Bedworth
{{Short description|Market town in Warwickshire, England}}
{{Use British English|date=May 2016}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2022}}
{{Infobox UK place
| country = England
| official_name = Bedworth
| coordinates = {{coord|52.4791|-1.4712|display=inline,title}}
| population = 31,090
| population_ref = (2021 census)
| shire_district = Nuneaton and Bedworth
| shire_county = Warwickshire
| region = West Midlands
| constituency_westminster = North Warwickshire and Bedworth
| post_town = BEDWORTH
| postcode_district = CV12
| postcode_area = CV
| dial_code = 024
| os_grid_reference = SP3586
| static_image_name = Bedworth civic hall 30s07.JPG
| static_image_caption = Bedworth High Street and Civic Hall
|static_image_width = 300px
| hide_services = yes
}}
Bedworth ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|b|ɛ|d|w|ər|θ|}} or locally {{IPAc-en|ˈ|b|ɛ|d|ər|θ|}}) is a market town in the borough of Nuneaton and Bedworth, Warwickshire, England.OS Explorer Map 232 : Nuneaton & Tamworth: (1:25 000) :{{ISBN|0 319 46404 0}} It is situated between Coventry, 6 miles (9.5 km) to the south, and Nuneaton, {{convert|3|mi|km|0}} to the north. In the 2021 census the town had a population of 31,090.{{cite web |title=Bedworth in Warwickshire (West Midlands) |url=https://www.citypopulation.de/en/uk/westmidlands/warwickshire/E63002915__bedworth/ |publisher=City Population |access-date=17 December 2023}}
Geography
Bedworth lies {{convert|101|mi|km|0}} northwest of London, {{convert|19|mi|km|0}} east of Birmingham and {{convert|17|mi|km|0}} north northeast of the county town of Warwick.
Bedworth has six main suburban districts, namely Collycroft, Mount Pleasant, Bedworth Heath, Coalpit Field, Goodyers End and Exhall. Exhall is a generic name for the area surrounding junction 3 of the M6 motorway, comprising parts of both Bedworth and Coventry. Around {{convert|1.5|mi|km|0}} to the east of Bedworth is the large village of Bulkington, and around {{convert|2|mi|km|0}} to the south-west, separated by a short gap is the village of Ash Green.OS Explorer Map 221 : Coventry & Warwick: (1:25 000) {{ISBN|0319244148}}
Bedworth is almost contiguous with Coventry, and is defined as being part of the Coventry and Bedworth Urban Area.
The River Sowe rises in Bedworth flowing through Exhall, northern and eastern Coventry, Baginton and Stoneleigh, before joining the River Avon south of Stoneleigh.{{cite web |url=https://www.riverlevels.uk/flood-warning-river-sowe-at-bedworth |title=Flood Warnings for River Sowe at Bedworth - the UK River Levels Website |access-date=24 January 2017 |url-status = dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170202024048/https://www.riverlevels.uk/flood-warning-river-sowe-at-bedworth |archivedate=2 February 2017 }}{{cite web |url=http://idlersquest.blogspot.co.uk/p/the-sowe.html |title=Idler's Quest: The River Sowe in Coventry |website=Idlersquest.blogspot.co.uk |access-date=29 January 2017 |url-status = live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161107025014/http://idlersquest.blogspot.co.uk/p/the-sowe.html |archive-date=7 November 2016 }}{{cite web |url=https://www.geograph.org.uk/snippet/14198 |title=Sowe Valley, Coventry [163 photos] :: Geograph Britain and Ireland |website=Geograph.org.uk |access-date=29 January 2017 |url-status = live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170202042401/http://www.geograph.org.uk/snippet/14198 |archive-date=2 February 2017 }}
The town is locally pronounced as 'Beduth' though as Bedworth almost everywhere else.{{cite web |title=Forty words that prove you're from Coventry and Warwickshire |date=7 October 2017 |url=https://www.coventrytelegraph.net/lifestyle/national-dialect-day-coventry-40-6484820 |publisher=Coventry Telegraph |access-date=19 May 2024}}
History
File:Former Topshops, Bedworth - geograph.org.uk - 583132.jpg. They were a common feature in Bedworth's and Coventry's textiles industry during the 19th and early 20th centuries. The lower two floors served as the weaver's private dwelling, while the upper floor acted as the workplace. This photograph clearly shows how the windows on the top floor were once much bigger, to allow more daylight.]]
