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==Toponymy==
==Toponymy==
The first mention of Hastings is found in the late 8th century in the form ''Hastingas''. This is derived from the Old English tribal name ''[[Haestingas|Hæstingas]]'', meaning "Hæsta's people", "the family/followers of Hæsta". [[Symeon of Durham]] records the victory of [[Offa]] in 771 over the ''Hestingorum gens'', that is, "the people of the Hastings tribe", and the same tribe gave their name to [[Hastingleigh]] in Kent. The place name ''Hæstingaceaster'' is found in the [[Anglo-Saxon Chronicle]] entry for 1050,<ref>Eilert Ekwall, ''The Oxford Dictionary of English Place Names'', Oxford University Press 1936.</ref><ref>Patrick Hanks and Flavia Hodges, ''The Oxford Names Companion'', Oxford University Press 2002. ISBN 0-19-860561-7</ref> and may be an alternative name for Hastings. However, the absence of any archaeological remains of or documentary evidence for a Roman fort at Hastings suggest that ''Hæstingaceaster'' may refer to a different settlement, most likely that based on the Roman remains at [[Pevensey]].<ref>Pamela Combes and Malcolm Lyne,"Hastings, Haestingaceaster and Haestingaport: a question of identity". ''Sussex Archaeological Collections'', 133 (1995), 213–24. ISSN 01438204</ref>
The first mention of Hastings is found in the late 8th century in the form ''Hastingas''. This is derived from the Old English tribal name ''[[Haestingas|Hæstingas]]'', meaning "Hæsta's people", "the family/followers of Hæsta". [[Symeon of Durham]] records the victory of [[Offa]] in 771 over the ''Hestingorum gens'', that is, "the people of the Hastings tribe", and the same tribe gave their name to [[Hastingleigh]] in Kent. The place name ''Hæstingaceaster'' is found in the [[Anglo-Saxon Chronicle]] entry for 1050,<ref>Eilert Ekwall, ''The Oxford Dictionary of English Place Names'', Oxford University Press 1936.</ref><ref>Patrick Hanks and Flavia Hodges, ''The Oxford Names Companion'', Oxford University Press 2002. ISBN 0-19-860561-7</ref> and may be an alternative name for Hastings. However, the absence of any archaeological remains of or documentary evidence for a Roman fort at Hastings suggest that ''Hæstingaceaster'' may refer to a different settlement, most likely that based on the Roman remains at [[Pevensey]].<ref>Pamela Combes and Malcolm Lyne,"Hastings, Haestingaceaster and Haestingaport: a question of identity". ''Sussex Archaeological Collections'', 133 (1995), 213–24. ISSN 01438204</ref>

Hastings is also one of many neighborhoods in Alvin Texas. Other hoods are Resoft Park, Eastside Barrio, Pine Colony and much more. Hastings is also known as 128 or Cr128hastings, hastings is between Alvin Texas and Pearland Texas. Two mainly gangs stay in hastings, the crips (SEC)and east side lokos (ESL).


==History==
==History==

Revision as of 20:25, 3 June 2011

Hastings
Town and Borough
Borough of Hastings
Hastings Old Town viewed from East Hill
Hastings Old Town viewed from East Hill
Coat of arms of Hastings
Hastings shown within East Sussex
Hastings shown within East Sussex
Sovereign StateUnited Kingdom
Constituent CountryEngland
RegionSoutheast England
CountyEast Sussex
DistrictHastings
Government
Leader & Cabinet
 • TypeBorough
 • MPAmber Rudd
 • Governing bodyHastings Borough Council
 • MayorKim Forward (Lab)
Population
 (2022)
 • Borough
Ranked
Time zoneUTC+0 (GMT)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+1 (British Summer Time)
Area code01424
PoliceSussex
FireE. Sussex
AmbulanceS.E. Coast
Grid referenceTQ821095
ONS code21UD
London Distance64 miles (103 km)
Websitewww.hastings.gov.uk

Hastings is a town and Borough on the South coast of England, in East Sussex. It includes originally separate settlements such as Ore and Hollington, as well as the inevitable growth of the town through the building of new estates.

In historical terms, Hastings can claim fame through its connection with the Norman conquest of England; and also because it became one of the medieval Cinque Ports. Hastings was, for centuries, an important fishing port; although much reduced, it has the largest beach-based fishing fleet in England. As with many other such places, the town became a watering place in the 1760s, and then, with the coming of the railway, a seaside resort. The town is sometimes referred to as "the birthplace of television" since the pioneer of television, John Logie Baird, lived at 21 Linton Crescent from 1922 to 1924.

