enjoyed a renaissance. After the war, both industries went into a severe decline. The last ship to be constructed in Hartlepool left the slips in 1961. There was a boost to the retail sector in 1968 when Middleton Grange Shopping Centre was opened by Princess Anne, with over 140 new retail outlets including Marks & Spencer and Woolworths on the site of the old terraced streets that where bombed during the Second World War. By the 1980s the area was again severely affected by unemployment. A series of major investment projects in the 1990s revived the town centre with a new marina, rehabilitation of derelict land, the indoor conversion to modernise Middleton Grange Shopping Centre from the 1960s brutalist architecture and the construction of much new housing, which has led to the town becoming improbably chic in recent years. The town's Historic Quay is home to Britain's oldest warship still afloat, the frigate HMS Trincomalee, built in Bombay 1817.
Hartlepool Power Station is a advanced gas-cooled reactor (AGR) type nuclear power plant opened near Hartlepool in the 1980s.
The town is served by Hartlepool railway station.
Politics
The Hartlepool constituency was represented in the House of Commons from 1992 until summer 2004 by Labour MP, Peter Mandelson.
Mr Mandelson resigned to take up a role in the European Commission. The by-election on September 30 was won by Labour's Iain Wright with a much-reduced majority following an 18% swing to the Liberal Democrats. He retained the seat with a greatly increased majority in the 2005 UK general election.
Monkey business
Hartlepool is famous for allegedly executing a monkey during the Napoleonic Wars. A French ship was wrecked off the town, when the townspeople went to investigate the crew had gone but they found a pet monkey. They assumed that the monkey was a Frenchman, and hanged it as a suspected spy. This story is unconfirmed, and has been told about a number of coastal town in Britain, e.g. Greenock and Mevagissey.
Historians have also pointed to the prior existence of a Scottish folk song called "And the Boddamers hung the Monkey-O". It describes how a monkey survived a shipwreck off the village of Boddam near Peterhead in Aberdeenshire. Because the villagers could only claim salvage rights if there were no survivors from the wreck, they allegedly hanged the monkey. A famous 19th century Geordie comic singer and songwriter named Ned Corvan is said to have been the first to mention the Hartlepool monkey story in his "Monkey Song"; it has been suggested that he adapted the Scottish folk song to give it a north-eastern English flavour. [1]
"Monkey hanger" is a common term of (semi-friendly) abuse aimed at "Poolies", often from bitter footballing rivals Darlington. The mascot of Hartlepool United F.C. is H'Angus the monkey. The man in the monkey costume, Stuart Drummond, stood for the post of Mayor in 2002 and campaigned on a platform which included free bananas for schoolchildren. To widespread surprise, he won, becoming the first directly-elected Mayor of Hartlepool, winning 7,400 votes with a 52% share of the vote and a turnout of 30%. He was re-elected by a landslide in 2005, winning 16,912 on a turnout of 51% – 10,000 votes more than his nearest rival, the Labour Party candidate.
The monkey legend is also linked with another of the town's sports clubs, Hartlepool Rovers RFC, which uses the hanging monkey as the club logo. On tours it would hang a monkey on the posts of the rugby pitch to spread the story.
In June 2005 a large bone was found washed ashore on Hartlepool beach, which initially was taken as giving credence to the monkey legend. Analysis revealed the bone to be that of a red deer which had died 6,000 years ago.
Famous Hartlepool residents
- Janick Gers Heavy Metal guitarist (Iron Maiden)
- Saint Hilda Abbess
- Reginald Hill Author of Dalziel and Pascoe series
- Micheal Hunter European Champion boxer
- Jack London British heavyweight champion
- Sir Compton Mackenzie Novelist
- Sir Edward Mellanby Scientist
- Sir Robert Ropner Ship owner (largest fleet in the world)
- Sir Ridley Scott Film director (attended the Hartlepool College of Art)
- Wayne Sleep Ballet dancer
- Reg Smythe Creator of Andy Capp
- Lionel Tertis Viola virtuoso
- Jeff Stelling Sky Sports Presenter
- Darren Morfitt Actor
- Frank Cook Labour Member of Parliament (born in Hartlepool)
- Michael Brown Footballer
- Iain Wright Labour Member of Parliament (born in Hartlepool)
- Ted Harrison Canadian artist - born in nearby Wingate - attended Hartlepool College of Art
- Philip Middlemiss was an actor who played Des Barnes in Coronation Street
Town twinning
External links
- Statistics about Hartlepool from the Office for National Statistics Census 2001
- This Is Hartlepool "Your guide to the town"de:Hartlepool
eo:Hartlepool fr:Hartlepool nl:Hartlepool no:Hartlepool sk:Hartlepool