| County of Herefordshire | |
|---|---|
| Geography | |
| Status | Unitary Titular county Ceremonial county |
| Origin | Historic |
| Region | West Midlands |
| Area: - Total - District | Ranked 26th 2,180 km² Ranked 3rd |
| Admin HQ | Hereford |
| GB | GB-HEF |
| ONS code | 00GA |
| NUTS 3 | UKG11 |
| Demographics | |
| Population - Total () - Density - District | Ranked / km² Ranked |
| Ethnicity | 99.1% White |
| Politics | |
| Herefordshire Council http://www.herefordshire.gov.uk/ | |
| Executive | |
| MPs | |
In 1974 it was merged with the neighbouring Worcestershire to form the relatively short-lived Hereford and Worcester. Within this, Herefordshire was covered by the districts of South Herefordshire, Hereford, and part of Malvern Hills and Leominster districts.
On April 1, 1998 it was split out again, in the form of a unitary authority, with broadly the same borders as before. It is not to be confused with Hertfordshire, a county near London.
Herefordshire is a very rural county best known for its fruit growing and cider production in particular. When Celia Fiennes visited Herefordshire in 1696 she saw a countryside in which apple and pear trees were growing everywhere 'even in their corn fields and hedgerows'. Modern agriculture has put pressure on the ancient orchards in the county but many of them still survive today providing a habitat for the rare noble chafer beetle.
Herefordshire's county flower is the Mistletoe.
The major settlements in the county include the City of Hereford, which is the county town, as well as Leominster, Ledbury, Ross On Wye, Kington and Bromyard.
| Year | Regional Gross Value Added | Agriculture | Industry | Services |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1995 | 1,622 | 218 | 567 | 836 |
| 2000 | 1,885 | 155 | 643 | 1,087 |
| 2003 | 2,216 | 185 | 708 | 1,323 |
includes hunting and forestry
includes energy and construction
includes financial intermediation services indirectly measured
Components may not sum to totals due to rounding
In the last few years soft fruits such as strawberries have become a new and rapidly expanding area of the agricultural economy of the county. One of the main reasons for this was the introduction of the polytunnel. This allowed the strawberries to be grown for a far longer season as well as producing strawberries of higher quality with no blemishes from the rain. The strawberries are (in the majority) picked by Eastern European 'students' who come over for the season to earn some money, more than they could working in their country of origin and with the bonus, for many of them, of learning or improving their English. The poly tunnels have been a major issue in the county as some people see them as a 'blot on the landscape'. Others believe however that if agriculture is to survive then it must be allowed to innovate, otherwise the industry will stagnate and the county will suffer.
The hilly nature of the terrain in Mid Wales means that the main ground transport links between North Wales and South Wales run through Herefordshire. The other trunk roads in Herefordshire, the A49 and the A465, form part of these north–south routes as well as catering for local traffic. These are single-carriageway roads and mean that travelling through the county is often slow. In particularly Hereford is a major congestion point with all traffic having to pass over one dual-carriageway bridge in the centre of town. Subsequently traffic can jam and leave the city in gridlock in rush hour. In times of flood a roundabout on the south side of the bridge is impassable leaving the south of the city almost stranded. ASDA supermarkets is currently building a controversial supermarket scheme connecting to this small roundabout on a flood plain. This project will have large flood defences and the roundabout will be replaced by traffic lights and the road level raised as part of the project.
Former routes which are now closed were Ledbury to Gloucester; Hereford to Ross-on-Wye and onward to Gloucester and Monmouth; Hereford to Hay-on-Wye; Pontrilas to Hay-on-Wye; Leominster to New Radnor; Eardisley to Presteign; and Leominster to Worcester via Bromyard.
The early nineteenth century saw the construction of two canals, The Hereford & Gloucester Canal and The Leominster & Stourport Canal but these were never successful and there are now few remains to be seen.
Herefordshire | Unitary authorities in England
Herefordshire | Herefordshire | Herefordshire | Herefordshire | Herefordshire | Herefordshire | Herefordshire | Herefordshire | Herefordshire | Херефордшир | Herefordshire
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"Herefordshire".
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