Hednesford
Hednesford is a market town and civil parish in Staffordshire, England, within Cannock Chase District. It adjoins The Chase to the north, and the town of Cannock to the south. It is also southwest of the market town of Rugeley.
The town comprises three district council electoral wards whose populations in the 2011 census totalled 17,343. It also comprises the civil parish of Hednesford and part of the civil parish of Brindley Heath.
History
Hednesford was an important coal mining community for over a century. This is commemorated in the town centre, where a Miner's Lamp has been erected, surrounded by a wall with individual bricks giving the names of former miners. The oldest sections of the town surround the hilltop areas of the existing town; however, the lower part of the town became the focal point as the community grew with the mining industry.Between 1914 and 1918 two huge army training camps were built in the area and over a quarter of a million British and Commonwealth troops passed through destined for the Western Front. In 1938 a Royal Air Force training camp was established to train technicians in maintenance and repair of airframes and engines. No. 6 School of Technical training became better known as RAF Hednesford. The camp was later used for resettlement of Hungarian refugees fleeing from the Russian invasion of Budapest, in 1956. The site is now a part of Cannock Chase Country Park.
The urban area of Hednesford now spreads across a swathe of the northern fringe of Cannock, from Pye Green across to Heath Hayes, and is the southern gateway to Cannock Chase AONB. Economically Hednesford has suffered since the 1980s as more people travel to the larger towns and cities nearby and due to the absence of redevelopment it retains a traditional street scene with many sole traders operating speciality shops. However, the area around Anglesey Square has been landscaped to provide a pleasant public space with a public clock as a central feature. A £50 million regeneration of the town centre has taken place, with an 80,000sq ft Tesco store being the centre piece. Also, a new drill hall for the local Army Cadet Force Detachment, shops and bingo hall were constructed in 2012. The Tesco site is known as Victoria Shopping Park and the Bingo/Aldi site as Chase Gateway.
Currently, a £2.2 million grant, from Heritage Lottery Fund Grant, is being used to fund a massive refurbishment of Hednesford Park.
Demography
Town
In the decade to 2011 the number of dwellings in the town rose by 7.8% to 7,482.Of the town's 7,277 households in the 2011 census, 25.9% were one-person households including 10.7% where that person was 65 or over. 69.3% were one family with no others. 29.9% of households had dependent children including 3.4% with no adults in employment. 72.4% of households owned their homes outright or with a mortgage or loan.
Of the town's 14,206 residents in the 2011 census aged 16 and over, 30.6% were single, 51.3% married, 0.15% in a registered same-sex civil partnership, 2.4% separated, 9.0% divorced and 6.5% widowed. 26.0% had no formal qualifications and 50.0% had level 2+ qualifications or 1+ 'A' levels/ AS levels.
77.3% of the 6,597 men aged 16 to 74 were economically active, including 50.2% working full-time, 5.4% working part-time and 14.6% self-employed. The male unemployment rate was 6.6%. 67.2% of the 6,515 women aged 16 to 74 were economically active, including 31.9% working full-time, 25.4% working part-time and 3.5% self-employed. The female unemployment rate was 4.7%.
Of people in employment aged 16 to 74, 14.3% worked in basic industries, 13.9% in manufacturing, and 71.8% in service industries. While 16.9% of households did not have access to a car or van, 84.6% of people in employment travelled to work by car or van.
79.1% of residents described their health as good or very good. The proportion who described themselves as White British was 96.9%, with all white ethnic groups making up 97.9% of the population. The ethnic make-up of the rest of the population was 0.88% mixed/multiple ethnic groups, 0.56% Indian/Pakistani/Bangladeshi, 0.18% Chinese, 0.15% other Asian, 0.28% Black and 0.046% other. 2.2% of Hednesford's residents were born outside the United Kingdom.
The responses to the voluntary question "What is your religion?" were 'No religion', Christian, Buddhist, Hindu, Jewish, Muslim, Sikh and other religion. 5.9% gave no answer.
Civil parish
The civil parish of Hednesford constitutes 96.8% of the population of the town. In the 2011 census it had 16,789 residents, 7,239 dwellings, and 7,058 households.Transport
re-opened in April 1989 by British Rail. It is on the Chase Line with links operated by current franchise West Midlands Railway to Rugeley, Walsall and Birmingham. In 2019, a new London service launched.Arriva Midlands operate four main bus services:
- 25/26 Cannock - Pye Green circulars
- 62 Cannock - Burntwood
- 63 Cannock - Rugeley
Education
Hednesford and the surrounding areas also contain many primary schools.
These include:
- West Hill Primary School
- Pye Green Academy
- Red Hill Primary School
- Moor Hill Primary School
- Hazleslade Primary School
- Gorsemoor Primary School
- Heath Hayes Primary School
- St Peter's C of E Primary School
- St Joseph's Catholic Primary School
Sport
The town's semi-professional football team, Hednesford Town F.C., nicknamed "the Pitmen", currently play in the Southern League Premier Division Central and won the FA Trophy in 2004.
The town's most prominent sportsperson is former footballer Brian Horton, who played for the Pitmen in the late sixties and early seventies. After a long professional career, he went on to manage Manchester City, Macclesfield Town and Port Vale amongst others, and is currently assistant manager of Championship side Doncaster Rovers
Notable people
- Lynda Grier, CBE, educational administrator, policy advisor, and principal of Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford
- George Henry Jones a British trade unionist and local politician
- Lieutenant General Sir Alan Reay, KBE, FRCP, CStJ a senior British Army officer, Director General Army Medical Services 1981-1984.
- Phil Ford screenwriter e.g. Doctor Who & Wizards vs Aliens
- David Picken a British Anglican priest, Archdeacon of Lancaster since 2020
- Kate Walsh business woman, runner-up in BBC's The Apprentice in 2009
Sport
- Jack Miller an English footballer, with over 300 caps for Wolverhampton Wanderers and Stoke
- Tom Lyons an English footballer with 289 caps and cricketer for Staffordshire
- Harry Rogers, cricketer who played for Worcestershire
- Joe Birch an English professional footballer, more than 200 appearances
- Rob Finch an association football player, 216 senior appearances for WBA
- Harry Lane an English professional footballer who scored 74 goals in 271 appearances
- Les Talbot, professional footballer with over 200 pro appearances
- Tom Galley an English international footballer, over 200 caps, mainly for Wolverhampton Wanderers.
- Brian Horton an English former footballer, over 600 pro appearances also assistant manager
- Mark Smith a British auto racing driver