Whipsnade
Whipsnade maps (2 available)
Map of Bedfordshire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of Bedfordshire
Personalised maps
Create an historic map centred directly on any postcode!
Whipsnade books (5 available)
Whipsnade memories
Be the first to add a memory of Whipsnade.
You can also read memories of nearby places in Bedfordshire below.
Bedfordshire memories
Whitethorn Morris dance at the Dunstable Folk Festival
Whitethorn Morris danced here at various town centre sites and pubs along with St Albans Morris Men, Caddington Blues and Bedfordshire Lace.
It was all in support of the Dunstable Folk Festival which was organised by Dunstable Town Council. A surprisingly enjoyable day was had by all!
A memory of Dunstable contributed by John Howard Norfolk
Memories of the Civic
My first memory of the Civic was that awesome ceiling, seen for the very first time at a do hosted by the then new Evening Post newspaper, for all the delivery boys & girls. Probably not long after the hall opened. The entertainment was none other than the Bonzo Dog Doo-dah Band.
Next, the heady days of the 70's when the Civic was one of the best venues for what has come to be called Classic Rock. We just called it rock then. Any band worth their salt played here along with one or two that weren't. Some names that come to mind are Pink Floyd, The Who, Wishbone Ash, Deep Purple, Quo ... the list goes on. I should ...read more here
A memory of Dunstable contributed by Merv Thomas
Orange rolling
Orange rolling, Good Friday afternoon up the 'orange pit'. There used to be crowds of people all chasing little oranges down the hill. Never quite sure what you did if you caught one, I'm sure it wouldn't have been fit to eat!
Is this peculiar to Dunstable? I know of cheese rolling, where they chase a double gloucester cheese down a hill in Leckhampton (near Cheltenham) but haven't come across anything else similar elsewhere.
A memory of Dunstable contributed by Merv Thomas
Living around the corner
I used to live in Sundown Ave, just around the corner from these shops. My friend Michelle lived to the right of the bus. My Mum used to work in the sweet shop at the end of the parade to the right. There was a supermarket on the far left with a chemist next door. I remember buying my Mum some rather stinky Yardley perfume there for her birthday one year for about 1/6d I went to school at Downside CP which you could get to by walking down the road to the right of the photo. People I remember living near theses shops are, Michelle Loggie, Steven Johnson, Michael Lithgo, Tim Francis, ELizabeth Graham, ...read more here
A memory of Dunstable contributed by Elaine Stephens (nee Ockwell)
Extracts From Whipsnade & Bedfordshire books
FEW PEOPLE would be shocked by the
idea of a national poll, conducted by Idler
magazine, discovering that Luton was Britain’s
‘crappiest town’. Luton stands out, according
to the study, because it is incredibly ugly
and has a sense of neglected isolation. Well,
beauty is in the eye of the beholder, but what
is neglected isolation? Clearly there is some
kind of insinuation that Luton is not cool, it’s
not with the latest trends in ‘Cool Britannia.’
Leaders of popular culture have a stupefying
arrogance, loathing any sort of individuality;
they are able to dish out criticism, but not
to take it. Luton is about people, whatever
the buildings look like. One must admit that
modern towns are unbearably look-alike,
but none look like Luton. Maybe it is this
uniqueness that critics cannot stand. That is
not to say there are not problems here, but
these are challenging times across the globe.
No place is really isolated. As for neglected,
that is not Luton’s fault. Like so much of the
south-east, the government wants to pack
the people in, but it does not want to pay the
price in infrastructure.
The meaning of isolation in the town’s
distant past is easier to understand.
Communications were slow, and neglect
was not an issue. Folk just got on with
the business of survival. Hunter gatherers
(evidence for their presence is Worthington
Smith’s discovery of Palaeolithic flint tools
in the 19th century) made their home
250,000 years ago beside hillside lakes.
Neolithic, or New Stone Age, men arrived
from France and the Rhine, crossing the
nascent channel on rafts. They brought
cattle, seed corn and pottery.
(Robert Cook)
We are looking across Luton in its Chiltern setting from the Eaton Farm location, which became the airport.
An extract from from"Luton - A History & Celebration".
William brought with him 5,000 knights,
the new aristocracy. When he died the
country was still 90% Saxon; the Normans’
policy, like the Romans’, was ‘divide and
rule’, with the majority of England’s two
million people subject to the Norman fist.
