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Worcestershire ( WUUST -ər-shər , -sheer ; written abbreviation: Worcs ) is a ceremonial county in the West Midlands of England . It is bordered by Shropshire , Staffordshire , and the West Midlands county to the north, Warwickshire to the east, Gloucestershire to the south, and Herefordshire to the west. The city of Worcester is the largest settlement and the county town .
The county is largely rural, and has an area of 1,741 km2 (672 sq mi) and a population of 592,057. After Worcester (103,872) the largest settlements are Redditch (87,036), Kidderminster (57,400), and Malvern (30,462). It contains six local government districts , which are part of a two-tier non-metropolitan county also called Worcestershire . The county historically had complex boundaries , and included Dudley and the southwestern suburbs of Birmingham .
The River Severn flows through the centre of the county from north to south, forming a wide plain. The southwest of the county contains part of the Malvern Hills , a National Landscape which contains Worcestershire Beacon , at 425 m (1,394 ft) the county's highest point. The southwest contains a small part of the Cotswolds , and in the northwest is part of the Wyre Forest , a national nature reserve .
There is some evidence of Roman occupation in Worcestershire; the area later became part of the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Hwicce , and then Mercia . Worcestershire was constituted as a county around 927, as the Kingdom of England formed. During the High Middle Ages the county was the site of the Battle of Evesham , in which Simon de Montfort was defeated, and in 1651 the Battle of Worcester was the last major engagement of the Wars of the Three Kingdoms . During the Industrial Revolution the north of the county was part of the Black Country , a major manufacturing centre, Kidderminster became famous for carpet production, and Worcester for porcelain . (Full article... )
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Edward Elgar, c. 1900
Sir Edward William Elgar, 1st Baronet , OM , GCVO (; 2 June 1857 – 23 February 1934) was an English composer, many of whose works have entered the British and international classical concert repertoire. Among his best-known compositions are orchestral works including the Enigma Variations , the Pomp and Circumstance Marches , concertos for violin and cello , and two symphonies . He also composed choral works, including The Dream of Gerontius , chamber music and songs. He was appointed Master of the King's Musick in 1924. (Full article... )
The following are images from various Worcestershire-related articles on Wikipedia.
Image 1 Worcester Square (from
Redditch )
Image 2 The 1906 sandstone and red brick Evesham Methodist Church on the banks of the River Avon (from
Evesham )
Image 3 Iron Age earthworks, British Camp
Image 4 Portrait of Sir William Waller, 1643, whose raids thoroughly depleted the Vale of Evesham (from
History of Worcestershire )
Image 5 Classical composer Sir
Edward Elgar was born in this house in
Broadheath, Worcestershire , currently used as the
Elgar Birthplace Museum . (from
Worcestershire )
Image 6 St Mary's and All Saints Parish Church, seen from the
Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal (from
Kidderminster )
Image 8 Map of Stourport, 1942 (from
Stourport-on-Severn )
Image 9 St John's Court: 19th century vicarage, served as council offices from 1920s to 1980s, now a care home. (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 10 Nailmakers in Bromsgrove c.1896 (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 11 Chateau Impney , near Droitwich (from
Droitwich Spa )
Image 13 The
Malvhina Fountain in the town centre, a sculpture by artist Rose Garrard. (from
Malvern, Worcestershire )
Image 14 Victorian
pillar box on the corner of Priory Road and Orchard Road
Image 15 Qinetiq at the
Malvern Hills Science Park , or Malvern Technology Centre; the integrated circuit was invented here in 1952 (from
Worcestershire )
Image 16 Bromsgrove Museum (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 17 Grave of
Mabel Tolkien (née Suffield, 1870–1904), mother of
J. R. R. Tolkien , in Bromsgrove (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 18 Grave of Sir Thomas Chavasse (1854–1913) and his family in Bromsgrove (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 19 Broadway Tower , one of several Worcestershire
follies (from
Worcestershire )
