Woodgate, Leicestershire
History
The name dates from the medieval period. It likely comes from the history of using this road to bring timber into the town from the nearby woodlands. It was the road to the various 'Frith' placenames on the west side of Leicester, which were parks within Leicester Forest where the medieval townspeople had rights to gather firewood.
The majority of the housing in Woodgate dates from the beginning of the 20th century, and like Newfoundpool was developed mainly by local builder Orson Wright. Before that time the area north of Woodgate, known as St Leonard's, was the principal residential area, and had been so for many centuries. Woodgate was a Housing Action Area in the late 1980s, when many properties were refurbished by Leicester City Council, and it forms part of the current regeneration plans for the city.
In the past Woodgate had a significant number of active factories, including hosiery, dyeworks, an iron foundry, light engineering and biscuit manufacture. The area has suffered from industrial decline with the closure of The Premier Screw and Repetition factory with over 100 redundancies. The site has often been vandalised. The former pubs, "The Friar Tuck" and "The Old Robin Hood" have long been derelict and been the scenes of crime including a murder. The former Nabisco factory site, home to a few small businesses and local Labour party offices was demolished in April 2008. This is the site of a new Aldi supermarket opened in November 2008. Other local businesses lie down Storey Street. The gothic Victorian St Leonard's Parish Church was demolished in 1983 and was replaced with a Kwikfit service station. St Leonard's Vicarage went at much the same time and was replaced by a car showroom. Woodgate itself remains a busy local shopping street with a bank, butcher, florist, hairdressers, optician, accountant, bakery (amongst others), Indian and Portuguese restaurants, a Chinese takeaway and traditional fish and chip shop. Woodgate has a primary school based on Balfour Street, and is also served by another on Slater Street.
St Leonard's Church
Since medieval times the Woodgate area, along with Frog Island, had formed the parish of St Leonard's, with a parish church dating to at least 1220, and probably from before the founding of Leicester Abbey in 1134. (It was an advowson of Leicester Abbey, and as all the extant Leicester churches had been granted to the Abbey by Robert de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Leicester in 1134, this is a possible explanation for the advowson.) Both the area and the church were impoverished and at various times it was too poor to appoint a vicar. In 1517 the building was said to be in disrepair, and by 1611 it was so dilapidated they applied for permission to pull down parts of it to provide materials to repair the rest. There were so few people living in the parish that they could easily be accommodated in the reduced area. How effective this was is unknown, but it is said that in 1645, during the English Civil War, with the Royalist forces besieging the city, the church tower was demolished as it commanded the North Bridge. For the next 230 years St Leonard's was a parish without a church, although the burial ground remained in use until after the opening of Welford Road Cemetery in 1849.
During the 230 years without a church, parish duties mainly fell to the vicar of All Saints', although in the 19th century is became more usual for St Margaret's to have the responsibility. In 1846 a parish school was built in the St Leonard's Churchyard, and in 1874, with a great expansion in housing nearby, the Anglican Diocese of Peterborough,through the Leicester Church Extension Association, appointed a vicar for the parish. Services were initially held in the school, and in 1876 work began on the new church, situated on the corner of Woodgate and Abbey Gate. Built in an austere version of Gothic Revival architecture, mainly from Mountsorrel granite, the church had been designed by Leicester architects Frederick Webster Ordish and John Charles Traylen, and the final cost was £7,600. The church was built with a nave, chancel, and south aisle. The plans also provided for a tower and spire, plus a north aisle, but finances never allowed them to proceed with these.
In 1970 a Leicester Diocese report recommended the closure of the church, and the parish to be merged with St Margaret's. Although the move was resisted for 11 years, the final service was held on 26 April 1981, and the building itself was demolished in October 1984. Amongst the dispersed fittings and fixtures, stained glass showing the life of St Leonard found a new home at St Leonard's Church, South Ormsby.]
Sites
The area is in Fosse Ward for local government purposes and part of the Leicester West parliamentary constituency at Westminster, the local MP from May 2010 is Liz Kendall. Previous MPs were Patricia Hewitt, Greville Janner and his father Barnett Janner.
The Woodgate Resources Centre is used for local social gatherings: it was formerly a library.
Also near to Woodgate is the Woodgate Adventure Playground on the Rally Park which is used by local children for recreation. The former Midland railway line is now a cycle/foot path leading in the direction of Glenfield and Groby to the north, and towards Leicester city centre to the south.
The 'Fiveways Junction' was dubbed 'Leicester's most confusing junction' in 2023, at the start of a £10.4m overhaul of the layout between Autumn 2023 and spring 2024, requiring one or both directions of Woodgate traffic to be closed while work progressed.
References
- ^ Siobhan Begley (1 November 2013). The Story of Leicester. History Press Limited. pp. 15–. ISBN 978-0-7524-9806-5.
- ^ Squires, Anthony; Jeeves, Michael (1994). Leicestershire and Rutland Woodlands Past and Present. Kairos Press. p. 43. ISBN 9781871344035.
- ^ Jane Goddard (6 December 2019). "11-year battle could not save Leicester church from demolition wrecking ball". Leicester Mercury. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
- ^ The ancient borough: St. Leonard's. A History of the County of Leicester (VCH). Vol. 4, the City of Leicester. London: British History Online. 1958. pp. 348–350. Retrieved 19 April 2024.
- ^ "Ordnance Survey map, Leicestershire XXXI.10 Revised: 1927 to 1928". National Library of Scotland. 1930. Retrieved 22 April 2024.
- ^ "Photograph Galleries: South Ormsby". Society For Lincolnshire History & Archaeology. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
- ^ Dan Martin (3 August 2023). "Leicester: Work to start on revamp of 'most confusing' junction". Leicester Mercury. Retrieved 22 April 2024.