Barrow-in-Furness is an
industrial town and seaport which forms about half the territory of
the wider Borough of
Barrow-in-Furness in the county of Cumbria
,
England. It lies northwest of Manchester
and southwest from the county town of Carlisle
.
The town
is situated at the tip of the Furness
peninsula bordered only by Morecambe Bay
and the Irish
Sea
. Barrow is located some 360 km (just
over 220 miles) north-west of London and 60 miles south of the
Scottish border.
Historically a part of Lancashire
until 1974, Barrow was a small fishing village
before the arrival of the Industrial Revolution in the mid-19th
century. The building of the
Furness Railway allowed iron ore to be
transported to the area; the village's location made it ideal for
smelting and then exporting steel. The natural harbour the booming
town possessed allowed the locally produced steel to be put to
another use: shipbuilding.
The shipyard became a significant producer of naval vessels and
from the 1960s increasingly specialised in the construction of
nuclear-powered
submarines. The original
iron- and steel- making enterprises closed down after World War II,
leaving boat building the area's main industry and employer. All of
Britain's
Vanguard class
submarines, which carry
Trident nuclear weapons, were
manufactured at the facility. With the end of the
Cold War and subsequent
decrease in military spending the town
suffered high unemployment, though the shipyard remains operational
and the largest submarine production facility in the UK.
Toponymy
The name was originally that of an island—the name 'Barrai' can be
traced back to 1190. This was later renamed 'Old Barrow', recorded
as Oldebarrey in 1537, and Old Barrow Insula and Barrohead in 1577.
The island was then joined to the mainland and the town took its
name. The name itself seems to mean 'island with promontory',
combining British
barro- and Old Norse
ey, but it
is more likely that Scandinavian settlers simply accepted
barro- as a meaningless name, and so added an explanatory
Old Norse second element.
History
In the
Middle Ages the Furness peninsula was
controlled by the Cistercian monks of the Abbey of St Mary of
Furness, known as Furness
Abbey
. This was located in the 'Vale of
Nightshade', now on the outskirts of the town. Originally founded
for the
Savigniac order, it
was built on the orders of King
Stephen of England in 1123. Soon after
the abbey's foundation the monks discovered iron ore deposits,
later to prove the basis for the Furness economy. These thin
strata, close to the surface, were extracted through open cut
workings, which were then smelted by the monks in small bloomeries
(early furnaces).
The proceeds from mining, along with
agriculture and fisheries, meant that by the 15th century the abbey
had become the second richest and most powerful Cistercian abbey in
England, after Fountains
Abbey
in Yorkshire.However, Barrow itself was just
a hamlet in the parish of Dalton-in-Furness on the Furness
peninsula, reliant on the land and sea for survival.
Small quantities of
iron and ore were exported from jetties on the channel separating
the village from Walney
Island
. Amongst the oldest buildings in Barrow are
several cottages and farm houses in Newbarns
(now a ward of the town) which date back to the
early 1600s. Even as late as 1843 there were still only 32
dwellings including two pubs.

Furness Abbey
In 1839
Henry Schneider arrived as a
young speculator and dealer in iron, and he discovered large
deposits of haematite in 1850.
He and other investors founded the Furness Railway, the first section of which
opened in 1846 to transport the ore from the slate quarries at
Kirkby-in-Furness
and haematite mines at Lindal-in-Furness
to a deep water harbour near Roa Island
. The docks built between 1867 and 1881 in the
more sheltered channel between the mainland and Barrow
Island
replaced the port at Roa Island. The
increasing quantities of iron ore mined in Furness were then
brought to Barrow to be transported by sea.
The investors in the burgeoning mining and railway industries
decided greater profits could be made by smelting the iron ore into
steel, and then exporting the finished product. Schneider and
James Ramsden, the railway's
general manager, erected blast furnaces at Barrow that by 1876
formed the largest steelworks in the world.
Its success was a
result of the availability of local iron ore, coal from the
Cumberland
mines and easy rail and sea transport. The
Furness Railway, who counted local aristocrats
William Cavendish, 7th
Duke of Devonshire and the Duke of Buccleuch as investors,
kick-started the Industrial Revolution on the peninsula. The
railway brought mined ore to the town, where the steelworks
produced large quantities of steel. It was used for shipbuilding,
and derived products such as rails were also exported from the
newly built docks. Thus Barrow's population, only 700 in 1851,
reached 10,000 by 1864 and 47,000 by 1881, forty years after the
railway was built.

Barrow Shipbuilding Works circa.

The now demolished Buccleuch Street
power station and Case's brewery circa.
