Clacton-on-Sea
{{short description|Seaside town in Essex, England}}
{{Redirect|Clacton}}
{{Use British English|date=June 2017}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2017}}
{{infobox UK place
|country = England
|static_image_name = Clacton-on-Sea.jpg
|static_image_caption = Clacton-on-Sea from the air in 2004
|official_name = Clacton-on-Sea
|coordinates = {{coord|51.7918|1.1457|display=inline,title}}
|label_position = left
|population_ref = {{nowrap|53,200 (Built-up area, 2021){{cite web |title=Towns and cities, characteristics of built-up areas, England and Wales |url=https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/housing/articles/townsandcitiescharacteristicsofbuiltupareasenglandandwales/census2021 |website=Census 2021 |publisher=Office for National Statistics |access-date=3 September 2023}}}}
|shire_district = Tendring
|shire_county = Essex
|region = East of England
|constituency_westminster = Clacton
|post_town = CLACTON-ON-SEA
|postcode_district = CO15, CO16
|postcode_area = CO
|dial_code = 01255
|os_grid_reference = TM170150
}}
Clacton-on-Sea, often simply called Clacton, is a seaside town and resort in the county of Essex, on the east coast of England. It is located on the Tendring Peninsula and is the largest settlement in the Tendring District, with a population of 53,200 (2021). The town is situated around {{convert|77|mi|km|abbr=off}} northeast of London, {{convert|16|mi|km|abbr=on}} southeast of Colchester and {{convert|16|mi|km|abbr=on}} south of Harwich.
The area was historically in the parish of Great Clacton. The development of the seaside resort began in the 1870s and was called Clacton-on-Sea to distinguish it from the older village about {{convert|1|mile|km}} inland. Great Clacton and Clacton-on-Sea were always administered together, forming a single urban district called Clacton between 1895 and 1974. The two settlements gradually merged into a single urban area during the twentieth century.
It lies within the United Kingdom Parliament constituency of Clacton.
Geography
Clacton-on-Sea is located between Jaywick and Holland-on-Sea along the coastline and the original village of Great Clacton, now a suburb, to the north. The local authority is Tendring District Council.
It is at the south-eastern end of the A133. The resort of Frinton-on-Sea is nearby to the north-east.
History
=Early history=
File:Clacton Spear 02.jpg, London]]
Deposits at Clacton have provided important evidence for the Lower Palaeolithic occupation of Britain by Homo heidelbergensis during the Hoxnian Interglacial, around 424-375,000 years ago, including stone tools of the titular Clactonian industry.{{cite book |last1=Laing |first1=Lloyd |last2=Laing |first2=Jennifer |date=1980 |title=The Origins of Britain |publisher=Book Club Associates |pages=50–51 |isbn=0710004311}}{{Citation |last=McNabb |first=John |title=Problems and Pitfalls in Understanding the Clactonian |date=2020 |work=Culture History and Convergent Evolution |series=Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology |pages=29–53 |editor-last=Groucutt |editor-first=Huw S. |url=http://link.springer.com/10.1007/978-3-030-46126-3_3 |access-date=2024-07-28 |place=Cham |publisher=Springer International Publishing |language=en |doi=10.1007/978-3-030-46126-3_3 |isbn=978-3-030-46125-6|url-access=subscription }} At this time Britain had a temperate deciduous forest environment and climate similar to today.{{Cite journal |last=Ashton |first=Nick |date=July 2016 |title=The human occupation of Britain during the Hoxnian Interglacial |url=https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1040618215011805 |journal=Quaternary International |language=en |volume=409 |pages=41–53 |doi=10.1016/j.quaint.2015.11.055|bibcode=2016QuInt.409...41A |url-access=subscription }}{{Cite journal |last1=Candy |first1=Ian |last2=Schreve |first2=Danielle C. |last3=Sherriff |first3=Jennifer |last4=Tye |first4=Gareth J. |date=January 2014 |title=Marine Isotope Stage 11: Palaeoclimates, palaeoenvironments and its role as an analogue for the current interglacial |url=https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0012825213001554 |journal=Earth-Science Reviews |language=en |volume=128 |pages=18–51 |doi=10.1016/j.earscirev.2013.09.006|bibcode=2014ESRv..128...18C |url-access=subscription }} The "Clacton Spear", a wooden (yew) spear found in these deposits around Clacton in 1911 is the world's oldest known wooden spear.{{cite web
|title=The Clacton Spear
|publisher=Natural History Museum
|url=http://piclib.nhm.ac.uk/results.asp?image=001066
|access-date=23 October 2012
|url-status=dead
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141028210420/http://piclib.nhm.ac.uk/results.asp?image=001066
|archive-date=28 October 2014
|df=dmy
The Domesday Book of 1086 records the village as Clachintuna.
