Everything about Margate Kent totally explained
Margate is a
seaside resort town within the
Thanet district of East
Kent,
England. It lies east-northeast of
Maidstone, along the
North Foreland of the
coastline of the United Kingdom.
Margate's history is closely tied to the sea; it was a "limb" of
Dover in the ancient confederation of the
Cinque Ports.
History
Margate was recorded as "Meregate" in 1264 and as "Margate" in 1299, but the spelling continued to vary into modern times. The name is thought to refer to a pool gate or gap in a cliff where pools of water are found, often allowing swimmers to jump in. The cliffs of the Isle of Thanet are composed of chalk, a fossil-bearing rock.
The town's history is tied closely to the sea and it has a proud maritime tradition. Margate was a "limb" of Dover in the ancient confederation of the
Cinque ports. It was added to the confederation in the 15th century. Margate has been a leading seaside resort for at least 250 years. Like its neighbour
Ramsgate, it has been a traditional holiday destination for Londoners drawn to its sandy beaches.
Margate had a fine
Victorian era pier which was destroyed by a violent storm in 1978.
Margate railway station
Margate railway station serves the town of
Margate in
Thanet in
Kent,
England. Train services are provided by
Southeastern Trains.
Government
Since 1983, the Member of Parliament for
North Thanet, covering northern
Thanet and Herne Bay, has been the
Conservative Roger Gale. At the
2005 General Election, in North Thanet the Conservatives won a majority of 7,634 and 49.6% of the vote.
Labour won 32.2% of the vote,
Liberal Democrats 14.4% and
United Kingdom Independence Party 3.9%.
Margate is within the Thanet
local government district. The town contains the seven electoral
wards of Margate Central, Cliftonville West, Cliftonville East, Westbrook, Garlinge, Dane Valley and Salmestone. These wards have seventeen of the fifty six seats on the
Thanet District Council. As of the
2007 Local Elections, nine of those seats were held by the Conservatives, seven by Labour and one by an Independent.
Geography
Margate also consists of
Cliftonville,
Garlinge,
Palm Bay and
Westbrook.
Demography
| Margate Compared |
| 2001 UK Census |
Margate |
Thanet |
England |
| Population |
57,008 |
126,702 |
49,138,831 |
| Foreign born |
5.8% |
5.1% |
9.2% |
| White |
97% |
98% |
91% |
| Asian |
1.2% |
0.6% |
4.6% |
| Black |
0.5% |
0.3% |
2.3% |
| Christian |
72% |
74% |
72% |
| Muslim |
0.7% |
0.5% |
3.1% |
| Hindu |
0.2% |
0.2% |
1.1% |
| No religion |
17% |
16% |
15% |
| Over 65 years old |
19% |
22% |
16% |
| Under 18 years old |
15% |
21% |
19% |
As of the
2001 UK census, Margate had a population of 40,386.
The
ethnicity of the town was 97.1%
white, 1.0%
mixed race, 0.5%
black, 0.8%
Asian, 0.6%
Chinese or other ethnicity.
The place of birth of residents was 94.2% United Kingdom, 0.9%
Republic of Ireland, 0.5%
Germany, 0.8% other
Western Europe countries, 0.7%
Africa, 0.6%
Eastern Europe, 0.5%
Far East, 0.5%
South Asia, 0.5%
Middle East, 0.4%
North America and 0.3%
Oceania.
Religion was recorded as 71.6%
Christian, 0.7%
Muslim, 0.2%
Hindu, 0.3%
Buddhist, 0.1%
Sikh and 0.3%
Jewish. 17.1% were recorded as having no religion, 0.3% had an alternative religion and 9.8% didn't state their religion.
For every 100 females, there were 92.0 males. The age distribution was 6% aged 0-4 years, 16% aged 5-15 years, 5% aged 16-19 years, 31% aged 20-44 years, 23% aged 45-64 years and 19% aged 65 years and over.
11% of Margate residents had some kind of higher or professional qualification, compared to the national average of 20%.
Economy
As of the
2001 UK census, the economic activity of residents aged 16-74 was 33.8% in
full-time employment, 11.8% in
part-time employment, 8.0%
self-employed, 5.5%
unemployed, 2.2%
students with jobs, 3.9% students without jobs, 15.5% retired, 8.3%
looking after home or family, 7.9% permanently sick or
disabled and 3.6% economically inactive for other reasons. The rate of unemployment in the town was considerably higher than the national rate of 3.4%.
The industry of employment of residents was 17% retail, 16% health &
social work, 13% manufacturing, 9% construction, 8% real estate, 8% education, 7% transport & communications, 5%
public administration, 6% hotels & restaurants, 2% finance, 1% agriculture and 6% other community, social or personal services. Compared to national figures, the town had a relatively high number of workers in the construction, hotels & restaurants and health & social care industries and a relatively low number in real estate and finance.
In more recent years, as tourists have travelled further afield, Margate's
unemployment rate has become higher than much of the rest of southeast England.
Tourism
For at least 250 years, the town has been a leading seaside resort in the UK, drawing
Londoners to its sandy beaches. It was the first resort to introduce
bathing machines and deck chairs, in 1898.
Like
Brighton and
Southend it was infamous for gang violence between
mods and
rockers in the 1960s.
