Dictionary Definition
slough
Noun
2 a hollow filled with mud
3 a stagnant swamp (especially as part of a
bayou)
4 any outer covering that can be shed or cast off
(such as the cast-off skin of a snake) v : cast off hair, skin,
horn, or feathers; "out dog sheds every Spring" [syn: shed, molt, exuviate, moult]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology 1
Old English slōh, probably from Proto-Germanic *slokhaz.Pronunciation
- :
- , /slaʊ/, /slaU/
- Rhymes with: -aʊ
- italbrac General American: , /slaʊ/, /slaU/ or , /sluː/, /slu:/
Noun
- A muddy or marshy area.
- 1883 "That comed - as you call it - of being arrant asses," retorted the doctor, "and not having sense enough to know honest air from poison, and the dry land from a vile, pestiferous slough. — Treasure Island, Robert Louis Stevenson
- italbrac Eastern US A
type of swamp or shallow
lake system, typically formed as or by
the backwater of a
larger waterway,
similar to a bayou with
trees.
- We paddled under a canopy of trees through the slough.
- italbrac Western US A
secondary channel of a river delta, usually flushed by the
tide.
- The Sacramento River Delta contains dozens of sloughs that are often used for water-skiing and fishing.
- A state of depression.
- John is in a slough.
Translations
a type of swamp or shallow lake system
a secondary channel of a river delta
a state of depression
- Finnish: masennus
Noun
the skin shed by a snake or other reptile
Verb
- To shed (skin).
- A week after he was burned, a layer of skin on his arm sloughed off.
Translations
to shed (skin)
- Finnish: luoda
Extensive Definition
Slough (pronunciation; ) is a
Borough and unitary
authority area within the
ceremonial county of Berkshire,
England. It
is west of central
London and 20 miles (32 km) east of Reading.
At the time of the 2001 census, the population
of Slough was 119,070 (est. 122,000 in 2006) and the borough
area was the most ethnically diverse local authority area outside
London in the United
Kingdom.
Slough is home to the Slough
Trading Estate, the UK's first such estate, which, coupled with
extensive transport links, makes it an important business centres
in the South
East England. It is also home to a campus of Thames
Valley University.
Slough is at and is situated to the west of
Greater
London. Proximate towns include Windsor
to the south, Maidenhead
to the west, Uxbridge to the
northeast and Bracknell to the
southwest.
History
The first recorded uses of the name occur as Slo
in 1196, Sloo in 1336, and Le Slowe, Slowe or Slow in 1437. It
first seems to have applied to a hamlet between Upton to
the west and Chalvey to the
east, roughly around the "Crown Crossroads" where the road to
Windsor (now the A332) met the Great West Road. The Domesday Survey of
1086, refers to Upton, and a wood for 200 pigs, worth £15. During
the 13th century, King Henry
III had a palace in Cippenham. Parts of Upton Court were built
in 1325, while St Mary's Church in Langley was probably built in
the late 11th or early 12th century, though it has been rebuilt and
enlarged several times.
From the mid 17th century, stagecoaches began to pass
through Slough and Salt Hill which became locations for the second
stage to change horses on the journey out from London.
By 1838 and the opening of the Great
Western Railway, Upton-cum-Chalvey's parish population
had reached 1,502. In 1849, a
branch line was completed from Slough Station to
Windsor and Eton Central railway station for the Queen's
greater convenience.
Slough has 96 listed
buildings. There are four Grade I:
St Laurence's church (Upton), St Mary the Virgin's church
(Langley), Baylis House and Godolphin Court; seven Grade II*: St
Mary's church (Upton-cum-Chalvey), Upton Court, the Kederminster
and Seymour Almshouses in Langley, St Peter's church (Chalvey), The
Ostrich Inn (Colnbrook), King John's Palace (Colnbrook); and
Grade II
listed structures include four milestones, Slough
station, and Beech, Oak and Linden Houses at Upton
Hospital.
1918 saw a large area of agricultural land to the
west of Slough developed as an army motor repair depot, used to
store and repair huge numbers of motor vehicles coming back from
First
World War in Flanders. In April
1920 the Government sold the site and its contents to the Slough
Trading Co. Ltd. Repair of ex-army vehicles continued until 1925
when the Slough Trading Company Act was passed allowing the company
(renamed Slough
Estates Ltd) to establish the world's first Industrial
Estate. Spectacular growth and employment ensued, with Slough
attracting workers from many parts of the UK and abroad.
