The name Rushden derives from the
Old English riscendenu meaning '
rushy valley'. Rushden's growth has resulted from a number of industries, including
lacemaking and
farming, and especially
shoemaking and associated trades. In the mid-1900s there were well over 100 boot and shoe factories in Rushden but today there are only four shoemaking companies left in Rushden. The novelist and short story writer
H. E. Bates, who grew up in Rushden, based many of his stories, notably "Love for Lydia", in Rushden, changing its name to Evensford. He recorded the past beauties of the surrounding countryside as he remembered it from the 1910s through to the 1940s, before much was destroyed by developments. He also gives childhood Iglimpses of vanished ways of life of many countryfolk, such as in the short stories, "The Watercress Girl", "The Mower", "The Cowslip Field", and "Great Uncle Crow". He often mentions the leather factories and bootmaking of "Evensford" (Rushden), and how the air in the town was often permeated with the smell of leather and its processing agents. One of the most renowned is Sanders and Sanders, who make boots for the British Army and several other defence departments throughout the world. Some of the redundant factories have been converted into flats, and MPs support for government help has been limited. Today, as with many towns in England, industry in the town is varied, and mostly situated in an out-of-town
industrial estate. As with the industry, town centre shopping in Rushden has changed considerably although there are still many shops. Rushden has the oldest toy shop in the county. In 1893 a short branch line
railway opened linking Rushden and
Higham Ferrers with the
Midland Main Line. The line was closed in 1959 and dismantled. In 1991 the trackbed was converted into a
pocket park. The former
Rushden railway station is now owned by the
Rushden Historical Transport Society, which operates a
museum and
real ale bar. The society often holds special events, including an annual 3-day transport cavalcade. The society aims to rebuild the branch line from Higham Ferrers to
Wellingborough. There is also a privately owned museum in Rushden which is situated in the town's Hall Park. It is open between the months of May and October.
Rushden Hall is the oldest domestic building in the town, once owned by many families throughout the years including the Sartoris family and the Pembertons family. The hall now functions as the head office of the town council and some rooms are available for hiring. It lies in of land which now is a public park (Hall Park). The 1970s
ITV Police Drama series
Hunters Walk was filmed on location in Rushden and the surrounding villages. ==Modern times==