East of England

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

East of England
Eastern
Eastern region shown within England
Geography
Status Region
Area
— Total
Ranked 2nd
19,120 km²
7,382 sq mi
NUTS 1 UKH
Demographics
Population
— Total
— Density
Ranked 4th
5,388,140 (2001)
282/km² (2001)
GDP per capita £16,086 (3rd)
Government
HQ Cambridge
Assembly
— Type
East of England
not directly elected
Regional development EEDA
European parliament East of England
Website

The East of England is one of the nine official regions of England. It was created in 1994 and was adopted for statistics from 1999. It includes the ceremonial counties of Essex, Hertfordshire, Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Norfolk and Suffolk.

Its population as of the 2001 census was 5,388,140. The area is mostly low-lying, and the highest place is an unnamed point near the hill of Ivinghoe Beacon, near Tring, reaching 817 feet. Peterborough, Luton and Thurrock are the region's most populous urban areas.

Contents

[edit] Historical use

Before the creation of the East of England region there had been a smaller standard statistical region of East Anglia which did not include Essex, Hertfordshire or Bedfordshire. They had previously been included in the South East region. The East of England civil defence region shared the boundaries of the current region.

[edit] Common use

In common usage the easterly parts of this area, have long been and, continue to be known as East Anglia. The areas closer to London are more commonly called part of the South East with Hertfordshire and Essex included in the "Home Counties".

[edit] Local government

The official region consists of the following subdivisions:

Map Ceremonial county Shire county / unitary Districts
Image:EnglandEastNumbered.png Essex 1. Thurrock U.A.
2. Southend-on-Sea U.A.
3. Essex a.) Harlow, b.) Epping Forest, c.) Brentwood, d.) Basildon, e.) Castle Point, f.) Rochford, g.) Maldon, h.) Chelmsford, i.) Uttlesford, j.) Braintree, k.) Colchester, l.) Tendring
4. Hertfordshire a.) Three Rivers, b.) Watford, c.) Hertsmere, d.) Welwyn Hatfield, e.) Broxbourne, f.) East Hertfordshire, g.) Stevenage, h.) North Hertfordshire, i.) St Albans, j.) Dacorum
Bedfordshire 5. Luton U.A.
6. Bedfordshire a.) Bedford, b.) Mid Bedfordshire, c.) South Bedfordshire
Cambridgeshire 7. Cambridgeshire a.) Cambridge, b.) South Cambridgeshire, c.) Huntingdonshire, d.) Fenland, e.) East Cambridgeshire
8. Peterborough U.A.
9. Norfolk a.) Norwich, b.) South Norfolk, c.) Great Yarmouth, d.) Broadland, e.) North Norfolk, f.) King's Lynn and West Norfolk, g.) Breckland
10. Suffolk a.) Ipswich, b.) Suffolk Coastal, c.) Waveney, d.) Mid Suffolk, e.) Babergh, f.) St. Edmundsbury, g.) Forest Heath

[edit] Regional assembly

An East of England Regional Assembly exists to co-ordinate the work of the local councils in the area and provides other functions. It is based in Flempton on the A1101 north-west of Bury St Edmunds.

[edit] Economy

[edit] Hertfordshire

The Greater Watford area is home to Camelot Group (owners of the National Lottery), the UK headquarters of international firms Total Oil and Skanska construction, retailers TK Maxx and Costco, Leavesden Film Studios, Sanyo, Kenwood and Beko electronic goods manufacturers, Wetherspoons pub chains, the European HQ of the Hilton hotel group and Nestlé Waters. In Elstree and Borehamwood (close to the A1 motorway) are the Elstree Studios, where the Star Wars films were made and more recently Big Brother. Borehamwood is also home to BBC Elstree, The Boy's Brigade and DSG International (owners of Currys and PC World), while 3Com, Steria (formerly Bull and Honeywell), and Kodak have their UK bases in Hemel Hempstead. In Welwyn Garden City are the headquarters of the Thresher Group and the UK headquarters of Xerox and Hoffmann–La Roche. Shredded Wheat and Shreddies are manufactured in the town by Nestlé, at least until 2008. Tesco is based in Cheshunt and Computacenter in Hatfield.

[edit] Bedfordshire

Moto Hospitality have their headquarters are Toddington in Bedfordshire (at the service station). Luton is home to easyJet and InBev while its neighbour in Dunstable is home to Whitbread.

[edit] East Anglia

The economy in Norfolk, Cambridgeshire and Suffolk is traditionally mostly agricultural. Nationally known companies include Bernard Matthews and Norwich Union in Norwich, Greene King in Bury St Edmunds, In Newmarket is the base of the UK horse racing industry. The main water company for the area, AWG plc is based in Huntingdon. Around Cambridge on numerous science parks, are high technology companies which form the so-called Silicon Fen. Cambridgeshire has a few RAF bases. The USAF still have bases in Suffolk.

[edit] Education

Essex and Southend-on-Sea LEAs have selective schools. The others do not. Nine out of the top ten schools in the region (by A level results) are either in Essex or Southend-on-Sea. However, at GCSE, the best performing LEA is Hertfordshire, followed by Cambridgeshire and Southend-on-Sea. Suffolk also performs better than the England average of 45.8% attaining 5 grades A-C including Maths and English. In general, the region performs well at GCSE, with only Luton being low performing. Thurrock and Peterborough are next lowest, but are not underperforming areas. At A level, the best performing area is Southend-on-Sea, followed by Cambridgeshire and Essex. No other areas are above the England average. Thurrock is the least performing area, followed closely by Luton. At A level, Norfolk does not perform well for a rural county.

Cambridge has an eponymous very well known university as well as a second, much less well-known one. There are also other towns and cities in the region which have universities including Norwich (University of East Anglia) and Hatfield (University of Hertfordshire).

[edit] Top twenty state schools in the East of England (2007 A level results)

[edit] Local media

[edit] See also

[edit] External links