The sheltered strait between Barrow and Walney Island was an ideal
location for the shipyard. The first ship to be built, the
Jane
Roper, was launched in 1852; the first steamship, a 3,000-ton
liner named
Duke of Devonshire, in 1873. Shipbuilding
activity increased, and on 18 February 1871 the Barrow Shipbuilding
Company was incorporated. Barrow's relative isolation from the
United Kingdom's industrial heartlands meant that the newly formed
company included several capabilities that would usually be
subcontracted to other establishments. In particular, a large
engineering works was constructed including a foundry and pattern
shop, a forge, and an engine shop. In addition, the shipyard had a
joiners' shop, a boat-building shed and a sailmaking and rigging
loft.
During these boom years, Ramsden proposed building a planned town
to accommodate the large workforce which had arrived. There are few
planned towns in the United Kingdom, and Barrow is one of the
oldest. Its centre contains a grid of well-built terraced houses,
with long tree-lined roads leading away from central squares.
Ramsden later became the first mayor of Barrow, which was given
municipal borough status in 1867,
and county borough status in 1889. The imposing red sandstone Town
Hall, designed by W.H. Lynn, was built in a neo-gothic style in
1887. Prior to this, the borough council had met at the railway
headquarters: the railway company's control of industry extended to
the administration of the town itself.
The Barrow Shipbuilding Company was taken over by the Sheffield
steel firm of
Vickers in 1897, by which time
the shipyard had surpassed the railway and steelworks as the
largest employer and landowner in Barrow.
The company
constructed Vickerstown
, modelled on George Cadbury's Bournville
, on the adjacent Walney Island in the early 20th
century to house its employees. It also commissioned
Sir Edwin Lutyens to design
Abbey
House
as a guest house and residence for its managing
director, Commander Craven.
By the 1890s the shipyard was heavily engaged in the construction
of warships for the Royal Navy and also for export. The Royal
Navy's first submarine,
Holland
1, was built in 1901, and by 1914 the UK had the most
advanced submarine fleet in the world, with 94% of it constructed
by Vickers. Vickers was also famous for the construction of airship
hangars during the early 1900s.
Well-known ships built in Barrow include the
Mikasa
, Japanese flagship during the 1905 Russo-Japanese
War, the liner SS Oriana
and the aircraft carriers HMS
Invincible and HMAS
Melbourne.
During World War II, Barrow was a target for the German air force
looking to disable the town's shipbuilding capabilities (see
Barrow Blitz). The town suffered the
most in a short period between April and May 1941. During the war,
a local housewife,
Nella Last, was
selected to write a diary of her everyday experiences on the home
front for the
Mass-Observation
project. Her memoirs were later adapted for television as
Housewife, 49 starring
Victoria Wood. The difficulty in targeting bombs meant that the
shipyards and steelworks were often missed, at the expense of the
residential areas. Ultimately, 83 people were killed and 11,000
houses in the area were left damaged. To escape the heaviest
bombardments, many people in the central areas left the town to
sleep in hedgerows with some being permanently evacuated. Barrow's
industry continued to supply the war effort, with Winston Churchill
visiting the town on one occasion to launch the aircraft carrier
HMS
Indomitable.
The end of the war saw the beginning of a long decline of mining
and steel-making as a result of overseas competition and dwindling
resources. The Barrow ironworks closed in 1963, three years after
the last Furness mine shut. The by then small steelworks followed
suit in 1983, leaving Barrow's shipyard as the town's principal
industry. From the 1960s onwards it concentrated its efforts in
submarine manufacture, and the UK's first nuclear-powered
submarine,
HMS
Dreadnought was constructed in 1960.
HMS Resolution, the
Swiftsure-class,
Trafalgar-class and
Vanguard-class
submarines all followed.

Mikasa in Japan in 2005
The end of the Cold War in 1991 marked a reduction in the demand
for military ships and submarines, and the town continued its
decline. The shipyard's dependency on military contracts at the
expense of civilian and commercial engineering and shipbuilding
meant it was particularly hard hit as government defence spending
was reduced dramatically. As a result, the workforce shrank from
14,500 in 1990 to 5,800 in February 1995, with overall unemployment
in the town rising over that period from 4.6% to 10%. The rejection
by the
VSEL management of detailed plans for
Barrow's industrial renewal in the mid-to-late 1980s remains
controversial. This has led to renewed academic attention in recent
years to the possibilities of converting military-industrial
production in declining shipbuilding areas to the offshore
renewable energy sector.
In the
2002 Barrow-in-Furness Legionnaires'
disease outbreak
, 172 people were reported to have caught the
disease, of whom seven died. This made it the fourth worst
outbreak in the world in terms of number of cases and sixth worst
in terms of deaths (see
list of
Legionnaires' disease outbreaks). The source of the virus was
later found to be steam from a badly maintained air conditioning
unit in the council-run arts centre Forum 28; the vent emitted the
virus over a busy alleyway in the town centre.
