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==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.rainhill-civic-society.org.uk/ Rainhill Civic Society]
*[http://www.rainhill-civic-society.org.uk/ Rainhill Civic Society]
*[http://www.rainhillxs.org.uk Rainhill Ex-Services Club]
*[http://www.rainhillgala.co.uk Rainhill Gala]


[[Category:Towns and villages in St Helens]]
[[Category:Towns and villages in St Helens]]

Revision as of 01:50, 13 January 2008

Rainhill
Population11,913 
OS grid referenceSJ494912
Metropolitan borough
Metropolitan county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townPRESCOT
Postcode districtL35
Dialling code0151
PoliceMerseyside
FireMerseyside
AmbulanceNorth West
List of places
UK
England
Merseyside

Rainhill is a town in the Metropolitan Borough of St Helens, Merseyside, England approximately 10 miles away from Liverpool. It forms a civil parish. It was formerly a separate town, then part of Prescot parish and Whiston Rural District. There is some confusion about which town or city Rainhill is classed under. Politically, Rainhill is in the constituency of St Helens South, and is controlled by the Borough of St Helens; according to postal codes, it is in the postal district of Prescot; and it uses the Liverpool telephone area code (0151).

History

Beginnings

The history of Rainhill has been recorded since Norman times but its name is believed to come from the Old English personal name of Regna or Regan.[citation needed] Recordings have shown that in the year of 1246, Roger of Rainhill died and the township was divided into two halves for each of his daughters. One half was centred on the now standing Rainhill Manor Public House and the other centred on Rainhill Hall, just off Blundell's lane.[citation needed]

Towards the end of the 18th century, four Catholic sons of a farmer, who came from the area around Stonyhurst, decided to seek their fortunes in Liverpool. The names of the brothers were Joseph, Francis, Peter and Bartholomew Bretherton. In 1800, Bartholomew decided to break into the coaching business. The partnership that he had with one or two of his brothers quickly built up and by 1820, he had the bulk of the coaching trade of Liverpool. He was running Coaches to and from Manchester fourteen times a day from Saracen's Head in Dale Street, Liverpool. Bartholomew chose Rainhill as his first stage and he developed facilities on the Land along side the Ship Inn (Originally the New Inn by Henry Parr 1780)and on this site he was believed to be stabling at least 240 horses, coach horses, farriers, coach builders, veterinaries etc.[citation needed]

Bartholomew had begun to purchase land in Rainhill, and in 1824, he bought the Manor of Rainhill from Dr James Gerrard of Liverpool. By 1830, he owned over 260 acres around Rainhill. In 1824, across the road from the stables, he built Rainhill House and laid out beautiful gardens around it. Today, this house is known as Loyola Hall, and has served as a retreat run by the Society of Jesus since 1923.[1]

Rainhill Trials

File:DSCN0417-s-rocket 800x600.JPG
The preserved Rocket

Rainhill was the site of the 1829 Rainhill Trials, in which a number of railway locomotives were entered in a competition to decide a suitable design for use on the new Liverpool and Manchester Railway. The winner was The Rocket, designed by George Stephenson. In 1979 the 150th anniversary of the trials was celebrated by a cavalcade of trains through the ages, including replicas of the winner and runner-up in the trials.[2]

Victorian murders

Rainhill was also the location of a notorious Victorian mass murderer; Frederick Bailey Deeming. In March 1892, the bodies of a woman and her four children were discovered buried under the concrete floor of Dinham Villa, Lawton Road, Rainhill.[citation needed]

The series of events that led to this gruesome discovery began with a marriage in St. Ann's Church, Rainhill. Miss Emily Mather married Frederick Bailey Deeming, an officer in the Army. The couple emigrated to Australia, where Deeming murdered his wife and buried her under the floor of their kitchen. Australian police contacted Scotland Yard and as a result of information passed onto them, made a search of Dinham Villa, home of Deeming's supposed sister and her four children. Marie Deeming, however, was his first wife. Her throat had been cut, as had the throats of three of the children. The fourth was strangled.[citation needed]

Deeming was convicted of the murder of Emily Mather and hanged in Australia. After being up for sale and attracting no interested buyers, Dinham Villa in Rainhill was demolished. Small bungaloes are now in place of it. The Rainhill victims were interred in the graveyard of St. Ann's Church. Sadly, the headstone marking their grave was stolen and the grave has since remained unmarked.[3]

Modern Rainhill

Rainhill is now primarily a commuter town. It is home to several sporting clubs including Rainhill Town AFC and Rainhill Cricket Club. Mohammed Ashraful, the Bangladesh National Cricket Team captain made several appearances for the Club in 2006.[4]

Places of interest

Skew Bridge as seen today.

A feature of the village is the "Skew Bridge", of sandstone construction, that takes the main road over the railway. It takes its name from the unusual diagonal angle at which the railway passes under the bridge. It is the world's first bridge to go over a railway at an angle.[5] The bridge was later widened to accommodate increases in road traffic. The milestone on the bridge that informs travellers of the distances to Warrington, Prescot and Liverpool was moved to the opposite side at the time of the expansion. Therefore, the distance markers pointed to the wrong destinations. This quirk was corrected in 2005 when the milestone was returned to the correct side of the bridge.[citation needed]

The railway still runs through Rainhill. There is a station with frequent services to Liverpool, Manchester and Warrington. Rainhill has four churches: St Ann's, St Bartholomew's and St James' – which are Church of England, Roman Catholic and Methodist, respectively – and an evangelical church. There are several primary schools in Rainhill: Oakdene, Longton Lane, St Ann's, St Batholomew's and Tower College, all of which boast high academic achievement. This is also true for the local comprehensive, Rainhill High School Media Arts College and the Christian independent public school, Tower College, which accepts students between 4 and 16 and has moderately low tuition fees.[citation needed]

Medicine

Rainhill has several medical centres but the largest and most notable is Scott Clinic which once treated Michael Abram after he was convicted of stabbing the late Beatles member George Harrison.[6][7] Rainhill was also home to what was at one time the largest mental health asylum in the world – Rainhill Asylum – which, in December 1911, housed 1,990 patients.[citation needed] This was demolished in 1991. Its former site is now a housing estate as well as accommodating Reeve Court, an extra-care housing project for older people.

Nightlife and pubs

Rainhill contains nine pubs and social clubs: The Manor Farm, The Ship Inn, Rainhill Ex-Services Club,The Victoria, The Commercial, The Labour Club, The Rocket, The Coach Bar and The Black Horse, most of which have some aspect of the history of the area attached to them. For example, the Ship Inn is an old waiting post where people used to change horses on their journeys to Liverpool and The Manor Farm is one of the oldest buildings in Rainhill and appears in the doomsday book (although the site dates back to Roman times).[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ "Townships: Rainhill". British History Online.
  2. ^ "Rainhill Trials".
  3. ^ Godl, John. "The Life and Crimes of Frederick Bailey Deeming". Casebook: Jack the Ripper.
  4. ^ "CRICKET: Mohammed Ashraful at Rainhill". St Helens Star.
  5. ^ "Railway History". Rainhill Parish Council.
  6. ^ "Freed Beatle's attacker sorry". BBC News.
  7. ^ "Scott Clinic - Medium Secure Unit".