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Whitehall, BB3 2JU DarwenGBP 57 - 105

guest review score: N/A
Situated at the base of The Pennines, the award-winning Whitehall Hotel is a striking Victorian Mansion set within 3 acres of scenic gardens and woodl… More
GBP 87 - 107

Astley Bank Hotel

Astley Bank, Bolton Road, Blackburn, BB3 2QB DarwenGBP 87 - 107

guest review score: N/A
Standing in 6 acres of grounds, this superb 19th century mansion house and its extensive gardens have superbly maintained their original characteristi… More
 

Darwen: Guide



Darwen is a small market town in Lancashire, which extends onto West Pennine Moors|the West Pennine Moors. Darwen is part of the Blackburn with Darwen borough, which has been a unitary authority since 1998.

The town is spread along the route of the A666 road, which joins Darwen to its bigger neighbours, Blackburn to the north, and Bolton to the south. Darwen is on a motorway junction, and so has a lot of passers through. It has a Darwen railway station|railway station and is on the Ribble Valley Line.

The River Darwen passes through the town, subsequently joining the River Ribble, one of the longest rivers in north-west England. Most authorities trace the word to Brythonic derw, oak. John Field Placenames of Britain and Ireland p 58 Kenneth Cameron English Placenames p 38, which is supported by the older name Derewent, though it has been claimed that the name Darwen stems from Dwrgwyn, from Old Welsh dwr or "water" and gwyn Brythonic for "white" or "clear". Thus the name may mean "clear water" .

The Roman Britain|Romans once inhabited Lancashire. A Roman roads in Britain|Roman road is visible on the Ordnance Survey map of the area, and Roman artifacts from the Whitehall area are on display in the Public Library.

Like many towns in Lancashire, Darwen was a centre for the Textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution|production of textiles during the industrial revolution. The most important textile building in Darwen is India Mill. This was built by Eccles Shorrock & Company but the company was ruined by the effects of the cotton famine of the 1860s. The building is now home to many companies including Brookhouse (producers of aeroplane parts) and Capita who runs Television licensing in the United Kingdom|TV licensing. Since the 1860s, the textile industry has strongly declined in the region, although many of the factories and other industrial buildings from the period survive and are now used for other purposes. India Mill and its famous chimney have been sold in a £12million deal.

Overlooking the town from the moors to the west is Darwen Tower (officially 'Jubilee Tower'). Built in celebration of both Victoria of the United Kingdom|Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee in 1897 and of the successful campaign the same year by the people of Darwen for free public access to Darwen Moors, it stands at an altitude of 1225 feet and is 86 feet tall.

In services here were originally named "Blackburn Services". Following local protests they have been renamed "Blackburn with Darwen Services".

Darwen was incorporated as a municipal borough in 1878. The population of the town declined from 40,000 in the 1911 census to 30,000 in the 1971 census. In 1974, under the Local Government Act 1972, the town became part of the Lancashire non-metropolitan district of Blackburn, which was renamed Blackburn with Darwen in 1997, shortly before it became a unitary authority.

The town is also the home of Darwen F.C.|Darwen Football Club, the Darwen Library Theatre (an extension to the library), and the TV show Hetty Wainthropp Investigates. It also has a large ethnic community including many Italians.

One of Darwen's biggest claims to fame is that it hosted a visit from Mahatma Gandhi in 1931. He had accepted the invitation from Corder Catchpool, owner of the Greenfield Mill, to come and see the effects of India's boycott of cotton goods. The unemployed cotton factory workers greeted the man with great affection despite it being his fault they were out of work in the first place!

Darwen People

Margaret Chapman: UK artist b. 1940

See also

Darwen Library Theatre

Notes

This "Travel Guide" section is drawn from the Wikipedia article "Darwen". We hope you will edit and improve it. It is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.