Knighton, Powys

Knighton
Welsh: Tref-y-clawdd

Broad Street
Knighton
 Knighton shown within Powys
Population 3,172 (2011)[1](3,007 in Powys, 165 in Shropshire)
OS grid referenceSO285725
CommunityKnighton
Principal areaPowys
Ceremonial countyPowys
CountryWales
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post town KNIGHTON
Postcode district LD7 1
Dialling code 01547
Police Dyfed-Powys
Fire Mid and West Wales
Ambulance Welsh
EU Parliament Wales
UK ParliamentBrecon & Radnorshire
List of places
UK
Wales
Powys

Coordinates: 52°20′38″N 3°02′56″W / 52.344°N 3.049°W / 52.344; -3.049

Knighton /ˈntən/ (Welsh: Tref-y-clawdd Welsh pronunciation: [trɛvəˈklauð] or Trefyclo) is a small market town and community situated chiefly in Powys, Wales, within the historic county boundaries of Radnorshire. Lying on the River Teme,[2] the town straddles the English-Welsh border; Knighton railway station, as well as a small part of the town's built-up area, is located in Shropshire, England. Knighton is the sixth largest town in Powys. The name Knighton derives from Old English meaning 'A settlement of servants' Cniht or cnihta (forming the now used 'knight' aspect) originally meaning servant rather than the oft mistaken 'Knight' as in the soldier. This was both an Anglo-Saxon settlement (though no trace of this has ever been located) and later a Norman fortified town. Tref-y-clawdd, its Welsh name, is not a translation: it means 'town on the dyke' (i.e. Offa's Dyke) and not Knighton, and is first recorded in 1262.

Knighton Church, 1910's

History

The name Knighton probably derives from the Old English words cniht and tūn meaning, respectively, "... a soldier, personal follower, young man, servant, thane, freeman" and "... farm, settlement, homestead". This implies that the settlement was perhaps founded as the result of a grant of land to freemen.[3][4] By contrast the Welsh name officially given to the town in 1971 (Tref-y-Clawdd) is more straightforward and translates simply as the town on the dyke.[5]

Inhabitants are Knightonians, Knightoners or merely from Knighton.

Inevitably, Knighton's earliest history is obscure but there are local clues: Caer Caradoc (an Iron Age hillfort associated with Caradoc or Caractacus) is 2 miles (3 km) away and just off the road towards Clun.[6] Watling Street, a Roman road, passes a few miles to the east at Leintwardine. Any settlements around the Knighton area would have been part of the Iron Age kingdom of Cornovii which consisted of the modern-day counties as Cheshire, Shropshire, North Staffordshire, North Herefordshire, parts of Powys and Worcestershire.

Knighton is known for a well-preserved section of Offa's Dyke.[7] Intriguingly, Wat's Dyke also runs parallel to Offa's Dyke and a few miles to the east. An earthwork that runs north-south along the English/Welsh border from Basingwerk near Holywell to Oswestry.[8] The dykes aside, two Norman castles, constructed in the 12th century, are the oldest survivors in modern Knighton.[9] The town became a borough in 1203, with a charter permitting a weekly market and annual fair.[10] The castle was besieged by Owain Glyndŵr in 1402 and the castle and much of the town were destroyed.[11] The major battle of the rebellion was fought at Pilleth (Welsh: Bryn Glas) 3 miles (5 km) south of the town in the same year.

Broad St. Knighton, c.1910

The town's church dates from the 11th century,[12] but much of it was rebuilt in the 19th century. It is one of only two in Wales dedicated to St Edward; the patron saint of England before St George.[10] This dedication to an English saint is a symptom of the dual English/Welsh nature of the town that was not legally resolved until 1535 when Knighton was finally confirmed as part of Wales by the Acts of Union.[13] Knighton also has a Baptist chapel and a small Catholic church.

