History
The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Bath , Somerset , England.
1st to 5th centuries [ edit ]
c. 60s – First Roman temple structures built, around the hot water springs; completed by 76.
2nd century
Early: Baths extended.
Late: Baths vaulted.
3rd century – By this time, Bath city walls are built for defence.
300–350 – Evidence for Christians in Bath.
5th century – Following the end of Roman rule in Britain , Bath is largely abandoned.
6th to 10th centuries [ edit ]
516 – Battle of Badon : A famous battle against the Saxons , where a progenitor of King Arthur is said to have been victorious; perhaps on Bathampton Down .
577 – Battle of Deorham : Bath is captured by the Saxons[ 3] and, being north of the River Avon , then falls within the Saxon petty-kingdom of the Hwicce .
628 – Following the Battle of Cirencester , the Hwicce come under the rule of the kingdom of Mercia .
676 – Abbess Berta founds a convent under the protection of Osric, king of the Hwicce .
757 – Cynewulf of Wessex grants land in Bath to monks of St Peter.[clarification needed ]
781 – Offa of Mercia takes control of the monastery from the Bishop of Worcester.
878 – Bath becomes a royal borough (burh ) of Alfred the Great , in his kingdom of Wessex (and also in the county of Somerset).[ 3]
c. 900 – Market active.[ 4]
973 – 11 May (Whitsunday): Edgar , King of England 959–975, is crowned and anointed with his wife Ælfthryth at Bath Abbey by Dunstan , Archbishop of Canterbury.[ 5] The Church of St Swithin, Walcot , is founded at about this date.
c. 980 – Ælfheah becomes abbot of Bath.
11th to 17th centuries [ edit ]
1087 – Town, Abbey and mint pass to John of Tours .
1090 – John of Tours, Bishop of Wells , moves the episcopal seat to Bath, giving it city status .
Early 12th century? – King's Bath built.
1102 – Bath fair active.[ 4]
1137 – Major fire.[ 6]
1148–1161 – Abbey consecrated between these dates.[ 6]
c. 1174 – St John's Hospital founded.
1273 – Old Bridge extant.
1285 – Church of St Michael's Within built in St John's Hospital .
c. 1333 – Monks of the abbey establish a weaving trade in Broad Street.[ 7]
1371 – Market mentioned in charter.
c. 1435 – Hospital of St Catherine established.
1482 – "Sally Lunn's House " built.
c. 1495 – St Mary Magdalen, Holloway, built as a chapel to a leper's hospital.[ 6]
1499 – Abbey found derelict by Oliver King , Bishop of Bath and Wells , who begins its reconstruction.[ 8]
Roman Baths with Abbey beyond as at c.1900
1533 – Rebuilding of Abbey substantially completed by this date.[ 6]
1539 – January: Dissolution of the Monasteries : Abbey surrendered.
1552
1572
The roofless Abbey is given to the corporation of Bath[ 6] for restoration as a parish church.
Dr. John Jones makes the first public endorsement of the medicinal properties of the city's water.
1576 – Queen's Bath built.
1578 – Drinking fountain installed in the Baths.
1590 – Bath chartered (city status confirmed) by Elizabeth I .[ 10]
1597 – Deserving poor given free use of the mineral water.[ 11]
1608 – Bellott's Hospital established.
1613 and 1615 - Anne of Denmark, wife of James VI and I, visits Bath for her health
1616 – Abbey Church consecrated.[ 12]
1625–1628 – Guildhall rebuilt.[ 13]
1643 – 5 July: Battle of Lansdowne fought near the city.
1657 – Regular coach service from London.
1676 – Dr. Thomas Guidott publishes A discourse of Bathe, and the hot waters there. Also, Some Enquiries into the Nature of the water , the first published account of the medicinal properties of the city's water.
1677 – West Gate pub in business.
1680 – Supposed origin of the Sally Lunn bun .
1687 – Mary of Modena , queen consort of James II of England , visits in the hope that Bath waters would aid conception; by the end of the year she is pregnant with James Francis Edward Stuart .
View of Bath, 18th century
1702–1703 – Queen Anne visits.
1704 – First pump-room built;[ 14] Richard "Beau" Nash is appointed Master of Ceremonies.
1705 – First theatre in the city built.[ 13]
1707 – Bath Turnpike Trust established.[ 15]
1708 – Harrison's Assembly Rooms, with a riverside walk, open.