At the conclusion of the inquest into the seven deaths, the coroner
for Furness and South Cumbria criticised the council for its health
and safety failings. In 2006, council employee Gillian Beckingham
and employer
Barrow Borough
Council were cleared of seven charges of manslaughter, but both
admitted breaching the Health and Safety at Work Act. Beckingham,
the council senior architect ultimately responsible for health and
safety at the centre, was fined £15,000 and the authority £125,000.
The borough council was the first public body in the country to
face corporate manslaughter charges.
Regeneration
The waterfront
Many areas of the town have seen regeneration in the 1990s, and on
28 September 2007 Barrow's £200 million Dockland regeneration
project began. Due to be completed by 2020, the project includes a
new 'Barrow Marina Village' which will incorporate an £8 million
400-berth marina, 600 houses, restaurants, shops, hotels and a new
state of the art bridge across Cavendish Dock. A large watersports
centre is also being built, with the possibility of a cruise ship
terminal. Some cruise ships are already scheduled to dock in
Barrow, mainly for tourists to visit the Lake District, although
there is no official cruise ship terminal yet. The
Tahitian Princess visited Barrow in May
2009.
Shipyard
The shipyard has been given planning permission to construct a new
assembly hall, dubbed 'Son of DDH' in a reference to the existing
Devonshire Dock Hall shipbuilding facility. However, the building
will not now be used for the construction of aircraft carrier
sections as the carrier build will now take place in Glasgow.
John Hutton, MP for Barrow,
has, however, promised that all seven Astute Class submarines will
be built at the shipyard. Following a decline in employment levels
at the shipyard over the last 20 years, BAE Systems recently
announced that the current workforce of 3,835 could soon grow to
5,000, although this is still only a third of the 14,000 employed
in the 1980s.
Possible bridges

The Donghai Bridge in Shanghai, China
has a similar structure to the proposed
Morecambe Bay
Bridge
For many
years there have been discussions on the possible construction of
bridges across Morecambe
Bay
and the Duddon
Estuary, leading to the Build Duddon and Morecambe Bridges
party contesting national elections in the borough of Barrow and Furness
, receiving 409 (1.1%) votes in the 2005 general
election.
Morecambe Bay bridge
This project has recently received more coverage. Construction of
the 12 mile structure would create Europe's longest bridge and the
7th longest in the world.
Connecting Heysham
in Lancashire to Rampside
near Barrow, the bridge would also produce
200 MW of renewable energy from a tidal stream system, enough
to power over 400,000 homes. The bridge would potentially have a major
economic impact on the area through increased employment and
tourism, and would cut journey times to Manchester
from Barrow from two hours down to around one hour,
which would put Barrow within commuting range of a major
city. The project's backer, Bridge Across the Bay Ltd.,
intends to seek planning permission in 2010. Subject to approval
and the problematic provision of finance, construction could begin
around 2011, and the company estimates the bridge could be
completed in 2015.
A second bridge to Walney Island from
mainland Barrow is planned to relieve congestion, and the Morecambe Bay
bridge proposal is also being discussed by local
councils.
Duddon Estuary bridge
A smaller
bridge (some 3 km long) crossing the Duddon Estuary linking
Askam
and Millom
would
improve transport links to the area, cutting journey times from
Barrow to parts of West Cumbria, but would require considerable
finance. There has also been talk of building a road and
rail tunnel under the Duddon instead of a bridge.
Governance

Barrow's iconic town hall at
sunset.
Barrow is the largest town in the
Borough of Barrow-in-Furness and
the largest settlement in the peninsula of
Furness. The borough is the direct inheritor of the
municipal and county borough charters given to the town in the late
1800s.
Historically it is part of the Hundred of
Lonsdale
'north of the sands' in the historic county boundaries of
Lancashire
. Since the local government reforms enacted
in England in 1974 the town has been within the administrative
county of Cumbria
. It
still forms a part of the
Duchy of
Lancaster.
The Barrow-in-Furness Borough
Council forms the 'lower' tier of local government under
Cumbria County
Council
. The town, along with Walney Island
, is unparished and forms the bulk of the wards
which make the entire borough's area. They can be seen in
the box below.
Geography
Barrow-in-Furness is situated at the tip of
the Furness peninsula on the north-western
edge of Morecambe
Bay
. The town centre and major industrial areas
sit on a fairly flat coastal shelf, with a gentle incline leading
away from the coast.
Ten miles to the north-east is the southern
boundary of the English Lake District
.
Islands
The town
is sheltered from the Irish Sea by Walney Island
, a 14 mile (22.5 km) long
island connected to the mainland by the bascule type Jubilee bridge
. About 13,000 live on the isle's various
settlements, mostly in Vickerstown
, which was built to house workers in the rapidly
expanding shipyard. Another significant island which lay in the
Walney Channel was Barrow Island
, but following the filling of the channel to create
land for the yard it is now directly connected to the town.