Originally a small market town with Saxon origins, Bedworth was mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Bedeword.{{cite web |title=Warwickshire A-F |url=http://www.domesdaybook.co.uk/warwickshire1.html#bedworth |publisher=The Domesday Book Online |access-date=15 February 2021}} The first record of a priest at Bedworth was from 1297. The town suffered great decline as a result of the Black Death in the 14th century. In 1590, the town was described as being home to just 14 families. By 1730, Bedworth had recovered somewhat as a result of local coal mining, and was described as containing 260 houses.{{cite web|title=Bedworth History & Information|date=23 February 2022 |url=https://www.bedworth-society.co.uk/bedworth/about|publisher=Bedworth Society|access-date=17 May 2024}}
Following the passage of the Five Mile Act 1665, which forbade Nonconformist church goers from assembling for worship and preaching within five miles of a corporate town such as Coventry. Bedworth, being exactly five miles from Coventry became a local centre for Nonconformists who assembled at the town. In 1686 the Reverend Julius Saunders established the Old Meeting congregation just north of the five-mile post. An old plaque that was on the mile-post can still be seen on a gate post of the Almshouses. In 1726 a Presbyterian Nonconformist chapel now of the United Reformed Church was built here which still stands, and was restored in 2012.{{cite web |title=Old Meeting United Reformed Church, Bedworth |url=https://historicengland.org.uk/services-skills/grants/visit/old-meeting-united-reformed-church-bedworth-cv12-8ah/ |publisher=Historic England |access-date=15 September 2020}}{{cite web |title=The Old Meeting House, off Chapel Street, Bedworth |url=https://www.ourwarwickshire.org.uk/content/catalogue_her/the-old-meeting-house-off-chapel-street-bedworth |publisher=Our Warwickshire |access-date=15 September 2020}}
Bedworth developed into an industrial town in the 18th and 19th centuries, due largely to coal mining and the overspill of ribbon weaving and textile industries from nearby Coventry: Located on the Warwickshire coalfield, coal mining in the area was recorded as early as the 13th century, but grew to a large scale as a result of the Industrial Revolution. The industry peaked in 1939 when there were 20 pits in the area producing over 5.8 million tons of coal. The last colliery in Bedworth, Newdigate Colliery closed in 1982, and Coventry Colliery on the edge of the town closed in 1991. The ribbon weaving industry had been introduced to the area by French Huguenot immigrants in the 18th century and thrived for nearly a century, until it was largely wiped out in the 1860s following the Cobden–Chevalier Treaty which removed tariffs on imported French silks, causing enormous hardship to the town. Hat making however grew and largely replaced the ribbon trade, and lasted until the 1950s.Slater, Terry (1981) A History of Warwickshire, {{ISBN|0-85033-416-0}}
The opening of the Coventry Canal in 1789 and later, the Coventry to Nuneaton railway in 1850 enhanced the town's growth. More recently, the M6 motorway was opened just south of the town in 1971.
