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Bromsgrove| Market town in Worcestershire, 20 km/12 mi southwest of Birmingham; population (2001) 87,800. |
| There is evidence of a 5th century Celtic settlement and a later Saxon settlement at Bromsgrove. In the 16th century the town's nail-making industry grew rapidly. It lasted for over 300 years but died out with the introduction of machine-made nails. In 1894, the Bromsgrove Guild, an internationally famous organization of highly-skilled craftsmen, was founded. They were later commissioned to design and produce the gates and railings for Buckingham Palace. |
| The poet and dramatist Laurence Housman was born in Bromsgrove in 1865. His brother, the poet A E Housman , attended school here. |
| Features include the church of St John the Baptist (12th century), built on the site of former Celtic and Saxon settlements, which has a 61 m/200 ft tower and spire, both dating from the 14th century. The Court Leet, an ancient form of local administration, is re-enacted every year. The ceremony includes a procession through the town and an Elizabethan Street Market. The Lickey Incline (274 m/900 ft) is the steepest gradient on the main lines of the British rail network; a headstone in the churchyard commemorates two engine drivers whose train engine exploded while trying to climb it in November 1840. |
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