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Joyce Frankland Academy

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50-479: Joyce Frankland Academy, Newport , formerly Newport Free Grammar School , is a school in Newport, Essex , England. It was founded in 1588. The school is a mixed secondary school with a sixth form . It previously existed in different forms including a boarding school and a grammar school . The headteacher is Duncan Roberts and the vice headteacher is Ian Stoneham. As of 2012, there were 987 students, including 160 in

100-589: A Language College since September 2003. The school achieved a second specialism in Science , commencing 1 September 2008 but this was later lost. The school converted to academy status on 1 September 2012. In 2011, Newport Free Grammar School was ranked 405th out of the 429 institutions supplying A-Level results to the Daily Telegraph's annual league table based on the percentages of A*, A and B grades achieved. Following an inspection on 15 March 2006, Ofsted rated

150-676: A comprehensive co-educational secondary school, is also located in the village. Newport is the centre point of the long-distance path known as the Harcamlow Way , a figure-of-eight walk between Cambridge and Harlow . Consequently, it has a large number of walks radiating from its centre; short walks of surrounding interest include those heading towards Saffron Walden, the English Heritage property of Audley End House , or Prior Hall Barn in Widdington . A settlement may have existed here under

200-645: A maze, rose garden and walled garden – were originally laid out by the Gibson family in about 1840. They have been restored with help from the Heritage Lottery Fund and volunteers. St Mary the Virgin, Saffron Walden ( Church of England ) is the largest parish church in Essex. The church dates mainly from the end of the 15th century, when an old smaller church was extensively rebuilt by the master mason John Wastell , who

250-457: A rural appearance and some buildings of the medieval period. The population was 15,504 at the 2011 census and 16,613 in the 2021 census. Archaeological evidence suggests continuous settlement on or near the site of Saffron Walden from at least the Neolithic period. It is believed that a small Romano-British settlement and fort – possibly in the area round Abbey Lane – existed as an outpost of

300-502: A school on this site since 1317 but it was in 1521 that Dame Bradbury made this school available for local people. For the first four years Dame Bradbury paid the salary of the schoolmaster herself, until the school was endowed in 1535. Friends' School , renamed Walden School, was a co-educational Quaker independent school with roots dating back to 1702. Its final building, in Mount Pleasant Road, opened in 1879. On 11 May 2017 it

350-427: A small independent petrol station and garage, a chemist, an Indian restaurant, a convenience store and post office. There is also a small garden centre, beauty salon, gentleman's hairdressers and a bakery. The seventeenth-century writer of books on cookery and household management, Hannah Woolley , lived here as wife of the school master around 1646. Chef Jamie Oliver went to Newport Free Grammar School and lives in

400-525: A very large royal fish pond and hence was known as Newport Pond, but the pond had dried up by the 16th century and that name has fallen into disuse. Its namesake is 25 acre Newport Pond, located beside Tracy Road (Route 6) west of Witherbee in Essex County, New York. Until the 20th century Newport was mostly dependent upon agriculture in addition to local trade of leather, woolcombing and in later years, malting . There are many attractive old buildings in

450-554: A village nearby. His parents owned a pub called The Cricketers in the nearby village of Clavering but sold it on retirement in October 2020. The professional footballer Matt Holland attended the same school, as did Martin Caton MP, and (albeit briefly) Adam Ant . "Tex" Banwell , a British soldier who escaped POW camps at least twice, impersonated Monty , joined the Dutch resistance and

500-405: Is Residents for Uttlesford ('R4U'), who are a local political party formed by residents. As of 2024 the mayor is Deryk Eke of Residents for Uttlesford. The town is divided into four parish wards: Audley, named after Audley End House - representing the western area of Saffron Walden including Audley End; Castle - taking its name from Saffron Walden Castle; Shire (formerly Plantation) - representing

550-495: Is 1.5 miles (2.4 km) long and opened in 1964. Saffron Walden Museum , which was established in 1835 by Saffron Walden Natural History Society, is close to the town's castle. The museum had many benefactors from local families, including the Gibsons, Frys and Tukes. The first professional curator, Guy Nathan Mayard, was appointed in 1889 and his son, also Guy Maynard, succeeded him as curator before moving on to Ipswich Museum . It

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600-415: Is a large co-educational academy with over 2000 pupils. Located to the west of the town centre, it was rated outstanding in its most recent Ofsted report in 2012. The school replaced Saffron Walden Grammar School , which was established in 1521 by the town's Holy Trinity Guild and Dame Joan Bradbury , a local benefactor. Dame Bradbury also founded Dame Bradbury's School on Ashdon Road. There has been

650-451: Is held every Tuesday and Saturday (and Thursdays in the run up to Christmas); it is attended by local residents like Jamie Oliver . The Anglo American playing fields , located close to Bridge End Gardens on Catons Lane, are home to the town's cricket club and were donated to Saffron Walden by the US forces after the war . Prior to that, Saffron Walden Cricket Club played on the town's common, with