From 1894 Bedworth was a civil parish within the Foleshill Rural District. In 1928 Bedworth was incorporated as an urban district in its own right.{{cite web |url=http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/relationships.jsp?u_id=10108706&c_id=10001043 |title=Bedworth UD Warwickshire through time | Administrative history of Local Government District: Hierarchies, boundaries |access-date=5 November 2006 |url-status = dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071001002344/http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/relationships.jsp?u_id=10108706&c_id=10001043 |archive-date=1 October 2007 }} In 1932 the urban district was enlarged by the addition of Exhall and parts of Foleshill, Astley and Walsgrave on Sowe parishes.{{cite web|title=Parishes: Bedworth|url=http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/warks/vol6/pp26-30|publisher=British History Online|access-date=14 April 2018}} It was further enlarged in 1938 by the addition of Bulkington. In 1974 the Bedworth Urban District was merged with the Municipal Borough of Nuneaton to create the borough of Nuneaton and Bedworth.{{cite web|title=Bedworth Timeline|url=http://www.bedworth-society.co.uk/bedworth-timeline|publisher=Bedworth Society|access-date=14 April 2018|archive-date=15 July 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180715233922/http://www.bedworth-society.co.uk/bedworth-timeline|url-status=dead}}
Features
File:Nicholas Chamberlaine Almshouses.JPG]]
Among the most notable buildings in Bedworth are the Nicholas Chamberlaine Almshouses on All Saints' Square in the town centre, which are built in Tudor style and date from 1840,Allen, Geoff, (2000) Warwickshire Towns & Villages, pages 22-23 {{ISBN|1-85058-642-X}} These replaced the original buildings which had been funded by a legacy from the local benefactor Nicholas Chamberlaine (1632–1715) through his will. The almshouses were restored in the 1980s, and are now Grade II* listed.{{cite web |title=Historic gem in the centre of Bedworth |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/coventry/webcams/stories/2003/07/bedworth-almshouses.shtml |publisher=BBC Coventry and Warwickshire |access-date=30 January 2019}}{{cite web |title=Chamberlaine's Almshouses A Grade II* Listed Building in Bedworth, Warwickshire |url=https://britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/101035003-chamberlaines-almshouses-nuneaton-and-bedworth#.XFIs-MHAPIU |publisher=British Listed Buildings |access-date=30 January 2019}}
The majority of the town centre was redeveloped in the 1960s and early-1970s, with the typical architecture of that period, and consists of a pedestrianised shopping precinct.{{cite web |title=Townscapes--Bedworth |url=http://www.nuneatonhistory.com/townscapes---bedworth.html |publisher=Nuneaton History |access-date=10 February 2019}} The town centre itself contains some of the usual high street retail names as well as many charity shops, card shops and banks.
The main venue in Bedworth is the Bedworth Civic Hall which opened in 1973 in the town centre, which has an attached arts centre.{{cite web |title=Civic Hall, Bedworth |url=https://www.theatresonline.com/theatres/bedworth-theatres/civic-hall-bedworth |publisher=Theatres Online |access-date=29 January 2019}}{{cite news |title=Civic hall set to close for refurbishment |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/coventry/stage/stories/2004/04/civic-hall-refurbishment.shtml |work=BBC News |access-date=29 January 2019 |date=15 April 2004}}
File:Miners Welfare Park, Bedworth - geograph.org.uk - 583135.jpg
File:Water Tower 19 365 (39747552882) (crop).jpg
South of the town centre is the Miners' Welfare Park, which opened in 1923, originally to provide a recreation space for miners and their families. Now managed by the local council it includes playing fields, sports facilities, footpaths and gardens.{{cite web |title=MINERS' WELFARE PARK, BEDWORTH |url=https://www.ourwarwickshire.org.uk/content/catalogue_her/miners-welfare-park-bedworth |publisher=Our Warwickshire |access-date=29 January 2019}} A new play area, on the site of the previous aviary and paddling pool near the cricket ground within the park, was dedicated in June 2012 to Sergeant Simon 'Val' Valentine. He was born and brought up in Bedworth, a soldier of 2nd battalion Royal Regiment of Fusiliers who died in August 2009 while serving his country in Helmand Province, Afghanistan.