Sunday, November 10, 2013

Living In The New Town Of Cramlington

Living In The New Town Of Cramlington




Cramlington is located in Northumberland in the North East of England. It is 9 miles north of Newcastle upon Tyne. Its name Cramlington is most likely to have originated in Danish or Anglo - Saxon as ' ton ' means town in both cases.

Cramlington is first recorded as a manor in 1135 when land was accustomed to Nicholas de Grenville. The first priest was John the Clerk of Cramlington from 1163 to 1180 and records of chaplains from then until this day cook. Cramlington was made up of mainly farms until 1865 when work began on the sanctuary of Saint Nicholas and then in the 1800 ' s dingy mining began in the area.

Cramlington remained small until 1964 when it was named a New Town which led to goodly housing estates being planned and built by developers akin as JT Bell and William Barnacle. The housing estates were named Southfield, Whitelea, Shankhouse, Mayfield, Beaconhill, Collingwood and Eastfield and the creation of these has turned the town into a ' dormitory ' or ' sleeper town '. Dormitory town is the name apt to a community where most of the residents work elsewhere and its main economic activity is to store retail outlets for these residents.

Cramlington does have Industrial zones, mainly in the north west of the town, which roof a number of substantial pharmaceutical companies and a shopping centre was constructed in the town centre in the 1970s and has been expanded twice since then. Cramlington also has a good variety of opportunity facilities like as Northburn Community Sports Centre and the Sporting Club at the High School. The main freedom centre is Cramlington Concordia which is in the town centre and was opened by Sovereign Elizabeth II in 1977; it has a wide scale of sports courts including tennis and squash, a good luck pool and a climbing wall. The New Town design included a circuit corridor network around the town, as well as routes to coming towns and the after beach.

Plessey Woods Country Park is a vast country park accessed through the area of Hartford Bridge to the north of Cramlington. It is over 100 acres of meadows, woodland and riverbanks with many trails through it. The river Blyth flows through the park on its way to the North Sea to the East. The Grade II listed Blagdon Arms public cobby is in Cramlington, on the position square along with three other public houses

Northumberland converted from a 3 concatenation school system to a two progression one in 2008 and Cramlington was one of the first towns to complete this. Cramlington High School was renamed Cramlington Learning Venue during this quarters and now has three sections catering for children from 11 through to 18.

Cramlington is the home town of humorist Ross Princely and Sting was briefly a teacher at St Pauls First School. Footballers Alan Shearer, Peter Ramage and Steven Taylor all played for Cramlington Juniors FC and Roger Uttley the former England National Rugby Union artist was a sports teacher at Cramlington High School. The Paralympic Gold medallist Stephen Miller also comes from Cramlington

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