The attraction of Hastings as a tourist destination continues; although the number of hotels has decreased, it caters for wider tastes, being home to internationally-based cultural and sporting events, such as chess and running. It has set out to become "a modern European town" and seeks to attract commercial business in the many industrial sites round the borough.[1]

Toponymy

The first mention of Hastings is found in the late 8th century in the form Hastingas. This is derived from the Old English tribal name Hæstingas, meaning "Hæsta's people", "the family/followers of Hæsta". Symeon of Durham records the victory of Offa in 771 over the Hestingorum gens, that is, "the people of the Hastings tribe", and the same tribe gave their name to Hastingleigh in Kent. The place name Hæstingaceaster is found in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle entry for 1050,[2][3] and may be an alternative name for Hastings. However, the absence of any archaeological remains of or documentary evidence for a Roman fort at Hastings suggest that Hæstingaceaster may refer to a different settlement, most likely that based on the Roman remains at Pevensey.[4]

Hastings is also one of many neighborhoods in Alvin Texas. Other hoods are Resoft Park, Eastside Barrio, Pine Colony and much more. Hastings is also known as 128 or Cr128hastings, hastings is between Alvin Texas and Pearland Texas. Two mainly gangs stay in hastings, the crips (SEC)and east side lokos (ESL).

History

Early history

There is evidence of prehistoric settlements at the site of the town: flint arrowheads and Bronze Age artefacts have been found; Iron Age forts have been excavated on both the East and West Hills suggests an early move to the safety of the valley in between, so that the settlement was already a port when the Romans arrived in Britain for the first time in 55 BC. At this time they began to exploit the iron (Wealden rocks provide a plentiful supply of the ore), and so the port was useful to them. One of the many local sites where the iron was worked at Beauport Park, to the north of the town, which employed up to one thousand men and is considered to have been the third largest in the Roman Empire.[5]

With the departure of the Romans the town suffered setbacks. The Beauport site had been abandoned; and natural and man-made attacks began. The Sussex coast has always suffered from occasional violent storms; with the additional hazard of longshore drift (the eastward movement of shingle along the coast) the coastline has been frequently changing. The original Roman port could now well be under the sea.[6]

Man-made attacks possibly included the Danish invaders, with their harbour in the west of the borough. Bulverhythe, where its original site is conjectured, suggests that: -hythe or hithe means a port or small haven.[7]

The Kingdom of Haestingas

From the 6th century AD until 771, the area around modern-day Hastings, as the territory of the Haestingas tribe, considered itself to be a separate Kingdom from the surrounding Kingdoms of Suth Saxe ("South Saxons", i.e. Sussex) and Kent, and attempted to retain its separate cultural identity until the 11th century.[8] The kingdom was probably a sub-kingdom, the object of a disputed overlordship by the two powerful neighbouring kingdoms: when King Wihtred of Kent settled a dispute with King Ine of Sussex & Wessex in 694, it is probable that he seceded the overlordship of Haestingas to Ine as part of the treaty.[8][9]

In 771, King Offa of Mercia invaded Southern England, and over the next decade gradually seized control of Sussex and Kent. Symeon of Durham records a battle fought at an unidentified location near Hastings in 771, at which Offa defeated the Haestingas tribe, effectively ending its existence as a separate Kingdom. By 790, Offa controlled Hastings effectively enough to confirm grants of land in Hastings to the Abbey of St Denis, in Paris.[10] However, the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle for 1011 relates that Vikings over-ran "all Kent, Sussex, Surrey and Haestingas", indicating the town was still considered a separate 'county' or province to its neighbours 240 years after Offa's conquest.[11]

A royal mint in Hastings was established in AD 928 during the reign of Athelstan.[12]

Medieval Hastings

The start of the Norman Conquest was the Battle of Hastings, fought on 14 October 1066; although the battle itself took place eight miles (13 km) to the north at Senlac Hill, and William had landed on the coast between Hastings and Eastbourne at a site now known as Norman's Bay. It is thought that the Norman encampment was on the town’s outskirts, where there was open ground; a new town was already being built in the valley to the east. That "New Burgh" was founded in 1069, and is mentioned in the Domesday Book as such. William defeated and killed Harold Godwinson, the last Saxon King of England, and destroyed his army; thus opening England to the Norman conquest.

William caused a castle to be built at Hastings probably using the earthworks of the existing Saxon castle.

Hastings was shown as a borough by the time of the Domesday Book (1086); it had also given its name to the Rape of Hastings, one of the six administrative divisions of Sussex. As a borough, Hastings had a corporation consisting of a "bailiff, jurats, and commonalty". By a Charter of Elizabeth I in 1589 the bailiff was replaced by a mayor.