Other
islands which lie close to Barrow are Piel Island
, whose castle protected the harbour from marauding
Scots, Sheep Island
, Roa
Island
and Foulney Island
.
Climate
Demographics
| Population |
| Total |
| 71,980 |
| of which: |
| Male |
35,092 |
| Female |
36,888 |
| by age: |
| 0-15 |
16-74 |
75+ |
| 14,993 |
51,228 |
5,759 |
Population
Barrow's population increased from the low thousands in the early
1800s to 60,000 in less than twenty years. Since the start of the
20th century the population of the town has gradually diminished to
just under 60,000. The
Barrow council district, which
includes the surrounding area, has a population of 71,980 according
to the most recent census, placing it 326th out of the 376 local
authorities in England and Wales (however the population density of
ranks 147th out of 376). Barrow-in-Furness can be regarded as the
largest town in Cumbria, Carlisle in the north of the county having
city status. People from Barrow are known as
Barrovians.
Population in the 19th century
| Year |
1801 |
1811 |
1831 |
1851 |
1861 |
1871 |
1881 |
1891 |
| Population |
1,958 |
2,078 |
2,702 |
4,684 |
22,513 |
40,343 |
58,172 |
62,694 |
|
Population in the 20th century
| Year |
1901 |
1911 |
1921 |
1931 |
1941 |
1951 |
1961 |
1971 |
1981 |
1991 |
2001 |
| Population |
67,354 |
72,360 |
73,394 |
74,447 |
75,509 |
76,619 |
75,902 |
72,192 |
72,645 |
73,704 |
71,979 |
|
Age
The female life expectancy at birth is 80.40 years, and male life
expectancy is 74.80 (The respective figures for England are 81.14
and 76.92).
Ethnicity
2008 estimates state 94.1% of Barrow's population as indigenous
White British, and ethnic minority populations in Barrow stand at
5.9%, the breakdown of which is shown in the table below. The first
people to settle in what is now Barrow were the Celts and
Scandinavians followed by the Cornish although in the late 19th
century there was mass immigration from Scotland and other parts of
England. Thus the distinction between these immigrants and the
previous native population is not clear from the table below.
| Ethnic Group |
% of Overall Barrow Population |
% of Ethnic Minority Population |
Population |
Further Breakdown |
| White British |
94.10% |
N/A |
67,658 |
89.7% White English, 2.8%
White Scottish, 0.6% White Welsh |
| Other
White |
1.90% |
34.54% |
1,366 |
0.7%
Polish, 0.3% Germans, 0.2% Canadians , 0.1% Yugoslavs, 0.1%
Kosovars , 0.1% Americans,
0.4% Other |
| White Irish |
1.00% |
18.18% |
719 |
0.6%
Northern
Irish , 0.4% Irish |
| East Asian |
0.90% |
15.25% |
647 |
0.4% Chinese, 0.3% Filipinos, 0.2% Thais and Other |
| South Asian |
0.80% |
13.79% |
575 |
0.4% Indian, 0.3% Pakistani, 0.1% Other South Asian |
| Mixed Race |
0.70% |
12.06% |
503 |
0.4% Mixed White and Black, 0.1%
Mixed White and Asian, 0.2% Other Mixed |
| Black |
0.40% |
6.89% |
288 |
0.3% African, 0.1% Caribbean |
| Other |
0.20% |
3.64% |
144 |
Largely Latin
Americans and Arabs |
Country of birth
The 2001 UK census states that 93.56% (67,345) of the borough's
population was born in England, 2.86% (2,061) in Scotland, 0.63%
(451) in Wales, 0.68% (486) in Northern Ireland, 0.32% (231) in the
Republic of Ireland and 0.06% (43) in the Channel Islands. 0.61%
(441) of the town's 2001 population were born in the rest of
Europe, although numbers are likely to be currently much higher,
due to significant immigration from Eastern Europe (in particular
Poland) to Barrow. Barrow has the eighth fastest growing
non-indigenous white community of any town or city in the country,
at 15.9% growth between 2004 and 2005, only Exeter, Lancaster,
Colchester, Hull, Durham, Leeds and Bristol were faster growing.
Barrow has also seen a huge increase with other ethnic minority
groups, and the growth rate for most groups is around 2 times
faster than national average. The Asian born population represented
0.50% (363) of Barrow's population, 0.35% (253) of people were born
in North America, 0.23% (177) of people were born in Africa, 0.12%
(83) of people were born in Oceania, 0.04% (27) of Barrovians were
born in Latin America, and 0.02% (11) of people were born in some
other place.
Religion
In the 2001 census 58,322 Barrovians stated themselves as being
Christian. People stating no religion or chose not to state
numbered 13,234 combined. The second largest religion in Barrow is
Islam with a population of 182 Muslims.
