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Cardington, Bedfordshire

Coordinates:52°06′58″N0°24′50″W / 52.1161°N 0.4139°W /52.1161; -0.4139
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Village and civil parish in England

Village and civil parish in England
Cardington
Village andcivil parish
Church Lane
Cardington is located in Bedfordshire
Cardington
Cardington
Location withinBedfordshire
Population317 (2001 census)
288 (2011 Census)[1]
OS grid referenceTL085475
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townBedford
Postcode districtMK44
Dialling code01234
PoliceBedfordshire
FireBedfordshire
AmbulanceEast of England
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Bedfordshire
52°06′58″N0°24′50″W / 52.1161°N 0.4139°W /52.1161; -0.4139

Cardington is a village andcivil parish in theBorough of Bedford in Bedfordshire, England.

Part of the ancienthundred ofWixamtree, the settlement is best known in connection with the Cardington airship works founded byShort Brothers duringWorld War I, which later became an RAF training station. However most of theformer RAF station is actually in the parish ofEastcotts, as is the settlement ofShortstown, which was originally built by Short Brothers for its workers.[2] The village of Cardington is located to the north east of Shortstown and the RAF station, and houses most of the population of the parish, which was 270 in 2005, making it one of the least populated parishes in Bedfordshire.[3]

Sites of interest

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The Church of St Mary the Virgin has pieces dating from the 12th century, although the church itself was mostly rebuilt between 1898 and 1902. It is a Grade II listed building.[4]

Airships, barrage balloons and RAF Cardington

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Main article:RAF Cardington
One of the two Cardington Sheds, with people in the foreground at left for scale.

Cardington became one of the major British sites involved in the development ofairships when Short Brothers bought land there to build airships for theAdmiralty. They constructed a 700-foot-long (210 m)airship hangar (the No. 1 Shed) in 1915 to enable them to build two rigid airships, theR-31 and theR-32. Some 800 people worked there in 1917, most of them travelled daily fromBedford.[citation needed] Shorts also built a housing estate, opposite the site, which they named Shortstown.

The airships site wasnationalised in April 1919, becoming known as theRoyal Airship Works.

In preparation for theR101 project the No 1 shed was extended between October 1924 and March 1926; its roof was raised by 35 feet and its length increased to 812 feet. The No. 2 shed (Southern shed) was originally located atRNAS Pulham, Norfolk. It was dismantled there and re-erected at Cardington in 1928.

After the crash of the R101, in October 1930, all work stopped in Britain on airships. Cardington then became a storage station.

In 1936/1937 Cardington started buildingbarrage balloons; and it became the No. 1RAF Balloon Training Unit.

For both airships and barrage balloons, Cardington manufactured its ownhydrogen, in theGas Factory, using thesteam reforming process. In 1948 the Gas Factory became 279 MU (Maintenance Unit), RAF Cardington; and then, in 1955, 217 MU. 217 MU, RAF Cardington, produced all the gases used by the Royal Air Force until its closure in April 2000; includinggas cylinder filling and maintenance.

The two airship sheds ceased being part of the RAF Cardington site in the late 1940s and they were put to other uses. The fence was moved, so they were outside the main RAF Cardington site.

From 1970, No. 2 shed was used by the Fire Research Station for large-scale fire tests in sheltered conditions which could not be carried out at their site inBorehamwood, Hertfordshire. Such tests included work on sprinklers in high-rack storage, department stores and other locations, gas explosions (following theRonan Point disaster of 1969), and reconstructions of notable fires including the Manchester Woolworth's fire of 1979. In 1972 the Fire Research Station was merged with the Building Research Station to form theBuilding Research Establishment (BRE) and in the 1980s onwards some of BRE's work in non-fire areas was done in the hangar until around 2001; this included multi-storey steel, concrete and wooden buildings which were constructed and then destructively tested within the huge space available. This shed was completely reclad for BRE in the 1990s by the Property Services Agency and its contractors and thus was looked after in comparison with the other shed.

The buildings tests were mentioned during the course of the BBC seriesThe Conspiracy Files as evidence in the controversy surrounding the collapse ofWorld Trade Center Building 7 on 11 September 2001.[5]

A company calledAirship Industries tried to revive the fortunes of the airship industry in the other shed in the 1980s,[citation needed] but the efforts ended in failure. In the 2000s decade, the site was used for the development of a new design of airship, the Skycat, by the companyHybrid Air Vehicles.[6] In the 2010s the site served as a base for Hybrid Air Vehicles'Airlander 10 prototype airship.

Goodyear Blimps, 2011

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Spirit of Safety I (G-HLEL) moored at Cardington, 20 March 2011. The grey/brown semi-trailer (articulated lorry) visible under the tail was parked close to Shed 2, giving some impression of the scale of the buildings.

In early 2011 twoGoodyear Blimps (Spirit of Safety I andSpirit of Safety II) were refurbished in Shed 1, prior to their deployment on a European tour promoting road safety.

Cardington Airship Sheds (Shed 1)

Sports

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Cardington is the location of the two largest and most successfulfootball clubs inBedford Borough.Bedford Town F.C. compete atThe New Eyrie stadium, and play in theSouthern Football League Premier Division.Bedford F.C. use the McMullen Park stadium, and play in theSpartan South Midlands Football League Division One. Both of the football stadiums are located next to each other on Meadow Lane in Cardington.

Cardington Artificial Slalom Course is anartificial whitewatercanoe slalom course located on the edge of Cardington next toPriory Country Park. The course was the first if its kind to be built in the UK, and hosts national canoe slalom competitions and cups. It is also used as a main training area for theViking Kayak Club.

Notable people from Cardington

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St Mary's Church

References

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  1. ^"Civil Parish population 2011".Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Archived fromthe original on 6 November 2016. Retrieved6 November 2016.
  2. ^"Eastcotts Parish Boundaries"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 27 September 2007.
  3. ^Tranter, N. L. (1967)."Population and Social Structure in a Bedfordshire Parish: The Cardington Listing of Inhabitants, 1782".Population Studies.21 (3):261–282.doi:10.2307/2173146.ISSN 0032-4728.JSTOR 2173146.PMID 22091542.
  4. ^Historic England."PARISH CHURCH OF ST MARY THE VIRGIN (Grade II) (1114144)".National Heritage List for England. Retrieved6 January 2017.
  5. ^"BBC NEWS | Programmes | Conspiracy Files".
  6. ^Little, Reg (11 October 2007)."Airship could serve Oxford-Cambridge". Oxford Times. Archived fromthe original on 7 October 2008. Retrieved5 March 2008.

External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toCardington, Bedfordshire.
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