Hastings and the sea

The beach and pier

By the end of the Saxon period, the port of Hastings had moved eastward near the present town centre in the Priory Stream valley, whose entrance was protected by the White Rock headland (since demolished). It was to be a short stay: Danish attacks and huge floods in 1011 and 1014 motivated the townspeople to relocate to the New Burgh.

In the Middle Ages Hastings became one of the Cinque Ports; Sandwich, Dover, and New Romney being the first, Hastings, and Hythe followed, all finally being joined by Rye and Winchelsea, at one point 42 towns were directly or indirectly affiliated to the group.

In the 13th century much of the town was washed away by the sea. During a naval campaign of 1339, and again in 1377, the town was raided and burnt by the French, and seems then to have gone into a decline. As a port, Hastings' days were finished.

Hastings had suffered over the years from the lack of a natural harbour, and there have been attempts to create a sheltered harbour. Attempts were made to build a stone harbour during the reign of Elizabeth I, but the foundations were destroyed by the sea in terrible storms. The last harbour project began in 1896, but this also failed when structural problems and rising costs exhausted all the available funds. Today a fractured seawall is all that remains of what might have become a magnificent harbour. In 1897 the foundation stone was laid of a large concrete structure, but there was insufficient money to complete the work and the "Harbour arm" remains uncompleted. It was partially blown up to discourage possible use by German invasion forces during World War II. The fishing boats are still stored on and launched from the beach.

Hastings was now a small fishing settlement, but it was soon discovered that the new taxes on luxury goods could be made profitable by smuggling, and the town was ideally located for that.[13] Near the castle ruins, on the West Hill, are "St Clement's Caves", partly natural, but mainly excavated by hand by the smugglers from the soft sandstone. Their trade was to come to an end with the period following the Napoleonic Wars, for the town became one of the most fashionable resorts in Britain, brought about by the so-called properties of seawater. Once this came about the expansion of the town took place, to the west, since there was little space left in the valley.

It was at this time that the elegant Pelham Crescent and Wellington Square were built: other building followed. In the Crescent is the classical style church of St Mary in the Castle (its name recalling the old chapel in the castle above) now in use as an arts centre. The building of the crescent and the church necessitated further cutting away of the castle hill cliffs. Once that move away from the old town had begun, it led to the further expansion along the coast, eventually linking up with the new St Leonards.

Like many coastal towns, the population of Hastings grew significantly as a result of the construction of railway links and the fashionable growth of seaside holidays during the Victorian era. In 1801 its population was a mere 3,175; by 1831 it had reached over ten thousand; by 1891 it was almost sixty thousand, and the 2001 census reported over 85,000 inhabitants.

Between 1903 and 1919 Fred Judge FRPS photographed many of the towns events and disasters. These included storms, the first tram, visit of the Lord Mayor of London, Hastings Marathon Race and the pier fire of 1917. Many of these images were produced as picture postcards by the British Postcard manufacturer he founded now known as Judges Postcards.

In the 1930s the town underwent some rejuvenation. Seaside resorts were starting to go out of fashion: Hastings perhaps more than most. The town council set about a huge rebuilding project, among which the promenade was rebuilt; and an Olympic-size bathing pool was erected. The latter, regarded in its day as one of the best open-air swimming and diving complexes in Europe, closed some years ago. The area is still known by locals as "The Bathing Pool".[14]

Governance

Hastings returned two Members of Parliament from the 14th century until 1885 since when it has returned one. Since 1983 it has been part of the parliamentary constituency of Hastings and Rye; the current MP, since 2010, is Amber Rudd of the Conservative Party. Prior to 1983, the town was in an eponymous seat of its own.

Hastings, it is thought, was a Saxon town before the arrival of the Normans: the Domesday Book refers to a new Borough: as a borough, Hastings had a corporation consisting of a "bailiff, jurats, and commonalty".[6] Its importance was such that it also gave its name to one of the six Rapes or administrative districts of Sussex.

By a Charter of Elizabeth I in 1589 the bailiff was replaced by a mayor, by which time the town's importance was dwindling. In the Georgian era, patronage of such seaside places (such as nearby Brighton) gave it a new lease of life so that, when the time came with the reform of English local government in 1888, Hastings became a County Borough, responsible for all its local services, independent of the surrounding county, then Sussex (East); less than one hundred years later, in 1974, that status was abolished.

