22-590: Rutland County Museum is located in Oakham , Rutland , in the old Riding School of the Rutland Fencible Cavalry which was built in 1794–95. The museum, opened in 1969, houses a collection of objects relating to local rural and agricultural life, social history and archaeology. Temporary exhibitions are shown alongside the permanent displays. Admission to the museum is free. The Museum's original collections were those transferred to it when it
44-464: A community based radio station which broadcast on DAB and online to the county and Stamford in Lincolnshire . The Rutland Mercury and Rutland Times are the local newspapers that serve the area. Oakham School is an English public school , founded together with Uppingham School in 1584. The original school building survives, north-east of the church. It has across its south front
66-525: A large collection of archaeological material from around Rutland. One of the more thought-provoking items on display is the New Drop Gallows . It is thought to be the only surviving gallows of its type in the UK. The gallows were portable and were set up at the front of Oakham Gaol when needed. The gallows was first used in 1813 to hang two burglars. The New Drop design was not to be very effective as
88-512: A population of 12,149 in the 2021 census. Oakham is to the west of Rutland Water and in the Vale of Catmose . Its height above sea level ranges from 325 to 400 ft (99 to 122 m). The name of the town means "homestead or village of Oc(c)a" or "hemmed-in land of Oc(c)a". There are two tiers of local government covering Oakham, at parish (town) and unitary authority level: Oakham Town Council and Rutland County Council . The town council
110-587: A wide range of reference books. 52°40′04″N 0°43′32″W / 52.6679°N 0.7255°W / 52.6679; -0.7255 Oakham Oakham is a market town and civil parish in Rutland (of which it is the county town ) in the East Midlands of England . The town is located 25 miles (40.2 km) east of Leicester , 28 miles (45.1 km) south-east of Nottingham and 23 miles (37.0 km) north-west of Peterborough . It had
132-555: Is a state-funded secondary school . Harington School is a sixth form centre next to it. Rutland County College , previously Rutland Sixth Form College, moved from the outskirts of the town to Great Casterton . Oakham United Football Club won the Peterborough and District Football League in 2015 and gained promotion to the United Counties League First Division. It currently plays in
154-617: Is based at Rol House on Long Row. The county council is also based in the town, at Catmose House . Oakham was an ancient parish , and gave its name to the Oakham Hundred , one of the five historic hundreds of Rutland. When elected parish and district councils were created under the Local Government Act 1894 , Oakham was given a parish council and included in the Oakham Rural District . The parish
176-506: Is believed to have held the relics of a saint. The reliquary was discovered in c.1805, after years of being concealed on the site of Brooke Priory , when building work was carried out in the cellar of Priory House. The reliquary is decorated with Limoges enamel work in shades of blue, red, yellow and green with images of Christ with two apostles or saints. The robes on the saints are engraved on copper plates which were originally gilded, but this has now worn away. The Local Studies collection
198-419: Is decorated with Romanesque architectural details, including six carvings of musicians. It is a Grade I listed building. The hall was in use as an assize court until 1970 and is still occasionally used as a coroner's court or Crown Court . It is also licensed for weddings. The outer bailey of the castle, which is still surrounded by low earthworks, lies to the north of the castle. Known as Cutts Close, it
220-524: Is hung in the great hall of the castle. There are now over 200 of these commemorative shoes on its walls. Not all are dated and some of the earliest (which would doubtless have been ordinary horseshoes given without ceremony by exasperated noblemen) may not have survived. The earliest datable one is an outsize example commemorating a visit by King Edward IV in about 1470. Recent horseshoes commemorate visits by Princess Anne (1999), Prince Charles (2003) and Princess Alexandra (2005). The horseshoes hang with
242-601: Is now a park. The park has some deep hollows which are remnants of the castle's dried-up stew ponds (fishponds). A Castle-class corvette named HMS Oakham Castle was launched in July 1944. Traditionally, members of royalty and peers of the realm who visited or passed through the town had to pay a forfeit in the form of a horseshoe . This unique custom has been enforced for over 500 years, but nowadays it only happens on special occasions (such as royal visits), when an outsize ceremonial horseshoe, specially made and decorated,
SECTION 10