After the Second World
War, several further large housing developments arose to take
large numbers of people migrating from war-damaged London.
Governance
Most of the area was traditionally part of Buckinghamshire and formed over many years by the amalgamation of villages along the Great West Road.In 1863 Slough became a local government area for
the first time, when a Slough Local Board of Health was elected to
represent what is now the central part of the modern Borough. This
part of Upton-cum-Chalvey Parish became an urban sanitary
district in 1875 and an Urban
District Council area in 1894.
There was a major extension of the Slough Urban
District in 1930. The local government district expanded westward,
and was divided into wards for the first time (the new areas of
Burnham, Farnham and Stoke as well as the divisions of the old
district Central, Chalvey, Langley
and Upton).
In 1938 the town received its first Royal
Charter and became a Municipal
Borough. See
List of Mayors of Slough which starts with the Charter Mayor in
1938, who became the first elected Mayor in November 1938.
Slough was incorporated into Berkshire in the
1974 local government reorganisation. The old Municipal
Borough was abolished and replaced by a Non-metropolitan
district authority, which was made a Borough by the town's
second Royal Charter. Britwell and
Wexham
Court became part of Slough at this time, with their own
parish
councils.
On 1 April 1995, the Borough of
Slough expanded slightly into Buckinghamshire
and Surrey,
to take in Colnbrook and
Poyle, which
received a joint parish council. Slough became a unitary
authority on 1 April 1998, with the
abolition of Berkshire
County Council and the 1973–1998 Borough. The present unitary
authority was created a Borough by the town's third Royal
charter.
Sister cities
Slough is twinned with:Geography
Over the years Slough has expanded greatly, incorporating a number of different villages. Original villages which now form suburbs of modern-day Slough include Chalvey, Cippenham, Colnbrook, George Green, Langley, Poyle, Upton, and Wexham.Other areas of the town include Brands Hill,
Britwell,
Huntercombe,
Manor Park, Salt Hill,
Upton Lea, and Windsor
Meadows.
The urban area (but not the borough council area)
merges into the neighbouring parishes of Burnham,
Datchet,
Farnham
Royal, and Stoke
Poges.
The population of Slough's greater urban area is
about 145,000 inhabitants.
Demography
During the Great Depression of the 1930s, Slough became a haven for unemployed Welsh people, who walked up the Great West Road looking for employment.In the post-war years, immigrants from the
Commonwealth,
notably Anguilla, Antigua
and Barbuda, India and Pakistan were
attracted to the town, settling predominantly in Chalvey.
In the early 1950s there were a number of Polish
refugee camps scattered around the Slough area. As returning to
Poland (then
in the Soviet Bloc)
was not considered an option by many of the war-time refugees, many
Polish families decided to settle in Slough, an expanding town
seeking committed workers and offering a chance to own homes for
those prepared to work hard. In time, a Polish speaking Roman
Catholic Parish was established with its own church building. A
new wave of Polish migration to Slough has followed since Poland
became part of the European
Union.
Slough Council made history by electing the
country's first black female mayor, Lydia
Simmons, in 1984.
Slough has the highest percentage of Sikh residents in the
country according to the latest national census figures (2001). Sikh
residents make up 9.1% of Slough’s population, more than any other
local authority. Slough also has the highest percentage of Muslim (13.4%) and
Hindu
residents (4.5%) in the South East region.
Economy
Before the 1800s, the main businesses of Slough were brickfields and agriculture. The bricks for the building of Eton College were made in Slough. Later, as the Great West Road traffic increased, inns and pubs sprang up along the road to service the passing trade. Until the town developed as an industrial area, nurseries were prominent in the local economy; Cox's Orange Pippin apple was first raised in Colnbrook (not then within Slough) around 1825, and the dianthus "Mrs Sinkins Pink" was first raised at some point between 1868 and 1883 by John Sinkins, the master of the Eton Union Workhouse, which lay in Slough.During the 1800s the only major employer apart
from the brickfields was James
Elliman, who started as a draper in Chandos Street. In 1847, he
changed careers and manufactured his
Elliman's Embrocation and Royal Embrocation horse liniment from
factories in Wellington Street and Chandos Street. Elliman became a
major benefactor to the town, and is remembered today in the names
of local roads and schools.