Hastings Borough Council is now in the second tier of local government, below East Sussex County Council. The Labour Party has an overall control of the council with 17 seats, whilst the Conservative Party holds 14 seats and the Liberal Democrat party has 1 seat. The Borough is divided into sixteen electoral wards as shown on the map,[15] they are in four areas, as below. Some explanation of the ward names is also given:

Ward Notes including name origin
Ashdown Northernmost ward: contains Ashdown House
Baird (part of Ore Valley) NE of town centre; named after John Logie Baird
Braybrooke Braybrooke Terrace is north of the town centre
Castle Most central ward, including town centre and sea front
Central St Leonards Main part of St Leonards, including sea front
Conquest Contains Conquest hospital
Gensing N of Central St Leonards ward; includes Gensing Gardens
Hollington One time village, home to The Grove School
Maze Hill Between Central and West wards; one-time maze in West St Leonards gardens
Old Hastings includes Hastings Old Town
Ore Ore Village, One-time separate village: largest ward in borough, home to Hilcress Hastings (School)
St Helens (part of Ore Valley) Area north of town: included St Helens Wood
Silverhill Well-established area of Hastings
Tressell (part of Ore Valley)) NNE of town centre; named after Robert Tressell
West St Leonards Large ward extending to the Borough boundary of Bexhill-on-Sea, home to Filsham Valley School
Wishing Tree Area named after an ancient tree

Suburbs

The most notable suburbs of Hastings are Ore Valley, St Leonards, Silverhill, West St Leonards, and Hollington.

Geography

Hastings town centre and the Memorial from an old postcard
Hastings town centre in 2005

Hastings is situated where the sandstone beds, at the heart of the Weald, known geologically as the Hastings Sands, meet the English Channel, forming tall cliffs to the east of the town. Hastings Old Town is in a sheltered valley between the East Hill and West Hill (on which the remains of the Castle stand). In Victorian times and later the town has spread westwards and northwards, and now forms a single urban centre with the more suburban area of St Leonards-on-Sea to the west. Roads from the Old Town valley lead towards the Victorian area of Clive Vale and the former village of Ore, from which "The Ridge", marking the effective boundary of Hastings, extends north-westwards towards Battle. Beyond Bulverhythe, the western end of Hastings is marked by low-lying land known as Glyne Gap, separating it from Bexhill-on-Sea.

The sandstone cliffs have been the subject of considerable erosion in relatively recent times: much of the Castle was lost to the sea before the present sea defences and promenade were built, and a number of cliff-top houses are in danger of disappearing around the nearby village of Fairlight.

The beach is mainly shingle, although wide areas of sand are uncovered at low tide. The town is generally built upon a series of low hills rising to 500 feet (150 m) above sea level at "The Ridge" before falling back in the river valley further to the north.

The town also has a large Victorian park, Alexandra Park.

There are three Sites of Special Scientific Interest within the borough; Marline Valley Woods, Combe Haven and Hastings Cliffs To Pett Beach. Marline Valley Woods lies within the Ashdown ward of Hastings. It is an ancient woodland of pedunculate oak-hornbeam which is uncommon nationally. Sussex Wildlife Trust own part of the site.[16] Combe Haven is another site of biological interest, with alluvial meadows, and the largest reed bed in the county, providing habitat for breeding birds. It is in the West St Leonards ward, stretching into the parish of Crowhurst.[17] The final SSSI, Hastings Cliffs to Pett Beach, is within the Ore ward of Hastings, extending into the neighbouring Fairlight and Pett parishes. The site runs along the coast and is of both biological and geological interest. The cliffs hold many fossils and the site has many habitats, including ancient woodland and shingle beaches.[18]

Demography

Hastings suffers at a disadvantage insofar as growth is concerned because of its restricted situation, lying as it does with the High Weald Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty to the north. Redevelopment of the area is partly hampered by the split administration of the combined Hastings and Bexhill economic region between Hastings and Rother district councils. There is little space for further large-scale housing and employment growth within the designated boundaries of Hastings, and development on the outskirts is resisted by Rother council whose administrative area surrounds Hastings. Rother has a policy of urban expansion in the area immediately north of Bexhill, but this requires infrastructure improvements by central Governments which have been under discussion for decades. Most of the jobs within the Borough are concentrated on health, public services, retail and education. 85% of the firms (in 2005) employed fewer than 10 people; as a consequence the unemployment rate was 3.3% (cf. East Sussex 1.7%); and almost one-third of the employable population had no skills at all in 2001.[19]

This situation has now become the subject of parliamentary consideration,[20] and regeneration of the Borough is now being considered at that level. From being the third tourist resort in the country 50 years ago, Hastings has still not been able to shake off its over-reliance on tourism.

Economy

Two of Hastings' beach-launched fishing fleet with part of Old Town and East Cliff Railway in background

Until the development of tourism, fishing was Hastings' major industry. The beach launched fishing fleet, based at the Stade remains Europe's largest and has recently won accreditation for its sustainable methods. The fleet has been based on the same beach, below the cliffs at Hastings, for at least 400, possibly 600, years. Its longevity attributed to the prolific fishing ground of Rye Bay nearby.[21]

Hastings fishing vessels are registered at Rye, and thus bear the letters "RX" (Rye,SusseX).