Image 20 Malvern St James girls school main building (from
Malvern, Worcestershire )
Image 21 Halesowen was an exclave of neighbouring
Shropshire until 1844 when it was reincorporated into Worcestershire. It is now within the metropolitan county of the
West Midlands . (from
Worcestershire )
Image 22 Richard Baxter, the leading Puritan in Kidderminster, noted the rising opposition to King Charles' policies of taxation and rule without Parliament (from
History of Worcestershire )
Image 23 Aggborough is the home ground of the professional club
Kidderminster Harriers , formerly of the
Football League . (from
Kidderminster )
Image 24 Summit of the
Worcestershire Beacon in the
Malvern Hills , the county's highest point (from
Worcestershire )
Image 25 Droitwich Spa High Street on
St. Richard's Day 2009 (from
Droitwich Spa )
Image 26 Graves of railway engineers Tom Scaife and Joseph Rutherford, killed in an engine explosion in Bromsgrove in 1840 (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 27 The
spa town of Great Malvern was laid out and developed largely during the 19th century
Image 28 St John the Baptist's Church (Church of England), built in 1843 (from
Kidderminster )
Image 30 Saltworkers by British sculptor
John McKenna in the town centre (from
Droitwich Spa )
Image 31 Seven shillings a week: this nailmaker in 1896 worked from 7am to 10pm, and turned out 11lbs of nails a week. (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 32 Prior's Croft, Grange Road (Victorian Gothic architecture)
Image 33 Interior of a Bromsgrove Nailmaker's shed in 1896; occupied by the tenant and two stallers, the latter worked each on his own account, and paid 6d. a week apiece and one-third of the firing. The oliver, or heavy hammer used for heading the nails, is attached to the bench in front of the little anvil. (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 35 St Peter's Church, Droitwich (from
Droitwich Spa )
Image 36 Thai Gy-Nguang brand Formula 2 Worcestershire sauce (2010) (from
Worcestershire sauce )
Image 37 Malvern post office, town centre
Image 38 John's tomb, Worcester Cathedral (from
History of Worcestershire )
Image 39 A statue of Richard Baxter in Kidderminster outside St Mary and All Saints' Church. (from
Kidderminster )
Image 40 The Abbey Gateway in the town centre is now the home of the
Malvern Museum
Image 41 Malvern Theatres (from
Malvern, Worcestershire )
Image 42 All Saints Church Evesham (from
Evesham )
Image 43 Due to its cathedral (pictured), the county town of
Worcester is the only settlement in the county with city status. (from
Worcestershire )
Image 44 Iron Age earthworks, British Camp
Image 45 View across Arrow Valley Lake (from
Redditch )
Image 46 Hand-drawn map of Worcestershire by Christopher Saxton from 1577. (from
Worcestershire )
Image 47 Council House (built 1874), viewed from Priory Park, is the headquarters of the District Council. (from
Malvern, Worcestershire )
Image 48 The Riverside Shopping Centre (from
Evesham )
Image 49 St Stephen's Church (Church of England) (from
Redditch )
Image 51 The
Lickey Incline in 1840 (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 52 James McConnell (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 55 Bewdley and surrounding area (Ordnance Survey) (from
Bewdley )
Image 56 Roosevelt plaque, Aldwyn Tower, Malvern (from
Malvern, Worcestershire )
Image 57 Tithe barn of St Johns, Bromsgrove, shortly before it was sold and demolished in 1844. It was used as a theatre in the 1700s. (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 58 The former Slingfield Mill (from
Kidderminster )
Image 60 Commemorative pavement plaque in Alcester Street (from
Redditch )
Image 61 Council wards of Malvern town (from
Malvern, Worcestershire )
Image 62 Parish church of
St John the Baptist (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 63 The hand axe discovered in 1970s in
Hallow . Potentially the first Early Middle Palaeolithic artefact from the West Midlands. (from
Worcestershire )
Image 64 Landsdown Methodist Church, Great Malvern (from
Malvern, Worcestershire )
Image 66 William Lloyd (from
History of Worcestershire )
Image 68 St Ann's Well spout (from
Malvern, Worcestershire )
Image 69 The coat of arms of Worcestershire County Council (from
Worcestershire )
Image 70 The Almonry, originally part of Evesham Abbey (from
Evesham )
Image 71 Coat of Arms of the former Bromsgrove Rural District Council (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 72 Stourport Road Bridge (from
Stourport-on-Severn )