{{cite web |url=http://www.itv.com/news/central/2012-06-16/play-area-to-be-dedicated-to-local-hero-in-bedworth/ |title=Play area to be dedicated to local hero in Bedworth | Central - ITV News |website=Itv.com |date=16 June 2012 |access-date=29 January 2017 |url-status = live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161209224623/http://www.itv.com/news/central/2012-06-16/play-area-to-be-dedicated-to-local-hero-in-bedworth/ |archive-date=9 December 2016 }} The town centre was closed and thousands of townspeople paid their respects at Sergeant Valentine's funeral in 2009.{{cite news |url=http://www.birminghampost.co.uk/news/local-news/thousands-line-streets-murdered-soldier-3939650 |title=Thousands line streets for murdered soldier |newspaper=Birmingham Post |access-date=29 January 2017 |url-status = live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150512220048/http://www.birminghampost.co.uk/news/local-news/thousands-line-streets-murdered-soldier-3939650 |archive-date=12 May 2015 }}
The former Bedworth water tower is probably the most noticeable landmark building in Bedworth; built in 1898 in the then fashionable Romanesque style, at approximately {{convert|45|m|ft|}} high, it is visible from miles around and has been Grade II listed since 1987.{{cite web |title=Water Tower A Grade II Listed Building in Bedworth, Warwickshire |url=https://britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/101116416-water-tower-nuneaton-and-bedworth |publisher=British Listed Buildings |access-date=10 February 2019}} It originally had a 60,000 gallon water tank, but became obsolete in 1988, when a new water mains was installed into Bedworth.{{cite news |title=Tower buyer will gain a top address |url=https://www.coventrytelegraph.net/news/coventry-news/tower-buyer-gain-top-address-3140679 |work=Coventry Evening Telegraph |access-date=10 February 2019 |date=26 April 2013}} The tower is home to a pair of peregrine falcons, first noted in 1998.{{cite news |title=Bird of prey released back into the wild |url=https://www.coventrytelegraph.net/news/local-news/bird-prey-released-back-wild-3123863 |work=Coventry Evening Telegraph |access-date=10 February 2019 |date=6 July 2006}} In 2015 it was sold to be converted into six luxury apartments.{{cite news |title=Look: We go inside Bedworth Water Tower before it is converted into luxury flats |url=https://www.coventrytelegraph.net/news/local-news/look-go-inside-bedworth-water-9528106 |work=Coventry Evening Telegraph |access-date=10 February 2019 |date=26 June 2015}}
Along Mill Street until recently were rows of former weavers' cottages which were once inhabited by Huguenot weavers. Some of these were still used as shops, although most had become derelict. They have been demolished as part of the redevelopment of Tesco.
Economy
With most of its historic industries gone, there is still some specialist manufacturing that continues in the town; one firm in Bedworth, Toye, Kenning & Spencer, specialises in producing items such as hats and caps, banners, flags, medal ribbons and Masonic regalia.
At the Bayton Road industrial estate in Exhall is a manufacturing firm; Premiere Group, which specialises in producing sheet metal products, primarily for the automotive sector. The firm won the contract to produce 12,000 Olympic torches for the 2012 Olympic Games.{{cite web |title=THE 2012 OLYMPIC TORCH |url=https://premier-group.co/case-studies/olympic-torch |publisher=Premiere Group |access-date=11 September 2020}} The German mechatronic car component manufacturer Brose that supplies 80 vehicle manufacturers worldwide has its UK factory in the estate. The estate was also the home of Abbey Panels which prior to 2002 produced prototype vehicle bodies for many car manufacturers including the first run of alloy bodied Jaguar XK120s in 1948. They also produced aluminium alloy racing car bodies for Jaguar's Le Mans winning cars of the 1950s, along with Formula 1 car bodies in the same era. The company continues as Loades Limited with a site on Bayton Road, but oriented to steel buildings for commercial properties named after their founder Edward Loades.{{cite web | url=https://www.loades.com/edward-loades-story/ | title=The Edward Loades Story }}
The domestic appliance insurer Domestic & General has offices in the town centre,{{cite web |title=Our offices around the world |url=https://investors.domesticandgeneral.com/about-us/our-locations/ |publisher=Domestic & General |access-date=14 September 2020}}
as does Warwickshire County Council.{{cite web |title=Warwickshire County Council, Bedworth |url=https://bedworth.cylex-uk.co.uk/company/warwickshire-county-council-19719867.html |publisher=Cyclex |access-date=17 April 2021}}