Near the Royal Victoria Hotel there is the "Conquerors Stone" where William of Normandy was supposed to have eaten his first breakfast in England.[22][23]

Net "shops"

On the beach near the Old Town are the so-called "net shops", said to be unique to Hastings, but similar buildings can be found in Whitby and Folkestone.[24] These are wooden constructions, weatherboarded and tarred, of various shapes and sizes, used for storage. The buildings were built tall and narrow to avoid payment of ground tax. Net shops were not used for drying nets, instead they were used to store them. Fishing nets were made from natural material. They needed to be dry before being hung in a net shop otherwise they would rot.[25] Nets were dried on the beach or on the piece of land known as the Minnis. The net huts are covered with traditional "clinker" weather-boarding and most of them measure about 25 feet (7.6 m) in height by 8 feet (2.4 m) square.

During the past 150 years, many net huts have been destroyed by stormy seas, and in the 1950s some of them were demolished by the Hastings Council as part of a clearance scheme for development of the beach. About forty-five of these structures still survive and are regularly maintained.[26]

Transport

Road

There are two major roads in Hastings: the A21 trunk road to London; and the A259 coastal road. Both are beset with traffic problems: although the London road, which has to contend with difficult terrain, has had several sections of widening over the past decades there are still many delays. Long-term plans for a much improved A259 east–west route (including a Hastings bypass) were abandoned in the 1990s, but a new road to Bexhill-on-Sea is planned to relieve the congested coastal route.[27] Hastings is also linked to Battle via the A2100, the original London road. The A28 road connects Hastings to Ashford, Canterbury and the Isle of Thanet. The A27 road starts nearby at Pevensey. The Ring road includes parts of most of the main roads.

The town is served by Stagecoach buses on routes that serve the town; and also extend to Bexhill, Eastbourne and Dover. National Express Coaches run service 538 to London.

National Rail

1914 Railway Junction Diagram of Hastings area lines and stations; the Bexhill West branch and the West Marina station have since closed.

Hastings has four rail links: two to London, one to Brighton and one to Ashford. Of the London lines, the shorter is the Hastings Line, the former South Eastern Railway (SER) route to Charing Cross via Battle and Tunbridge Wells, which opened in 1852; and the longer is the East Coastway Line, the former London, Brighton and South Coast Railway (LBSCR) route to Victoria via Bexhill, Eastbourne and Lewes. Trains to Brighton also use the East Coastway Line. The Marshlink Line runs via Rye to Ashford where a connection can be made with Eurostar services, and is unelectrified except for the Hastings-Ore segment.

A historic British Rail Class 201 "Thumper" can sometimes been seen (and heard) on historic runs to and from Hastings.[28] This was a regular service from Hastings to Ashford and many locals have fond memories of hearing the trains rumble in and out of Hastings.

Hastings is served by two rail companies: Southeastern and Southern. Southeastern services run along the Hastings Line, generally terminating at Hastings, with some peak services extending to Ore; the other lines are served by Southern, with services terminating at Ore or Ashford.

The town currently has four railway stations: from west to east they are West St Leonards station, St Leonards Warrior Square, Hastings, and Ore; this latter has been proposed to be renamed to Ore Valley.[29] There is also one closed station and one proposed station in the area. West Marina station (on the LBSCR line) was very near West St Leonards (on the SER line) and was closed some years ago. A new station has been proposed at Glyne Gap in Bexhill, which would also serve residents from western Hastings.[29]

Local Rail

The East Hill Lift: one of the two funicular railways in Hastings

There are two funicular railways, known locally as the West Hill and East Hill Lifts respectively.

The Hastings Miniature Railway operates along the beach from Rock-a-Nore to Marine Parade, and has provided tourist transport since 1948. The railway was considerably restored and re-opened in 2010.

A local metro railway service from Bexhill to Ore has also been proposed.[29]

Paths

The Saxon Shore Way, (a long distance footpath, 163 miles (262 km) in length from Gravesend, Kent traces the Kent and Sussex coast “as it was in Roman times” to Hastings. The National Cycle Network route NCR2 links Dover to St Austell along the south coast, and passes through Hastings.

Historical transport systems

Turnpike

Hastings became part of the Turnpike road system in 1837, when builder James Burton was building his new town of St Leonards. The route of the road is that taken by the A21 today.

