Like us on Facebook

MENU
Europe
England
Devon
Ashburton
Axminster
Barnstaple
Bideford
Bovey Tracey
Branscombe
Braunton
Brixham
Buckfastleigh
Budleigh Salterton
Combe Martin
Crediton
Dartmouth
Dawlish
Exeter
Exmouth
Great Torrington
Holsworthy
Honiton
Ilfracombe
Ivybridge
Kingsbridge
Lundy
Lynton & Lynmouth
Modbury
Moretonhampstead
Newton Abbot
Okehampton
Ottery St Mary
Paignton
Plymouth
Princetown
Salcombe
Seaton
Shaldon
Sidmouth
South Molton
Tavistock
Teignmouth
Tiverton
Torquay
Totnes
Woolacombe
100 best things to do in England
Things to do in Paignton


PLACE NAMES




Paignton
5 Vaughan Parade, Torquay - 0844 474 2233
holiday@englishriviera.co.uk


Paignton is a seaside town on the coast of Tor Bay in south-east Devon, England. Together with Torquay and Brixham it forms the unitary authority of Torbay which was created in 1998. The Torbay area is a holiday destination known as the English Riviera. Paignton's population in the United Kingdom Census of 2011 was 49,021.

It has origins as a Celtic settlement and was first mentioned in 1086. It grew as a small fishing village and a new harbour was built in 1847. A railway line was opened to passengers in 1859 creating links to Torquay and London. As its population increased, it merged with the villages of Goodrington and Preston.

The Torbay Picture House (now closed) is believed to have been Europe's oldest purpose-built cinema and was built in 1907. Seat 2 Row 2 of the circle was the favourite seat of crime novelist Agatha Christie, who lived in neighbouring Torquay. The cinemas and theatres in her books are all said to be based on the Torbay Picture House. It was also used as a location for the 1984 Donald Sutherland film Ordeal by Innocence and the 1981 film The French Lieutenant's Woman (which was filmed mainly at Lyme Regis in Dorset).

The Royal Bijou Theatre is now demolished, but a blue plaque marking its former location can be found next to the Thomas Cook travel agency in Hyde Road. The theatre was the venue for the premiere of The Pirates of Penzance by Gilbert and Sullivan on 30 December 1879. The performance was given at short notice to secure the British copyright on the work after problems had arisen with unauthorised performances of HMS Pinafore in the USA.

The department store Rossiters was a centrepiece of the town until it closed in 2009. The store is said to have been the inspiration for the sitcom Are You Being Served?.

From 1889 to 1897 the mathematician Oliver Heaviside lived in Palace Avenue, in the building now occupied by Barclays Bank. A commemorative blue plaque can be seen on the wall. Heaviside is buried in Paignton Cemetery.



leonedgaroldbury@yahoo.co.ukFeel free to Email me any additions or corrections


LINKS AVAILABLE TO YOUR SITE