Clacton was repeatedly surveyed by the Army in the Napoleonic Wars as a possible invasion beach-head for Napoleon and his Dutch allies. There was a large army and militia camp where Holland-on-Sea now stands. In 1810 five Martello Towers were built to guard the beaches between Colne Point to the south and what is now Holland-on-Sea to the north of the town.
In 1865 railway engineer and land developer Peter Bruff, the steamboat owner William Jackson, and a group of businessmen bought an area of undeveloped farmland adjoining low gravelly cliffs and a firm sand-and-shingle beach lying to the south-east of Great Clacton village, with the intention of establishing a new resort. One of the first facilities they built for the new resort was the pier, which opened in 1871, allowing visitors to travel by ship; the railway would not reach Clacton until 1882.{{cite book |title=Clacton-on-Sea through Time |date=2011 |publisher=Amberley Publishing |isbn=9781445627519 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=c2KIAwAAQBAJ |access-date=3 September 2023}} The town of Clacton-on-Sea was laid out rather haphazardly over the next few years; though it has a central 'grand' avenue (originally Electric Parade, now Pier Avenue) the street plan incorporates many previously rural lanes and tracks, such as Wash Lane. Plots and streets were sold off piecemeal to developers and speculators. In 1882 the Great Eastern Railway already serving the well-established resort of Walton-on-the-Naze along the coast, opened a branch line to Clacton-on-Sea railway station from a junction on the existing railway at Thorpe-le-Soken.
=Twentieth century=
Clacton grew into the largest seaside resort between Southend-on-Sea and Great Yarmouth, with some 10,000 residents by 1914 and approx. 20,000 by 1939. Due to its accessibility from the East End of London and the Essex suburbs, Clacton, like Southend, remained preferentially geared to catering for working-class and lower-middle-class holidaymakers.
For well over a century Clacton Pier has been an RNLI lifeboat station.
Just before the Second World War the building of Butlin's Holiday Camp boosted its economy, though the Army took it over between then and 1945 for use as an internment, engineer, pioneer and light anti-aircraft artillery training camp.
Four notable incidents occurred in Clacton-on-Sea during the Second World War. First, very early in the war a German airman bailed out over the town. Procedures for dealing with enemy captives were not yet well-established and he was treated as a celebrity guest for some days, including by the town council, before eventually being handed over to the military. Second, a Luftwaffe Heinkel He 111 bomber crashed into the town on 30 April 1940, demolishing several houses in the Vista Road area as one of the magnetic mines on board exploded on impact, killing the crew and two civilians; another mine was defused by experts from the Navy. Third, the Wagstaff Corner area was bombed in May 1941, demolishing some well-known buildings. Finally, a V-2 rocket hit in front of the Tower Hotel, injuring dozens of troops inside though without bringing down the structure. Clacton lay beneath the route taken by many of the V-1 flying bombs and V-2 rockets aimed at London.{{cn|date=April 2025}}
A big role in the town during the pre- and post-war period was played by the Kingsman family, which bought and developed the pier and ran a pleasure-steamer service from London. A summer sea excursion to Calais also ran until the early 1960s. Butlin's reopened the holiday camp after the war. This, along with the expansion of the nearby chalet town of Jaywick, originally a speculative private development of inter-war years, and increasingly capacious caravan sites, all swelled by the movement of retired Londoners into the area, altered the character of the town.{{cn|date=April 2025}}
Throughout the 1960s Clacton beach remained a popular summer excursion for residents of Essex and east London and in August was often crammed to capacity in the area around the Pier. The pirate radio ship MV Galaxy (originally known as USS Density), which broadcast Wonderful Radio London, was anchored offshore from 1964 until its forced closure in 1967.{{cite web |title=The Radio London Story, Part One: Big L Begins |url=https://www.offshoreradio.co.uk/bigl1.htm |access-date=2025-04-27}}{{cite web |title=The Radio London Story, Part Six: Peel, Pepper and their final hour |url= https://www.offshoreradio.co.uk/bigl3.htm |access-date=2025-04-27}}
With the advent of cheap flights to Mediterranean resorts in the 1970s, the holiday industry began to decline. Increasingly, hotels' and guest-houses' spare capacity came to be used as 'temporary' accommodation by the local authority to house those on welfare, refugees, migrants and asylum seekers. Pier Ward, in the centre of the town, is one of the poorest in the UK (nearby Jaywick is often cited{{by whom|date=April 2025}} as the poorest of all).