Trams and trolleybuses

Hastings had a network of trams from 1905 to 1929. The trams ran as far as Bexhill, and were worked by overhead electric wires, except for the stretch along the seafront from Bo-Peep to the Memorial, which was initially worked by the Dolter stud contact system. The Dolter system was replaced by petrol electric trams in 1914, but overhead electrification was extended to this section in 1921. Trolleybuses rather than trams were used in the section that included the very narrow High Street, and the entire tram network was replaced by the Hastings trolleybus system in 1928–1929.[30]

Maidstone and District bought the Hastings Tramway Company in 1935, but the trolleybuses still carried the "Hastings Tramways" logo until shortly before they were replaced by diesel buses in 1959, following the failure of the "Save our trolleys" campaign.

Landmarks

Marine Court

Iconic landmarks,frequently appearing in the town's tourist publicity, are the castle on its sandstone cliffs, and Hastings Pier. Little remains of the Castle apart from an arch of the chapel, some walls, and dungeons. The pier is closed owing to its unsafe condition. Violent storms during mid March 2008 damaged the structure further. The pier burnt down on 5 October 2010, and is currently in a vulnerable position.

In a similar vein, the old town of Hastings is certainly a landmark. Many of the buildings there today date from the time when the Georgians arrived here to "take the waters", although the two churches (see below) are very much older. An example of the houses is East Cliff House, designed and built between 1760 and 1762 by Edward Capell, the Shakespearean critic and official censor of plays, at a cost of £5,000. The house was constructed on the site of the old East Fort, with a gun platform that may have been adapted to form the front terrace of the building. The house was abandoned during the Second World War, and from then on, it became a bingo centre and then a seafront cafe.

An important former landmark was "the Memorial", a clock tower commemorating Albert the Prince Consort which stood for many years at the traffic junction at the town centre, but was demolished following an arson attack in the 1970s.

On the seafront at St Leonards is Marine Court, a 1930s block of flats in the Art Deco style that is said to represent an ocean liner. This block of flats can be seen up to 20 miles (32 km) away on a clear day, from Holywell, in the Meads area of Eastbourne.

Education

View of houses from the East Hill Lift top entrance
View of houses from the East Hill Lift top entrance at night

The school founded by Rev William Parker in 1619 and that founded by James Saunders in 1709 were eventually amalgamated to form Hastings Grammar School, which later became the William Parker Sports College. It is now the only all-boys secondary school in East Sussex. There is also a single-sex school for girls in Hastings, called Helenswood, named after St Helen's Wood situated close by the school.

East Sussex County Council has plans to close three mixed comprehensive schools (Filsham School, The Grove School and Hillcrest School) and replace them with two academy schools. The proposed sponsors for the academies are University of Brighton (lead sponsor), British Telecom and East Sussex County Council itself. As of December 2008 the proposals are awaiting approval of the Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families.[31] East Sussex County Council provisionally approved the closure of Hillcrest, the Grove and Filsham Valley in late-November, and has announced that a final decision will be made on the schools' future in January 2010.[32]

Sussex Coast College Hastings is a general further education college for the town and surrounding area. The University Centre Hastings is an institute of higher education located in the town, with courses validated by the University of Brighton.

Religious buildings

The most important buildings from the late medieval period are the two churches in the Old Town, St Clement's (probably built after 1377) and All Saints (early 15th century).[33] There is also a Muslim mosque, formerly "Mercatoria School" until purchased by the East Sussex Islamic Association. The former Ebenezer Particular Baptist Chapel in the Old Town dates from 1817 and is listed at Grade II.[34]

Culture

Hastings has four museums: the Hastings Museum and Art Gallery; the Old Town Hall Museum;[35] the Fishermen's Museum[36] and The Shipwreck Museum.[37] The first three are all open for the whole year. The Hastings Museum and Art Gallery includes a Durbar Hall representing an Indian palace, donated by Lord Brassey.The Jerwood Foundation, a charitable organisation specialising in funding arts projects, has recently donated the funds for the creation of a gallery and art space on the Stade, the area of Hastings Old Town famed for its Net Drying huts.

There are two places providing a theatrical venue: the White Rock Theatre the town's multipurpose venue; and the Stables Theatre,[38] which shows mainly local productions and acts as an arts exhibition centre. Among other uses to which the main theatre is put is to host the annual Hastings Musical Festival. There is a small Odeon cinema in Hastings, however there are plans to renovate an area known as the 'Priory Quarter' in the town centre. Some of the plans include large office spaces, retail units and a new large multiplex cinema.[39] The town has its own independent cinema known as "Electric Palace".[40]

The Hastings International Chess Congress[41] which started in 1882 attracts international players to Hastings. The Hastings Writers' Group claims to be one of the oldest in the country: it was established in 1947.[42]

Hastings has long been known as a retreat for artists and painters. For example, the pre-Raphaelite painters including Dante Gabriel Rossetti (who married in Hastings) and William Holman Hunt, who painted pictures of nearby cliffs at Fairlight,[43] admired the town for its light and clear air. [citation needed]

Visitor attractions

The town has its fair share of "visitor attractions". These are mostly clustered around the Fishmarket, near the dropping-off place for the coaches, and include a miniature railway, fairground rides and amusement arcades; there are also many refreshment places in this area of the town. The nearby cliff railways take visitors further afield: to the Caves; and to Hastings Country Park, an area of 12.67 km² (6.9 miles²) of lightly wooded and open land extending from Hastings approximately 3 miles (5 km) along the cliff tops to Fairlight.

