Everything about Yeovil totally explained
Yeovil is a town in south
Somerset,
England, on the
A30 and
A37. It has a population of 41,871 at the 2001 census (est. 42,500 in 2006). The town lies within the local district of
South Somerset and the
Yeovil parliamentary constituency.
History
The name "Yeovil" comes via
Anglo-Saxon from a corruption of the
Celtic gifl "forked river", or 'The river noble' from the
Old English ea and
aerel, which became
Givele.
Archaeological surveys have indicated signs of activity from the palaeolithic period, with burial and occupation sites located principally to the south of the modern town.
Yeovil was on the main
Roman road from
Dorchester to the
Fosse Way at
Ilchester. The route of the old road is aligned with the
A37 from Dorchester, Hendford Hill, Rustywell, aross the Westland site, to Larkhill Road, and Vagg Lane, rejoining the A37 at the Halfway House pub on the Ilchester Road. The Westland site has evidence of a small Roman town. There were several
Roman villas (estates) in the area, including finds at
East Coker,
West Coker and Lufton. During the 1800s Yeovil was a centre of the
glove making industry and by 1853 was connected to the rest of Britain via railway and soon after, in 1856, the town gained borough status and was given a mayor. In the early 20th century Yeovil had around 11,000 inhabitants and was dominated by the defence industry, making it a target of German raids during
World War II.
In April 2006 Yeovil became the first town in Britain to institute a somewhat controversial system of
biometric fingerprint scanning in nightclubs. Individuals wishing to gain access to one of the town's nightclubs are being asked in the first instance to submit their personal details for inclusion in a central system. This includes a photograph and index fingerprint. Thereafter, each entry to one of the participating premises will require a fingerprint scan. If the system is proved successful at reducing crime and violence, it'll be introduced in towns throughout the country.
In late July 2007, South Somerset District Council plans were made public by the
Western Gazette to build a £21m 'Yeovil Sports Zone' on Yeovil Recreation Ground, which has been a popular open green space used by the local community for over seventy years. Residents are currently fighting to protect the Rec. The free, informal recreational space of Mudford Rec, as it's known colloquially, was frequented by England Cricket great
Ian Botham during his childhood stay in Yeovil.
Governance
Officially designated as a borough in 1854, the town continued to lend its name to the area with the creation of the
local government district of Yeovil on
1 April 1974 with the merging several neighbouring rural and urban districts which is today known as
South Somerset.
Residents of Yeovil also form part of the electorate for the
South West England constituency for elections to the
European Parliament.
Geography
Yeovil is situated at the Southern Boundary of Somerset, close to the border with
Dorset, from
London, south of
Bristol and from
Taunton.
The suburbs include: Summerlands, Hollands, Houndstone, Preston Plucknett, Penn Mill, New Town, Hendford.
Outlying villages include
East Coker,
Evershot,
Halstock,
Stoford,
Sutton Bingham,
Mudford and
Yetminster. Other nearby villages include
Bradford Abbas,
Corscombe,
Montacute (where one will find
Montacute House), and
Pendomer. The village of
Brympton, now almost a
suburb of Yeovil, contains the
medieval manor of
Brympton d'Evercy.
Tintinhull is also a village close to Yeovil featuring the National Trust owned
Tintinhull House and Gardens.
Climate
Along with the rest of
South West England, Yeovil has a temperate climate which is generally wetter and milder than the rest of the country. The annual mean temperature is approximately and shows a seasonal and a
diurnal variation, but due to the modifying effect of the sea the range is less than in most other parts of the UK. January is the coldest month with mean minimum temperatures between and . July and August are the warmest months in the region with mean daily maxima around .
The south-west of England has a favoured location with respect to the
Azores high pressure when it extends its influence north-eastwards towards the UK, particularly in summer.
Convective cloud often forms inland however, especially near hills, reducing the number of hours of sunshine. The average annual sunshine totals around 1,600 hours.
Rainfall tends to be associated with Atlantic
depressions or with convection. The Atlantic depressions are more vigorous in autumn and winter and most of the rain which falls in those seasons in the south-west is from this source. Average rainfall is around –. About 8–15 days of snowfall is typical. November to March have the highest mean wind speeds, with June to August having the lightest winds. The predominant wind direction is from the south-west.
Demography
Yeovil has a population of 41,871 at the 2001 census (est. 42,500 in 2006).
| Population since 1801 - Source: A Vision of Britain through Time |
| Year | 1801 |
1851 |
1901 |
1911 |
1921 |
1931 |
1941 |
1951 |
1961 |
1971 |
1981 |
1991 |
2001
|
| Population South Somerset | 70,769 |
93,075 |
85,080 |
84,280 |
85,001 |
85,729 |
92,313 |
99,407 |
106,462 |
114,020 |
129,310 |
143,395 |
150,974
|
Economy
AgustaWestland manufactures helicopters in Yeovil, and
Normalair Garratt, builder of aircraft oxygen systems, is also based in the town.
Yeovil's reputation as a centre of the aircraft and defence industries lived on into the 21st century despite attempts at diversification, and the creation of numerous industrial estates, the principal employer is the aviation group
AgustaWestland. This firm was created through the acquisition of
Westland Helicopters by Agusta in 2000. In January 1986 the proposed sale of Westland to the American
Sikorski Fiat group led to a crisis in the
Thatcher government, the resignation of
Michael Heseltine as
Defence Secretary and the resignation two weeks later of the
Trade and Industry Secretary Leon Brittan after his admission of leaking of a governmental law officer's letter which harshly criticised Mr Heseltine.