1711 – Bluecoat school founded as a charity.[ 7]
1712 – March: Ralph Allen appointed postmaster.
1715 – Church of St Michael's Within in St John's Hospital rebuilt to the design of William Killigrew.
1720 – Ralph Allen begins to farm the Cross and Bye Posts in the south west of England.
1717 – Approximate date: Green Street developed.[ 16]
1721 – Bluecoat school opens.[ 9]
1724 – James Leake (bookseller) in business.[ 17] [ 18]
1725–1727 – Guildhall extended.
1725
1726
1727–1728 – John Wood, the Elder , executes his first private commission in Bath, a new building for St John's Hospital .[ 9]
1727–1736 – Beaufort Square laid out by John Strahan .[ 19] [ 20]
1727
1728
1728–1736 – Queen Square laid out by John Wood, the Elder .[ 7]
1730s – Parade Gardens laid out.
1731 – A tramroad is opened to carry building stone from Ralph Allen 's Combe Down mine through his Prior Park estate down to the Kennet and Avon Canal .
c. 1733
1734
1735
1738 – Royal visit by Frederick, Prince of Wales with Princess Augusta , marked by erection of an obelisk in Queen Square.[ 10]
1739
c. 1741 – North Parade built by John Wood, the Elder .
1742
1743–1749 – South Parade built to the design of John Wood, the Elder .[ 7]
1744
1745 – Beau Nash forced to retire as Master of Ceremonies due to anti-gambling laws.[ 7]
1747 – Bath Pauper Scheme originates.
1750
1751 – Pump Room enlarged, truncating the King's Bath.
1752 – King Edward's School rebuilt in Broad Street.
1754
1754–1755 – North and South Gates demolished (West Gate demolished c. 1776).
1755
Royal Crescent , climax of the Woods' Bath
Bath Assembly Rooms
Thomas Rowlandson , Comforts of Bath – The Pump Room (1798)
Map of the city, drawn in 1818.
1800
North side of Pulteney Bridge collapses in a flood.
S. W. Simms (bookseller) in business.[ 46]
Approximate date:
1801
January: Jane Austen becomes resident in Bath when her father retires here; she will remain until summer 1806 living mostly in the new-built Sydney Place.
1 May: Kennet and Avon Canal opens from Bath to Devizes [ 48] (completion of the locks at the latter place at the end of 1810 creates through inland water communication to London).[ 49]
Footbridges over Kennet and Avon Canal in Sydney Gardens
1802 – Balloon ascents from Sydney Gardens .
1805
1806 – East wing of Grand Pump Room completed.[ 16]
1808 – New houses in Sydney Place completed to the design of John Pinch the elder .
1810
Lancasterian Free School established.[ 50]
Union Street completed.
1812 – Jewish Burial Ground, Combe Down opened.
1813 - Claverton Pumping Station opens, allowing the Bath locks on the Kennet and Avon Canal to be used in periods of low rainfall.
1815
1816 – 8 January: Third Bath Philosophical Society formed.[ 52]
1817
1818 – Bath Gas Light Company established.[ 15]
1819 – Masonic Hall dedicated.[ 50]
1821 – 6 February: Original Assembly Rooms in Terrace Walk destroyed by fire.
1822
1824 – Bath Royal Literary and Scientific Institution founded (given Royal status 1837).[ 53]
1825
1826
1827
1829 – New basin at baths completed.[ 16]
1830
1831 – Jolly's department store opens as The Bath Emporium.
1832 – Sydney Buildings constructed.[ 16]
1833–1834 – George Phillips Manners restores the Abbey, replacing the pinnacles.[ 6]
1834–1837 – St Michael's Without church rebuilt to the design of George Phillips Manners .
1834 – Stothert, Rayne & Pitt acquire the Newark Iron Foundry.
1836
1837 – Victoria Column erected.[ 56]
1839 – Isaac Pitman moves to Bath.
1840
1841
1846 – City authorised to provide drinking water from springs at Bathampton and Batheaston .
1847 – Commercial Reading Room and Tottenham Library founded.[ 43]
1851 – Kingswood School moves to Bath.
1852 – Bath School of Art founded.
1854 – Post Office in York Buildings, George Street (1750s).
1855
February: Bath Natural History and Antiquarian Field Club established by Leonard Jenyns .[ 52]
Bath Quartet Society established.[ 41]
Corn market built in Walcot Street.
