Mansfield is a town in Nottinghamshire. It lies on the River Maun, from which the name of the town (Maun's field) is derived. It is the main town in the Mansfield Local Authority District. On its own, the town of Mansfield has a population of approx. 59,000. Within the district, it is joined by Mansfield Woodhouse (27,000) and Warsop (13,000), to give a total district population of about 99,000.
There has been a permanent settlement at Mansfield since the year AD 70, and the town was mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086. Around that time, Mansfield was the administrative camp of a defence force intended to repel attacks from Yorkshire, which was then still a separate and hostile nation. After the Norman Conquest, Mansfield took on a role as the capital of the Royal Forest of Sherwood. With some prescience, the great eighteenth century writer Daniel Defoe passed through Mansfield in 1725, noting only that:
"...I came to Mansfield, a market town but without remarkables." (A Tour Through The Whole Island of Great Britain, 1724 - 1726)
The town has a museum and the Palace theatre. Mansfield has a large market square and large commercial centre focusing around the market. The town's rival is the nearby town of Chesterfield; the origins of the rivalry comes from the towns' football teams. The television presenter Richard Bacon came from Mansfield and the singer Alvin Stardust lived there as a child. Classical pianist John Ogdon was born in the suburb of Mansfield Woodhouse in 1937.
The area also has entertainment such as a cinema, swimming pool, and an exciting nightlife, with four nightclubs (Illusions, Coyote Wild, Liquid and The Late Lounge) and numerous pubs and bars. However Mansfield, which D.H. Lawrence described as "that once romantic now utterley disheartening colliery town" in Lady Chatterley's Lover until recently did not, apart from a small section in W H Smith, have a bookshop. Furthermore the "bookshop" Mansfield now has is, in fact, bargain retailer "The Works".
In Nottinghamshire, Mansfield is regarded with some disdain, being as it is a working class town with little in the way of culture or scenery. Some Yorkshire folk still associate the town with failure to support the UK Miners' Strike (1984-1985); football matches between Mansfield Town and Doncaster Rovers have seen fans of the latter chant "scab".
The ancestral home of Lord Byron, Newstead Abbey, is located not far away in Ravenshead. The community based Bandwagon Recording Studios are also to be found here.
The town's bus station is often cited by locals as one of the very worst places in England to spend time waiting for transport. The town, like many others, continues to suffer from glaring problems with drugs, alcoholism and antisocial behaviour, possibly a legacy of its close links to the now almost defunct coal mining industry.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Mansfield".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world