#1732773371923264-567: Is the Buttercross with an octagonal stone-slate roof and the wooden stocks – both Grade I listed buildings . The spire of Oakham parish church, built during the 14th century, dominates distant views of the town for several miles in all directions. Restored in 1857–1858 by Sir George Gilbert Scott , the church is a Grade I listed building. Only the great hall of the Norman castle is still standing, surrounded by steep earthworks marking
286-457: The inner bailey . The hall dates from about 1180–1190. The architectural historian Nikolaus Pevsner , in his Leicestershire and Rutland volume of the Buildings of England series, noted; "It is the earliest hall of any English castle surviving so completely, and it is doubly interesting in that it belonged not to a castle strictly speaking, but rather to a fortified manor house." The building
308-631: The Oakham South East ward had the fifth-highest life expectancy at birth, 95.7 years, of any ward in England and Wales in 2016. The urban area of the town now extends into the neighbouring parish of Barleythorpe , to the north-west of the town centre. Tourist attractions in Oakham include All Saints' Church and Oakham Castle . Another historic feature is the open-air market held in the town's market place every Wednesday and Saturday. Nearby
330-663: The drop was too short to break the neck cleanly. The Museum has one of the oldest surviving box wagons in the country. Built in Lincolnshire and used on a farm in Preston, Rutland it dates from 1755–1795 and is unusual due to its wooden axles. One of the smaller items on display includes the Brooke Reliquary . This small casket dates from the 13th Century and originates from the workshops in Limoges , France and
352-616: The ends pointing down; while this is generally held to be unlucky, in Rutland this was thought to stop the Devil from sitting in the hollow. The horseshoe motif appears in the county council's arms and on Ruddles beer labels. The museum is located in the old Riding School of the Rutland Fencible Cavalry which was built in 1794–1795. The museum houses a collection of objects relating to local rural and agricultural life, social history and archaeology. A statue of Elizabeth II by Hywel Pratley
374-539: The inscription Schola Latina – Graeca – Hebraica A ° 1584 and above its door a stone with an inscription in Latin , Greek and Hebrew . Oakham School is the owner of the town's former workhouse . Built in 1836–1837 by the Oakham Poor Law Union , it held 167 inmates until its conversion into Catmose Vale Hospital. It now contains two of the school houses for girls. Catmose College , founded in 1920,
396-847: The town with Corby , Melton Mowbray and Stamford . The Oakham Canal connected the town to the Melton Mowbray Navigation , the River Soar and the national waterways system between 1802 and 1847. Local news and television programmes are provided by BBC East Midlands and ITV Central . Television signals are received from the Waltham TV transmitter. Rutland's local radio stations are BBC Radio Leicester on 104.9 FM, Smooth East Midlands on 106.6 FM, Hits Radio East Midlands on 106.0 FM, Greatest Hits Radio Midlands (which used to be Rutland Radio ) on 107.2 FM, Sabras Radio on 91.0 FM and Rutland and Stamford Sound,
418-461: Was moved from Oakham Library to the museum in 2010 and comprises a large collection of materials and resources on Rutland and the surrounding villages. It includes census records for Rutland, photographs of local villages, the Jack Hart postcard collection, Ordnance Survey maps of Rutland, editions of local newspapers and offers access to ancestry.co.uk (library edition). The collection also contains
440-574: Was removed from the rural district in 1911 to become the Oakham Urban District , with the parish council being replaced by an urban district council. The urban district was abolished in 1974 and a new parish council established, taking the name Oakham Town Council. Oakham, along with the rest of Rutland , has been represented at Westminster by the Conservative Member of Parliament Alicia Kearns since 2019. Women in
462-514: Was set up by the former Rutland County Council in 1967. These were the rural life collection of E G Bolton from Casterton Secondary Modern School and the mainly archaeological collection from Oakham School . Over the years the Museum has grown and it now has an extensive rural life collection which includes farm tools, tractors, wagons and a wide range of rural tradesmen's tools. In addition it also houses domestic and social history items, along with
SECTION 20
#1732773371923484-624: Was unveiled on 21 April 2024, which would have been the 98th birthday of the late Queen. The 7ft (2.1m) tall sculpture on a limestone base was commissioned by the Lord Lieutenant of Rutland and funded through donations from businesses and members of the public, at the cost of £125,000. Oakham railway station is a stop on the Birmingham–Peterborough line . It is served by two train operating companies : Most bus services in Oakham are operated by Centrebus and Blands. Routes link
#922077