In September 1851 William
Thomas Buckland, an auctioneer and surveyor from nearby Wraysbury, began
livestock sales in a
field near the Great
Western Road Railway Station belonging to the North Star Inn.
Originally held on the first Tuesday of every month, the Cattle
Market's popularity soon saw this increased to every Tuesday. A
move to Wexham Street was necessitated by the post-war
redevelopment of the town. The Slough Cattle Market was run by
Messrs Buckland and Sons until its final closure in 1988.
In 1906, James Horlick, one
of the founders of the eponymous malted milk
company, opened a purpose-built red-brick factory near Slough
Railway Station to manufacture his malted milk product. Starting in
the 1920s, Slough
Estates Ltd, the operator of the original Slough
Trading Estate, created and operated many more estates in the
UK and abroad.
The Slough
Trading Estate meant that the town was largely insulated from
many of the effects of recession. For many years,
Slough's economy was mainly manufacturing-based. In the last 20 or
so years there has been a major shift from a manufacturing to an
information-based economy. This has seen the closing down of many
factories (some of which have been in Slough for many decades). The
factories are rapidly being replaced by office buildings.
Hundreds of major companies have sited in Slough
Trading Estate over the years, with its proximity to London
Heathrow
Airport and good motorway connections being attractive. In the
1960s Gerry
Anderson's film company was based in Slough, and his Supermarionation
series, including Thunderbirds,
were filmed there.
The UK headquarters of Masterfoods
(originally called Mars,
Incorporated) is based in Slough, the main factory having been
created in 1932 by Forrest
Mars Sr. after a quarrel with his father, Frank C.
Mars. He proceeded to produce and develop the world famous
Mars Bar
in Slough over 70 years ago. The European head offices of major IT
companies such as Network Associates, Computer Associates,
PictureTel and Compusys (amongst others) are all in the town.
O2 is
headquartered in the town across four buildings. The town is also
home to the
National Foundation for Educational Research, which is housed
in The Mere.
In recent years, Slough's manufacturing
industries have been in decline, instead being replaced by modern
offices, including those of Nintendo, Black and
Decker, and the UK branch of popular online retailer, Amazon.com.
Dulux
paints are still manufactured in Slough by
Imperial Chemical Industries. Satchwell have been manufacturing
electrical and electronic products in Slough since the 1920s,
currently focusing on climate controls such as thermostats.
The motor trade has long been represented in
Slough. Until 1966 Citroën
assembled cars in a Liverpool Road factory (later used by Mars
Confectionery) on Slough Trading Estate, and they retain their UK
headquarters in the town. Ford
built Transit vans
at their factory in Langley (a former Hawker
Aircraft site from 1936 to the 1950s) until the site was
redeveloped for housing in the 1990s. Ferrari, Fiat and Maserati now have
offices in the town.
Slough's transport links make it an ideal
location for those working in London, but looking
for more affordable accommodation; as such it attracts a large
number of young professionals and families.
Culture and leisure
Slough has 42 parks and open spaces plus an ice skating arena where Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean once trained. The town has produced many Olympic class athletes as part of the "Windsor, Slough, Eton and Hounslow Athletics Club".Heart of Slough
The Heart of
Slough Project is a highly ambitious, multi-million pound plan
for the redevelopment of Slough's Town Centre. The aim is to create
a leading European and national focus, and cultural quarter for
creative media, information and communications industries. It will
create a mixed-use complex, multi-functional buildings, visual
landmarks and a public space in the Thames
Valley.
Recommendations for the £400 million project have
been approved, with work possibly starting in 2008 for completion
in 2011.
Most recent news, gives an estimate for work to
commence in 2009 for completion in 2018.
Negative Perceptions
- Slough has a strong rivalry with local neighbouring town, Staines. Both are near Heathrow and vie for out-of-town businesses moving from London. Ali G, a fictional resident of Staines, often pokes fun at Slough and its sports teams.
- According to the Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE) in 2006, Slough is England's least tranquil area.
- Slough has been the subject of much derision. Some references are mentioned above. However, the BBC aired a four-part series called "Making Slough Happy", where a team of experts attempted to bring happiness to the whole town. Despite complaints by some residents who said "the series was not particularly representative of the diversity of Slough", this can be contradicted because the sample "50" did provide a cross section of Slough with different ethnic minorities and age groups represented. However, most of the criticism was seen to come from people within Slough, while the majority of people outside Slough thought it was quite good; overall it did make a big impact and raised people's awareness of Slough as a whole.
