Online Encyclopedia

WALSALL

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 292 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WALSALL  , a

market
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town and municipal, county and
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parliamentary borough of
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Staffordshire, England, on the
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northern edge of the Black Country, and on a tributary stream of the Tame . Pop . (1891) 71,789; (19o1) 86,430 . It is 1201 M . N.W. from
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London by the London & North-Western railway, on which
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system it is a centre of several branches, and is served by the
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Birmingham-Wolverhampton branch of the Midland railway and by canals . The town, though of ancient foundation, is
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modern in appearance . The central
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part stands high on a ridge at the northward termination of which is the church of St Matthew, dating in part from the 15th century, but almost wholly rebuilt . The council house and town hall was completed in 1905; there are two theatres, a
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free library and museum, and an institute of science and
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art . Recreation grounds include a picturesque
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arboretum, Reed's Wood and Palpey Park . Queen Mary's
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Schools are a foundation of 1554; here are believed to have been educated John Hough (1651—1943), the president of Magdalen College, Oxford, whom James II. sought to eject from office, afterwards bishop of Oxford,
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Lichfield, and Worcester; and John, Lord Somers (1651—1716), Lord Keeper and Lord Chancellor of England . There are large charities, and Walsall was the scene of the charitable
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work of
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Sister Dora (
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Miss Pattison) whom a statue commemorates .
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Coal,
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limestone and ironstone are
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mined in the neighbourhood .

The most important products are

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saddlery and leather-work, horses' bits and all metal harness fittings; there are iron and brass foundries, and locks, keys, bolts and other hardware are made, both in Walsall and at Bloxwich, a large
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industrial suburb . Three
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annual fairs are held . The parliamentary borough returns one member . The town is governed by a mayor, 8 aldermen and 24 councillors .
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Area, 7480 acres . Walsall (Waleshales, Walshall, Walsaler) is included in the list of lands given in 996 to the church of Wolverhampton, which, however, did not retain it long . It was granted by Henry II. to Herbert Ruffus, and Henry III. confirmed it to his grandson (1227) . Later the
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manor passed to the Bassets and the Beau-champs, and Warwick the King-maker held it in right of his wife . Henry VIII. granted it (1538) to Dudley, afterwards duke of Northumberland . William Ruffus in the reign of John granted to the burgesses, in consideration of a
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fine of 12 marks
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silver and of a
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rent of 12d. for every burgage, all services, customs andsecular demands belonging to him and his heirs, except tallage . Henry IV. confirmed to the burgesses a grant of freedom from toll on the ground that Walsall was ancient demesne of the
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Crown . A mayor and twenty-four brethren who formed the council of the borough are mentioned in 1440, but the earliest charter of incorporation is that of Charles I .

(1627), confirmed in 1661, incorporating it under the

title of " the Mayor and Commonalty of the Borough and
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Foreign of Walsall": under the act of 1835 the town was governed by a mayor, six aldermen and eighteen town councillors . It was not represented in parliament till 1832 . Walsall had a merchant gild in 1390; in the 17th century it was already known for its manufacture of iron goods and nail-making . In the 18th century the
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staple industry was the making of chapes and shoe-buckles, and the town suffered when the latter went out 'of fashion . Two fairs, on Michaelmas day and September 21, were granted in 1399 . The Tuesday market, which is still held, and two fairs on
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October 28 and May 6, were granted in 1417 to Richard Beauchamp,
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earl of Warwick . See Victoria County
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History, Stafford; E . L . Glew, History of the Borough and Foreign of Walsall (1856) .

End of Article: WALSALL
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