Home ·  Art · Live Music . Staines Blog · Music Shop ·  Theatre · Comedy Dance · History ·  

5TAINE5
 
Bookmark us!

 Contact Us
Articles
 Blogs
Photos  
Threads
Newsletter
 Map of Staines 

STAINES
FAVOURITE
LIVE BANDS...

Getaway Team
New Assassins
 Velvet Razor
 The PFJ
 Sunsets on Vegas
Blue Fuses
 Sweet Melinda
 Suzerain
 Foulplay
Bohica
Instill
Cry Wolf
Big Jim Sullivan
Satellite State
Netherworld
East of Ealing
fiN
 Karova
Cats & cats & cats
 Afterspark
Without Thought
 Purge
 Apex of Extinction
 Bloodloss
Demure
 MiMi Soya
 The Stilts
 Loaded Dice

 



Staines Interest 
Up Pontes~ Up Pontes - Roman Town of Staines, Middlesex (Paperback)
Up Pontes [Paperback]


Staines Argos

Check and Reserve at Argos.co.uk


Amazon Search Box

"Men is from Staines
and wimmin is from Egham"

Ali G ~ Poet and Scholar

The Making of the Roman Army
The Making of The Roman Army
For the Glory of Rome
For the Glory of Rome: A History of Warriors and Warfare
ROME: HBO Season 2
Rome- The HBO series 2- 5 disc box set
Black Adder- The COMPLETE box set- region 2
Blackadder - Complete Collection 
All the Kings Armies
All The Kings Armies
London Bridges- James Patterson
London Bridges
James Patterson
WELCOME TO ADPONTES-5TAINE5 ~ The STAINES Arts & Lifestyle Magazine



STAINES HISTORY


    * 4000 - 4000 to 3000 BC Neolithic settlement of the Thames Valley
    * 1700 - Bronze Age burial ground- Sunbury
    *  750  - Iron age settlement of area
    *    10  - British tribe Atrebates rules the area
    *    43  - Claudius invasion of Britain to help King Verica of the Atrebates
    *    43  - First Staines Bridge built by the Roman Army
    *   406 - Roman occupation ends
    *   600 - 400 a.d. to 600 a.d. Saxon migration to area
    * 1086 - Domesday Book mentions Staines
    * 1215 - King John at Runnymede to sign the Magna Carta
    * 1228 - First annual fair held in Staines- granted by Henry III
    * 1285 - The 'London Stone' mark boundry of City of London
    * 1603 - Sir Walter Raleigh was committed at Staines
    * 1642 - and 1648 skirmishes in Civil War on Staines Moor
    * 1671 - Staines bridge destroyed in Civil War and replaced with ferry
    * 1791 - a new stone bridge was built
    * 1803 - The Lucan (Lord Lucan) family moved into Laleham
    * 1815 - Penton Hook lock constructed
    * 1832 - Modern Staines Bridge officially opened by King William IV
    * 1848 - Railroad arrives in Staines
    * 1851 - Staines Boat Club established
    * 1864 - Opening of the Staines Linoleum Company
    * 1890 - Staines Hockey Club was formed
    * 1892 - Staines Town Football Club formed as Staines Albany
    * 1894 - St. Peter's Church was built
    * 1902 - Twin back-to-back Staines Reservoirs built
    * 1906 - The British car maker Lagonda, was founded 
    * 1925 - Queen Mary Reservoir opened
    * 1935 - Le Mans 24-hour race won by a 4.5 litre Lagonda car built in Staines
    * 1955 - Queen Elizabeth II opens Heathrow Terminal 2
    * 1956 - Vulcan bomber crashes at Heathrow
    * 1965 - Staines West Railway station closed
    * 1969 - Staines 'supershow' in the lino factory with Led Zeppelin
    * 1972 - British European Airways Trident One jet airliner crashed on 18 June
    * 1975 - Staines FC plays in Rome in front of a crowd of 70,000
    * 1980 - The Elmsleigh Centre shopping complex opened by HM The Queen
    * 1985 - Staines section of M25 opened
    * 1990 - Spelthorne Leisure Centre in Knowle Green, Staines opened
    * 1996 - Planning permission granted for new "Two Rivers" 
    * 2002 - Ali G Indahouse filmed in Staines
    * 2005 - Hard-Fi's debut album

See article on: How Old is Staines?

