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1901-1940 Unused
Kempston (pronounced \"Kemstun\") is a town in Bedfordshire, England. It is part of the Borough of Bedford. Once known as the largest village in England, Kempston is now a town with its own town council. It has a population of approximately 20,000, and is adjacent to Bedford. more...
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It serves principally as a dormitory town for Bedford and for Milton Keynes, which is approximately ten miles away.
History
The name in its old form is \"kemestun\" which includes the Brittonic word \"cambio\" meaning bent or curved. Therefore, the name meant when coined \"the enclosed settlement on the bend\". The bend was that of the River Great Ouse, noted for its sharp bends upstream of Bedford. It is just possible that \"cambita\" (the curved one) was the name given to this stretch of the river by the Celtic-speaking population. In this case the name could have developed like that of the river Kembs in the French Department of Haut Rhin.
Kempston was recorded as \"camestone\" in the Domesday Book and had a 6th-century Anglo Saxon burial site, now home to the Saxon Centre.
Until the 19th century Kempston was a mainly rural parish. It was one of the largest in Bedfordshire with an area of 5,025 acres (20 km²) at the time of enclosure in 1804, and was in Redbournestoke Hundred. Historically there was no central village, but instead settlement was divided between a number of hamlets called \"Ends\", for example, Up End, Wood End and Box End. Kempston's parish church, All Saints, was in Church End, which was not the largest end but is fairly central. In the 19th century East End, Bell End and Up End began to coalesce into a larger settlement. In 1870 developers began to attempt to develop land on the road from Kempston to Bedford under the name \"Kempston New Town\". Construction was slow at first, but the new district soon began to expand steadily and Kempston acquired a more urban feel. In 1896 the parish was divided into Kempston Urban District 1,255 acres (5.1 km²) and the civil parish of Kempston Rural 3,770 acres (15 km²).
The Urban District was based on East End, Up End and Kempston New Town all of which are in the north eastern part of the parish close to Bedford, and it had 86.8% of the total population at the 1901 census. Kempston Rural was three times larger, but remained sparsely populated. Church End, with its original parish church, remains a small hamlet in the rural part of Kempston.
The growth of Kempston's population level off in the early decades of the 20th century, with a rise of just 12% between 1901 and 1931, but it then began to expand rapidly. The 1951 population of just under 10,000 was 60% higher that that of 1931; in the second half of the 20th century, the population more than doubled. In 1974 Kempston Urban District was abolished and Kempston reverted to being a civil parish, in the Borough of Bedford but with a separate town council with minor powers. Kempston Rural remains a civil parish with its own parish, although its low population means that it jointly forms a single ward for elections.
Read more at Wikipedia.org
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