700-407: Is now called Joyce Frankland Academy and is fully comprehensive as well as co-educational. The village also has its own primary school. In 1660, diarist, Samuel Pepys stayed overnight, whilst visiting Lord Braybrooke at Audley End House. On the creation of a turnpike trust in 1744 the main road was greatly improved. This brought new people and new trade to the village, as did the arrival of

750-406: Is on Castle Street. Created in 1906 from a 16th-century barn, it was restored in 2004–5. With a long history of non-conformism , Saffron Walden has: Saffron Walden falls in to three local government administrative areas, including Uttlesford District Council and Essex County Council . The town itself is administered by Saffron Walden Town Council which has 18 members. The majority party

800-412: Is recorded in the town's Guild of Holy Trinity accounts and reads, "For 2 new maces, weying 18 ownces one quarter and half at 8s. the ownce 7l.7s" . The 12th-century Walden Castle , built or expanded by Geoffrey de Mandeville , the first Earl of Essex , is in ruins. After the medieval period, the castle fell into disuse and much of the flint was taken and used in the construction of local houses and

850-738: Is sited on the West Anglia Main Line between Cambridge and London Liverpool Street . Greater Anglia operates an off-peak service of two trains an hour in each direction, with additional services during peak times; the journey time to London is approximately 55 minutes and approximately 20 minutes to Cambridge. All southbound trains also stop at Tottenham Hale , where there is a London Underground Victoria line station and onward rail connections to Stratford station in east London. An hourly GreaterAnglia service between Stansted Airport and Norwich , via Cambridge and Ely , also stops at Audley End. Saffron Walden railway station served

900-618: Is still owned by the founding society – now Saffron Walden Museum Society – and is managed by Uttlesford District Council. The museum contains the stuffed remains of a lion named Wallace (1812 – 1838), said to have inspired Marriott Edgar 's comic poem "The Lion and Albert". It is also home to the mummy of a 7 year old dating to the 3rd century AD. The Fry Art Gallery exhibits the work of artists who had an association with Saffron Walden and north west Essex, focusing on Great Bardfield Artists . The collection includes extensive artworks and supporting material by Edward Bawden , who lived in

950-501: Is thought to be of Anglo-Saxon origin and is thought to mean new town or market, rather than a modern-day seaport. "Port" was often a name for a market in Saxon times, and Newport did have a flourishing market in this period. The village prospered until around 1300, after which it declined and its market ceased; it was overtaken in importance by the neighbouring town of Chipping Walden (known today as Saffron Walden ). Newport used to contain

1000-517: The Conservative Party since 1922. In the 1840s Saffron Walden became a municipal borough , the district contained the parish of Saffron Walden. On 1 April 1974 the district and parish were abolished and became part of Uttlesford district. A successor parish was formed covering the same area as the former district and its parish. According to the Office for National Statistics , at the time of

1050-683: The United Kingdom Census 2001 , Saffron Walden had a population of 14,313. The 2001 population density was 10,900 inhabitants per square mile (4,209/km ), with a 100 to 94.5 female-to-male ratio. Of those over 16 years old, 45.0 per cent were married, 27.4 per cent were single (never married), and 8.2 per cent divorced. The parish's 6,013 households included 38.5 per cent married couples living together, 31.5 per cent one-person households, 8.4 per cent co-habiting couples, and 7.9 per cent single parents with children. Of those aged 16–74, 22.3 per cent had no academic qualifications , close to

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1100-445: The dissolution of the monasteries , Sir Thomas Audley converted its cloisters into a dwelling. Later this became the site of Audley End House . The market was moved from nearby Newport to Walden during de Mandeville's tenure, increasing the town's influence. This Tuesday market was held from 1295. The town's first charter was granted in about 1300, to what was known then as Chepyng (i. e. Market) Walden. The town at that time

1150-530: The 15th and early 16th centuries, but by the 1540s it had become Saffron Walden. The town and surrounding area, like much of East Anglia , was strongly Puritan during the 17th century. The population was influenced by the missionary John Eliot . By 1640, Samuel Bass's family and a number of others had departed for the Massachusetts Bay Colony as part of the Great Migration . Saffron Walden

1200-539: The 16th and 17th centuries the saffron crocus ( Crocus sativus ) was widely grown, thanks to the town's favourable soil and climate. The stigmas of the flower were used in medicines, as a condiment, in perfume, as an expensive yellow dye, and as an aphrodisiac. The industry gave Walden its present name. In the records of the Court of Common Pleas, the town was called Magna Walden in Hilary Term 1484, and Chipping Walden in