------------------------





Queen Victoria (creative commons licence)

The Victorian Era in Staines- June 1837 to January 1901

Staines developed rapidly during Victorian times and an interesting display can be seen at Spelthorne Museum (details below this article), representing part of a Victorian kitchen in a small house or cottage.

The advent of the railways were a significant reason for this intense and rapid development of Staines. Staines Central Station, on the London-Windsor line was opened in 1848, and the Wokingham branch, joining the Windsor line at Staines with a bridge over the river, was opened in 1856. A station in the High Street (near the Garabaldi) was opened- closed later in 1916. Staines & West Drayton Railway at Staines West was opened in 1885. So in Victorian times there were three stations in Staines - Staines West, Staines East (the station we now call Staines Station) and Staines 'Central'[http://www.british-history.ac.uk/]

The linoleum factory was one of several industries in Staines that grew and prospered as a result of the emerging rail networks. The factory covered an area some 35 acres north of the High Street and was established in 1862. This is the area now used as the Two Rivers shopping centre.

St. Peter's Church was built in 1894.

Victorian Staines

1837: Coronation of Victoria

1848: Railway line from Waterloo to Ashford and Staines opened

1862: Opening of the Staines Linoleum Company, founded by businessman Frederick Walton, to produce his new invention of Linoleum floor covering.

1864: It is thought that Charles Dickens may have visited Staines and Laleham area whilst writing "Our Mutual Friend"

1872: a local commission was appointed to clear the Market Square area, build the (current) Town Hall, and establish a market. A school board of five members was formed for Staines in 1885. It took over all the existing elementary schools in
the area and built 'the new school' in 1896.

1878: First horse race meeting held at Kempton Park Racecourse, with a specially built railway station opened later in the same year

1897: Sunbury Clock erected in celebration of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee

1881: Population of Staines is 2,486.  (according to the www.workhouses.org.uk) The Staines Workhouse had a total of 339 residents ranging in ages from just 1 year old (at age 3 years a child would recieve schooling) to over 90 years old. The Staines workhouse was on the site of the Ashford Hospital, Stanwell.

1889: Gothic Revival architecture; The campus of the Royal Holloway college was founded in 1879 by the Victorian entrepreneur, Thomas Holloway and was a women-only institution- officially opened in 1886 by Queen Victoria.The campus is
dominated by its original building, the Founder's Building, (designed by William Henry Crossland) which is modelled on Château de Chambord in The Loire.

1889: Jerome K Jerome mentions Penton Hook and Runnymede

Gothic Revival Architecture
[Château de Chambord in The Loire]

Spelthorne Museum:

Victorian kitchen layout at Spelthorne Museum
1 Elmsleigh Road, Staines TW18 4PM
Phone: 01784 461 804


PDF FILE

SEE THIS ARTICLE AS A PDF FILE

Web Accessibility

WEB ACCESSIBILITY - RE-SIZE OR PRINT TEXT TO SIZE

 _________________________________________________



-----------------------




adpontes-staines.com - © Rights Reserved adpontes.co.uk 2007

 Staines Bridge

"COLONIA CLAVDIA VICTRICENSIS"

Staines bridge owes its existence to the Romans. In fact, the original name for the area we now know as Staines was Ad pontes- 'at the Bridges'. The Roman invasion of Britain, commanded by General Aulus Plautius on behalf of Emperor Claudius, came about after an appeal from an ousted tribal ally-the exiled King Verica of the British Atrebates. At that time, Britain was governed by Celtic tribes like the Atrebates and the more dominant Catuvellauni. Although the tribes already had strong trading and political links with the Roman Empire, tensions were growing and inter-tribal conflict meant that the Romans could use the excuse to invade.

