Online Encyclopedia

STROUD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 1043 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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STROUD  , a

market
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town in the Stroud
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parliamentary division of Gloucestershire, England,
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IO2 m . W. by N. of
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London . Pop. of urban
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district (1901), 9153 . It is served by the
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Great Western railway and a branch of the west-and-north
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line of the Midland . It lies on the steep flank of a narrow and picturesque valley and traversed by the
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Thames and Severn and the Stroudwater canals, which unite at Wallbridge close by . The church of St Lawrence is
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modern excepting the tower and
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spire . The Elizabethan town-hall and the school of science and
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art, commemorating Queen Victoria, are noteworthy . Stroud is the
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principal seat of the west of England
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cloth manufacture, the industry extending to Stonehouse and other places in the vicinity . Stroud has also
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silk-mills, dyeworks, breweries, foundries, and a manufacture of umbrellas and walking-sticks . There is no evidence of the existence of Stroud before the
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Conquest, and in 1087 it was still
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part of the
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manor of
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Bisley, from which it was separated in the reign of
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Edward II . It became a centre of the cloth trade in the Tudor period, and in 1607 Henry, Lord
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Danvers, lord of the manor, obtained a charter from James I., authorizing a weekly market . During the 18th century the commercial importance of the town increased, though, owing to its distance from any of the great high-roads and to the localization of the clothing trade in scattered factories near
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water power, it was never a great centre of population .

By the Reform

Act of 1832 Stroud became a borough and returned two members to parliament until 1885, when it was merged in the Stroud division of Gloucestershire . The manufacture of very
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fine broadcloth and of
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scarlet-dyed cloth has been carried on in the Stroud valley for centuries, the town being a distributing centre only, until the adoption of steam power and the erection of cloth factories in the town about 183o led to considerable growth . Pin-making was introduced in 1835,
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carpet-
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weaving and iron-founding before 185o . Markets on Friday and Saturday are held under the grants of 1607 and 1832 . See Victoria County
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History: Gloucestershire; P . H . Fisher, Notes and Recollections of Stroud (1871) ; T . D . Fosbrooke, Gloucestershire Records (18o7) .

End of Article: STROUD
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