1250-488: The 2011 census. Located approximately 41 miles (66 kilometres) north of London , the village is situated amongst the arable fields of northern Essex. With a regular train service to London Liverpool Street and Cambridge from the Newport (Essex) railway station , the village is considered to be within commuting distance of the capital and as such attracts a number of workers from the City of London . Joyce Frankland Academy ,

1300-563: The Village Hall where activities include a farmers' market, bingo, keep fit, Pilates, the Footlight Theatre Dance School, Newport Amateur Theatrical Society, Newport Art Group, and Saffron Walden Indoor Carpet Bowls Club. Newport has a village magazine, Newport News, which is published twice a year and hosts a bonfire night firework display on 5 November each year. Newport is served by a handful of small businesses, such as

1350-471: The average for Uttlesford (22.0 per cent) and below that for the whole of England (28.9 per cent). In the 2001 UK census, 73.0 per cent of Saffron Walden residents declared themselves Christian, 0.6 per cent Muslim, 0.4 per cent Buddhist, 0.2 per cent Jewish, and 0.1 per cent Hindu. The census recorded 17.6 per cent as having no religion, 0.4 per cent with an alternative religion, and 7.8 per cent not stating their religion. Saffron Walden County High School

1400-748: The construction of several public buildings that remain today, such as the Saffron Walden Museum and the Saffron Walden Town Hall . In the 1900s the Saffron Walden branch railway line from Audley End station , on the mainline from London to Cambridge, was extended to Bartlow . The branch succumbed to the Beeching cuts in the 1960s. Heavy industry arrived after the Second World War. Acrows Ltd, makers of falsework , built premises to

1450-475: The east of the town and became a significant employer and economic influence in the area. For a short time there was a dedicated railway station for the works known as Acrow Halt . Saffron Walden's unofficial coat of arms showed the saffron crocus within the walls of the castle in the form of an heraldic pun – as in, "Saffron walled-in". In 1961, a formal coat of arms was granted by the College of Arms and this

1500-436: The industry was replaced by malt and barley . More than 40 maltings stood in the town by the end of the century. The trade was less lucrative than saffron, but the town continued to grow through the 19th century, and had a cattle market , corn exchange and other civic buildings. During this time Quakers became economically active in the area. The influential Gibsons – one of the founding families of Barclays Bank – aided

1550-485: The much larger settlement of Cestreforda to the north. After the Norman invasion of 1066, a stone church was built. Walden Castle , dating from about 1140, may have been built on pre-existing fortifications. A priory, Walden Abbey, was founded under the patronage of Geoffrey de Mandeville, 1st Earl of Essex about 1136, on the site of what is now Audley End House. The abbey was separated from Walden by Holywell Field. After

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1600-580: The name Wigingamere which King Edward the Elder , engaged in the reconquest of the Danelaw , ordered to be refortified in 921 (or possibly 917). However, the author of the paper that associated Wigingamere with Newport wrote a subsequent paper in which he indicated that this idea was "no longer tenable." The earliest mention of Newport is in 1086 in the Domesday Book , in the hundred of Uttlesford . The name

1650-441: The railway in 1845. The greatest changes have occurred recently. One hundred years ago about 900 people, largely agricultural workers, lived in some 220 dwellings. By 1971 the population had increased somewhat to over 1,200. Since then all the livestock farms have closed, fields, orchards and farm premises in the centre of the village have been built over, and more than 2,200 people now occupy over 900 houses. An electoral ward in

1700-578: The same name exists. The population of this ward at the 2011 census was 3,443. The village has two public houses: the Coach and Horses, a large 17th-century inn situated at the north end of the village, and the White Horse, an equally old but smaller pub in the centre of the village. There is also a social members club, the Newport Club. Newport is home to a tennis club and youth organisations and benefits from

1750-516: The school as good , the second-best grade on its four-point scale. Inspectors said teaching was "sometimes outstanding, even inspirational" in languages and the humanities but needed improvement in mathematics and IT. Newport, Essex Newport is a village and civil parish in the Uttlesford district in Essex , near Saffron Walden . The village has a population of over 2,000, measured at 2,352 at

1800-474: The sixth form. It takes its current name (since 2012) after Dame Joyce Frankland (1531-1588), the only daughter of goldsmith Robert Trappes, who founded it as the "free Grammer Schole of Newport". Dame Frankland also made a number of educational bequests in her will to colleges at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge. The school achieved Specialist Language College status in July 2003 from DfES and has been

1850-412: The southern area of the town; and Little Walden - representing the small village of the same name and a large rural area to the north of the town. Nationally, the town is part of the much larger Saffron Walden Parliamentary constituency . The MP is Conservative , Kemi Badenoch who is Secretary of State for International Trade. Notable former MPs include: It has been considered a safe seat for