Margate faces major structural redevelopments and large inward investment. Its
Dreamland Amusement Park (featured in "
The Jolly Boys' Outing" extended episode of the television series
Only Fools and Horses) was threatened with closure because of the increase in value of the site. In 2003, one of the arcades on the seafront was destroyed by fire. This has created a new potential entrance point to the Dreamland site. In the following years, 2004–2006 it was announced that Dreamland (although somewhat reduced in its amusements) would reopen for three months of the summer; a pressure group has been formed to keep it in being. The group is anxious that the UK's oldest wooden
roller coaster,
The Scenic Railway, a Grade II
Listed and the third oldest in the world was sadly destroyed in a fire on April 7th 2008. It was planned that the Dreamland site will reopen as a heritage amusement park in the near future with the Scenic Railway at the centre. Classic rides from the defunct Southport amusement park have already been shipped in as well as parts of the now demolished Water Chute at
Rhyl. More details on Dreamlands future can be obtained from The Dreamland Trust web site.Today the Dreamland roller coaster is one of only two early twentieth century scenic railways still remaining in the UK and the only other surviving UK scenic railway is located in
Great Yarmouth and was built in 1932. If the Dreamland scenic railway isn't rescued the Great Yarmouth coaster would then be the last of its kind in the country. The Margate roller coaster is an
ACE Coaster Classic.
Other attractions -
Cliftonville next to Margate has a classic British
Arnold Palmer seaside
mini golf course.
A controversial gallery,
The Turner Contemporary, has been proposed, as an alternative to Margate's traditional "kiss me quick" style tourist trade, and when built it would have formed part of the harbour itself. Some critics, however, questioned the prudence of placing part of Britain's national art treasures in a spot that's exposed to the full fury of the
North Sea.
Thanet District Council have now moved the building from the harbour wall, to a plot of land adjacent to the harbour because of the spiralling costs for a sea born building. Work has a projected completion in 2009. The scheme had been supported by the artist
Tracey Emin, who was brought up in Margate. It is hoped the gallery will help regenerate the town in the same way St Ives has benefited since the introduction of the Tate gallery.
There are two notable theatres, the
Theatre Royal in Addington Street - the second oldest theatre in the country - and the Tom Thumb Theatre, the second smallest in the country, in addition to the Winter Gardens.
An annual jazz festival takes place during a weekend in July.
Margate Museum in Market Place explores the town's seaside heritage in a range of exhibits and displays.
The
Shell Grotto, which has walls and roof covered in elaborate decoration of over four million shells, covering 2000 square feet, in complex patterns, was rediscovered in 1835, but is of unknown age and origin.
In addition there's a Tudor House in King Street.
Margate features as a destination in
Graham Swift's novel
Last Orders and the movie made version of it. Jack Dodds has asked to have his remains scattered at Margate. The book tells the tale of the drive to Margate and the memories evoked on the way. It also features at the start and as a recurrent theme in
Iain Aitch's travelogue
A Fete Worse Than Death. The author was born in the town.
Draper's Mill is a
smock mill built in 1845 by John Holman. It was working by wind until 1916 and by engine until the late 1930s. It was saved from demolition and is now restored and open to the public.
Sports
Notable connections
In Big Brother 7 (2006), Big Brother briefly went on holiday to Margate and left the house-mates under the rule of Automated Big Brother.
In One Foot In The Grave the Meldrews stated they'd visited Margate and Dreamland Margate in an episode was named "Dreamland".
Dreamland Margate
In 4 July 1978 Siouxsie and the Banshees played Dreamland Margate.
Fiona Phillips of GMTV fame lived as a child in Canterbury and is quoted as saying, "I used to love Dreamland at Margate; it was such a little child's idea of another world then. It was my Disneyland really."
Bad Manners front-man, Buster Bloodvessel (born Douglas Trendle on 6 September, 1958, London) founded the all too briefly popular 'Fatty Towers' Hotel/Restaurant, serving high-cholesterol cuisine. Buster also invested heavily in Margate Football Club, who were promoted to the Nationwide Conference in 2001.
The harbour area was also used in a music video by Chas & Dave for their song "Margate" (on their album Joblot) in 1982.
Two films by Tracey Emin, CV Cunt Vernacular (1997) and Top Spot (2004), are set in the town. Also, the play Hannah and Hanna
by John Retallack is set in Margate. First premiered at the Edinburgh Fringe in 2001, it tells of the impact on the town had by an influx of Kosovan refugees.
Only Fools And Horses 1990 Christmas special "The Jolly Boys' Outing" was filmed all over the town including Dreamland, the railway station, Palm Bay and hotels in Dalby Square.
The Margate Exodus is a contemporary re-telling of the Book of Exodus, the story of Moses and his search for the promised land. A story about identity and migration. Written and directed by filmmaker Penny Woolcock, Exodus is a film for Channel Four shot on location in Margate, mainly in Dreamland. Exodus Day was a day of filmed live events that took place on Saturday 30 September 2006. The film was shown in 2007 at the cinema and on Channel Four.
J.M.W. Turner spent long periods in Margate and would use the skyscapes as inspiration for many of his paintings. Turner drank in what is now the oldest pub in Margate, The Northern Belle, and regularly travelled to Seasalter near Whitstable to sketch and paint the skies over the Isle of Sheppey, spending hours at Reculver to paint the skies over Margate and Sheppey from a different perspective.
Oscar Wilde described Margate as Ramsgate's 'nom de plume' and preferred the drinking dens of Margate to the more plush Public Houses and Hotels of Ramsgate whilst waiting for his passage to the continent.
Benjamin Beale invented the bathing machine in Margate, which popularised sea bathing amongst the Victorians. His bathing machines were pushed toward the shoreline so Victorian ladies and gentlemen could change into their bathing costumes and then walk immediately into the sea.
Affiliations
Margate is twinned with the following cities:
Yalta, Ukraine
Idar-Oberstein, GermanyFurther Information
Get more info on 'Margate Kent'.
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