Shropshire Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
| Shropshire | |
|---|---|
| Geography | |
| Status: | Ceremonial & (smaller) Administrative County |
| Region: | West Midlands |
| Area: - Total - Admin. council - Admin. area | Ranked 13th 3,487 km² Ranked 14th 3,197 km² |
| Admin HQ: | Shrewsbury |
| : | GB-SHR |
| ONS code: | 39 |
| NUTS 3: | UKG22 |
| Demographics | |
| Population: - Total (2002 est.) - Density - Admin. council - Admin. pop. | Ranked 42nd 445,780 128 / km² Ranked 34th 285,204 |
| Ethnicity: | 97.3% White 1.2% S.Asian |
| Politics | |
| Shropshire County Council http://www.shropshire-cc.gov.uk/ | |
| Executive: | Labour & Liberal Democrat & Independents |
| MPs: | Peter Bradley, Matthew Green, Paul Marsden, Owen Paterson, David Wright |
| Districts | |
Shropshire is one of England's most rural counties. The county town is Shrewsbury, although the new town of Telford is the largest town. Also in this rural county is Coalbrookdale, where the Industrial Revolution started, Ironbridge, where the world's first iron bridge was constructed and Ditherington, where the world's first iron framed building was built. Read the "cradle of industry" section for more.
The ceremonial county of Shropshire is now split up into the administrative county of Shropshire and the unitary authority of Telford and Wrekin borough. Shropshire, the administrative county, is then split up into five districts - Shrewsbury and Atcham borough, Oswestry borough, North Shropshire district, South Shropshire district and Bridgnorth district. The area covered by the ceremonial county has not changed for centuries (other than the removal of several exclaves in other counties) - see traditional counties of England.
The county was called Salop in legal documents for some centuries, a name deriving from 'Salopesbiry', an older name for the county town, Shrewsbury. When a council for the county was set up in 1888, it was called 'Salop County Council'. The name was never popular, and the council renamed itself 'Shropshire County Council' in 1980. However, the term "Salopian", derived from "Salop", is still used to mean "from Shropshire".
| Table of contents |
|
2 Geography 3 Towns and villages 4 Places of interest 5 Famous People 6 List of MPs 7 Trivia 8 Links |
Cradle of Industry
Quite why this remote, rural county on the Welsh border became the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution is mystifying to many people. The reason, however, is Shropshire's diverse geology. Shropshire is the geological "capital" of the UK, as just about every rock type in Northern Europe is found within its borders, as are coal, lead, copper and iron ore deposits. In addition to this, the River Severn flows through the county and has been used for the transportation of goods and services for centuries.
Geography
Geographically, Shropshire is divisible into several distinct areas:Towns and villages
Places of interest
Famous People
List of MPs
+Marsden was elected as a Labour member, but defected to the Liberal Democrats in 2001, over a "disagreement" over the military action in Afghanistan.
He has since been successfully sued by the Shrewsbury and Atcham CLP over the "misappropriation" of Labour Party equipment.
Trivia
The Shropshire Regiment burned down the American White House during the War of 1812.
Oswestry Football Club play in the Welsh League.
Shropshire holds the record for the coldest temperature recorded in England and Wales. This was set on the 10th January 1982 at -26.1C.
This is an Article on Shropshire. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Shropshire Links
