Royal Leamington Spa
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Warwick Town
Royal Leamington Spa has a host of attractions to cater for
so many different tastes.
The stylish Regency and Georgian
architecture provides a superb setting together with the
tree lined avenues and squares. The Jephson Gardens have
recently received a £4.3 million restoration and they are
now back to their very best. The gardens now host a
temperate house, riverside restaurant and refurbished boat
house. Across the road is the magnificent Royal Pump Rooms
cultural complex which now houses the museum, art gallery,
library and tourist information centre. In the museum there
are displays of the historic use of the pump rooms and spa
treatments including fascinating period objects. If you so
wish you can still sample the spa waters but be warned it is
not to everyone’s taste.
The town holds a vast range of events throughout the year.
On the fourth Sunday every month the town hold a very
popular Farmers market at the Royal Pump Room Gardens. In
May and September Leamington has a taste of the continent
when the French Market comes to town. During the summer
months there is a series of free music concerts on Sundays
in Jephson Gardens when audiences can hear the best in local
brass band sounds. Other events planned for this year
include the Peace Festival in June, The Asian Festival MELA
in August and The Women’s World Bowls Championships which
take place at Victoria Park in September.
The recently refurbished Royal Priors Shopping Centre has a
vast range of contemporary retailers – but what makes the
town really special is the variety of independent retailers
from designer to jewellery to fashion, from trendy boutique
high street The town also has a fantastic range of eateries,
restaurants and bars
The night time economy is booming with visitors travelling
into town from as far as field Nottingham and Northampton.
Visit the exclusive fashion retailers, top cuisine and
regionally renowned night life to experience the difference
– you’ll love it.
History of the Town
The town of Leamington Spa, originally known as Leamington
Priors was a tiny village until about 1800.
The value of the mineral springs was known in the middle
ages, but it was not until 1784 that the small village began
rediscovering its saline springs and started building baths
around some of them.
In the period just prior to 1810 it had become obvious that
the town's existing Bath Houses could not cope with the ever
increasing number of visitors. Plans were made to build a
bathing establishment on a scale surpassing anything yet
attempted. A syndicate was formed to provide the necessary
funds.
A company was formed to buy the land on the west side of the
Parade for building purposes. This was the start of the 'new
town' and it was hoped the new baths could be erected in
this area. However, attempts to discover a reliable source
of saline water in this vicinity were unsuccessful.
Eventually in 1810 a spring was discovered on land owned by
Mr Greatheed - a member of the syndicate - on the north side
of the river, but only a stones-throw away from the old
town.
The Gardens are the centre-piece of a sequence of 19th
century parks beside the River Leam in Regency and Victorian
Leamington Spa. The whole group is accorded a Grade II in
the English Heritage Register of Historic Gardens. The
Gardens themselves have long been famous for their floral
displays, beautiful and unusual trees, fountains and quiet
riverbanks. Among their admirers was the American writer
Nathaniel Hawthorne, who described them in 'Our Old Home'.
Formerly riverside meadows and woodland, they were laid out
as walks in 1832 by the landowner, Edward Willes of Newbold
Comyn, and know as the Newbold Gardens. Walking was
recommended to visitors by the medical men of the time,
notably Dr Henry Jephson, as an essential adjunct to 'taking
the waters'. The Gardens' other purpose was to raise the
value of properties which Willes planned in Newbold Terrace,
by guaranteeing them an open outlook.
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