Since around 1970 several well-known local buildings have been demolished, including the palatial art deco Odeon Cinema (a great loss to both the town and the county); the Warwick Castle Pub; the Waverley Hotel; Barker House, a large home for the learning disabled, and John Groom's Crippleage which housed orphaned handicapped girls from London. Cordy's, a well-known large seafront restaurant has recently been demolished. The site of Butlin's Holiday Camp was redeveloped as a housing estate. The once famously crowded bus station in Jackson Road has become a car park. The Ocean Revue Theatre, where Max Bygraves made one of his first appearances, has closed.{{cite book |last=Jacobs|first=Norman |author-link=Norman Jacobs |date=1967 |title=Clacton Past and Present|publisher=WO series (War Office), ADM 1 (Naval), HO 192/3 (Civil Defence) files at the National Archives}}{{cite book |last=Jacobs|first=Norman |author-link=Norman Jacobs |date=1967 |title=The Essex Countryside|publisher=WO series (War Office), ADM 1 (Naval), HO 192/3 (Civil Defence) files at the National Archives}}
The town expanded substantially in the 1980s, 1990s and first decade of the 21st century, with new housing estates on the rural margins of town, and some brownfield developments. Many residents commute to work in Colchester, Witham, Chelmsford or London. Clacton was in the news when its town centre and seafront areas were struck by an F1/T2 tornado on 23 November 1981, as part of the record-breaking nationwide tornado outbreak on that day.{{Cite web|url=https://www.eswd.eu/cgi-bin/eswd.cgi|title=European Severe Weather Database|website=www.eswd.eu}}
=Twenty-first century=
File:Simon_King_Clacton_on_Sea_Ganesha_Visarjan_Wind_Turbines.jpg (immersion ceremony) is observed in the North Sea]]
Gunfleet Sands Offshore Wind Farm, built in the early 2000s some {{convert|3|nmi|km|0|abbr=off|spell=on}} offshore, is visible from many places in the flat hinterland of the town.
As common with many English seaside towns, unemployment has remained stubbornly high in Clacton. In 2023, Clacton won a £20 million government levelling-up grant to improve the town centre.{{cite news |url=https://www.clactonandfrintongazette.co.uk/news/23261790.clacton-wins-20m-government-level-up-town-centre/ |title=Clacton wins £20m from Government to 'level-up' town centre |last=Dwan |first=James |website=Clacton Gazette |date=19 January 2023 |access-date=19 September 2023}}
Seaside resort
File:Clacton-on-Sea West-Beach.jpg
File:Garden of Remembrance, Clacton-on Sea2.jpg
The modern day Clacton-on-Sea was founded by Peter Bruff in 1871 as a seaside resort. Originally the main means of access was by sea; Steamships operated by the Woolwich Steam Packet Company docked from 1871 at Clacton Pier which opened the same year. The pier now offers an amusement arcade and many other forms of entertainment.