1856 – J. B. Bowler, engineer and carbonated drink manufacturer, in business.
1859–1860 – New Bluecoat school built.
1861–1863 – St John the Evangelist Roman Catholic Church in South Parade is built to the design of Charles Francis Hansom .
1861 – Guildhall Market built.
1862 – 18 April: A major fire causes the Theatre Royal to be rebuilt.[ 57]
1863 – Widcombe ("Halfpenny") footbridge first built over the Avon in wood.
1864
1865
1867
1869–1885 – Excavations of Roman Baths by Maj. C. E. Davis , the city architect.
1869
1870–1873 – St Andrew's Church built to the design of George Gilbert Scott .
1874
1875
1877 – 6 June: Widcombe footbridge collapses, killing eleven, causing it to be rebuilt as a wrought-iron lattice girder.
1878
1880
1881 – Population: 52,557.[ 58]
1882 – Holburne Museum fine art collection bequeathed to the city.
1883 – Queen's Bath largely demolished revealing a Roman circular bath.
1886 – First telephone exchange.
1887 – Botanical Gardens opened in Royal Victoria Park .
1888 – Bath Photographic Society formed.[ 59]
1889
1890 – Electricity generating station begins operation.[ 15]
1891 – Bath Fire Brigade and Ambulance Service established.
1892 – Technical training begins, origin of City of Bath Technical School and Bath College of Domestic Science .
1893 – Holburne Museum opens in Charlotte Street.
1894 – Major floods.
1896 – April: Bath Municipal Technical College and Bath City Secondary School established in a new north extension of the Guildhall.
1897
18 October: Victoria Art Gallery foundation stone laid to commemorate the diamond jubilee of Queen Victoria.[ 19]
Henrietta Gardens laid out to commemorate the diamond jubilee of Queen Victoria.
Roman Baths and associated Concert Room designed by J. M. Brydon are opened to the public.[ 6]
Empire Hotel with Pulteney Bridge beyond
1900
Silcox Son & Wicks, furnishers, established.
May: Victoria Art Gallery and Reference Library opens.[ 12] [ 46]
New (redbrick) houses for the working classes erected in Dolemeads.[ 7]
1901
1902 – 25 July: Horse tram system closes for electrification, being temporarily replaced by horsebuses .
1904 – 2 January: Bath Electric Tramways Company begins operating.
1905 – 12 December: Midland Bridge , a replacement lattice-girder bridge over the Avon, is opened.
1907 – Bath School of Pharmacy established.
1909
1910 – Jubilee Hall Cinema operating in Assembly Rooms .
1911 – 9 November: Twerton and parts of Charlcombe and Weston are incorporated within the city boundary under terms of the Local Government Act 1888 .
1915
1916
1920 – Bath Tramways Motor Company set up to operate motor buses.
1923
Roman hot plunge baths excavated.
Kingston Baths demolished.
1925
Bath Corporation Act includes conservation powers.
Lansdown Water Tower built.
1927
16 May: New Post Office and Telephone Exchange opens in Northgate Street.
3 November: City war memorial dedicated.
1929
1931 – October: Assembly Rooms purchased by the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings with funds provided by Ernest Cook and transferred to the National Trust for restoration and preservation.
1932
1934 – Bath Preservation Trust founded.
1936–1941 – Haile Selassie , deposed Emperor of Ethiopia , spends most of his exile in Bath.
1936 – North Parade Bridge rebuilt in stone-faced reinforced concrete.
1937
Bath Corporation Act includes additional conservation powers.
A school crossing patrol ("lollipop lady") is appointed, one of the earliest in the UK.
1938
15 October: Assembly Rooms reopened after restoration.
Kilowatt House on Claverton Down , a unique example of modernist architecture in the city, is completed to the design of Mollie Taylor as a residence for electrical engineer Anthony Greenhill.[ 6]
1939
1942 – 25–27 April: Bath Blitz : Three German aerial bombing raids as part of the "Baedeker Blitz " kill 417; among the buildings destroyed or badly damaged are the newly restored Assembly Rooms , St Andrew's church and All Saints Chapel.[ 65]
City centre in 1958, still with signs of the Bath Blitz
1944 – March–November: John Betjeman is assigned to a wartime job working on publicity for the Admiralty at the requisitioned Empire Hotel .[ 66]
1945 – Town planner Patrick Abercrombie produces A Plan for Bath for post-war reconstruction.[ 67]
1946 – October: City of Bath Bach Choir founded.