- Slough-raised comedian Jimmy Carr said: "I grew up in Slough in the 1970s, if you want to know what Slough was like in the 1970s, go there now".
- The Slough Sewage Treatment Works between M4 Junc 6 and 7, sometimes releases malodorous fumes detectable to drivers on the nearby M4 motorway, a phenomenon known colloquially as The Slough Stench.
- The Russian KGB secret service made detailed 1:10,000 maps of most urban areas of the UK, but did not bother to make a map of Slough.
- Slough was recently the subject of a scathing documentary by the BBC's Panorama series, entitled: "Immigration - how we lost count". It highlighted the massive recent growth in the immigrant population.
Transport
Major roads
Bus services
Rail links
Crossrail
Slough, along with a number of other boroughs, is bidding to be part of the Crossrail Project, a new trans-London rail link likely to start construction in the early 2010s:- Cross London Rail Links (Crossrail) is a 50/50 joint venture company formed by Transport for London (TfL) and the Department for Transport (DfT).
- Crossrail is tasked with promoting and developing two new routes through London: Crossrail Line 1 (West-East) and Crossrail Line 2 (NorthEast-SouthWest).
- Crossrail was allocated a budget of £154 m in 2001 by central Government to carry out feasibility work for both Lines 1 and 2, and to acquire Parliamentary powers for Line 1.
Cultural references
- 1597: In Act IV, Scene 5 of Shakespeare's The Merry Wives of Windsor, Bardolph is mugged: "so soon as I came beyond Eton, (cozenors) threw me off, from behind one of them, in a slough of mire". This could be a reference to Slough. In the same scene Cole-brooke (Colnbrook) is referenced along with Reading and Maidenhead.
- 1932: (but set in the 26th century) In Aldous Huxley's Brave New World the chimneys of Slough Crematorium, around which Bernard Marx flies, are used to demonstrate the physio-chemical equality of all people.
- 1937: The poet John Betjeman wrote his poem Slough as a protest against the new town and 850 factories that had arisen in what had been formerly a rural area, which he considered an onslaught on the rural lifestyle:
- Come, friendly bombs, and fall on Slough
- It isn't fit for humans now
- There isn't grass to graze a cow.
- Swarm over, death!
- It isn't fit for humans now
- However, on the centenary of the poet's birth, the daughter of the poet apologised for the poem. Candida Lycett-Green said her father "regretted having ever written it". During her visit, Ms Lycett-Green presented Mayor of Slough David MacIsaac with a book of her father's poems. In it was written: "We love Slough".
- 1979: Slough is mentioned by name in the hit single Eton Rifles by The Jam from the album Setting Sons , in the line "There's a row going on down near Slough"
- 1991: Film Buddy's Song with externals filmed mainly on the Britwell Estate and the Farnham Road (A355) released.
- 1996: The Tiger Lillies' album The Brothel to the Cemetery includes a track called Slough, probably inspired by Betjeman's poem. The lyrics to the chorus are:
- Drop a bomb on Slough, Drop a bomb on Slough
- Drop a bomb on Slough, Drop a bomb on Slough
- 1998: The song "Costa del Slough" by the rock band Marillion posits the town as a post-global warming coastal resort, possibly in a reference to the comedian Spike Milligan having presented Slough on TV as a holiday resort.
- 2001, 2002, 2003: The BBC comedy series The Office is set in Slough, reiterating Betjeman's view of the place as a depressing industrial wasteland. In fact the character David Brent comments on Betjeman's poem in the series, and it also appears on the inside sleeve of the video and DVD of Series 1. Foreign versions of the show have transported it to locations with similar reputations, such as Scranton, Pennsylvania.