The tribes had always been aware of the importance of a river crossing at the area we now know as Staines (the 'stones') where the Thames meets the Colne. The river itself connected with the important trading routes of the Icknield and the Ridge-Way and so could be used for trade and safe transport. The river is shallow at this crossing point and the bed is gravel. There had been a thriving community here since at least 750BC. Whoever had control over the causeway at 'the stones' would have the Thames Valley, with its flat and easy travelling country, open to them.

London to Bath Road- GNU Free Documentation Licence
[ London to Bath Roman Road ]

General Aulus Plautius quickly made progress with four legions (one commanded by the future Emperor 'Vespasian') and the British defending forces were pushed back to the Thames. Eleven tribes of South East Britain surrendered to Claudius and the Romans prepared to move further West in the same year, taking the crossing point at the stones (Ad Pontes) at Staines. They quickly established a fortified settlement at Ad Pontes to protect the bridge. It is generally thought that this first Roman 'Pont' was probably a rough earthwork causeway supported by stone.

The Roman 'Ad Pontes' bridge soon became a vital part of the Roman Road that connects London to the West. Although this road does not have a common name ( unlike, for example, 'Stane Street' that runs to Chichester) it does connect, in a straight line, a route from Staines to the London Wall via Hounslow, Brentford, Shepherds Bush and Holborn. If you have driven down the A30, A315 or even Oxford Street, you have used this old Roman route.

Claudius- Denarius
[ Claudius denarius ]

How long this first Roman bridge survived is not known but the position of a river crossing-point on this important main road from London to the southwest, and its proximity of the settlement to Windsor and the seat of soveriegn power, led to the town being involved in national affairs (not least the signing of the Magna Carta.) The need for a more permanent wooden bridge could not be overlooked and a wooden structure was built in 1222.This first recognisabe bridge was constructed using piles of oak driven into the bed of the river and covered with planks. There were four more wooden bridges built after this very first attempt- all failed to survive for very long. Eventually, in 1796, when the first modern stone bridge was built at the present site.

This bridge, made of three semicircular arches of stone, from the design of the celebrated Paul Sandby, lasted only five years, when it was replaced by a very elegant bridge of one arch, of 180 feet span, constructed of cast iron, from the design of Thomas Wilson. This bridge, like its predecessors, did not last long and had to be closed to the public after just one month! His Majesty King George the Third was said to have been among the last to pass over it.

The current bridge with three arches was designed by George Rennie and construction started in 1827 (it was opened in 1832 by their Royal Highnesses the Duke and Duchess of Clarence - later William IV.) George Rennie constructed the Grosvenor Bridge over the Dee at Chesterand and was the 'less-famous' son of John Rennie the Elder, the Scottish civil engineer who designed the famous London Bridge that now can be found at Lake Havasu City, Arizona. The Staines railway bridge - spanning the Thames parallel to the road bridge, was opened in 1856.

Staines New Bridge- project Gutenberg
[ Staines New Bridge- 1827 ]

There is now support for an elegant pedestrian/cycle bridge to be constructed beside the existing bridge (like the popular Hungerford footbridge) to ease traffic flow and provide a safer more enjoyable route for pedestrians.

Sources:

http://www.lakehavasu.com

http://www.british-history.ac.uk/

http://www.rotherhamweb.co.uk/m

Bridge at Lake Havasu City- remarkably similar?
[ London Bridge at Lake Havasu City, Arizona ]


PDF FILE

SEE THIS ARTICLE AS A PDF FILE

Web Accessibility

WEB ACCESSIBILITY - RE-SIZE OR PRINT TEXT TO SIZE

 _________________________________________________________________





Staines Artwalk- Roman at AD PONTES - © Rights Reserved Neil_Mach 2007

Life in Staines has long been refreshed and cleansed by two sparkling young rivers and the wiser and older waters of the Thames. Prosperity has been generated first from an early ponticello (a bridge of stones- and an arterial passage for Roman armies) and then from fishing, milling and fermenting along the banks.

The mute swan is an exalted emblem and a powerful of symbol of Staines. The swan invokes, at once, the sensibility, peace, calmness and the purity of the townsfolk.