The ruins of Hastings Castle, whose construction is depicted in the Bayeaux Tapestry, stand on the West Hill, overlooking both the Old Town to the East and modern Hastings to the West.

The Old Town area of Hastings retains several streets of mostly medieval half-timbered houses, some of which, although privately-owned, are opened to the public during 'Old Town Week'.

The Blue Reef Aquarium (formerly Underwater World) is a popular visitor attraction, as is the Smugglers' Adventure in St Clement's Caves.

Events

Hastings Pier and beach in the Winter
Hastings Pier at sunset

The largest annual event is the May Day bank holiday weekend, which features a Jack-in-the-Green festival (revived since 1983),[44] and the Maydayrun, when tens of thousands of motorbikes drive to Hastings.

There is also a yearly carnival, and Old Town Week during August, a beer festival in Alexandra Park, and a Seafood and Wine Festival in the Old Town. During Hastings week held each year around 14 October the Hastings Bonfire Society[45] stages a torchlight procession through the streets, with a beach bonfire and spectacular firework display. The World Crazy Golf Championships is an annual event (since 2003) and is held at the Crazy Golf Course on the seafront.

On or around the beginning of March each year, there is the annual Hastings Musical Festival. This is a competitive festival of the Performing Arts held at the White Rock Theatre.

Sport

There are many organisations and venues catering for the sports enthusiast including angling, golf, lawn tennis, riding, rowing and swimming. The Summerfields Leisure Centre[46] provides the largest venue. Another family pool (although outside the borough) with wave machine and water slide is situated at Glyne Gap, on the coast mid-way between Bexhill and Hastings.

The Hastings Half Marathon is becoming well-known around the country, being voted the best race of its kind three years running, and has become known as the unofficial "Great South Run". With numbers increasing every year, in 2010 the race had nearly 5,000 entries.

As for team sports, Hastings is home to one senior football club, Hastings United, who play in the Isthmian League Premier Division and use The Pilot Field as their home ground. There are also many other football clubs in Hastings that play in the East Sussex Football League, such as Hollington United and Hastings Rangers. The town's premier cricket venue is now Horntye Park Sports Complex, home of Hastings Priory. The previous venue, where Priory Meadow Shopping Centre now stands, saw the final game played in 1989.

Hastings is home to two major rugby clubs, Hastings & Bexhill R.F.C and Cinque Ports Rugby Club. Hastings & Bexhill play their home matches at William Parker Sports College and play in Division Four of the London Rugby Union League (2009/10). Cinque Ports play in the Sussex Rugby Union League and play at The Grove School. Hastings' main hockey club is South Saxons, who play and train on the town's only AstroTurf surface at Horntye Park Sports Complex. The AstroTurf is also used for other sports such as football.

One of the athletics clubs in the Hastings & Rother Area is Hastings Athletics Club: it uses the running track at William Parker Sports College, the only running track in the area. A very popular sport in the town is bowls: there are plenty of greens in the town. The Hastings Open Bowls Tournament has been held annually in June since 1911 and attracts many entrants country-wide.[47]

