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Carlisle History
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Carlisle from Stanwix
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ROMAN CARLISLE Carlisle began as a Roman town called Luguvallium. The
Romans invaded Britain in 43 AD and about 78 AD the governor, Agricola,
built a wooden fort on the site of Carlisle.
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CARLISLE FROM THE 5th TO THE 11th CENTURY Carlisle may not have been abandoned completely. There may have been some farmers living inside the walls and farming the land outside. However it seems certain that Carlisle ceased to be a town and all its Roman buildings fell into ruins. Carlisle was part of a Celtic kingdom until the 7th century when it fell to the Saxons. The Celts gave Carlisle its name. They called it Caer Luel, the fortified place belonging to Luel. St Cuthbert founded a monastery among the ruins of Carlisle in 685. In 876 the Vikings captured Carlisle and sacked it. The monks moved away but some people probably continued to live within the walls of the old Roman town. The Vikings held Carlisle until the 10th century when the Saxons once again captured it. Carlisle was rebuilt and revived by King William Rufus in 1092. He built a wooden castle at Carlisle (In the 12th century it was rebuilt in stone). Rufus encouraged people to come and live in Carlisle. |
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Carlisle Cathedral
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CARLISLE IN THE MIDDLE AGES In the Middle Ages Carlisle was a small town with a population
of perhaps 1,500-2,000. It would seem tiny to us but by the standards
of the time Carlisle was a fair sized market town. However Cumbria was
a poor area of England with little trade and commerce in the region. However
Carlisle was strategically important because of its position near the
Scottish border. In the 12th century stonewalls were erected around the
town. The castle was rebuilt in stone and strengthened in the mid-12th
century. Nevertheless from 1135-1154 Carlisle was in the hands of the
Scots. The Scots laid siege to Carlisle for 3 months in 1173 but they
were unable to take the town. The Scots returned in 1315 but again they
were unable to capture Carlisle. |
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Carlisle Castle
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CARLISLE IN THE 16th AND 17th CENTURIES In 1541 Henry VIII closed the priory and the 2 friaries. He also rebuilt and strengthened the castle. Henry replaced the southern gate of Carlisle with a citadel with 2 towers. Like all towns in those days Carlisle suffered outbreaks of plague which decimated the population each time. There was a severe outbreak of plague in Carlisle in 1597. Even so the population grew and by 1600 Carlisle probably had about 2,500 inhabitants. In 1642 came civil war between king and parliament. Carlisle was staunchly loyal to the king. However after the battle of Marston Moor in July Scottish soldiers (on parliament's side) occupied all of northern England except Carlisle. The city was under siege from October 1644 to June 1645. Finally Carlisle was starved into surrender. The soldiers then ransacked and vandalised the Cathedral. Afterwards Carlisle was again struck by an outbreak of plague which killed many people. Carlisle Cross was erected in 1682. Tullie House was built in 1689. The Old Town Hall was built in 1699. |
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Map of Carlisle circa 1700
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CARLISLE IN THE 18th CENTURY In the mid-18th century Carlisle was no more than a medium sized market town with a population of about 4,000. The Town Hall was built in 1717. The situation began to change in the late 18th century. Trade had always been limited in Carlisle because it was in a poor area of England. In the later 18th century roads to and from Carlisle were improved which allowed the merchants of the town to sell their goods elsewhere. In 1758 a turnpike road was build to Newcastle. (A turnpike road was privately owned and maintained and you had to pay a toll to use it.) In the last years of the 18th century the industrial revolution began to transform Carlisle. The wool industry began to boom. St Cuthbert's Church was built in 1778. In 1782 a dispensary opened where the poor could obtain free medicines. Carlisle gained its first bank in 1787 and its first newspaper in 1798. The novelist Sir Walter Scott married in Carlisle Cathedral in 1797. In 1745 the Jacobites under their leader Bonnie Prince Charlie marched south and after a short siege took Carlisle. However they did not hold it for long. English forces soon recaptured Carlisle. They hanged several Jacobites. |
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Carlisle from Canal by William Henry
Nutter 1842-66
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CARLISLE IN THE 19th CENTURY In 1801 the population of Carlisle was 9,555. By the standards of the time it was quite a large town. Carlisle grew rapidly and by 1851 it had a population of over 25,000. Scottish and Irish immigrants swelled the population. The textile industry boomed in the early 19th century although many of the weavers lived in poverty. However in the later 19th century the textile industry declined. Other industries in Carlisle in the 19th century were biscuit making, engineering, printing and brick making. From 1804 the corporation lit and paved the streets. At first Carlisle was lit by oil lamps but after 1819 it was lit by gas. Carlisle gained its first theatre in 1813. Between 1811 and 1815 parts of the town walls were demolished. Lowther Street was laid out on the site of the east wall. An infirmary was built in 1841. However, like all towns in the early 19th century, Carlisle was dirty and unsanitary. There were outbreaks of cholera in 1832 and 1848. In 1848 a company began to supply piped water (to those who could afford it). In the 1870s sewers were dug under Carlisle. The first telephone exchange in Carlisle opened in 1885. The Covered Market was built in 1889. Carlisle council obtained Tullie House in 1890 and built extensions to house a museum and library. In 1893 a park was opened called the Peoples Park. It was later extended and renamed The Bitts. In 1899 electricity was generated in Carlisle for the first time and the town gained electric light. In 1823 a canal was dug from Carlisle to Port Carlisle. However it was filled in 30 years later. In 1856 a railway was built to replace it. A railway connected Carlisle to Newcastle in 1838. Another railway was built to Maryport in 1845. Another connected Carlisle to Lancaster in 1846. Citadel station was built in 1848. |
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Carlisle from Rickerby Park by Thomas
Bushby 1897
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CARLISLE IN THE 20th CENTURY By 1901 the population of Carlisle was over 45,000. In 1900 electric trams began to run in the streets of Carlisle. They were replaced by buses in 1931. Carlisle gained its first cinema in 1906. In 1912 the boundaries of Carlisle were extended to include Stanwix and Botcherby. In the 1920s and 1930s Raffles Estate was built. In the early 20th century the textile industry continued to decline. Other industries in Carlisle in the 20th century included biscuits and railway engineering. In the 1920s and 1930s the first council houses were built in Carlisle. Carlisle Civic Offices were built in 1964. Radio Carlisle (later renamed Radio Cumbria) began broadcasting in 1973. In 1974 a ring road was built around Carlisle. In the early and mid-1980s The Lanes were rebuilt. Shops replaced old houses. A new library opened in 1986. Carlisle city centre was pedestrianised in 1989. |
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Carlisle Market circa 1920
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