Other religious
populations are as follows: 72 Buddhists, (nearby Conishead
Priory
, the first Kadampa Buddhist
centre in the west, is home to around 100 Buddhists) 46 Hindus, 25
Jews and 96 with another religion.
Other
>Out of the 56,987 age 16 or over in 2001, 43.81% were married,
26.26% single, 9.57% widowed, 9.36% divorced, 8.98% re-married and
2.01% separated (but still legally married). The Total Fertility
Rate of Barrow is 1.54, lower than North West England's rate (1.66)
and England's (1.65).162 Barrovians were working in the Armed
Forces in 2001 Barrow has one of the highest percentages of people
on benefits in the entire United Kingdom, at 23% of the working
age, it is much higher than England's average of 14%.
Economy
Shipyard

BAE Systems viewed from Walney
Island
The
BAE
Systems Submarine Solutions
shipyard at Barrow is one of the largest shipyards
in Britain. It was expanded in 1986 by construction of a new
covered assembly facility, the Devonshire Dock Hall (DDH),
completed by
Alfred McAlpine plc, on
land that was created by infilling part of the Devonshire Dock with
2.4 million tonnes of sand pumped from nearby Roosecote Sands. DDH
is the tallest building in Cumbria at 51 m. With a length of ,
width of and an area of it is the largest shipbuilding construction
complex of its kind in Europe.
The DDH provides a controlled environment for ship and submarine
assembly, and avoids the difficulties caused by building on the
slope of traditional slipways. Outside the hall, a 24,300 tonne
capacity shiplift allows completed vessels to be lowered into the
water independently of the tide. Vessels can also be lifted out of
the water and transferred to the hall. The first use of the DDH was
for construction of the
Vanguard-class submarines,
and later vessels of the
Trafalgar-class
submarines were also built there. The shipyard is currently
constructing the
Astute-class submarines the
first of which was launched on 8 June 2007. BAE Systems is
currently studying the design of a
new class of
ballistic missile submarines. BAE Systems also has orders for
submarine pressure domes for the
Spanish
Navy.
BAE Systems has obtained planning permission from Barrow Borough
Council for the new Central Assembly Shop dubbed 'Son of DDH' which
will provide over 700 new jobs, initially in construction of a
large section of the new
Queen Elizabeth class
aircraft carriers. (hull lower block 3). Despite the large fall
in numbers employed by the shipyard, Barrow retains a high
proportion of workers in the manufacturing industry. In September
2008, Barrow was named as the most
working
class location in the UK, based on a series of measures devised
to judge the lifestyle of the people. Ironically in the 1870s
Barrow had more aristocrats per head than anywhere else in the
country.
The shipyard does not build submarines exclusively: it undertook
fitting out and commissioning of helicopter carrier
HMS Ocean in the mid-1990s
(although the ship was built by Kværner in Govan, Glasgow), and
construction of
Wave Class
tanker Wave
Knight and
Albion Class amphibious
assault ships
HMS Albion
and
HMS Bulwark.
.
Other
Associated British
Ports Holdings owns and operates the port of Barrow which can
berth vessels up to long and with a draught of . Principal traffic
includes the export of condensate by-product from the production of
gas at the Rampside Gas Terminal, wood pulp, and locally quarried
limestone which is exported to Scandinavia for use in the paper
industry.
The port, which has deep water access, also
handles the shipment of nuclear fuels and radioactive waste for
BNFL's nearby Sellafield
plant.
In 1985,
gas was discovered in Morecambe Bay
, with the products processed onshore at the gas
terminal in Rampside, south of the town. A new 30 turbine
wind-farm which has recently been built in the Irish Sea off the
coast of Walney
Island
, although the electricity generated is sent by
undersea cable to Heysham
.
James Fisher & Sons plc,
a service provider in all sectors of the marine industry and a
specialist supplier of engineering services to the nuclear industry
in the UK and abroad, was founded in Barrow in 1847 and is the
largest company to have its headquarters situated in Cumbria.
Annual revenue stood at almost £90 million in 2007 (up 55% from £57
million in 2006), as well as staff numbers standing at over 1,000
worldwide, with 120 of those in the Barrow headquarters.
Other major employers include the
NHS, through Furness
General Hospital, which employs 1,800 staff and the
Kimberly Clark paper mill which has 400
employees. Amongst many retailers that have established themselves
in Barrow, the furniture store
Stollers is
noted as being one of the largest shops of its kind in the
UK.
Employment

Tesco has two locations in Barrow
which employ hundreds of staff each
Below is a list of how many people were employed by each sector
(2001 UK Census), the percentage in brackets is that of the total
working population of Barrow. The + or - signs at the end indicate
whether the percentge employed in that sector is slightly higher +,
much higher ++, slightly lower- or much lower—than England's
average.