People who wanted to come by road had to go through Great Clacton. In the 1920s, London Road was built to cope with the influx of holidaymakers. Later, in the 1970s, the eastern section of the A120 was opened, obviating the need for Clacton visitors to go through Colchester. Today the Paddle Steamer Waverley operates from Clacton Pier, offering pleasure boat excursions.
Clacton has a Blue Flag beach at Martello Bay (two more are locally at Dovercourt Bay and Brightlingsea).{{cite web |title=Blue Flag beaches in the UK |url=https://inews.co.uk/inews-lifestyle/travel/blue-flag-beaches-uk-full-list-england-wales-scotland-northern-ireland-how-explained/ |website=inews |date=15 May 2019 |access-date=4 September 2019}} Clacton Seafront Gardens which run along the top of the seafront west of Clacton Pier has also been awarded a Green Flag, and includes various sections with formal gardens, memorials and places to sit.
=Former Butlins=
{{main|Clacton (holiday camp)}}
In 1936, Billy Butlin bought and refurbished the West Clacton Estate, an amusement park to the west of the town. He opened a new amusement park on the site in 1937 and then, a year later on 11 June 1938, opened the second of his holiday camps. This location remained open until 1983 when, due to changing holiday tastes, Butlins decided to close the facility. It was then purchased by former managers of the camp who reopened it as a short-lived theme park, called Atlas Park. The land was then sold and redeveloped with housing.{{cite news|url=http://edition.pagesuite-professional.co.uk/Launch.aspx?referral=other&pnum=&refresh=3Ex0Hy14j5C1&EID=52357006-6cf2-46b7-874f-a85febe6a2c6&skip=true|title=Morning campers|last=Adams|first=Nicky|date=June 2008|work=Essex Life|publisher=Archant|pages=18–20|access-date=5 February 2009|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110725170452/http://edition.pagesuite-professional.co.uk/Launch.aspx?referral=other&pnum=&refresh=3Ex0Hy14j5C1&EID=52357006-6cf2-46b7-874f-a85febe6a2c6&skip=true|archive-date=25 July 2011|df=dmy-all}} (Registration required.)
Governance
File:Clacton Town Hall looking south-west (geograph 5668500).jpg]]
There are two tiers of local government covering Clacton, at district and county level: Tendring District Council, which is based at Clacton Town Hall, and Essex County Council, based in Chelmsford.
The ancient parish was called Great Clacton. Until 1891 the parish was administered by its vestry in the same way as most rural areas. As the area became more populous, largely due to the growth of the seaside resort, more urban forms of government were required. The parish of Great Clacton was made a local government district in 1891, governed by a local board.{{cite book |title=Annual Report of the Local Government Board |date=1892 |location=London |page=346 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6hEMAQAAMAAJ&dq=annual+report+local+government+board+1892+clacton&pg=PA346 |access-date=3 September 2023}} Such local boards were reconstituted as urban district councils in 1894.Local Government Act 1894 In 1895 the council changed the name of the urban district from Great Clacton to simply Clacton.{{cite news |title=Clacton Urban District Council: Change of name |url=https://www.findmypast.co.uk/search-newspapers |access-date=3 September 2023 |work=Essex County Standard |date=8 June 1895 |location=Colchester |page=4}} The legal name of the parish which covered the same area as the urban district remained Great Clacton, but as an urban parish it had no separate parish council. The neighbouring parish of Little Holland covering Holland-on-Sea was abolished in 1934 and absorbed into Clacton.{{cite web |title=Little Holland Ancient Parish / Civil Parish |url=https://visionofbritain.org.uk/unit/10243683 |website=A Vision of Britain through Time |publisher=GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth |access-date=3 September 2023}}
Clacton Urban District Council built the Town Hall on Station Road to serve both as its headquarters and as a public hall and theatre for the town, with the theatre now called the Princes Theatre. It is a neo-Georgian building, with a tall portico of composite columns flanked by two-story wings. The architect was Sir Alfred Brumwell Thomas and it was completed in 1931.{{NHLE|desc=Clacton Town Hall|num=1267903|access-date=10 March 2021}}