Politics
Bedworth is within the parliamentary constituency of North Warwickshire and Bedworth, the local MP since 2024 has been Rachel Taylor of the Labour Party.{{Cite web |title=West Midlands {{!}} Boundary Commission for England |url=https://boundarycommissionforengland.independent.gov.uk/2023-review/west-midlands/ |access-date=2023-06-20 |website=Boundary Commission for England}}
Local government services are provided by Warwickshire County Council and Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough Council
Religion
=Church of England=
The town centre has a church dedicated to All Saint's known locally as All Saints' Parish Church (Church of England). A church has stood at the site since the 14th century, and it still retains its original tower from that period. The rest of the church has been rebuilt several times, the current building dates from the late Victorian era, when it was rebuilt during 1888-1890 out of Runcorn sandstone at a cost of £8,000 raised by public subscription. The church is grade II* listed.{{cite web |title=THE REBUILDING OF ALL SAINTS CHURCH, BEDWORTH |url=https://www.ourwarwickshire.org.uk/content/article/rebuilding-saints-church-bedworth |publisher=Our Warwickshire |access-date=11 September 2020}}{{cite web |title=Church of All Saints A Grade II* Listed Building in Bedworth, Warwickshire |url=https://britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/101365052-church-of-all-saints-nuneaton-and-bedworth#.X1ulCfDQjIU |publisher=British Listed Buildings |access-date=11 September 2020}}
=Roman Catholic=
St Francis of Assisi Roman Catholic Church, a prominent building in the town centre. The first church at the site opened in June 1883. Over later years, a number of additions were made, including the porch and tower. The church was made a parish church in 1919, and in September 1923 it was consecrated in its current form by Archbishop McIntyre.{{cite web |title=Bedworth Town Trail |url=https://www.bedworth-society.co.uk/bedworth-town-trail |publisher=The Bedworth Society |access-date=15 February 2021}}
File:St francis of assisi RC bedworth 3u07.JPG
In the early-1970s the interior of the church was modernised, with the tabernacle, altar, pulpit, font, Mary and Child, and the Sacred Heart and Risen Christ, all made by the noted Maltese artist and sculptor Carmel Cauchi.
The church is part of the Rugby Deanery in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Birmingham.
=Other Christian denominations=
There are also, Bedworth Methodist Church, and the United Reformed Church in Mill Street in the town centre, Bedworth Baptist Church on Coventry Road near the football ground as well as Life Church on Bulkington Road. A Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses is in Deronda Close, behind The Newdigate Arms. Zion Baptist Church is on Newdigate Road and is a striking 1977 replacement of the original 1796 chapel on High Street, which was demolished to make way for the Civic Centre (See external links.)
=Sikhism=
Bedworth has a Sikh gurdwara on Bayton Road in Exhall, named the Gurdwara Dhan Dhan Baba Vadbhag Singh Ji.{{cite web |title=Gurdwara Dhan Dhan Baba Vadbhag Singh Ji Bedworth |url=https://www.worldgurudwaras.com/gurudwaras/gurdwara-dhan-dhan-baba-vadbhag-bedworth/ |publisher=World Gurudwaras |access-date=16 May 2024}}
Demographics
At the 2021 census, there were 31,090 residents in Bedworth, up slightly from 30,459 in the 2011 census, and 29,082 at the 2001 census.
In terms of ethnicity in 2021:
- 88.3% of Bedworth residents were White
- 6.9% were Asian
- 1.6% were Black
- 1.7% were Mixed.
- 1.4% were from another ethnic group.
In terms of religion, 51.1% of Bedworth residents identified as Christian, 40.7% said they had no religion, 5.1% were Sikh, 1.4% were Hindu, 1.0% were Muslim, 0.3% were Buddhists, and 0.5% were from another religion.
Sport and leisure
File:The Oval, Bedworth - geograph.org.uk - 799083.jpg.]]
Bedworth has a Rugby Union team "Bedworth Rugby Football Club", that has a Senior Men's team, a Senior Ladies Touch team and a Mini & Junior section for boys & girls, it is based at the "Old" Nursery at Nicholas Chamberlaine School.
Bedworth has a non-League football team Bedworth United F.C. who play at the Oval Ground. There is also a swimming club called Nuneaton and Bedworth Dolphins.
Bedworth is proud host to the Bedworth Parkrun on a Saturday and Bedworth Park 5k on a Sunday. Both of these runs are held in the Miners Welfare Park at 9am.
