Tetbury
Tetbury is a village and also civil parish within the Cotswold area of Gloucestershire, England. It lies on the site of an old hillside ft, on which an Anglo-Saxon abbey was founded, possibly by Ine of Wessex, in 681. The population of the parish was 5,250 in the 2001 census, increasing to 5,472 at the 2011 census. Throughout the Middle Ages, Tetbury ended up being a vital market for Cotswold woollen and also thread. The Tetbury Woolsack Races, founded 1972, is an annual competition where participants must bring a 60-pound (27 kg) sack of wool backwards and forwards a steep hill (Gumstool Hill). The Tetbury Woolsack Races happen on the "late May Bank Holiday", the last Monday in May each year. Significant buildings in the town consist of the Church House, Market House, built in 1655 as well as the late-eighteenth century Gothic rebirth parish church of St Mary the Virgin and St Mary Magdalene as well as much of the remainder of the town centre, dating from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The Market House is a fine example of a Cotswold pillared market house and is still in use as a meeting place and also market. Various other destinations include the Police Bygones Museum. Chavenage House, Highgrove House as well as Westonbirt Arboretum lie simply outside the town. Tetbury has actually won 5 consecutive Gold awards in the Regional "Heart of England in Bloom" competitors in 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010 and also was group victor "Best Small Town" in 2008, 2009 and also 2010. In 2010 Tetbury was Overall Winner of Heart of England in Bloom as well as won a Judges Discretionary Award for Area Achievement. Tetbury won Silver Gilt as a new entrant in the National Britain in Flower Project in 2009 and a second Silver Gilt in Britain in Bloom in 2011. The Tetbury town crest features 2 dolphins.