Arrival of the railway

Knighton first prospered as a centre of the wool trade in the 15th century[14] and was later an important point on the two drover routes from Montgomery to Hereford, and from London to Aberystwyth. Otherwise, Knighton was remote from the centres of commerce. It seemed likely that the railway revolution would also fail to reach the town; the 1840s and 1850s saw considerable railway building right across Great Britain but Radnorshire had a small population and little industry. The construction of the railway was made economically viable – just – by an entrepreneurial drive to connect the Mumbles and Milford Haven with the cities and factories of the industrial Midlands.[15] The Knighton Railway Company was formed by local landowners and businessmen to build a line from Craven Arms to the town.[16][17] Work began in August 1858 and the line reached Knighton in March 1861. The station itself was built in 1865.[17]
To mark the accession of H.M. Queen Elizabeth II in 1953 the initials "ER" were planted out in deciduous trees within an evergreen forest on the hill to the north of the town.[18]

In August 1970, Knighton hosted a rock festival with bands such as The Move and the somewhat more obscure Pete Brown & Piblokto, Roger Bunn, Forever More, Clark-Hutchinson, James Litherland's Brotherhood (James was originally part of Colosseum) and Killing Floor. Comperes were radio DJ Pete Drummond and local resident and bluesman Alexis Korner, who also performed.[19]

Governance

Politics

After the Acts of Union, Knighton was for nearly 450 years part of the traditional County of Radnorshire. In common with many ancient counties Radnorshire ceased to exist in 1974 and was subsumed in the county of Powys.[20]

The town council of 13 councillors elects a largely ceremonial mayor.[21] The mayor for 2008 is Ken Fincham.[22] Real municipal authority lies with Powys County Council. Above the county council, the National Assembly for Wales forms the next tier of government.

Knighton falls within the Westminster constituency of Brecon and Radnorshire and the current MP is Christopher Davies – a Conservative. The Principality forms one large Wales European Parliamentary constituency. It is part of the National Assembly for Wales constituency of Brecon and Radnorshire and represented by Kirsty Williams AM; she is a Welsh Liberal Democrat. The town returns a single councillor to Powys County Council; currently Mr K Harris (2011).[23]

English part

The few roads and houses that lie across the border in England are part of the civil parish of Stowe, in the county of Shropshire. This is part of the Westminster constituency of Ludlow and the current MP is Philip Dunne – a Conservative. It also lies in the European Parliamentary Constituency of West Midlands (European Parliament constituency).

Public services

Knighton has a fire station served by a part-time crew and part of the Mid and West Wales Fire and Rescue Service. Knighton's police station is also part-time; the local force is Dyfed-Powys Police.

Knighton has a hospital on Ffrydd Road on the site of and using some of the former buildings of the workhouse. It has maternity facilities but no accident and emergency capacity. Primary care is provided by two GP practices and a Boots pharmacy.[24]
Social housing is largely provided by two housing associations; one based in Wales (Mid Wales Housing Association) and another in England (South Shropshire Housing Association).[25][26]

Twinning

Knighton has been twinned with the small Breton town of Varades since August 2009.[27]

Demography

Religion %[28]
Buddhist 0.13
Christian 74.33
Hindu 0.00
Jewish 0.00
Muslim 0.13
No religion 16.14
Other 0.32
Sikh 0.00
Not stated 8.91
AgePercentage[29]
0–1520.57
16+172.60
18–4430.47
45–5920.97
60–8443.87
85+2.50
YearPopulation:[30][31][32]
18411,404
18511,566
18611,853
18711,946
18811,905
18911,813
19012,139
20013,043
20053,336
Knighton Compared
2011 UK CensusKnightonPowysWales
Total population3,007132,9763,063,456,
Speaks and or reads Welsh12.3%28.0%26.7%
Non-white0.7%0.8%4.4%
Born in Wales32.9%49.8%72.7%
Welsh ethnicity (self-declared)28.2%43.3%57.5%
Welsh or Welsh and British ethnicity 31.5%48.5%64.6%
Unemployed2.88%4.12%3.30%
No qualifications33.63%22.60%23.61%

Dry statistics that confirm Knighton's slow growth since the early nineteenth century. The 2001 Census provides a snapshot of Knighton today and allows comparisons with the county and Wales as a whole.[17][33] Knightononians are less likely to describe their identity as Welsh, compared with other parts of Wales. It is also more homogenous and enjoys higher rates of employment.[34]

Culture

Attractions

Clock Tower

On the last Saturday in August the town holds its annual Carnival and Show, which attracts thousands of visitors to the town from all over the world.[35] It features two parades, one at midday, and another at around 8 pm; these consist of various themed carnival floats and people dressed in fancy dress. The show takes place at the town's showground at Bryn-y-Castell; also home to Knighton Town F.C., Knighton Cricket Club and Knighton Hockey Club.