Armistice Day
File:Bedworth Armistice Day Parade (22930800982).jpg
Bedworth has billed itself as the "town that never forgets" due to its tradition of large Armistice Day commemorations on 11 November, which are well attended by the population, who gather in the town to watch the veterans' armistice parade that concludes with the laying of poppy wreaths at the war memorial, to pay their respects to those who fought and died in the armed forces.{{cite web |title=Bedworth's proud Armistice Day 2022 hailed the 'largest and finest' in the UK |url=https://www.coventrytelegraph.net/news/local-news/bedworths-proud-armistice-day-2022-25493930 |publisher=Coventry Evening Telegraph |access-date=16 May 2024 |date=11 November 2022}} Local youth groups like the Girls' Brigade, and cadets march through the town as part of the parade, with bands playing commemorative music. Second World War Douglas C-47 Skytrain 'Dakota' military transport aircraft, also known as the civilian version Douglas DC-3, scatter remembrance poppy petals over the town, aiming at the war memorial if the weather permits. Before 2005 Spitfire fighters were used.
Bedworth chose to keep 11 November as Armistice Day, even after 1939, when the rest of the country moved to the nearest Sunday.{{cite web |title=Lasting legacy to Bedworth's proud Armistice Day tradition |date=3 July 2018 |url=https://www.coventrytelegraph.net/news/local-news/lasting-legacy-bedworths-proud-armistice-14855335 |publisher=Coventry Evening Telegraph |access-date=16 May 2024}} In more recent times, the tradition was kept up by Frank Parsons. The former Royal Marine died in 2011,{{cite news |url=http://www.coventrytelegraph.net/news/coventry-news/bedworth-standstill-funeral-war-hero-3041613 |title=Bedworth at standstill for funeral of war hero Frank Parsons |work= Coventry Telegraph |date=29 July 2011 |access-date=17 April 2017 |url-status = live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170418084102/http://www.coventrytelegraph.net/news/coventry-news/bedworth-standstill-funeral-war-hero-3041613 |archive-date=18 April 2017 }} but his work over the previous 25 years not only kept Bedworth's tradition - unique in the United Kingdom - alive, but also lent significant weight to the campaign to move Remembrance Day back to 11 November.
Transport
=Road=
Bedworth has good transport links being situated immediately north of the M6 motorway at junction 3, with access via several slip roads onto the A444 dual carriageway bypass. The A444 also provides fast access to Nuneaton, the Ricoh Arena, the Arena Retail Park and northern/central Coventry.
=Rail=
Bedworth railway station in the town centre is on the Coventry to Nuneaton railway line, and was reopened in 1988 after the original station at the same site was closed in 1965 as part of the Beeching Axe. Historically two more stations were in the vicinity of Bedworth which are now closed: Just south of Bedworth was Hawkesbury Lane railway station, also on the Coventry-Nuneaton line, which also closed in 1965, Just east of Bedworth was Bulkington railway station on the Trent Valley Line which closed in 1931.
=Buses=
Bus services to the city centre of Coventry are operated competitively by Stagecoach in Warwickshire and National Express Coventry. Stagecoach also provides direct services to Nuneaton, Bulkington, Keresley, Atherstone, Hinckley & Leicester and a direct service to the University Hospital in Walsgrave, Coventry is provided by Arriva Midlands.
File:The Coventry Canal, Bedworth, Warwickshire - geograph.org.uk - 1128127.jpg at Bedworth]]
=Waterways=
The Coventry Canal runs along the eastern edge of the town. Just outside Bedworth to the north-east is Marston Junction where the Coventry Canal joins the Ashby Canal. Just to the south-east at Hawkesbury Junction it joins the Oxford Canal.
=Tramways=
Historically Bedworth was the northern terminus of the Coventry Corporation Tramways system, which operated from the late 19th century until closure in 1940.A History of Coventry Tramways, F.K. Farrell, The Tramway Review, Vol. 4, No, 30, 1961
Schools
{{main|List of schools in Warwickshire}}
Media
=Radio=
The local radio stations are:
- BBC CWR: 94.8 FM
- Fosse 107: 107.9 FM
- Free Radio Coventry and Warwickshire (formally known as Mercia Sound, Mercia FM and Mercia): 97.0 FM
- Anker Radio – which serves the nearby George Eliot Hospital, but can be heard on 1386 AM.
- BBC Radio Leicester can be received in the town on 104.9 FM.
=Written media=
The main local newspapers are:
- The Nuneaton News (originally known as the Evening News upon launch and then the Heartland Evening News): Serving the whole of north Warwickshire and some border areas in Leicestershire, the paper is owned by Local World. The newspaper is published on weekdays. The Wednesday edition is circulated free throughout the town, whereas the daily paper on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday are paid. It was founded in 1992, following the decision of the Tribune's publisher to switch to a weekly freesheet.