Notable people

Filmography

References

Notes

  1. ^ "Hastings Borough Council". Competitive Hastings. Retrieved 10 February 2009.
  2. ^ Eilert Ekwall, The Oxford Dictionary of English Place Names, Oxford University Press 1936.
  3. ^ Patrick Hanks and Flavia Hodges, The Oxford Names Companion, Oxford University Press 2002. ISBN 0-19-860561-7
  4. ^ Pamela Combes and Malcolm Lyne,"Hastings, Haestingaceaster and Haestingaport: a question of identity". Sussex Archaeological Collections, 133 (1995), 213–24. ISSN 01438204
  5. ^ "Beauport Park". History and the Arts. BBC/Open University. Retrieved 31 March 2008.
  6. ^ a b Marchant, Rex (19-06-1905–1 October 1997). Hastings Past. Phillimore & Co Ltd. ISBN 1 86077 046 0. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  7. ^ "Hithe – the definition of Hithe". The Free Online Dictionary. Retrieved 31 March 2008.
  8. ^ a b http://www.historyfiles.co.uk/KingListsBritain/EnglandSussex.htm
  9. ^ Kirby, Earliest English Kings, p. 124.
  10. ^ http://www.esawyer.org.uk/content/charter/133.html
  11. ^ http://www.hastingschronicle.net/771-1699.html
  12. ^ Challis, Christopher Edgar (1993). "The English and Norman Mints, c. 600–1158". A New History of the Royal Mint. Cambridge University Press. p. 40. ISBN 9780521240260. Retrieved 31 March 2008. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  13. ^ "Hastings Museum". Smuggling on the Sussex Coast. Retrieved 10 February 2009. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  14. ^ Seaside History: the Bathing Pool at Hastings and St Leonards
  15. ^ "Map of ward boundaries". Hastings Online. Retrieved 17 February 2009.
  16. ^ "Natural England – SSSI (Marline Valley Woods)". English Nature. Retrieved 6 October 2008.
  17. ^ "Natural England – SSSI (Combe Haven)". English Nature. Retrieved 7 October 2008.
  18. ^ "Natural England – SSSI (Hastings to Pett Cliffs)". English Nature. Retrieved 5 October 2008.
  19. ^ "Local Development Framework". Hastings Online. Retrieved 17 February 2009.
  20. ^ House of Commons Select Committee: Stakeholders in Hastings 2006
  21. ^ Peak, Steve (1985). Fishermen of Hastings – 200 years of the Hastings Fishing Community.
  22. ^ "Gorgeous Gardens in need of Restoration". Hastings Online. Hastings Borough Council. Spring 2005. Retrieved 8 October 2008.
  23. ^ Winn, Christopher. I Never Knew That About England.
  24. ^ Coastal Treasures – Hastings as a seaside resort
  25. ^ "The Net Huts". Retrieved 28 March 2009.
  26. ^ Brooks, Ken. Hastings: Then And Now.
  27. ^ east Sussex County Council:Bexhill to Hastings link road
  28. ^ Hastings Diesels
  29. ^ a b c "ACCESS TO HASTINGS MULTI-MODAL STUDY (Consultation Report)" (PDF). p. 324. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 October 2007. Retrieved 9 May 2009.
  30. ^ Robert J Harley, Hastings Tramways. Middleton Press 1993. ISBN 1 873793 18 9.
  31. ^ East Sussex County Council announcement of academy plans
  32. ^ "Protest opposes school academies". BBC News. 24 November 2009. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  33. ^ Nairn, Ian, and Pevsner, Nikolaus, The Buildings of England: Sussex, Page 119. Penguin, 1965
  34. ^ "Detailed Record: Ebenezer Particular Baptist Chapel, Ebenezer Road, Hastings, Hastings, East Sussex". Images of England. English Heritage. 2007. Retrieved 20 April 2010.
  35. ^ Hastings Museum and Art Gallery
  36. ^ Fishermen's Museum
  37. ^ http://shipwreck-heritage.org.uk/
  38. ^ http://www.stables-theatre.co.uk/
  39. ^ "Priory Quarter – Website". Retrieved 7 January 2009.
  40. ^ Electric Palace
  41. ^ Hastings International Chess Congress
  42. ^ Hastings Writers' Group
  43. ^ The Earthly Paradise – Our English Coasts
  44. ^ Hastings Traditional Jack-in-the-Green
  45. ^ Hastings Boroughs Bonfire Society
  46. ^ Summerfields Leisure
  47. ^ Hastings Open Bowls Tournament
  48. ^ "Foyle's War". The Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 10 February 2009.
  49. ^ "When I Was 12 (2001)". The Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 23 May 2010.

Bibliography

  • Challis, Christopher Edgar (1993). "The English and Norman Mints, c. 600–1158". A New History of the Royal Mint. Cambridge University Press. p. 40. ISBN 9780521240260. Retrieved 31 March 2008. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  • Baines FSA, John Manwaring (1963). Historic Hastings. F J Parsons Ltd.
  • Peak, Steve (1985). Fishermen of Hastings: 200 Years of the Hastings Fishing Community. Newsbooks. ISBN 0-95107-060-6.
  • Marchant, Rex (1997). Hastings Past. Phillimore & Co Ltd. ISBN 1-86077-046-0.
  • Winn, Christopher. I Never Knew That About England.
  • Down the Line to Hastings Brian Jewell, The Baton Press ISBN 0 85936 223 X
  • Robert J Harley, Hastings Tramways. Middleton Press 1993. ISBN 1 873793 18 9.
  • Nairn, Ian, and Pevsner, Nikolaus, The Buildings of England: Sussex, Page 119. Penguin, 1965
  • Brooks, Ken. Hastings: Then And Now.

50°51′36″N 0°34′19″E / 50.860°N 0.572°E / 50.860; 0.572