- Manufacturing - 8,087 employed (28.03% of the town's working
population) ++
- Retail: 4,671 (16.19%) -
- Health and Social Work: 3,635 (12.60%) ++
- Real estate, renting and business activities: 1,852 (6.42%)
–
- Construction: 1,797 (6.23%) -
- Education: 1,765 (6.12%) -
- Hotels and Catering: 1,730 (6.00%) ++
- Transport Storage and Communication: 1,490 (5.16%) -
- Public Administration and Defence: 1,427 (4.95%) -
- Other: 1,179 (4.09%) -
- Finance: 471 (1.63%) –
- Electricity, Gas and Water supply: 379 (1.31%) +
- Agriculture: 252 (0.87%) -
- Fishing: 8 (0.03%) +
Tourism
Being
only around 20 minutes from the Lake District
, Barrow has been referred to as a 'gateway to the
lakes', a status which could be enhanced by the new marina complex
and planned cruise ship terminal. Barrow itself has several
tourist attractions, including the Dock Museum. The museum tells
the history of Barrow's shipbuilding, as well as offering gallery
space to local artists and schoolchildren. It is built upon and
around the old graving dock. Barrow also has a popular indoor
market, which features a food hall as well as stalls selling
clothes and other goods.
Barrow has been described as the Lake
District's premier shopping town, with big name shops mingling in
with small local ones, and being home to Portland
Walk Shopping Centre
. The town also features Hollywood Park - a
leisure facility with restaurants, shops and Cumbria's largest
cinema. The town also features several other retail parks. The Park
Leisure Centre is a fitness suite with a pool, set in the Barrow
Park.
Walney Island has two world renowned nature
reserves as well as several golf courses, and Furness Abbey
on the outskirts of Barrow was once the second
richest and most powerful Cisterian abbey in the entire
country. Both locations are significant tourist draws.
Transport
See: Transport in
Barrow-in-Furness
Roads
Barrow's
principal road link is the A590, linking
it to Ulverston
, the Lake District
and to the M6
motorway. Just north of Barrow is the southern
terminus of the A595, linking the town to
Whitehaven
, Workington
and eventually Carlisle
. The possibility of a bridge link over
Morecambe
Bay
is occasionally raised, with feasibility studies
currently underway. Walney Bridge
connects Barrow Island to Walney Island
.
Buses
Bus services within the town are operated by
Stagecoach North West. There is no
specifically designated bus station, although many buses start and
terminate their routes near the town hall. The original bus station
was known for its role in a 1970s television commercial for
Chewits sweets before its demolition.
Other
services link Barrow with outlying villages as well as longer
distance routes to Dalton-in-Furness
, Ulverston
and Kendal
.
Railways
Barrow-in-Furness railway
station
provides connections to Whitehaven
, Workington
and Carlisle
to the north, via the Cumbrian Coast Line and to Ulverston
, Grange-over-Sands
and Lancaster
to the east, via the Furness Line. It handles 503,800
passengers annually.
Barrow has a second railway station,
Roose
, which serves the suburb of the same
name.
Furness Abbey
, Barrow's third main line station, closed in
1950. There was also a station on
Barrow Island, used to enable workers at
Vickers Limited (as it was then
known) to commute directly between the shipyard and nearby towns
served by the
Furness Railway. This
railway link was severed in 1966 when the famous cradle bridge
across the docks was closed permanently for safety reasons.
Other transport
Air
In the 1980s Furness Air had commuter flights to Manchester Intl.
Barrow/Walney Island Airfield
operates two Beechkraft Kingair 250 aircraft which
fly to various destinations every weekday, including Manchester,
Bristol and Blackpool. It is owned and operated by BAE Systems
(IATA airport
code: BWF, ICAO
:
EGNL). The longest runway is almost 4000 feet long.
It is one
of two airports in the county, the other being Carlisle
Airport
. The nearest international airport is
Blackpool
International Airport
, although most people from Barrow use the larger
Liverpool
and Manchester
airports.
Sea
Despite being one of the UK's leading shipbuilding centres, Barrow
is only a minor port. There are no ferry links to Barrow, but there
are proposals to create a cruise ship terminal.
Sport
Barrow A.F.C.
Barrow A.F.C. are in the
Conference National division of English
football.
The team, founded in 1901, are nicknamed
"the Bluebirds" and play their home games at the Holker Street
stadium. The side were members of the
Football League until they were
demoted in 1972.
In 1990, they won the FA Trophy beating Leek
Town 3-0 in the final at Wembley Stadium
, London. Football players born in Barrow
include England internationals
Emlyn
Hughes and
Gary Stevens, as well as
Harry Hadley, and
Vic Metcalfe.Of current professional
footballers,
Wayne Curtis,
Morecambe striker, and Iran Under-20 and
Hibernian winger
Shana Haji both hail from the town.
