Why is bedfordshire called bedfordshire




















In a corn exchange was built where grain was bought and sold. Bunyan Meeting House was built in Like all towns in the early 19th century, Bedford was dirty and unsanitary. There were outbreaks of cholera in Bedford in and in However, conditions in 19th century Bedford gradually improved.

After Bedford corporation dug a network of drains and sewers. In a water company was created to provide piped water. The first cemetery in Bedford opened in Furthermore, The Park was opened in Shire Hall was built in and a hospital opened in Bedford in Meanwhile, in the early 19th century grain and wool were taken from Bedford along the river.

Coal and iron were brought to the town. However, in , the railway reached Bedford. Yet in the 19th century, Bedford remained an agricultural market town. Its main industries were brewing and making farm implements. Bedford grew rapidly in the 20th century. In the population of Bedford was 35, By the end of the century, it had grown to 74, In the boundaries of Bedford were extended to include Goldington and after new estates were built at Brickhill and Manton Heights.

However, Bedford remained an agricultural town. Farm implements were made in Bedford. So were other machines. In the 20th century, bricks were also made in the town. Conditions in Bedford continued to improve in the 20th century.

The first public library in Bedford opened in Cecil Higgins Art Gallery opened in Bedford is also an important local shopping centre. The Harpur Centre opened in In a statue of Trevor Huddleston , who fought against apartheid in South Africa was erected in Silver Street. Previous post. Next post. Today Bedford is a flourishing town.

The Icknield Way — possibly the oldest footpath in the country — runs through the area along the Dunstable Downs and skirting the Barton Way Nature Reserve. Dunstable itself is traceable back to Roman times, when its name was Durocobrivis. Visit the beautiful Dunstable Priory, which is steeped in fascinating Tudor history and still an active part of the local community. Following the end of Roman Britain in AD, the area now known as Bedfordshire became a boundary between Norse and Danish peoples that settled the east of England, and the Anglo-Saxons who settled in the south including Kempston, in the fourth century AD.

Most Bedfordshire towns were founded in the Middle Ages. Bedford town itself is named after a little-known Saxon chief called Beda, whose followers settled at a fordable spot along the River Ouse. From the early Middle Ages it was a market town for the agricultural region, and by AD was a boundary town separating Wessex from the Danelaw.

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