Clacton Urban District was abolished in 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972, with the area becoming part of the new Tendring District. No successor parish was created for the former urban district and so it become an unparished area, directly administered by Tendring District Council.{{cite legislation UK|type=si|si=The English Non-metropolitan Districts (Definition) Order 1972|year=1972|number=2039|access-date=31 May 2023}}
The current Member of Parliament for the Clacton constituency is Nigel Farage, the leader of Reform UK, who won the seat from Conservative Giles Watling in the 2024 general election.{{cite news |last1=Ahmed |first1=Jabed |title=Nigel Farage wins Clacton seat as Reform UK makes huge gains |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/nigel-farage-clacton-result-election-reform-b2573289.html |access-date=12 July 2024 |work=The Independent |date=5 July 2024}}
Media
Clacton and Frinton Gazette is the town's local newspaper.[https://www.clactonandfrintongazette.co.uk/ Clacton Journal website]
Industry
Clacton Urban District Council had provided the town with electricity since the early twentieth century from Clacton power station. Upon nationalisation of the electricity industry in 1948 ownership passed to the British Electricity Authority and later to the Central Electricity Generating Board. Electricity connections to the national grid rendered the small 2.15 megawatt (MW) internal combustion engine power station redundant. It closed in 1966; in its final year of operation it delivered 796 MWh of electricity to the town.CEGB Statistical Yearbook 1966, CEGB, London.
In 2013 Tendring District Council undertook significant work to develop a 10-year Economic Strategy for the district which includes Clacton on Sea. Now, half-way through this 10-year strategy, the approach has been refreshed to add a greater focus on the populations of Clacton and Jaywick Sands between 2020 and 2024, noting a decline in economic performance of these locations. The strategy focuses specifically on local participation within communities and addressing long term prosperity and also proposes bold action in Clacton town centre, recognising that its future is unlikely to be led by retail.{{cite web |url=https://www.tendringdc.gov.uk/sites/default/files/documents/business/regeneration/Economic%20Strategy%202020-24.pdf |title=Tendring Economic Strategy 2020-24 |work=Hatch Regeneris |via=tendringdc.gov.uk |date=November 2019 |access-date=19 September 2023}} In 2023, Clacton had the highest proportion within the UK of people classed as "economically inactive".{{cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/sep/19/clacton-on-sea-coastal-town-voted-brexit |title=Clacton-on-Sea: the 'forgotten' town that voted for Brexit |last=Moore |first=Hannah |newspaper=The Guardian |date=19 September 2023 |access-date=19 September 2023}}
Landmarks
Clacton has comparatively few buildings of architectural interest. In addition to the surviving large seafront hotels, these are:
=St John's Church, Great Clacton=
File:St. John the Baptist church, Great Clacton, Essex - geograph.org.uk - 196114.jpg
The parish church of St John, Great Clacton, is the oldest surviving building in the town; it dates from the early decades of the 12th century, though considerably altered. In the late 16th century the vicar was Eleazer Knox (d. 1591) son of John Knox and Marjory Bowes of Norham.Fasti Ecclesiae Scoticanae; by Hew Scott A local legend that smugglers used a tunnel from the coast to the Ship Inn (16th century) opposite the church is discounted by historians; the pub is more than 1.5 km from the sea. The nearby Queens Head inn may be pre-1600.
=St James's Church=
File:The Parish Church of St James Tower Road Clacton-on-Sea Essex England UK - Aisle.jpg
A large (and actually unfinished) church of 1912-13 between Tower Road and Wash Lane, St James's is a rare southern building by Temple Moore, an architect chiefly associated with the North of England. Somewhat grim on the outside (as Pevsner noted in The Buildings of Essex), the interior is surprisingly light and spare, with different orders of arch on either side of the chancel giving an asymmetrical feel. The building is only a third of its intended size; the original plans had included a large tower at the west end. Ordered for Anglo-Catholic worship, it is large, without pews, and boasts an impressive reredos which finishes in a canopy at the east end.