- The Tribune (formerly the People's Tribune (1895), Midland Counties Tribune (1903) and Nuneaton Evening Tribune (1957)): It is owned by Trinity Mirror's Coventry Newspapers (publisher of the Coventry Telegraph). Covering 'northern Warwickshire' (particularly Bedworth, Atherstone & Nuneaton), the free paper is available weekly to collect at many newsagents in the area on a Thursday or Friday. In September 2015 The Tribune ceased publication. The last edition was published on Thursday 24 September.{{cite web |last=Lambourne |first=Helen |url=http://www.holdthefrontpage.co.uk/2015/news/trinity-mirror-to-axe-towns-120-year-old-newspaper/ |title=Trinity Mirror to axe 120-year-old Nuneaton Tribune - Journalism News from |publisher=HoldtheFrontPage |access-date=29 January 2017 |url-status = live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170420163302/http://www.holdthefrontpage.co.uk/2015/news/trinity-mirror-to-axe-towns-120-year-old-newspaper/ |archive-date=20 April 2017 }}
- The Nuneaton Telegraph; a localised sub-edition of the Coventry Telegraph, it was launched in 1992 (when the aforementioned Tribune switched from daily to weekly production).
- The Bedworth Local is a local business directory, news and local interest website serving Bedworth, Nuneaton, Exhall and Bulkington.
=Television news=
The Nuneaton area is covered on regional TV News by:
Notable people
- Nona Bellairs (1824–1897), writer and philanthropist.
- Nicholas Chamberlaine (1632–1715), priest, benefactor.
- Pete Doherty, (born 1979) former Libertines front-man, attended Nicholas Chamberlaine School.{{cite news |title=30 celebrities you probably didn't know were from Warwickshire |url=https://www.coventrytelegraph.net/article6833713.ece |work=Coventry Telegraph |access-date=5 March 2019 |date=17 March 2014}}
- Diane Elson, (born 1946) economist, sociologist.{{cite web|title=ELSON, Prof. Diane Rosemary PhD|url=http://www.ukwhoswho.com/view/article/oupww/whoswho/U247126/ELSON_Prof._Diane_Rosemary|publisher=Who's Who|access-date=1 May 2014}}
- Conrad Keely, (born 1972) of American rock group ...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead was a resident of Bedworth.
- Brian Locking, (1938–2020) musician, one time member of The Shadows.{{cite web |title=Grantham musician Brian 'Licorice' Locking who found fame with The Shadows has died |url=https://www.granthamjournal.co.uk/news/grantham-musician-brian-licorice-locking-who-found-fame-with-the-shadows-has-died-9125699/ |publisher=Grantham Journal |access-date=4 March 2021 |date=8 October 2020}}
- Rev Richard Mudge (1718–1763), clergyman, composer and brother of the eminent clockmaker Thomas Mudge, died here.
=Sport=
- Nick Skelton, (born 1957) winner of a gold medal in London 2012 Olympics, winner of the Hickstead Derby and European showjumping championships.
- Kyle Storer (born 1987), Professional Footballer
- Jordan McFarlane-Archer (born 1993), professional footballer.
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{Commons category|Bedworth}}
- [http://www.nuneatonhistory.com/townscapes---bedworth.html Nuneatonhistory.com – Townscapes of Bedworth & Collycroft]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20051122211442/http://www.bedworth-society.co.uk/index.html The Bedworth Society]
- [http://www.nuneatonandbedworth.gov.uk/ Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough council]
- [http://www.civichallinbedworth.co.uk/ The Civic Hall, Bedworth]
- [https://bedworthlocal.com/ Bedworth Local]
- [http://www.nicholaschamberlainetrusts.org.uk Nicholas Chamberlaine Trusts]
- [https://bedwortharmisticeday.org/ Bedworth Armistice Day]
- [https://www.ourwarwickshire.org.uk/content/location/bedworth Bedworth archives] - Our Warwickshire
{{Warwickshire}}
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Category:Towns in Warwickshire
Category:Market towns in Warwickshire
Category:Unparished areas in Warwickshire