British defence giant
BAE Systems also operate a site which produces high-integrity networked software solutions primarily for the military.
Landmarks
The
Museum of South Somerset is in Hendford.
Yeovil has two theatres, a ten-screen cinema and 18-lane ten-pin bowling alley.
Yeovil District Hospital NHS Foundation Trust provides local health services.
One of the symbols of Yeovil is
Jack the Treacle Eater, a folly consisting of a small archway topped by a turret with a statue on top. This is actually located in the village of
Barwick, just to the south of the town.
Transport
The town has two railway stations on two separate railway lines.
Yeovil Pen Mill is on the
Bristol to Weymouth line served by the
Great Western Trains train operating company, whilst
Yeovil Junction is on the
London Waterloo to Exeter line served by
South West Trains. Both stations are situated some distance from the centre of Yeovil, with Pen Mill station being just under one
mile to the east and Junction station being just over one mile to the south.
Yeovil also has a bus service provided by
First Avon and Somerset along with coach services from Bakers and South West Tours.
Education
Yeovil is home to a number of primary and secondary schools, including
Preston School, whose past pupils include actress
Sarah Parish, Buckler's Mead School
Sir Ian Botham's former School and Westfield School, which is also a science college. Further Education is principally offered by
Yeovil College, with land-based studies available through a Yeovil centre of
Bridgwater College, and some provision through private providers. It also contains one higher education university centre,
University Centre Yeovil. The registered awarding body for the university centre is
Bournemouth University.
Westfield School
Westfield School is situated on Westfield Road. It has 4 main buildings on site and over 15 different facilities. Westfield is a science college and has some of the best science facilities in somerset.
Religious sites
The Church of St John The Baptist dates from the late
14th century. The tower is high, in 4-stages with set back offset corner buttresses. It is capped by openwork balustrading eatching the parapets which are from the 19th century. There are two-light late 14th century windows on all sides at bell-ringing and bell-chamber levels, the latter having fine pierced stonework grilles. There is a stair turret to the north-west corner, with a
Weather vane termination. The tower contains two bells dating from 1728 and made by Thomas Bilbie of the
Bilbie family in
Chew Stoke. The "Great Bell" was recast from to . It has been designated by
English Heritage as a grade I
listed building.
Suburbs
Houndstone, Hollands, Summerlands, Penn Mill, Preston Plunkett, New Town, Hendford, Old Town.
Sport
The local
football team
Yeovil Town F.C. play in green and white livery. Known as the 'Glovers' (a reference to the town's glove-making past), they won promotion to
Division Three as
Football Conference champions. They had achieved numerous
FA Cup victories over
Football League sides in the past 50 years, and since joining the elite they've won promotion again – as
League Two champions in 2005. They came close to yet another promotion in 2007, when they reached the
League One playoff final, but lost to
Blackpool at the newly reopened
Wembley Stadium.
Notable residents
- T. S. Eliot - Famous poet, overall winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature, buried in nearby East Coker.
- Jim Cregan, guitarist with original Cockney Rebel.
- Robert Harbin - born in 1526, was a mercer by profession, who lived and died in Yeovil. He is buried in St. John the Baptist Church. His house, located at the edge of town and named Newton Surmaville, was completed in 1612 Robert was granted his coat of arms in May 1612 and given the title "Gentleman". He wasn't knighted.
- Michael T. Davies, Traditionalist Catholic writer and public figure (born in Yeovil in 1936)
- William K. Everson - the film historian.
- PJ Harvey - singer and songwriter.
- Sarah Parish - actress.
- Sir Ian Botham - cricketer.
- Sir William Dampier - 17th Century English explorer, the first man to circumnavigate the world twice, and to map Australia. Born in nearby East Coker.
- Stuckley Wescott - Early American (17th century) settler. Co-founder, with Roger Williams and 11 others, of Providence, Rhode Island (1636), early American religious freedom asylum.
- Trevor Peacock currently lives in the area. Most famous for his role as Jim Trott in The Vicar of Dibley.
- Martin Cranie - Plays Defence for Portsmouth Football Club.
- Steve Kitch - DJ and Producer.
- Martin Day - writer.
- The Pineapple Thief - New prog band.
Media references
Yeovil is the location for the
School of Lifemanship in a series of novels by
Stephen Potter:
Gamesmanship (1947),
Lifemanship (1950),
One-Upmanship (1952),
Supermanship (1958),
Anti-Woo (1965) and
The Complete Golf Gamesmanship (1968). The books were adapted for the 1960 film
School for Scoundrels, starring
Alastair Sim,
Terry-Thomas,
Ian Carmichael and
Irene Handl. Later they were adapted by
Barry Took into a BBC TV comedy series called
One-Upmanship (1974-78), starring
Richard Briers and
Peter Jones.
Yeovil is also one of the three principal locations in
John Cowper Powys's 1929 novel,
Wolf Solent. Powys's father, the Reverend C. F. Powys was vicar at nearby Montacute for 32 years. Yeovil is known in
Thomas Hardy's
Wessex as "Ivell".
In the novel
The English Patient by
Michael Ondaatje, the character of Maddox is cited as living in the nearby village
Marston Magna. In the novel, Maddox's suicide takes place in an unspecified church in Yeovil.
International links
There is, in
Johannesburg,
South Africa, a suburb called
Yeoville which has a link to Yeovil. It was proclaimed in 1890 by one
Thomas Yeo Sherwell, a native of Yeovil. He named the streets after his sons, friends and business associates.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Yeovil'.
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