Knighton Community Centre is the towns largest venue and plays host to many events such as discos, performances, wrestling, bands, artists along with local clubs and organisations.

Within the town are the visible remains of two early castle mottes.[36] One at Bryn-y-Castell and the other hidden behind the fire station and in a private garden.[36]

Just outside Knighton and visible for many miles, is an observatory with a telescope, Europe's largest camera obscura and a planetarium. The observatory is part of the Spaceguard UK[37] project which searches for asteroids that might threaten the earth.

The Clock Tower– similar to those in Rhayader, Hay on Wye and Machynlleth– built in 1872 is a central landmark[38][39] and visible in the picture above.

Knighton is at the centre or the start of two National Trails; Glyndŵr's Way and Offa's Dyke Path. The Offa's Dyke Association has a visitors' centre in the town alongside the site of the ceremony at which John Hunt, Baron Hunt of Llanfair Waterdine inaugurated the long distance footpath in 1971.[40] Much of the route has higher status than footpath, though, so horse riders and vehicles can use it,.[41] It is a walk recommended by the Daily Telegraph.[42] A further trail– the Jack Mytton Way– passes nearby and yet another– Wat's Dyke Way– is proposed.[43]

Cultural references

Knighton has served as a location for two major films. First, Gone to Earth (released 1950), directed by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger used the nearby location of Pentre, New Invention.[44][45] Second Best (released 1994), starring William Hurt was filmed, in part, in Knighton.[46]

The Oscar-winning actor Julie Christie lived nearby in the 1970s.[47] The actor Richard Thorp, famous as the tubby former publican Alan Turner in Emmerdale, lived at Skyborry.[48]

Knighton is mentioned in A Shropshire Lad by A E Houseman:[49]

We still had sorrows to lighten,

One could not always be glad,
And lads knew trouble at Knighton,
When I was a Knighton lad

Bruce Chatwin was inspired to write his novel On the Black Hill by a hill of the same name just 2 miles (3 km) North of the town and on the road towards Clun. Chatwin stayed nearby in Purslow with friends during the 1970s.[50] Of perhaps less literary note, Guy N Smith's book The Knighton Vampires is based locally.[51]
The musician, songwriter, historian, and broadcaster Alexis Korner also lived nearby in the 1970s.

Sport

Bowling Club

In common with many small towns, Knighton has rugby, cricket,[52] football and hockey teams.[53][54] It also has a 9-hole Golf course established in 1906, and designed by Harry Vardon.[55][56]

The football club, Knighton Town, plays in the Mid Wales League and Aspidistra Radnorshire Cup. The footballer Arthur Rowley, brother of England international Jack– managed the town's football team.[57]
For recreational sportsmen and women a swimming pool and leisure centre are available.[58][59]

In July 2009, Knighton hosted round 2 of the British Enduro Championship.[60][61]

The Tour of Britain passed through Knighton in 2014 [62]

Notable residents

Saxophonist and composer Dick Heckstall-Smith was raised near the town.[63]

Commodore Paul Webb, one of three Spitfire pilots who took part in the shooting down of the first German aircraft attacking a target on British soil during World War II.[64]

Emma Watkins, wife of David Manners, 11th Duke of Rutland and chatelaine of Belvoir Castle, was born and raised locally.

Sir Simon Gourlay, former president of the NFU farms locally.[65][66] Kenneth Turpin, a former Provost of Oriel College, Oxford and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford retired to the town.

Chaz Davies was born in Knighton. He is the 2011 World Supersport champion.

Alfred Edwards businessman. He was, along with Herbert Kilpin, one of the charter members of Italian football club A.C. Milan, which was originally named Milan Foot-Ball and Cricket Club, and was elected the first president of the club.[67][68]

Economy

The town has a variety of shops serving a large rural hinterland and employing 18% of the active population and is, after manufacturing (18.81%), the largest employment sector.[69] Otherwise, and in common with many small towns, Knighton has little industry.[70] Most young people leave after completing their education. Tourism is crucial and, consequently, the area was hit hard by the foot and mouth epidemic of 2001.[71]
Although wages are low (e.g. 20%+ of homes have no car[17]) Knighton has an unemployment rate (2001) of just 2.88%.[17]
Responsibility for economic development lies with the Welsh Assembly Government. Knighton remoteness makes it an unlikely choice for the commuter and, consequently, the majority of the working population (69.45% in 2001) work within a 12 miles (19 km) Travel to Work Area.[72]

