| Borough of Poole | |
|---|---|
| Geography | |
| Status: | Unitary, Borough |
| Region: | South West England |
| Ceremonial County: | Dorset |
| Area: - Total | Ranked 285th 64.88 km² |
| Admin. HQ: | Poole |
| Grid reference: | |
| ONS code: | 00HP |
| Demographics | |
| Population: - Total () - Density | Ranked / km² |
| Ethnicity: | 98.2% White |
| Politics | |
| Borough of Poole http://www.poole.gov.uk/ | |
| Leadership: | Leader & Cabinet |
| Executive: | |
| MPs: | Annette Brooke, Robert Syms |
| Post Office and Telephone | |
| Post Code: | BH |
| Post Town: | POOLE |
| Dialling Code: | 01202 |
Poole is a coastal town, port and tourist destination in the traditional county of Dorset in southern England. The town has a population of 138,299 (2001) and is famed for its large natural harbour,situated on the shores of the English Channel. Poole is positioned on a very popular stretch of coastline, with the resort of Bournemouth to the east, Studland and the Jurassic coast to the south-west. The town has grown rapidly, and Sandbanks, a small sand spit across part of the harbour mouth, is so popular that it has the fourth highest land value, by area, in the world. There are exclusive homes both on Sandbanks and the whole of the area stretching east from the Harbour to The Avenue (the eastern boundary of Poole).
Prominent employers in Poole include Barclays Bank, Hamworthy Engineering, Poole Packaging, Sunseeker, Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) and Ryvita.
Poole Harbour (said to be the second largest natural harbour in the world after Sydney) has been a working port for many hundreds of years, though the port has declined somewhat as the shallow water cannot take the largest ships. The harbour is noted for its ecology, supporting saltmarsh, mudflats and an internationally important population of wintering waterfowl as well as the Brownsea Island nature reserve, where the Scouting movement began. Today the port is amongst other things the home of Sunseeker, manufacturers of luxury yachts, and the departure point for ferries (Brittany Ferries and Condor) to France and the Channel Islands. The quayside and harbour was the place from which some ships departed for the D-Day landings of World War II.
Poole was a small fishing village at the time of the Norman Conquest, but grew rapidly into an important port exporting wool and in 1433 was made Port of the Staple. By then the town had trade links from the Baltic to Spain. However, in 1405 the Spanish burnt Poole to the ground because local pirate, Harry Paye, kept attacking Spanish vessels. The town, however, continued to grow in importance despite the effects of piracy and, in 1571, was made a county corporate. In the 17th century transatlantic trade and travel developed and at the start of the 18th century Poole was beating rival Bristol as the busiest port in England. The town grew rapidly during the industrial revolution as urbanisation took place, and the merchants put up tenement buildings, most of which were demolished during the ill-advised slum clearance activities in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
Poole was granted exclusive rights to fish off Newfoundland by Queen Victoria, which drasticly improved the importance and wealth of the town, however, when this right wore off other ports were quick to get their share in the trade which negatively affected the importance of Poole.
At the turn of the 19th century 9 out of 10 workers in Poole were engaged in harbour activities, but as the century progressed ships became too large for the shallow harbour and the port began losing business to the deep water ports at Liverpool, Southampton and Plymouth.
In the 19th century the beaches and landscape of south-west Hampshire, as well as the Isle of Purbeck district of Dorset, began to attract large numbers of tourists and the villages to the east of Poole began to grow and merge until the holiday town of Bournemouth emerged. Growth accelerated and Poole and Bournemouth (along with Christchurch to the east) have become a large built-up area. This area is known by some as a conurbation, although this not a view held by the populations of either Poole or Christchurch. Although the three towns are well known as popular holiday destinations, each has its own individual character and attracts different types of holidaymakers. Despite the growth in leisure activities, Poole retains a considerable part of its industrial heritage.
The Town Centre retains a few of the old buildings put up by the wealthy merchants, such as the 1761 market house and Sir Peter Thompson's 1746 town house designed by John Bastard. The 18th and 20th century buildings hide earlier buildings, such as the mediaeval Wool house, Scaplen's Court and the Tudor almshouses. However, the town suffered from both bombing in World War II and the utilitarian town planning of the economically drained post-war Britain, and consequently has lost many old buildings. In recent years, however, some regeneration has taken place, with the demolition of Hamworthy (Poole)power station and the redevelopment of the old town gas gas-works.
On April 1, 1997 the town was made a unitary authority, once again administratively independent from Dorset, thus thwarting a take-over campaign by neighbouring Bournemouth, which lobbied the government for the creation of a super town comprising Poole, Christchurch and Bournemouth, which would have been administered from Bournemouth.
| Year | Regional Gross Value Added | Agriculture | Industry | Services |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1995 | 2,740 | 4 | 665 | 2,071 |
| 2000 | 4,142 | 2 | 890 | 3,250 |
| 2003 | 4,705 | 2 | 898 | 3,804 |
includes hunting and forestry
includes energy and construction
includes financial intermediation services indirectly measured
Components may not sum to totals due to rounding
Poole is also noted for its motorcycle speedway team, the Poole Pirates.
Poole's football team is Poole Town FC.which plays in Wessex League Division 1.
Poole has a variety of entertainment sites, from the out-of-town development Tower Park, the refurbished arts centre now known as The Lighthouse, Poole town centre itself and Bournemouth's many clubs, bars and restaurants.
Coastal cities | Local government in Dorset | Seaside resorts in England | Towns in Dorset | Unitary authorities in England