Droitwich Spa
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Droitwich Spa is a town in northern Worcestershire, England. The town is situated on massive deposits of salt, and salt has been extracted there since ancient times. In the time of the Romans, it was known as "Salinae", and several Roman roads ran to the town.
Salt was extracted by pumping up saturated brine from the salt deposits, and evaporating the brine; over the years the removal of enormous quantities of salt from the substrata of the town led to considerable, if gradual, subsidence in some parts of the town; one photograph from the early 20th century shows one Droitwich house tilted at a considerable angle from the vertical.
In the 19th century, Droitwich became famous as a Spa town; unlike other places, the medicinal benefits were not derived from drinking the spa water (which is almost saturated brine); but from the muscular relief derived by swimming and floating in such a dense, concentrated salt solution, at the town's Brine Baths (first opened in 1830).
Opened in the 1930s was the town's lido, a large open-air swimming pool, which used diluted brine from beneath the town. See: Droitwich Spa Lido
Near Droitwich there is the central longwave broadcasting facility of the UK, which is also used for transmissions in the medium wave range, AM transmitter Droitwich.
Further reading
- Around Droitwich (Archive Photograph Series) - ISBN 0752407473
- Droitwich in Old Photographs - ISBN 0862994217
- The Droitwich Discovery - ISBN 057312146X
External links
- Droitwich RFC (http://www.droitwichrfc.co.uk)de:Droitwich