His successor, Henry II, gave the manor of
Luton to his illegitimate son Robert, Earl of
Gloucester, and a new church was built south
of the present St Mary’s. Henry also gave land
to the monks to build a hospital and chapel
on Farley Hill. Another hospital, the House
of God of the Virgin Mary, was founded by
Thomas Beckett on a hill between the old
Vauxhall car factory and Luton Airport.
An extract from from"Luton - A History & Celebration".
Contagious Diseases Acts were passed to
deal with all manner of problems arising
from people living in highly populated areas
like Luton. Edwin Chadwick was in charge of
the government campaign to sanitize towns
and cities by cleaning up the water supply and
trying to improve the habits of the growing
populace. Religion had its own methods for
cheering up the poor, but William Booth’s
Salvation Army was an innovation, aiming
to reach out to them by entering the dens of
iniquity and trying to change lives. That was
a hard task in a town facing major threats
to its livelihood. Things had to change. The
railways would at least make it easier for
people to move elsewhere in search of a job,
or vice versa if Luton’s fortune changed.
The town’s two stations were built side by
side, but the Bute Street link to Dunstable
was closed during the short-sighted Marples
era at the Transport Ministry in the 1960s -
Ernest Marples employed his scientist friend
Dr Beeching to take an axe to as many rail
routes as possible. The consequences in traffic
congestion between Luton and Dunstable are
all too obvious.
Non-conformist religious groups were
fierce in their advocacy of total abstinence.
They played a significant role in getting some
of the worst local pubs closed down through
(Robert Cook)
The Brewery Tap dates back to the 17th century. It stood next to a tithe barn until shops were built to meet the
town’s changing requirements.
An extract from from"Luton - A History & Celebration".
IN SPITE of the depression, the town’s
population grew to 36,404 in 1901, and the
town grew richer. The Liberal mayor Edwin
Oakley, who gained office in 1891, was far-
sighted; he sensed that Luton’s future and
prosperity depended on new industries and
better infrastructure. Rapid expansion meant
that jerry-building was inevitable (it is thought
that the term may derive from the poorly built
walls of biblical Jericho, which were so easily
knocked down by Joshua’s army);
this would build up problems later
on. Health problems were endemic.
Although the population reached
50,000 by 1911, men’s life expectancy
was only 52 years and women’s
55. Infant mortality was very high,
with working parents having little
knowledge of what was best for their
offspring or money to make good
provision for them. Typhoid, scarlet
fever, whooping cough, tuberculosis
and diphtheria were rife.
As the population grew, so did
the need for public services. Balfour’s
Education Act of 1902 placed
‘board schools’ under borough or
county councils (Local Education
Authorities), authorizing them to
establish secondary and technical
schools as well as to develop
the existing elementary schools.
Bedfordshire County Council took
over education in 1902, and it was
hoped that the Higher Grade School
would serve Luton’s growing needs.
At the time, boys were travelling to
Dunstable, Bedford and St Albans. The new
Luton Modern School opened in 1908. Built
on the site of the White House in Park Square,
it was originally called the Edward VII School;
it was renamed the Technical School in 1938.
The steel magnate Andrew Carnegie added to
the educational infrastructure by providing
the town with a magnificent new library
building in 1910 opposite the town hall at the
entrance to Manchester Street.
An extract from from"Luton - A History & Celebration".
Religion had been the mainstay of lives
high and low for centuries, but the industrial
revolution was raising questions and creating
pressures and hardships that were disturbing
a long-settled order. Above all, the revolution
was about new technology, and working
practices were changing fast. For centuries,
the church had preached that God approved
the hierarchy of ‘the rich man in his castle, the
poor man at his gate’, but that teaching, too,
would change. When Lord Bute left the Hoo,
the living was sold to various patrons, who
appointed a series of vicars. These included
Dr Thomas Peile, who surrendered much
of his income to allow new churches to be
built: East Hyde in 1859, Stopsley in 1860,
and Christ Church in 1860. James O’ Neill
bought the living for himself when St Mary’s
had become run down; he remained there for
35 years. St Mary’s had been the centrepiece
of the old order, but could it remain so? At
least its chequerboard walls benefited from
a restoration in the 19th century. As the
town continued to grow, more new churches
were opened: the church at Biscot in 1866,
St Matthew’s in 1875, and St Paul’s in 1892.
An extract from from"Luton - A History & Celebration".