=Clacton railway station=
File:2013 at Clacton-on-Sea - station frontage.jpg
The main station building dates from 1929. A typical neo-Georgian 'late Imperial'-style building, it is notable for the decorative use of moulded 'fasces' on either side of the main entrance.{{cn|date=April 2025}}
=Martello Towers=
There are three Martello towers between the Pier and Jaywick Sands to the south; they date from 1809 to 1812. The immensely thick brick walls look circular but are, in fact, rounded triangles, designed to deflect cannon-fire. The tower nearest the pier was, unusually, built within a moat. The name comes from similar fortifications in Mortella, Corsica.
=Moot Hall=
A real oddity: in Albany Gardens West, near the seafront to the north of the Pier, this house of the 1400s was moved from the village of Hawstead, Suffolk and reconstructed here in 1911 – though considerably modernised and altered – for a London builder named J H Gill.
=St Helena Hospice=
The former hospice is situated in Jackson Road, in the town centre. It has a curved wood and brick corner design of 2001-2 by the Purcell Miller Tritton architectural partnership. The building has been redeveloped and now houses eighteen modern, privately let, dwellings.
=Jaywick Sands=
{{Main|Jaywick}}
A huddle of self-builds and kit-houses were built in the 1920s and '30s in a bleak field dangerously close to the mean sea level. It has been described as resembling "a shanty town", but it also has its admirers who call it "a great place to live."{{Cite web |title=Jaywick: Shanty town? Not us, say residents |last=Elks |first=Sonia |work=Daily Gazette |date=25 September 2008 |access-date=20 May 2023 |url= https://www.gazette-news.co.uk/news/3698559.jaywick-shanty-town-not-us-say-residents/ |quote=}}
Jaywick was attractive to workers from the Ford plant in Dagenham, who bought strips of cheap agricultural land for holiday homes. Following the destruction of many East-End homes during the Second World War, they moved there permanently. The area was badly damaged by the floods of 1953, when 35 residents died; most settlements were swept away.{{Cite web |title=How Jaywick Sands became the most deprived area in the UK |last=Stanley |first=Bob |work=The Guardian |date=1 July 2012|access-date=20 May 2023 |url= https://www.theguardian.com/society/shortcuts/2012/jul/01/jaywick-sands-most-deprived-uk |quote=}}
=Clacton Pier=
{{Main|Clacton Pier}}
Clacton Pier was the first building of the new resort of Clacton-on-Sea; it opened officially on 27 July 1871. It was {{convert|160|yd|m|abbr=on}} in length and {{convert|12|ft|m|abbr=on}} wide.{{Cite web |title=Pier History|work=Clacton Pier|access-date=20 May 2023 |url= https://www.clactonpier.co.uk/about/pier-history/ |quote=}} It was built originally as a landing point for goods and passengers, as Clacton was becoming an increasingly popular destination for day trippers.
In 1893, the pier was lengthened to {{convert|360|m|yd|order=flip|abbr=on}} and entertainment facilities were added.{{Cite web|url=http://www.theheritagetrail.co.uk/piers/clacton%20pier.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120419131351/http://www.theheritagetrail.co.uk/piers/clacton%20pier.htm|url-status=dead|title=The Heritage Trail|archive-date=19 April 2012}} Bought by Ernest Kingsman in 1922, it remained in the ownership of the Kingsman family until 1971.{{Cite web|url=http://www.clactonhistory.com/pier.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090204090429/http://www.clactonhistory.com/pier.htm|url-status=usurped|title=Buy Generic Accutane|archive-date=4 February 2009|website=www.clactonhistory.com}} In March 2009, the pier was purchased by the Clacton Pier Company, who installed a {{convert|50|ft|m|abbr=on}} helter-skelter as a new focal point.{{cite web|url=http://www.gazette-news.co.uk/news/4257303.New_arrival_at_Clacton_Pier_is_not_just_any_helter_skelter___/|title=New arrival at Clacton Pier is not just any helter skelter...|date=4 April 2009 |url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090409061719/http://www.gazette-news.co.uk/news/4257303.New_arrival_at_Clacton_Pier_is_not_just_any_helter_skelter___/|archive-date=9 April 2009|df=dmy-all}}
=Gunfleet Sands offshore wind farm=
{{Main|Gunfleet Sands Offshore Wind Farm}}
A 48-turbine wind farm is located {{convert|7|km|mi|order=flip}} south-east of the Clacton coast. It has been in commercial operation since 2010 and has an overall capacity of 173 MW.{{Cite web |title=Our offshore wind farms|work=Orsted|date=2023 |access-date=20 May 2023 |url= https://orsted.com/en/what-we-do/renewable-energy-solutions/offshore-wind/our-offshore-wind-farms |quote=}}
Climate
Clacton has an oceanic climate (Köppen "Cfb"), but with lower precipitation than most of the UK and Western Europe. This makes for warm and relatively dry summers, and also fairly chilly winter days. For the 1961–1990 observation period, Clacton averaged 103.7 days with at least 1mm of rain, and 24.3 air frosts a year- comparable to south west coastal locations.