Holker Old Boys F.C.
Holker Old Boys, based at Rakesmoor Lane, are the town's second
most successful football team, and they play in the
North West Counties Football
League Division One.
Barrow RLFC
Rugby league is a well-established
sport and the town is considered as one of the game's traditional
heartlands at professional and amateur levels.
The professional
team, Barrow Raiders, whose home
games are at Craven
Park
, play in The Championship. In the
1950s the side played in three Challenge Cup finals, winning the
last of these against
Workington
Town. In the 1997 reorganisation of the sport the original
Barrow RLFC team merged with
Carlisle
Border Raiders to form Barrow Border Raiders, with the word
"border" later dropped. Players who were born in the town and
played at a professional level include brothers
Ade and
Mat Gardner
and
Willie Horne. The latter captained
Barrow to their Challenge Cup victory and represented Great Britain
at an international level. He was inducted in to the "Barrow Hall
of Fame" along with former Barrow players
Phil Jackson and
Jimmy Lewthwaite.
Motorcycle Racing
Barrow-in-Furness has staged speedway racing at three venues since
the pioneer days in the late 1920s. The first track was at Holker
Street. This venue had a revival for a short spell in the early to
mid 1970s. In 1930 the sport moved to Little Park but this a
somewhat hazy venue. The sport had a revival in 1978 at Park Avenue
Industrial Estate but this was relatively short lived.
Golf
Barrow is home to two large golf clubs. Barrow Golf Club, founded
in 1922, is situated in Hawcoat and covers some with 18 holes.
Furness Golf Club founded in 1872 is the sixth oldest golf club in
England and is possibly the more famous of the two. It is located
on Walney Island, just from the Irish Sea. It also offers an
18-hole course, a shop and other facilities.
Culture
Dialect
Furness is a special part of Cumbria and the local dialect tends to
be more Lancashire-oriented. Until 1974 Furness was an
exclave of Lancashire. As with Liverpool, the
special local dialect has been influenced by large numbers of
settlers from various regions (predominantly Scotland, England and
Ireland). In general the
Barrovian dialect tends to drop
certain letters (including
h and
t); for example
holiday could be pronounced as
'oliday, with more emphasis
on the letter
o. Similarly the word "hiya" which could be
pronounced "'iya" with a lot of emphasis on the letter
i.
Another example is with the letter
t where twenty is often
pronounced "twen'y" (again an emphasis on the
n could
occur); see
Cumbrian dialect as
well as
Lancashire
dialect for more information.
Nightlife
There are countless pubs and working men's clubs located across
Barrow—Barrow has fourteen of the latter, one of the highest number
per capita of any British town.
There are also many bars and clubs found
primarily in Barrow
Town Centre
on Duke Street and Cornwallis Street.
Popular venues on Duke Street include the following bars: , The
Lounge, Bar Cairo,
Yates's.
Cornwallis Street –
often dubbed the Gaza
Strip
by locals – is currently undergoing a
multi-million pound renovation with the former Martinis being the
flagship renovation into Club M. Other clubs on Cornwallis
Street include: Circus Circus, Kavannas, O'Sullivans, Scorpio and
the nearby floating Blue Lagoon Nightclub which has multiple floors
like many other Barrow clubs although with a capacity of it is the
town's largest club.
Music
Barrow has produced several musical performers of note. They
include
Thomas Round, a singer and
actor in D'Oyly Carte productions of
Savoy
Opera as well as
Glenn Cornick,
the original bass guitarist in the rock band
Jethro Tull.
The father of
Simply Red's Mick Hucknall was born in Barrow before moving
to Manchester
. In addition, Paul MacKenzie, bass player
with 1980s Preston-based thrash metal band
Xentrix, is from Barrow. More recently, hip-hop DJ
and record producer
Aim has had
considerable commercial success.Les Muscutt, jazz banjo player and
guitarist was born in Barrow in Furness in 1942. The family moved
to East Ham in London where Les became a professional musician at
age 15.
Shortly after the Second World War, an Old Tyme Dancing trio was
formed by Wyn Large (piano), Felix Lee (piano accordion) and Reg
Powell (drums). This group entertained three or more times a week
at several venues in the town and surrounding districts and was
very popular with those locals who enjoyed keeping Old Tyme dancing
alive. Wyn Large was succeeded by Billy Steele in the 1960s after
which the group became known as the Felix Lee Trio until it
disbanded in the 1970s due to its ageing members.
Expressive arts
Several notables in Art and Literature have come from Barrow.
Artist
Keith Tyson, the 2002 Turner Prize winner, was born in nearby
Ulverston
, attended the Barrow-in-Furness College of
Engineering and worked at the then VSEL
shipyard. Constance Spry, the
author and florist who revolutionised interior design in the 1930s
and 40s, moved to the town with her son Anthony during World War I
to work as a welfare supervisor.