1948
1951
1955
Bath Terraces Scheme introduced to conserve the city's historic architecture.[ 7]
Covered reservoir opens on Bathampton Down .
1958 – Bus station opened in Manvers Street.
1960 – December: Major floods.
1961 – Bath Crematorium opens.
1963
1965–Easter 1983 – Excavations of Roman Baths under the direction of Barry Cunliffe , including areas beneath the Grand Pump Room and in the sacred spring.
1965 – Town planner Colin Buchanan publishes Bath: a planning and transport study .[ 68]
1966
1969–1972 – Original Southgate Shopping Centre built to the design of Owen Luder .
1969 – J. B. Bowler, engineer and carbonated drink manufacturer, ceases business.
1970
1971
25 April: Population: 84,670.[ 70]
New semicircular Pulteney Weir in the Avon designed by Neville Conder is completed.[ 7]
Bath gasworks ceases production.
1973 – 30 March: Beaufort Hotel (later Hilton Bath City Hotel) opens in Walcot Street.
1974
1975
1978 – Spa baths closed due to contamination.[ 7]
1979
1981 – Bath Fringe Festival and Bath Half Marathon begin.
1986
1987
1989 – 11 January: Closure of Stothert & Pitt is announced.
1991
1993
1995 – Bath Literature Festival begins.
1996 – 1 April: City becomes part of the Bath and North East Somerset non-metropolitan district. Charter Trustees of the City of Bath established.
1997 – Ustinov Studio (theatre) built.
1999 – 15 November: Bath FM launches as an independent local radio station, broadcasting until 24 March 2010.
Thermae Bath Spa
Elizabeth Park in the Bath Western Riverside residential development, opened in 2019
John Palmer (postal innovator) at age 75
c.953 – Ælfheah of Canterbury , archbishop (d. 1012)
c.1080 – Adelard of Bath , natural philosopher (d. c.1152)
1704 – John Wood, the elder , architect (d. 1754)
1707 – Benjamin Robins , military engineer (d. 1751)
1728 – 25 February: John Wood, the younger , architect (d. 1782)
1732 – David Hartley, the younger , statesman and inventor (d. 1813)
c.1738 – John Palmer , architect (d. 1817)
1742 – John Palmer , postal innovator and theatre owner (d. 1818)
1744 – 31 May: Richard Lovell Edgeworth , politician, writer and inventor (d. 1817)
1751 – Honora Sneyd , educationalist (d. 1780)
1754 – September: Elizabeth Ann Linley , soprano (d. 1792)
1771 – Frances Brett Hodgkinson , actress in the United States (d. 1803)
1773 – 14 January: William Amherst, 1st Earl Amherst , diplomat and Governor-General of India (d. 1857)
1780
3 June: William Hone , libertarian writer, satirist and bookseller (d. 1842)
Approximate date: Daniel Terry , actor and playwright (d. 1829)
1790 – 19 December: William Parry , Arctic explorer (d. 1855)
1794
1796 – John Pinch, the younger , architect (d. 1849)
1807 – Robert Montgomery , poet (d. 1855)
1808 – 15 July: Henry Cole , civil servant and inventor (d. 1882)
1810 – 2 April: Edward Vansittart Neale , Christian socialist (d. 1892)
1816 – 17 March: Abraham Marchant , Mormon leader (d. 1881)
1820 – 22 June: Charles Lowder , Anglo-Catholic priest (d. 1880)
1835 – 2 April: William Eden Nesfield , domestic revival architect (d. 1888)
1840 – 29 July: James Dredge, the younger , civil engineering journalist (d. 1906)
1846 – 26 October: C. P. Scott , newspaper editor (d. 1932)
1872 – Edith Garrud , née Williams, pioneer martial artist and suffragist (died 1971)
1880 – 28 October: Thomas Ley , politician in Australia and murderer (d. 1947)
1881 – 7 July: Sidney Horstmann , engineer and businessman (d. 1962)
1888 – 15 June: Martin D'Arcy , Catholic intellectual (d. 1976)
1896 – 7 January: Arnold Ridley , playwright and actor (d. 1984)
1898 – 17 June: Harry Patch , supercentenarian and last surviving combat soldier of World War I (d. 2009)
1901 – 29 September: Caryll Houselander , Catholic lay mystic (d. 1954)
1903 – 17 October: G. E. Trevelyan , novelist (d. 1941)
1908 – 27 March: Semprini , conductor (d. 1990)
1935 – 24 March: Mary Berry , food writer and presenter
1943 – 3 April: Jonathan Lynn , stage and screen director, producer, writer and actor
1945 – 17 December: Jacqueline Wilson , née Aitken, children's fiction writer
1947 – 4 October: Ann Widdecombe , politician
1964
1973
1974 – 18 January: Princess Claire of Belgium , née Coombs, princess consort
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Christopher Anstey , author of The New Bath Guide , with his daughter, painted by Bath resident artist William Hoare c.1777
Published in 18th century [ edit ]
Published in 19th century [ edit ]
"Bath" . Bradshaw's Descriptive Railway Hand-Book of Great Britain and Ireland . London: W.J. Adams. 1860.
