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Rugeley Town Centre

 

Town of change

Beginnings

Rugeley’s name, like that of hundreds of English places, comes from the Anglo-Saxon language. The word Hrycg, meaning a ridge or chain of hills, is put together with the word Leah, meaning a woodland clearing, to make Rugeley.

In Saxon times, this area was part of the kingdom of Mercia. When William I invaded England a rebellion was led against the Normans by Edwin, son of Earl Aelfgar of Mercia. This was crushed in 1071, and the Normans took control. The
estimated population of Rugeley was then 35-40 inhabitants.

Rugeley’s prosperity grew first from agriculture and then from a variety of other industries. By 2001 its population was 23,000 people.

From forest settlement to market town

In 1189, Rugeley was sold to the Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry by King Richard I (known as the Lionheart). At this time Rugeley was still a small
settlement and was part of the Royal Forest of Cannock, which provided hunting country for the monarch and the aristocracy. Only seventy years later, in 1259, the town had grown big enough to be granted the right to hold a weekly market.

Fire and flood

In 1709, Rugeley suffered two major disasters. The town was ravaged by fire, and the Rising Brook, the stream that runs through the town centre, burst its banks. The town had been devastated by fire only sixty years before.

The Rugeley Poisoner

In 1856 the town was rocked by the trial of Dr William Palmer, who was born and worked in Rugeley. He was found guilty of poisoning his associate, John Parsons Cook, with strychnine – the first trial of its kind. The murder took place in The Shrew, just across the street from his house. Among other victims, he was also widely believed to have murdered his wife, four of his five children, and his brother.


Dr William Palmer, the notorious ‘Rugeley Poisoner’. This likeness
was drawn from his death mask
Image courtesy of Staffordshire Arts & Museum Service

An agricultural community

For hundreds of years, Rugeley was an agricultural community. Its sheep and
horse fairs provided the opportunity for farmers from the surrounding area to
meet and sell their livestock. Reaching its peak in the mid 19th century and
lasting until the 1930s, the annual horse fair was known internationally,
and attracted trade from far and wide.

Until 1967 cattle fairs were held behind The Shrew. When afternoon business started after lunch, the market bell was rung from the steps of the pub to call the farmers back to the market.


Horse Fair in the early twentieth century. A tram-way taking
coal wagons to the canal basin ran along the right side.
Drawing courtesy of Edwina Morgan


Horse Fair facing towards the Globe Hotel.
Drawing courtesy of Edwina Morgan

 

The changing face of Rugeley

Most towns change over time, and Rugeley is no exception. Some of the views on this old postcard have changed beyond recognition. Since the 1950s and 1960s many old buildings have been demolished and new ones developed. In 1973, the town centre was made a Conservation Area, an area of special architectural or historic interest.

Coal mining and power stations

Since mediaeval times, Rugeley has been important in providing power, first in the form of coal and, more recently, from the power stations built on the edge of the town. The town was given a great boost in 1960 when it gained a new colliery, Lea Hall.


The site of the two power stations in the 1970s

The neighbouring Rugeley ‘A’ power station complex was completed in 1963. However, both this power station and the colliery closed within a few years of each other in the 1990s.

An adjoining power station, Rugeley ‘B’, was opened in 1972. In 1983 when both power stations were in operation they employed about 850 people. Today the four cooling towers of Rugeley ‘B’ continue to dominate the town’s sky-line.

Hats, glass, iron and leather Among the other industries that have played an important part in the history of Rugeley are glass-making and millinery (hat-making) and iron and leather production. Glass-making flourished near here in mediaeval times. In the 1990s mediaeval glass furnaces were excavated two miles from Rugeley. In 1419 a large quantity of the glass made there was sold to York Minster, where it was painted and used in the windows of its chancel.

For a time in the 19th century, Rugeley’s chief manufacturing industry was hatmaking. By 1834, there were about 30 journeymen hatters in the town.
There were tanneries in Rugeley from the 12th century until the mid 1900s,
and iron was produced here from the 12th century until the 1930s.

Explore and discover
Its great thoroughfare situation
 


An account of Rugeley from the early 19th century declares that Rugeley’s
prosperity was considerably enhanced by its great thoroughfare situation.

When the Trent and Mersey Canal was completed in 1777 it brought a new measure of prosperity to Rugeley. The transport links it provided promoted the growth of trade and industry.


Image courtesy of Staffordshire Arts & Museum Service

 


The opening of the Trent Valley railway line in 1847 gave Rugeley another boost. This view from the railway line, taken in 1916, shows some buildings in nearby Talbot Street. The allotments were built over in the 1930s.

Rugeley lies on the busy London-Chester road that has carried heavy traffic from the earliest times. From at least 1700 what is now The Shrew was a coaching inn. It was visited daily by passing stage coaches and road wagons.

Before pedestrianisation in 1973, we see a Dewhurst's van outside Taylor's bakery shop, with a Foden cement tanker passing on the right.

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