Peter Purves,
later a Blue
Peter
presenter, began his acting career with 2 years as
a member of the Renaissance Theatre Company at the town's Her
Majesty's Theatre.The Canteen Media & Arts Centre - known
simply as "The Canteen" - and Forum Twenty Eight
are the main venues for theatre.
Literature
In
fictional works, Barrow and Vickerstown
on Walney
Island
featured in children's show The Railway Series, which developed
into Thomas the Tank
Engine, as the point where the fictional Island of Sodor connected to
mainland Britain and the national rail network.
The great Portuguese poet
Fernando
Pessoa wrote a poem called "Barrow-in-Furness". His "heteronym"
Álvaro de Campos lived in
Barrow when he was studying ship engineering.
Architecture

Ramsden Square in Barrow town centre
is home to many fine buildings including Barrow Public
Library
Barrow is one of Britain's few planned towns and has many fine
buildings to show for it. There are many old and distinctive
buildings in the town centre, mostly from the Victorian era, such
as the town hall, old fire station, the 'Nan Tait' Centre,
Salvation Army building and public library.
There is also an increasing number of modern office buildings as
well as the shipyard's cranes and construction halls which dominate
much of Barrow's skyline. Barrow has 8
Grade I listed buildings (see:
List
of Grade I listed buildings in Barrow-in-Furness), 15
Grade II* and 249
Grade
II buildings.
Media
Radio
Barrow is
served by one commercial radio station, The Bay, which is broadcast from
Lancaster and serves the area around Morecambe Bay
. Another commercial station,
Abbey FM, ceased broadcasting in February 2009 when
it went into administration. The BBC's local radio service is
BBC Radio Cumbria, who have studio
facilities in the town.
Newspapers
There is one paid-for evening daily paper, the
North West Evening Mail. There
is also a weekly freesheet called the
Advertiser, which is
delivered to most households in the Furness area. Both are owned by
independent publisher the
CN group,
formerly Cumbrian Newspapers.
Television
Barrow
lies in the Granada TV – North West England region with the main
signal coming from the Winter Hill
transmitter near Bolton. There is also a relay
transmitter at Millom
whose signal
can be received in the northern end of the town. The signal
from Millom is generally of inferior quality, with most households
receiving BBC 1 and 2 and ITV at adequate quality, with low quality
reception of Channel 4 programs.
Various television personalities were born in the district. Dave
Myers was a biker born in Barrow, before he found fame as one half
of television cookery duo
The Hairy
Bikers.
Karen Taylor is
a TV comedienne best known for her BBC Three sketch show
Touch Me, I'm Karen
Taylor.
Steve
Dixon is a newsreader for Sky News, while
Nigel Kneale was a well-known film and
television scriptwriter.
Wartime diarist and local housewife
Nella
Last's memoirs were adapted for television, with parts of the
town used in filming. The resulting programme,
Housewife, 49, starring comedienne
Victoria Wood, was broadcast by ITV in
2006. It won two
BAFTA awards - one
for Best Single Drama, the other for Best Actress (Victoria
Wood).CITV children's show
The
Treacle People had two villains named Barrow and Furness.
- In addition to that the first episode of Nature Boy was filmed
at Walney School.
Education
Education
in the state sector is provided by the local education authority,
Cumbria County
Council
. There are fifteen
primary schools, five
infant schools, five
junior schools and many nurseries.
Five
secondary schools were created
following the reorganisation of Barrow's selective tri-partite
secondary education system in 1979: Parkview
School
, St. Bernard's Catholic High
School
, Walney
School
, Thorncliffe School
and Alfred Barrow School
. Three schools - Parkview, Thorncliffe and
Alfred Barrow are scheduled to close in August 2009 with a new
Furness Academy due to take their place from the first of September
2009 on the Parkview and Thorncliffe sites - initially in the
existing buildings there, which are planned to be replaced by
state-of-the-art building on both sites within three years.
In
addition to publicly funded education, the town has one private
school, Chetwynde
, which has fee-paying pupils from nursery to
sixth form level.
In the further education sector there are two colleges.
Barrow-in-Furness Sixth Form
College
concentrates on teaching A-level subjects, while Furness
College
specialises in vocational courses.
The town's main library is the Central Library in Ramsden Square,
situated near the town centre. The library was established in 1882
in a room near the town hall, and moved to its current premises in
1922. A branch of the County Archive Service, opened in 1979 and
containing many of the town's archives, is located within adjoining
premises, whilst until 1991 the library also housed the Furness
Museum, a forerunner of the Dock Museum.
Smaller branch
libraries are currently provided at Walney,
Roose
, Ormsgill and Barrow
Island.
See also
References