Education

Knighton has a primary school[73] but for state secondary education, pupils travel by bus 8 miles (13 km) to John Beddoes School in Presteigne. Until 1974 Knighton had a secondary modern school, on the site of the current primary school.[74]
Knighton Church in Wales Primary school (until 1998 – Knighton Voluntary Primary School) has 299 pupils (2008) and in the most recent Estyn inspection was graded Good or Satisfactory; the inspectors were largely positive but criticised "low expectations".[75]

Geography

Entry to Knighton

Location

Knighton is 137 miles (220 km) from the UK capital city, London; 86 miles (138 km) from the Welsh capital of Cardiff; and, 19 miles (31 km) from the county town, Llandrindod Wells.[76] For the smaller part of Knighton that is in Shropshire, the district administrative centre of Ludlow is 16 miles (26 km) distant and the county town of Shrewsbury is 34 miles (55 km) away. The town is remote but is connected with the following towns and villages.

Knighton is a nucleated settlement centred on the clock tower with limited ribbon development along the A roads.

Geology and geomorphology

River Teme in spate

Knighton is at 52°20′40″N 3°03′0″W / 52.34444°N 3.05000°W / 52.34444; -3.05000. It is in a sparsely populated tract of mid-Wales and the English border characterised by a hilly plateau cut by narrow river-valleys with a broadly east-west axis. To the west, ground rises steeply towards Radnor Forest, and to the north, more gently, to the summit of Clun Forest. Turning east, the elevation falls gently to the Shropshire Plain. To the south of the town stands Llan Wen hill.
The town centre lies at circa 174 metres (571 ft) above sea level although the surrounding hills – Bailey Hill the highest – rise to 418 metres (1,371 ft) above sea level. The only major river is the River Teme.
According to Samuel Lewis (a mid 19th century visitor):

.... at the head of a deep vale sheltered on all sides by hills of lofty elevation, crowned with timber of luxuriant growth, and commanding extensive and finely varied prospects over the surrounding country[77]

Knighton rests on Ludlovian rocks of the Silurian Period and was close to the southern edge of the ice-sheet during the last ice age.[78]

Climate

The average temperature and rainfall figures taken between 1971 and 2000 at the Met Office weather station in Shawbury, can be seen on that page. Although 35 miles (56 km) away, Shawbury is the nearest recording station and has a similar climate. Knighton is in the rain shadow of the Cambrian Mountains and consequently is slightly warmer and substantially drier than the Wales average.[79]

On 18 August 2004, fish fell from the sky in one of the most recent instances of raining animals within the United Kingdom.[80]

Transport

See also: Knighton travel guide from Wikivoyage

Knighton is approximately 30 miles (48 km) midway between the larger towns and cities of Shrewsbury and Hereford and at the junction of the A4113 road and the A488 road.[81]

Local bus services are very limited and heavily subsidised.[82][83] Knighton has a railway station on the Heart of Wales Line.

The nearest international airport is at Birmingham. Light aircraft can fly from Welshpool Airport and Shobdon Aerodrome.

The River Teme in its higher reaches is not navigable.

References

  1. "Ward/Town population 2011". Retrieved 11 November 2015.
  2. The town should not be confused with the village of Knighton-on-Teme, further downriver in Worcestershire, England.
  3. Institute for Name Studies. "A Key to English Place-Names (Knighton Staffs but sharing same etymology". Retrieved 15 July 2009.
  4. "Ancestry.co.uk". Retrieved 11 March 2008.
  5. "InterTran". Retrieved 11 March 2008.
  6. "The National Gazetteer of Great Britain and Ireland (1868)". Retrieved 19 February 2007.
  7. William Camden. "Chorographicall Description of the most flourishing Kingdomes, England, Scotland, and Ireland (London, 1610)". Retrieved 19 February 2007.
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  10. 1 2 "Clwyd Powys Archaeological Trust". Retrieved 19 February 2007.
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  15. "Powys Digital History Project". Retrieved 11 March 2008.
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  17. 1 2 3 4 5 "Powys County Council – transport in Knighton and district". Retrieved 20 November 2007.
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  21. "Knighton Town Council". Retrieved 23 January 2008.
  22. "Knighton Town Council". Retrieved 23 January 2008.
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  41. The Definitive Map and Statement of rights of way for the relevant counties
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