{{Weather box|location = Clacton 1961–1990, 16 m asl.
|metric first = Yes
|single line = Yes
|Jan high C = 6.1
|Feb high C = 6.3
|Mar high C = 8.6
|Apr high C = 11.0
|May high C = 14.8
|Jun high C = 18.2
|Jul high C = 20.3
|Aug high C = 20.3
|Sep high C = 18.1
|Oct high C = 14.5
|Nov high C = 9.7
|Dec high C = 7.2
|year high C = 14.5
|Jan low C = 1.8
|Feb low C = 1.9
|Mar low C = 3.1
|Apr low C = 4.9
|May low C = 8.3
|Jun low C = 11.2
|Jul low C = 13.3
|Aug low C = 13.5
|Sep low C = 11.7
|Oct low C = 9.3
|Nov low C = 5.0
|Dec low C = 2.8
|year low C = 7.2
|Jan precipitation mm = 49
|Feb precipitation mm = 31
|Mar precipitation mm = 43
|Apr precipitation mm = 40
|May precipitation mm = 40
|Jun precipitation mm = 45
|Jul precipitation mm = 43
|Aug precipitation mm = 43
|Sep precipitation mm = 48
|Oct precipitation mm = 48
|Nov precipitation mm = 55
|Dec precipitation mm = 50
|year precipitation mm = 535
|Jan sun = 58.3
|Feb sun = 75.6
|Mar sun = 117.6
|Apr sun = 155.9
|May sun = 207.8
|Jun sun = 211.9
|Jul sun = 200.1
|Aug sun = 199.3
|Sep sun = 153.4
|Oct sun = 117.9
|Nov sun = 75.0
|Dec sun = 54.2
|year sun = 1627.0
|source 1 = Met Office{{cite web
| url =http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/climate/uk/averages/sites/39.html | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20010210224457/http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/climate/uk/averages/sites/39.html | archive-date =10 February 2001 | title = Clacton 1961–90 averages | access-date = 16 September 2011 | publisher = Met Office}}
|date=September 2011
}}
Demography
Clacton's population increased substantially during the 20th century from 7,456 at the 1901 census to 25,000 in the 1960s, 45,065 in 1991 and reaching over 53,000 by 2001.
Population as 107,237 according to Dataloft Inform, Land Registry, 2011 Census.
Education
{{Unsourced section|date=June 2025}}
The town is served by two secondary schools, Clacton Coastal Academy and Clacton County High School.
Transport
{{Unsourced section|date=June 2025}}
File:Weeley By-pass (Mk 2) - geograph.org.uk - 124855.jpg bypass at Weeley]]
File:Clacton-on-Sea - Greater Anglia 321335 and 321443.jpg]]
Clacton-on-Sea is located at the terminus of the A133 road, which runs between Clacton and Colchester.
The town is served by Clacton-on-Sea railway station, a terminus of the Sunshine Coast Line which links the town with Colchester. Trains are operated by Greater Anglia.
Clacton Airfield has been active since its use by the Royal Air Force during the Second World War. It does not operate scheduled passenger flights. In the 1990s, the airfield was featured in the BBC Television series Airport.