Swans ~ on the towpath at Staines- © Rights Reserved Neil_Mach 2007

Sprites of the river emerge from the crystal waters of the Wraysbury and the Colne supporting life and vitality in Staines for posterity. Moreover, nypmhs rise from those abundant waters and safeguard the life and the prosperity of all those whose lives are, forever,  twinned and entwined with the life of the river.  All along, Old Father Thames smiles benignly >>>>


From the tranchets to villeins, and from the cottars and serfs to the burgesses, Staines has had an industrial beginning.

Among the original  free tenants were 68 gavelmen who worked the boons and various rolling mills.

Lammas land and the Staines demesne was largely agricultural and laid to hay but even by the 13th century there were two working brewhouses. Fullers and mills were operating successfully as well as a dyeworks in Yeoveney.

The famous Ashby’s Staines brewery was working by 1783 and coaching inns brought increasing prosperity to the town >>>>

Lino Men Staines - © Rights Reserved Neil_Mach 2007

By 1848 and the arrival of the railroad, Staines was transforming itself into an industrial centre. In 1864 the Linoleum Manufacturing Company was formed in a previously successful calico works. This soon became the town’s principal industry. A second very large brewery and also a candle-making factory were also operating around this time. Paint and varnish makers and mustard millers were attracted to the town. Mineral water works and large laundries also arrived by the mid 19th century.

The Staines Linoleum Company stayed in the town right up until the 1970's and the Lagonda car works, Candle Factory, Ashby Brewery, and the Harris Brewery placed Staines firmly on the industrial map. >>>>


___________________________________________________________________




__________________________________________________________________

Guy Fawkes~ The STAINES connection

GUY FAWKES- The STAINES connection

In about March 1605, three conspirators hired a cellar beneath Parliament and Guy Fawkes was made responsible for filling the cellar-room with barrels of powder. But who came to foil the plot? Who had betrayed the conspirators? And what is the STAINES connection?  >>>>


__________________________________________________________________






-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Login

Members Area

Username:
Password:
Latest Articles
 2009 Gig Guide

 Cry Wolf Review

 Sticky Fungus

 London & Karova

 Cats & cats & cats

Contents
Ad Pontes Arts
Scousers v Chavs

 Swan Upping

The Magna Carta 

Ad Pontes Lifestyle

 Symphony X

 Sticky Fungus

 Moody Blues
Forum Threads
Newest Threads
Scousers v Chavs

 Swan Upping

The Magna Carta 

Hottest Threads

 Symphony X

 Sticky Fungus

 Moody Blues
Google
Google


HardFi_StarsofCCTV
Stars of CCTV
Lagonda- 1899-1999 Photo Archive
Lagonda_ 1899-1999
History Archive
Around Heathrow- 60 years old- Photo Archive
Around Heathrow
Past & Presernt
Photo Archives

------------------------------------
__________________________

------------------------------------
__________________________

THE ADPONTES STAINES

LIST

MUSIC


1. Rockferry

Rockferry

£8.98
2. Third

Third

£8.98
3. Raising Sand

Raising Sand

£7.98
4. Hard Candy

Hard Candy

£8.98
5. I Know You're Married But I've Got Feelings Too

I Know You're Married But I've Got Feelings Too

£8.98


DVD'S


1. P.S. I Love You [2008]

P.S. I Love You [2008]

£19.99 £11.98
2. Gavin And Stacey : Complete BBC Series 1 [2007]

Gavin And Stacey : Complete BBC Series 1 [2007]

£19.99 £6.98
3. The Golden Compass [2007]

The Golden Compass [2007]

£19.99 £10.97
4. I Am Legend [2007]

I Am Legend [2007]

£19.99 £9.98
5. Prison Break - Season 3 - Complete [2007]

Prison Break - Season 3 - Complete [2007]

£39.99 £27.98


BOOKS

1. A Thousand Splendid Suns

A Thousand Splendid Suns

£11.99 £5.99
2. This Charming Man

This Charming Man

£17.99 £8.99
3. The Book Thief

The Book Thief

£7.99 £3.86
4. Delia's How to Cheat at Cooking

Delia's How to Cheat at Cooking

£20.00 £9.99
5. Tricks of the Mind

Tricks of the Mind

£6.99 £3.94