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BS 2

 St Paul's, St Werburghs, St Jude's, St Philip's

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St Paul's

St Pauls (also written St Paul's) is an inner suburb of Bristol, England, situated just north east of the city centre and west of the M32.

It is bounded by the A38 (Stokes Croft), the B4051 (Ashley Road), the A4032  (Newfoundland Road) and the A4044 (Newfoundland Street), although the traditional southern boundary before the M32 used to be the Frome. 

In the early 18th century it was laid out as one of Bristol's first suburbs.

In the 1870s the Brooks Dye Works opened on the edge of St Pauls and became a major local employer, leading to the construction of terraced houses.

Together with migration to Bristol, both from overseas and within Britain, this led to St Pauls becoming a densely populated suburb by the Victorian era.

The area was bomb damaged during World War II. Rebuilding and investment was focused on new housing estates such as Hartcliffe and Southmead  rather than St Pauls, and this contributed to a decline in the quality of the area.

During the large-scale immigration of the 1950s, many people moved from Jamaica and Ireland, and settled in St Pauls.

In 1963 St Paul's became the focus of attention when members of the British African-Caribbean community organised the Bristol Bus Boycott to protest against the racist employment policy of the Bristol Omnibus Company which operated a colour bar, refusing employment to non-white workers as bus crews.

This policy was overturned in August of that year after sixty days of protest and the action helped establish the Race Relations Act 1968.

A riot followed a police raid on the Black and White Café in St Pauls on 2 April 1980.

The St Pauls riot started when the police entered the Black and White Café, knowing that the premises was being used for drug dealing.

A customer had his trousers ripped and demanded compensation, which the police refused.

A crowd outside then refused to allow the police to leave, and when back up was called a riot started. 

The riots were quickly blamed on race, but both white and black youths from both Irish and  Jamaican backgrounds and some English fought against the police and the problems are thought to have been linked instead to poverty and perceived social injustices, predominantly the Sus law and anti Irish feelings from IRA activity on the main land.

In 1990 a Bristol and St Pauls black politician Mr. Kuomba Balogun, Chairman of the Bristol West Labour Party, was reported in the Bristol Evening Post of 2 February, as saying: We make a public plea to the IRA to consider ways of strongly giving some assistance to the armed wing of the ANC in the same light as Colonel Gaddaffi sought to assist in the liberation of the people of Ireland. An Early Day Motion was presented in Parliament calling on him to be expelled from the Labour Party forthwith.

This area of the city has also suffered its share of gun violence, reaching a high point in the early 2000s (decade) when rival Jamaican Yardie and drug gangs such as the British Aggi Crew fought turf wars over territory.

The drugs war between the rival feuding factions was extinguished following en masse arrests of both the Yardies and the home grown Aggi Crew with a main proportion of the foreign drug dealers being deported back to Jamaica.

The Black and White Café was closed in March 2005, and has been demolished to make way for houses after a compulsory purchase order.

Now the area is experiencing a positive urban renewal with the St. Pauls Unlimited scheme.

St Pauls has a large African-Caribbean population.

The relative poverty of the area has created a strong community spirit shown in the St Pauls Carnival, similar to the Notting Hill Carnival  in London.

It has been run annually since 1967, and it now attracts an average of 40,000 people each year.

This is a vibrant parade with local primary schools and community groups joining in.

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St Werburghs

The district is close to the district of St Pauls. Whilst it has a more of a cultural mix than Bristol, it is not as diverse as other inner city areas.

It also has more family housing which has increased house prices.

The area has less crime than the other inner city Bristol areas.

This leads to the benefits of a multi-cultural community but less deprivation than some neighbouring areas.

Mina Road is St Werburghs' 'high street', whose shops each have an imaginative figurehead protruding from their frontages indicating the type of trade on offer.

The park opposite the shops contains an original example of a cast iron Victorian public lavatory.

Before 1879 the northern part of the area now known as St. Werburghs was referred to as Ashley Vale, and the southern part Baptist Mills.

The area became known as St. Werburghs in 1879 when St Werburgh's Church was relocated (with substantial rebuilding) to Mina Road in this district from Corn Street, Bristol.

The church is now a climbing centre run by Undercover Rock.

The area was historically prone to serious flooding from the River Frome, notably in 1882 and 1889.

There are still four Victorian flood marker posts. It was also a source of water supply for the city of Bristol through the Quay Pipe and The Boiling Wells.

St. Werburghs has a city farm and has been the scene of several environmental campaigns including the development of a self-build housing community and the establishing of Narroways Hill as a Millennium Green and wildlife area.

The BBC Television series Only Fools and Horses, which was filmed in and around Bristol, used the allotments for the episode 'Mother Nature's Son', and BBC wildlife and gardening programmes and Casualty have been filmed in the area.

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St Jude's

St Jude's is an area of central Bristol, England.

It takes its name from the former Church of England parish church of St Jude the Apostle, which was designed by Samuel Burleigh Gabriel and completed in 1849.

St Jude's is east of the Broadmead shopping area.

The main car park for Cabot Circus is there.

Part of the land of St Jude's was also annexed to Broadmead for the construction of Cabot Circus in 2006.

An excavation, of a proposed residential development on a site of 1,260m² at the corner and on the north-west side of Little Anne Street and Wade Street, uncovered 18th century artisan's houses which were removed in the years on either side of the Second World War as part of a so-called 'slum clearance' project.

Census records and other primary sources suggest that a property within the bounds of the study site, 26 Wade Street, served as a pipe factory, while several pipemaking families and individuals resided within the area.

St Philip's

St Philip's is an industrial inner suburb of Bristol, England.