Notable people
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The following were all born or have lived in Clacton-on-Sea:
- George Wylie Hutchinson (1852–1942), Canadian artist, lived in Clacton in retirement
- Arthur Townsend (1883-1937), long-distance runner
- Edward Pennell (1894–1974), WWI flying ace and politician
- Joan Kiddell-Monroe (1908–1972), author and illustrator of children's books
- Ivy Benson, musician, retired to Clacton in the early 1980s
- Pat Fletcher (1916–1985) golfer, born in Clacton-on-Sea and emigrated to Canada
- Jennifer Worth (1935–2011), nurse and musician{{Cite news|title=Jennifer Worth|date=9 July 2011|work=The Times|issue=70307|page=84}}
- Mike Everitt (born 1941), footballer
- Graham Hurley (born 1946), crime fiction writer
- Paul Barber (born 1951), actor
- Steve Foley, footballer
- Stephen D. Nash (born 1954), wildlife artist
- Steve Wright (born 1959), footballer
- Barry Lamb (born 1963), musician, composer
- Beth Goddard (born 1969), actress
- Paul Banks (born 1978), singer
- Ian Westlake (born 1983), footballer
- Tom Eastman (born 1991), footballer
- Rob Daly (born 1986), footballer
Cultural references
On the Easter weekend of 1964, rival youth gangs of Mods and Rockers descended upon Clacton-on-Sea. They created mild havoc by fighting with each other.{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/may/18/newsid_2511000/2511245.stm|title=BBC ON THIS DAY – 18 – 1964: Mods and Rockers jailed after seaside riots|date=18 May 1964 |url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160306021547/http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/may/18/newsid_2511000/2511245.stm|archive-date=6 March 2016|df=dmy-all}}{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-essex-27062074|title=Mods and rockers 50 years on since Clacton 'invasion'|first=Laurence|last=Cawley|work=BBC News |date=20 April 2014|via=bbc.co.uk|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160811183433/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-essex-27062074|archive-date=11 August 2016|df=dmy-all}}
The music video for "Always on My Mind" by the Pet Shop Boys was filmed in Clacton, which was also the setting for their film It Couldn't Happen Here.{{cite web|url=http://petshopboys.co.uk/history/1987|title=History: 1987|website=petshopboys.co.uk|access-date=30 April 2018|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171024194350/http://petshopboys.co.uk/history/1987|archive-date=24 October 2017|df=dmy-all}} Parts of the 2019 film Yesterday (working title All You Need Is Love) were also filmed in Clacton.{{cite news |url=http://www.gazette-news.co.uk/news/16187446.Danny_Boyle_s_new_Beatles_musical_is_being_filmed_in_north_Essex/ |title=Danny Boyle's new Beatles musical was being filmed in north Essex |first=Chris |last=Wilkin |date=26 April 2018 |newspaper=Daily Gazette |access-date=10 January 2023}}
Gallery
File:Clacton-on-Sea 700.jpg|Town centre
File:Clacton memorial gardens.jpg|Memorial Gardens
File:Clacton_Pier_01_(Piotr_Kuczynski).jpg|Pier entrance
File:Clacton_Beach_01_(Piotr_Kuczynski).jpg|The beach
File:King's Walk commemorative stone, Clacton.JPG|King's Parade commemorative stone (1911)
File:Towers_Clacton.jpg|The Towers (once St Osyth's Teacher Training College hall of residence)
File:Clacton on seamap.jpg|A map from 1940
File:Garden of Remembrance,Clacton-on Sea1.jpg|Garden of Remembrance
File:View of Clacton-on-Sea viewed from the Pier.jpg|Clacton from the Pier
See also
Notes
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References
- {{Cite book|author=Jacobs, Norman|title=Clacton Past|publisher=Phillimore|location=Chichester|year=2002|isbn=1-86077-225-0}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20141028210420/http://piclib.nhm.ac.uk/results.asp?image=001066 The Clacton Spear]. The Natural History Museum. (2012). Retrieved 2012-02-16.
External links
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{{Wikivoyage|Clacton|Clacton-on-Sea}}
- [http://www.tendringdc.gov.uk Tendring District Council]
{{Essex}}
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Category:Seaside resorts in Essex
Category:Populated coastal places in Essex
Category:Aviation accidents and incidents locations in England