John Earle (1864). A guide to the knowledge of Bath, ancient and modern . Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts, and Green.
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British Association for the Advancement of Science (1888). J. W. Morris (ed.). Handbook to Bath . Bath: I. Pitman and Sons. OL 19530108M .
J. G. Douglas Kerr (1898). Popular Guide to the Use of the Bath Waters (12th ed.). Bath Herald. OL 14035086M .
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Charles Gross (1897). "Bath" . Bibliography of British Municipal History . New York: Longmans, Green, and Co.
Published in 20th century [ edit ]
Emanuel Green (1902). Bibliotheca Somersetensis . Vol. 1: Bath Books. Taunton: Barnicott and Pearce. OCLC 7080200 .
G. K. Fortescue, ed. (1902). "Bath" . Subject Index of the Modern Works Added to the Library of the British Museum in the Years 1881–1900 . London: The Trustees.
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Robert Donald , ed. (1908). "Bath". Municipal Year Book of the United Kingdom for 1908 . London: Edward Lloyd. hdl :2027/nyp.33433081995593 .
Bryan Little (1947). The Building of Bath 47-1947: an architectural and social study . London: Collins.
Walter Ison (1948). The Georgian Buildings of Bath from 1700 to 1830 . London: Faber.
Benjamin Boyce (1967). The benevolent man: a life of Ralph Allen of Bath . Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
"Bath in the Eighteenth Century". Apollo . London. November 1973.
Peter Coard (1973). Vanishing Bath: buildings threatened and destroyed (3rd ed.). Bath: Kingsmead Press. ISBN 0-901571-67-9 .
Adam Fergusson (1973). The Sack of Bath: a record and an indictment . Salisbury: Compton Russell. ISBN 978-0-85955-002-4 .
Adam Fergusson; Tim Mowl (1989). The Sack of Bath and after . Salisbury: Compton Russell. ISBN 0-85955-161-X .
Charles Robertson (1975). Bath: an architectural guide . London: Faber. ISBN 0-571-10750-8 .
Larry R. Ford (1978). "Continuity and Change in Historic Cities: Bath, Chester, and Norwich". Geographical Review . 68 (3): 253–273. Bibcode :1978GeoRv..68..253F . doi :10.2307/215046 . JSTOR 215046 .
Bryan Little (1980). Bath Portrait: the story of Bath, its life and its buildings (4th ed.). Bristol: Burleigh Press. ISBN 0-902780-06-9 .
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Christopher Pound (1981). Genius of Bath: the city and its landscape . Bath: Millstream. ISBN 978-0-948975-01-1 .
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Barry Cunliffe (1986). The City of Bath . Gloucester: Alan Sutton. ISBN 0-86299-297-4 .
Tim Mowl; Brian Earnshaw (1988). John Wood: architect of obsession . Bath: Millstream Books. ISBN 978-0-948975-13-4 .
Peter Davenport, ed. (1989). Archaeology in Bath 1976–1985 . Monograph 28. Oxford University Committee for Archaeology. ISBN 0-947816-28-3 .
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Peter Davenport (1999). Archaeology in Bath: excavations 1984–1989 . BAR British series 284. Oxford: Archaeopress. ISBN 1-84171-007-5 .
Peter Borsay (2000). Image of Georgian Bath, 1700–2000 . Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-820265-2 .
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Published in 21st century [ edit ]
51°23′N 2°22′W / 51.38°N 2.36°W / 51.38; -2.36
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