It is bounded by River Avon and Harbour feeder canal making it an almost island area, unlike the other two areas surrounded by water, it was historically part of Gloucestershire and is part of North Bristol. The site is home of Avonmeads Retail Park, a large retail and leisure park with Showcase Cinemas and a Hollywood Bowl ten-pin bowling centre among its tenants.

It was extensively redeveloped in the 15 years to 2007.

A bypass runs over the River Avon creating a major transport link from the A4 road in south east Bristol, to junction 3 of the M32 motorway near the city centre.

In past years St Philip's marsh was a housing development for the workers of Bristol's market area (now known as Old Market).

One of St Philip's' more influential residents during the early 1900s was George Townsend, a major property developer of the South Bristol area.

His family home situated in the St Anne's area of Bristol is still standing today and a reminder of Bristol's history.

Today there is very little housing in the area making it almost deserted at night, and other than the retail area it does contain one shop, pub, takeaway and Sparke Evans Park.

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St Werburghs City Farm Bristol UK.jpg

St Werburghs City Farm

The St Werburghs City Farm  is situated opposite the award-winning City Farm Cafe, adventure playground and community building.

The Farm is open to the public between 9am and 5pm, 7 days a week. 

The City Farm is free to visit and welcomes more than 40,000 visitors each year. 

 

Watercress Rd, Bristol BS2 9YJ

Official website:

http://www.swcityfarm.co.uk/

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Attractions of BS 2 Area

City Road Baptist Church Bristol UK walkinbristol.jpg

City Road Baptist Church

The City Road Baptist Church  is a Baptist church on Upper York Street, Stokes Croft in Bristol, England.

It was built in 1861 by the  Gloucester  architects James Medland and Alfred William Maberly.

It has been designated by English Heritage as a grade II listed building...

 

Stokes Croft, St Paul's, Avon, Bristol BS2 8TP

Official website:

https://crbc-bristol.org.uk/

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Narroways Local Nature Reserve Bristol UK walkinbristol.jpg

Narroways Local Nature Reserve

Narroways Hill is a little grassy & wooded ridge dissected by railway lines lying just North of inner-city Bristol, in the neighbourhood of St Werburghs.

It has always been an open space and as the city has encroached around it, its value as a green sanctuary has increased. 

 

St Werburghs, Bristol BS2 9YT

Official website:

https://narroways.wordpress.com/about/

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St Agnes Church Bristol UK walkinbristol.jpg

St Agnes Church

St Agnes Church is a place of sanctuary in an increasingly challenging world.

It is at the heart of St Paul’s Parish which is at the heart of inner city Bristol. 

 

223 Newfoundland Rd, Bristol BS2 9NX

Official website:

https://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/11732/service-and-events/events-all/

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St Agnes Park Bristol UK walkinbristol.jpg

St Agnes Park

Popular community park with playground and interesting history.

St Agnes Park is open at all times.

St Agnes Park is accessible for wheelchairs.

Facilities and features

 

St. Agnes Park, Thomas St, Bristol BS2 9QJ

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St Paul's Church Circomedia Bristol UK walkinbristol.jpg

St Paul's Church (Circomedia)

St Paul's Church gives its name to the surrounding St Paul's area of Bristol.

It was built in the 1790s but fell into disuse and disrepair by its closure in 1988.

It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building.

Major renovation work was undertaken to repair and convert the building for use as a performance space and circus skills school Circomedia...

 

Portland Square, Bristol BS2 8SJ

Official website:

https://www.circomedia.com/

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St Paul's park Bristol UK walkinbristol.jpg

St Paul's Park

Small park in the city. 

Facilities and features:

  • playground and seating within a fenced area

  • basketball hoop

  • climbing wall

  • 'twin-fly' play equipment

  • ramp and dish feature for bikes and skateboards

  • grassed event space

 

Portland Square, St Paul's, Bristol BS2 8SA

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St Werburgh's  Church - The Climbing Academy Bristol UK walkinbristol      .jpg

St Werburgh's church

St Werburgh's Church, Bristol, is a former church, now a climbing centre in the St Werburghs area of central north-east Bristol, England.

It has been designated on the National Heritage List for England as a Grade II* listed building.

The area became known as St Werburghs when the church was relocated from Corn Street to Mina Road in 1879.

The church held its last service on Remembrance Sunday in 1988, after which it was de-consecrated and converted into Bristol's first indoor climbing centre called Undercover Rock.

The climbing centre includes top-rope climbs, bolted lead climbs, and a bouldering area, all using hardboard walls built inside the original church structure.

There is also a small cafe and viewing area. In 2016 Undercover Rock was taken over by another Bristol climbing centre The Climbing Academy, which specialises in bouldering.

 

St Weburgh's Church, Mina Rd, Bristol BS2 9YT

Official website:

https://www.theclimbingacademy.com/locations/the-church/

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The Wardrobe Theatre and the Old Market Assembly Bristol UK walkinbristol.jpg

The Wardrobe Theatre
& The Old Market Assembly

The Wardrobe Theatre is a fringe studio venue and thriving arts hub in the heart of Bristol showcasing the best of the city’s theatre-makers, companies and artists.

In December 2015 we relocated and built a new arts space in the Old Market area of the city , a shared building with The Old Market Assembly. 

The Old Market Assembly is first and foremost a place for people to meet. Their aim is to create an environment where cultures collide and meld to create new connections between people and ideas.

This runs through the design of the space and into the shaping of the menu, bakery and theatre and music.

 

25 West St, Bristol BS2 0DF

Official websites:

The Wardrobe Theatre:

http://thewardrobetheatre.com/

The Old Market Assembly:

http://www.oldmarketassembly.co.uk

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