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ROMAN AND MEDIEVAL TIMES | |
During Roman times, the Fylde, was an area of oak forests and
impassable bogs. The inhabitants were known as the Setantii or Segantii, "the
dwellers in the country of water". The Romans built a road through Preston to a
settlement outside Kirkham fort and this continued westwards, probably towards a Roman
port (Portus Setantiorum) thought to be situated two miles north of Fleetwood at the point
where the River Wyre Discharges into the Lune Deeps.
| | Blackpool's early boundaries were within the township of Layton
with Warbreck, part of the manor of Layton, which together with Bispham and Norbreck
formed the ancient parish of Bispham or Biscopham as recorded in the Domesday Book. In
1416 members of the powerful Butler family were granted manorial rights over much of the
Fylde coast area, including "Le pull". This "pool" or "pull"
was a stream draining the mile square Marton Mere into the sea near the present day
Manchester Square. The peat lands through which the stream ran had the effect of
discolouring the water, hence the name Black Poole. | |
17TH CENTURY BLACKPOOL | |
In 1602 entries in the Bispham parish baptismal register mention
"de Poole" and "de blackpoole", at that time a collection of cobble
and clay huts spread along the coast near to the "Pool". However, by the end of
the century a number of the landed gentry, led by the Tyldesleys of Foxhall, had settled
in the area. | | 18TH CENTURY BLACKPOOL |
The Fylde coast began to attract visitors from the landed gentry
by the 1720's and in 1735 a cottage owned by Ethart a' Whiteside became the first 'guest
house' used especially for visitors. In 1750 drainage dykes were cut from the Marton Mere
to the River Wyre effectively reducing the size of the lake from around one square mile to
15 acres. By 1780 the emerging resort could boast four substantial hotels and four ale
houses registered in Blackpool with two more in Layton. 19TH CENTURY BLACKPOOL The 19th Century saw the rapid development of
Blackpool as a major resort for the industrial working classes of Lancashire and
Yorkshire. In 1801 the towns population stood at 473, only a century later it had reached
47,348. | | The railway was introduced to the area in 1840 and by 1846 the
railway had reached Talbot Road allowing the development of cheap excursion trains from
industrial Lancashire and Yorkshire and for the first time bringing many thousands of
working people to the resort. | | Many of Blackpool's most famous attractions were built in the
second half of the nineteenth century including, North Pier (1863) Central Pier (1868)
South Pier (1894) the Tower (1894), the Grand Theatre (1894) and the gigantic wheel at the
Winter Gardens (1896). | | Blackpool was also the first place in the world to have electric
street lighting in 1879, with the installation of the electric arc street lighting system. | | Municipal history in Blackpool began in this period when the new
town was granted a Charter of Incorporation as a Borough on the 21st January
1876. Dr William Henry Cocker was the first Mayor. | | 20TH CENTURY BLACKPOOL | | In 1904 the rapidly developing town was constituted as a County
Borough, a status the town retained until the 1974 reorganisation of local government, and
is now set to regain this unitary status in April 1998 as the century draws to a close. | | Many more of Blackpool's famous attractions were developed in the
early part of the twentieth century including the Pleasure Beach (1905) and Stanley Park
(1926). The Illuminations were first created in 1912, the means to extend the holiday
season by a massive eight weeks more than their competitors. | | During the Second World War tourism reduced but Blackpool
welcomed over three quarters of a million servicemen to be given their initial training in
the Winter Gardens. | | Post War Blackpool has seen a marked shift from rail to road
transportation. In 1964 Central station was closed and the area was immediately developed
to produce additional car parking. In 1975 the M55 opened, linking Blackpool to the
national motorway network. In January 1986 the land of the former railway line was used to
build the link road, Yeadon Way, from the motorway to one of the largest open area car
parks in the country, catering for the ever increasing demand for car and coach parking. | | The 1970's and 80's brought competition from continental holidays
and from the consequent higher expectations of visitors. Blackpool adjusted as it has
throughout its history, by providing mini breaks, en-suite facilities, and major indoor
facilities such as the Sandcastle, Sea Life Centre and most recently the World of
Coronation Street. |
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