, a near replica of the third
Eddystone Lighthouse The name
Ulverston, first noted as
Ulurestun in the
Domesday Book of 1086, consists of an
Old Norse personal name,
Úlfarr, or the
Old English Wulfhere, with the Old English
tūn, meaning farmstead or village. The
personal names Úlfarr and
Wulfhere both imply "wolf warrior" or "wolf army", which explains the presence of a wolf on the town's coat of arms. The loss of the initial W in
Wulfhere can be linked to
Scandinavian influence in the region. Other variants include
Oluestonam (1127), and
Uluereston (1189). The
market charter granted in 1280 by
Edward I was for a
market on Thursdays. The town retains its market-town appearance; market days are now Thursdays and Saturdays. The charter also allowed
public houses to open from 10:30 am to 11:00 pm, regardless of other statute on the books. The present Saturday market includes in the summer craft stalls, charity stalls and locally produced ware on
"Made in Cumbria" stalls. The
parish church is a listed building and was founded in the 12th century. Historically, the parish included chapelries and
townships that later became separate civil parishes:
Blawith, Church Coniston,
Egton with
Newland,
Lowick,
Mansriggs,
Osmotherley,
Subberthwaite and
Torver. From 1894 to 1974 the town served as an
urban district in the administrative county of
Lancashire. Under the
Local Government Act 1972 it became a
successor parish in the Cumbria district of South Lakeland.
Town Bank Grammar School was founded in 1658 from a benefaction by
Thomas Fell. The
Victoria Road drill hall opened in 1873. and
Oliver Hardy statue; Stan Laurel was born in Ulverston in 1890, and named Arthur Jefferson. The High Carley Hospital and Ulverston Joint Hospital Board built an infectious disease hospital at High Carley, Pennington, in 1884. It was initially a fever hospital for paupers. In 1916 a second hospital, run by
Lancashire County Council, was built to treat tubercular patients. From 1949 a children's annexe was built. In the 1950s, as the number of tubercular patients decreased, the hospital was run as an acute hospital. In 1984, after the building of the new
Furness General Hospital, High Carley was closed. In 2009, the comedian
Ken Dodd unveiled a statue of
Laurel and Hardy (by
Graham Ibbeson) outside Coronation Hall in the town centre.
Earthquake On 28 April 2009, Ulverston was near the
epicentre of an earthquake measuring 3.7 on the
Richter magnitude scale. Tremors were felt across south
Cumbria and parts of north
Lancashire at 11.22, but virtually no damage was caused. A spokesman for the
British Geological Survey stated that earthquakes of such magnitude occur roughly once a year in Britain. Regionally, it was the strongest seismic event since a magnitude 4.4 earthquake struck
Lancaster in 1835. ==Governance==