Notable people
- Cecil Aldin (painter of animals and rural life)
- Gerry Anderson (television drama maker and creator of supermarionation)
- Stanley Baldwin (schoolboy at St Michael's School, Aldin House and later Prime Minister)
- Steve Bell (political cartoonist)
- Richard Bentley ("Bentley's", the publishing firm)
- Keith Bosley (poet and translator)
- Fenner Brockway (anti-war activist and politician)
- Isambard Kingdom Brunel (engineer)
- Jimmy Carr (comedian)
- Frank Carter (Real Name - Chris Carter, vocals for a band named Gallows)
- Alma Cogan (singer, former pupil at St Joseph's School)
- Gregory Edwards (musician)
- Rod Evans (original lead Singer of Deep Purple)
- Tommy Farr (boxer)
- Sean Foley (comedian)
- Ricky Gervais (as David Brent) (actor/comedian)
- Thomas Gray (English poet, classical scholar, and professor of history)
- Geri Halliwell (entertainer)
- Victoria (Hanover) (monarch)
- Caroline Herschel (astronomer)
- John Herschel (mathematician and astronomer)
- William Herschel (astronomer and composer)
- Mark Hylton (Olympic athlete)
- Alan Johnson (former Slough postal worker, Cabinet minister)
- Iain Lee (entertainer)
- Forrest Mars Sr. (entrepreneur)
- Fiona May (twice world long jump champion)
- John Nash (painter)
- Gary Numan (musician)
- Henry III (Plantagenet) (monarch)
- Richard, 1st Earl of Cornwall (Plantagenet) (Royal aristocrat)
- Marcia Richardson (Olympic athlete)
- Mark Richardson (Olympic athlete)
- Helen Sharman (scientist and astronaut)
- Kalim Siddiqui (journalist and Muslim activist)
- Billy Smart, Jr (circus owner)
- Una Stubbs (actress)
- Ellen Ternan (actress)
- Robert Watson-Watt (scientist)
- Vic Woodley (footballer)
Deaths and funerals in Slough
- Harold Alexander, 1st Earl Alexander of Tunis (World War II military commander) died at Wexham Park Hospital in 1969.
- Brian Connolly (singer with 1970s group The Sweet) died at Wexham Park Hospital in 1997.
- Ronnie Kray (East End gangster) died in Wexham Park Hospital in 1995..
- Peter Osgood (footballer) died while attending his uncle's funeral in Slough.
- Princess Margaret (Windsor) was cremated at Slough Crematorium.
- Ernie Wise (comedian) died at Wexham Park Hospital in 1999, and was cremated at Slough Crematorium.
References
External links
slough in Bulgarian: Слау
slough in German: Slough
slough in Spanish: Slough
slough in Esperanto: Slough
slough in French: Slough
slough in Italian: Slough
slough in Dutch: Slough
slough in Norwegian: Slough
slough in Polish: Slough
slough in Portuguese: Slough
slough in Romanian: Slough
slough in Finnish: Slough
slough in Swedish: Slough
slough in Volapük: Slough
slough in Chinese: 斯劳
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abandon, baygall, bilge, bilgewater, bind, bog, bottom, bottomland, bottoms, buffalo wallow,
caries, carrion, case, cashier, cast, cast aside, cast away, cast
off, chuck, chuckhole, clutch, complication, crunch, decay, decomposition, deep-six,
desquamation,
discard, dishwater, dispose of,
ditch, ditchwater, dry gangrene, dry
rot, dump, eighty-six,
eliminate,
embarrassing position, embarrassment, everglade, exuviae, exuviate, fen, fenland, fine how-do-you-do,
foulness, gangrene, garbage, gas gangrene, get quit
of, get rid of, get shut of, give away, glade, hell to pay, hobble, hog wallow, holm, hot water, how-do-you-do,
husk, imbroglio, jam, jettison, jilt, junk, loblolly, marais, marish, marsh, marshland, meadow, mere, mess, mire, mix, moist gangrene, molt, moor, moorland, morass, mortification, moss, muckhole, mud, mud flat, mud puddle, mudhole, necrosis, necrotic tissue,
noma, offal, offscourings, parlous
straits, part with, pass,
peat bog, pickle,
pinch, plight, pod, predicament, pretty pass,
pretty pickle, pretty predicament, puddle, putrefaction, putrescence, putridity, putridness, quagmire, quicksand, rancidity, rancidness, rankness, refuse, reject, remove, riffraff, rot, rottenness, salt marsh,
scrap, scrape, scum, scurf, sewage, sewerage, shed, shell, shuck, skin, slip, slob land, slop, slops, sough, sphacelation, sphacelus, spoilage, spot, squeeze, stew, sticky wicket, strait, straits, sump, swale, swamp, swampland, swill, taiga, throw away, throw off,
throw out, throw over, throw overboard, tight spot, tight squeeze,
tightrope, tooth
decay, toss overboard, tricky spot, unholy mess, wallow, wash