Everything about Jarrow totally explained
Jarrow (or /ˈjærə/) is a
town on the
River Tyne,
England with a
population around 27,000 (2001
Census). It is part of the
South Tyneside district of
Tyne and Wear.
History and Naming
Saxon foundation
The
Anglo-Saxons re-occupied a
1st century Roman fort on the site of Jarrow in the
5th century. Its name is recorded around AD 750 as
Gyruum, representing
Anglo-Saxon [æt] Gyrwum = "[at] the
marsh dwellers", from Anglo-Saxon
gyr = "mud", "marsh".
Wearmouth-Jarrow Priory
The Monastery of
Saint Paul in Jarrow, part of the twin foundation
Monkwearmouth-Jarrow Priory, was once the home of the
Venerable Bede, whose most notable works include
The Ecclesiastical History of the English People and the translation of the
Gospel of John into
Old English. At the time of its foundation, it was reputed to have been the only centre of
learning in
Europe north of
Rome. In
794 Jarrow became the second target in England of the
Vikings, who had plundered
Lindisfarne in
793. The Monastery was later
dissolved by
Henry VIII. The ruins of the Monastery are now associated with and partly built into the present-day
church of St. Paul, which stands on the site. One wall of the church contains the oldest
stained-glass window in the world, dating from about AD
600. Just beside the Monastery is "
Bede's World", a working
museum dedicated to the life and times of Bede. Bede's World also incorporates
Jarrow Hall, a grade II
listed building and significant local landmark.
19th century to present
Jarrow remained a small town until the introduction of
heavy industries like
coal mining and
shipbuilding.
Charles Mark Palmer established a shipyard -
Palmers Shipbuilding and Iron Company Limited - here in 1852 and became the first armour-plate manufacturer in the world.
John Bowes, the first iron screw collier, revived the Tyne coal trade, and Palmers was also responsible for the first modern cargo ship, as well as a number of notable warships.
Palmers employed as much as 80% of the town's working population until its closure in the early
1930s following intervention by the
Conservative government. Around 1,000 ships were built at the yard. As from 1935,
Olympic, the sister ship of
RMS Titanic, was partially demolished at Jarrow (in 1937 she was towed to Inverkeithing, Scotland for final scrapping). The closure of the shipyard was responsible for one of the events for which Jarrow is most famous. Jarrow is marked in history as the starting point of the
Jarrow Crusade (to London) to protest against
unemployment in Britain in
1936. Jarrow MP
Ellen Wilkinson wrote about these events in her book
The Town That Was Murdered (1939). Jarrow was also one of the focuses of Philip Gibbs's absorbing book
England Speaks (1935).
Famous former residents of the town, including
Ellen Wilkinson MP,
Charles Mark Palmer and
William Jobling have been remembered in the names of beers produced by
Jarrow Brewing Company, a microbrewery in the town.
Twin towns
Jarrow is
twinned with the following towns, under the umbrella of the
South Tyneside town-twinning project which saw individual twinning projects brought together in
1974:
Wuppertal in
Germany, originally twinned with
South Shields in
1951.
Noisy-le-Sec in
France, originally twinned with
Hebburn in April
1963.
Épinay-sur-Seine in
France, originally twinned with Jarrow in June
1965.
Education
Jarrow's needs for secondary education are currently served by
Jarrow School, formerly Springfield Comprehensive. Springfield was merged with another of Jarrow's secondary schools, Hedworthfield Comprehensive at Fellgate, following a gradual reduction of the number of new pupils for the yearly intake of 11 year olds to the point where keeping both schools open was no longer viable.
Famous Jarrow residents
- Roger Avon, actor.
- Bede, Benedictine monk and scholar.
- Catherine Cookson, writer.
- Steve Cram, Olympic Athlete.
- Peter Flannery, playwright.
- William Goat, awarded the Victoria Cross.
- Stephen Hepburn, politician.
- Jarrow Elvis,Elvis impersonator
- William Jobling, last man to be gibbeted in Britain.
- L.S. Lowry, the artist spent time in Jarrow in 1964.
- Jem Mace Famous pugilist died at 6 Princess Street, Jarrow in 1910.
- John Miles, rock musician, singer, songwriter.
- Jarra Jim half marathon runner
- Fergus Montgomery, Conservative MP.
- Charles Mark Palmer, shipbuilder.
- Alan Plater, writer
- Alan Price, musician. Alan was born in Washington and brought up in Jarrow.
- Patrick Stewart, Star Trek actor, spent the majority of his childhood living in Jarrow, although wasn't born here
- Paul Thompson, rock musician, drummer of Roxy Music.
- Ellen Wilkinson, Labour MP and Jarrow March organiser.
- Wee Georgie Wood, music hall star.
Transport
Road
Jarrow is reached from the south by the
A1(M) via the A194, and is connected to
North Tyneside and
Northumberland via the
Tyne Tunnel.
Metro
Jarrow is served by three stations on the
Tyne and Wear Metro:
Jarrow station in the centre of the town (on the Yellow line)
Bede station in the Bede industrial estate (also on the Yellow line), and
Fellgate station (on the Green line) to the south.
Air
The nearest major airport is
Newcastle Airport, about 10 miles away.
Trivia
Jarrow is the setting in Monty Python's Flying Circus where the Spanish Inquisition first appears. Interestingly though, in the sketch the unintelligible accent Graham Chapman uses to explain the "trouble at mill" is more akin to that of someone from Yorkshire.
J.M.W. Turner, the great artist, was rowed out into Jarrow Slake in 1835 to paint his picture Keelmen Hauling Coals by Moonlight, which is now in Washington D.C.
Jarrow is often pronounced as Jarra by the locals and other Northeasterners.
The first Arndale Centre shopping centre was in Jarrow.Further Information
Get more info on 'Jarrow'.
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