1900-486: The town between 1865 and 1964. Regular bus services connect the town with Cambridge, Bishop's Stortford , Haverhill and Stansted Airport. Operators include Stephensons of Essex and Stagecoach East . Saffron Walden is accessed from junction 8 of the M11 when travelling northbound from London and from junction 10 when travelling south from Cambridge. During the coronavirus pandemic, Essex Highways narrowed some roads in

1950-411: The town centre to make social distancing easier for pedestrians and they reduced some speed limits to 20 miles per hour (32 km/h) as part of their Safer, Greener, Healthier scheme. Stansted Airport is located 15 miles (24 km) from the town, while Luton Airport is 43 miles (69 km) away. Audley End Airfield , a private grass runway, is located about 1 mile (2 km) outside of

2000-507: The town during the 1970s and 1980s, and Eric Ravilious . Saffron Hall , which is attached to Saffron Walden County High School, opened in 2013. The 730-seater venue came about as a result of a £10 million donation by an anonymous music loving donor. In 2014, former head of music at the Barbican Centre Angela Dixon became its director. Saffron Walden Market is a thriving market, with numerous local sellers trading goods,

2050-718: The town is believed to be the former maltings at 1 Myddleton Place. The 15th-century building with a courtyard garden was used by the Youth Hostel Association from 1947 to 2010. It is now used for functions. Pevsner described it as: "without doubt, the best medieval house of Saffron Walden". Other notable early buildings are in Bridge Street, Castle Street and the side streets off the High Street. The High Street contains some late-Georgian and Victorian buildings. Bridge End Gardens , seven interlinked gardens – including

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2100-568: The town. Audley End House , once one of the largest mansions in England, is now in the care of English Heritage and is open to the public. During the summer months, picnic concerts and a last night in the style of the BBC Proms have been held in the grounds. Audley End Miniature Railway – originally built by Lord Braybrooke – is a 10 + 1 ⁄ 4  in (260 mm) gauge railway ride through woodland adjoining Audley End House. The track

2150-432: The village, a characteristic of the area. The church, St Mary the Virgin, dates from the late 14th century. Perhaps the two most interesting other buildings are The Crown House (mostly late 16th century), and Monks Barn, a Wealden type house dating from the 15th century. In 1588 Newport Free Grammar School was founded by Dame Joyce Frankland; although it retained its name it began to take boys of all abilities in 1976, but

2200-548: The wall surrounding the Audley End estate. All that remains is the ruined basement. Near the castle is a turf maze , a series of circular excavations cut into the turf of the common . It is the largest example of this style of maze in England, the main part being about 100 feet (30 m) in diameter. The earliest record of it dates from 1699, although its origin may be earlier. It has been extensively restored several times, most recently in 1979. The oldest inhabited building in

2250-426: Was adapted in 1974 into its current form. The town has three ceremonial maces . The large mace was given to Saffron Walden by James II in 1685 and provides an early recording of the unofficial coat of arms. Made of silver gilt , it is approximately 4 feet (1.2 m) long. Two smaller silver maces were bought by the corporation in 1549 to commemorate the granting of a new town charter by Edward VI . This purchase

2300-406: Was announced that Walden School would close at the end of the 2016–17 school year. Its final day was 7 July 2017. Saffron Walden College, a teachers' training college for women, closed in 1977. The nearest station to Saffron Walden is Audley End , which is located 2 miles (3 km) outside the town in the village of Wendens Ambo ; regular bus services link it to the town centre. The station

2350-685: Was at the centre of the Eastern Association during the English Civil War . While the town was the headquarters of the New Model Army , Lieutenant-General of Horse, Oliver Cromwell paid a 19-day visit in May 1647, taking part in debates to seek a settlement between Parliament and the army. He is thought to have stayed at the Sun Inn . By the end of the 18th century saffron was no longer in demand and

2400-408: Was building King's College Chapel in the nearby city of Cambridge. In 1769 it was damaged by lightning and the repairs, carried out in the 1790s, removed many medieval features. The spire was added in 1832 to replace an older lantern tower. The church is 183 feet (56 m) long and the spire, 193 feet (59 m) high, is the tallest in Essex. The town's Catholic church , Our Lady of Compassion,

2450-525: Was finally imprisoned in Auschwitz , was born in the town in 1917 and lived here as a toddler. Nurse, B. et alA village in time; the history of Newport, Essex; Newport, Newport News, 1995 Saffron Walden Saffron Walden is a market town and civil parish in the Uttlesford district of Essex , England, 12 miles (19 km) north of Bishop's Stortford , 15 miles (24 km) south of Cambridge and 43 miles (69 km) north of London . It retains

2500-511: Was largely confined to the castle's outer bailey, but in the 13th century the Battle or Repel Ditches were built or extended to enclose a larger area to the south. The focus of the town moved southwards to Market Square. The main trading item in medieval times was wool. A guildhall was built by the wool-staplers in the market place, but demolished in 1847 to make way for the Corn Exchange . In

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