Image 73 Astley Hall ,
Stanley Baldwin 's home between 1902 and 1947 (from
Stourport-on-Severn )
Image 74 Stafford tomb, St John the Baptist Church, Bromsgrove: one of the most powerful families in Worcestershire, living just south of the town (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 75 Welcome to Malvern, on an approach road to the town centre. (from
Malvern, Worcestershire )
Image 76 Hanbury Hall, completed around 1706 (from
History of Worcestershire )
Image 77 Grafton Manor , home of the Catholic Talbot family, holding leading military posts in Worcestershire's Royalist forces in the Civil War (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 78 Battle of Worcester (from
History of Worcestershire )
Image 79 Priory Park with Malvern Theatres complex and Priory Church tower in the background (from
Malvern, Worcestershire )
Image 80 Oswald and Eadnoth (from
History of Worcestershire )
Image 81 Brintons carpet factory in Kidderminster,
c. 1870 (from
Kidderminster )
Image 82 The North West View of the City of Worcester (from
History of Worcestershire )
Image 83 Bromsgrove Guild maker's mark on a main gate of Buckingham Palace (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 84 The art deco Regal Cinema (from
Evesham )
Image 85 The former Redditch Bus Station,
c. 1996 (from
Redditch )
Image 86 Bewdley Bridge and Severn Side South, 2003 (from
Bewdley )
Image 87 15th-century Merchant's House formerly located on Bromsgrove's High Street, now at
Avoncroft Museum of Historic Buildings (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 88 The flag of the historic county of Worcestershire (from
Worcestershire )
Image 89 Nailmakers in Bromsgrove c.1896 (from
History of Worcestershire )
Image 90 Parkside, headquarters of Bromsgrove District Council (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 91 Lea & Perrins Worcestershire sauce — the invention of two Worcester chemists (from
Worcestershire )
Image 92 The hand axe discovered in the 1970s in
Hallow . Potentially the first Early Middle Palaeolithic artefact from the West Midlands. (from
History of Worcestershire )
Image 94 The Lickey Incline about 1845 (from
History of Worcestershire )
Image 95 A bottle of Shanghainese "spicy soy sauce", Taikang Yellow brand (from
Worcestershire sauce )
Image 96 The Market Place in Evesham ,
circa 1904 by
Edmund Hort New . (from
Evesham )
Image 97 Detail of buildings and shops in Church Street, Great Malvern (from
Malvern, Worcestershire )
Image 99 Bewdley from the racks, 2019 (from
Bewdley )
Image 100 View of the QinetiQ facility from the Malvern Hills. Malvern College campus in the foreground, and the village of
Poolbrook to the rear
Image 101 Bewdley Station, now restored as part of the
Severn Valley Railway (from
Bewdley )
Image 102 Bromsgrove War Memorial (from
Bromsgrove )
Image 104 Worcester Bosch; Bosch Thermotechnology are in
Warndon (from
Worcestershire )
Image 106 The Enigma Fountain and statue of Edward Elgar, a group of sculptures by artist
Rose Garrard , on Belle Vue Terrace (from
Malvern, Worcestershire )
Image 108 A.E. Housman , poet, lived at Perry Hall, Bromsgrove (from
Bromsgrove )
This is a Good article , an article that meets a core set of high editorial standards.
The southbound services building.
Strensham services is a motorway service station on the M5 in Worcestershire , England. It is operated by Roadchef . In August 2011, it was rated as 4 stars (southbound) and 3 stars (northbound) by quality assessors at Visit England .
Unusually for a motorway service station, the two sites are about 0.5 miles (0.8 km) apart due to the proximity of junction 8 (for the M50 motorway ). The services opened with the motorway in 1962 and have undergone many developments over time, largely due to the evolution of the motorway, which at the time of its opening ran from Birmingham to Strensham but now runs to Exeter some 100 miles (160 km) southwards. It was the first service station on the M5. The service station is also an operational base for the Midlands Air Ambulance . (Full article... )
“
The Most I Have To Fear While Hiking In Worcestershire, Is Whether Or Not The Mud Awaiting Me In The Narrow Lanes Ahead Is Deep Enough To Foul My Socks.
”
— Jim Crace
WORCS/ToDo is a list of urgent tasks. If they have been addressed, please do not remove them from the list, but check them off with the {{done}} ( Done ) template, and sign your name with four tildes: ~~~~ (Full article... )
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