There is a reason they call us the#1 Sugar Daddy Dating Site
Featured in the NY Times, 20/20, CNN, Dr. Phil and Dr. Drew, SeekingArrangement is the leading sugar daddy dating and sugar baby personals in Stroud, New South Wales. Always FREE for Sugar Babies, we are the number one website for those seeking mutually beneficial relationships.
Goal Seeking Sugar Babies in Stroud, New South Wales
Attractive, intelligent, ambitious and goal oriented. Sugar Babies in Stroud, New South Wales are students, actresses, models or girls & guys next door. You know you deserve to date someone who will pamper you, empower you, and help you mentally, emotionally and financially.
The Modern Sugar Daddy in Stroud, New South Wales
You are always respectful and generous. You only live once, and you want to date the best. Some call you a mentor, sponsor or benefactor. But no matter what your desires may be, you are brutally honest about who you are, what you expect and what you offer.
Where can I find the best Sugar Baby in Stroud, New South Wales?
A Sugar Baby is someone who both delights and attracts. Attraction to her Sugar Daddy may help some women remain charming. However, with the correct perspective, for the right person, at the right time, it is not a necessity; it is simply a bonus. Women are emotional creatures, seldom do they separate their hearts from their heads, Sugar Babies are no different. There is the rare girl who totally compartmentalizes her head and heart within a Sugar Daddy/Sugar Baby relationship. Therefore, easing the transition from business to personal attraction for the Sugar Baby. Attraction is not always a physical thing; emotions play a large part in attraction to another person. Sugar Babies, need not feel physical attraction toward their Sugar Daddy, nor must there be an emotional connection, however, more often than not, it does develop. Attraction is not necessary to make the relationship work; it simply makes it more comfortable for the Sugar Baby to reconcile her relationship choices.
The women in Stroud, New South Wales are the best
There's no nice way to put this: some of the sugar babies in Stroud, New South Wales on other sugar daddy sites look a bit rough. Our sugar daddy site offers you nothing but the best of the best. All of our women are absolutely gorgeous and looking for a special sugar daddy just like you. The best part? The women in Stroud, New South Wales outnumber the men 5 to 1, greatly increasing your odds of meeting a sugar baby that you click with. What other sugar daddy site has impressive numbers like that?
More Sugar Babies in Stroud, New South Wales than other Sugar daddy sites.
The average sugar baby is a beautiful, ambitious college student, aspiring actress or model, or single mom. She works hard to get where she wants to be in life, but doesn't have a lot of extra spending money. That's why our basic services are 100% free for all sugar babies. We even offer free premium upgrades for all women with an official .edu school email address. Our affordable prices and membership options are one of many reasons that hundreds of thousands of people find what they're looking for on Seeking Arrangement.
Actors
* Tim McInnerny, actor (probably most famous for his roles in BBC TV's Blackadder), attended Marling School [36] * William Moseley, young actor (star in "The Chronicles of Narnia") * Emma Samms, actress, lives in Stroud * Keith Allen, actor, comedian, singer, writer, and father of singer-songwriter Lily Allen, has a home in Lypiatt and is often seen in town. * Tamzin Malleson, actor, grew up in Chalford, attending Archway School, and now lives in Lypiatt. * Colin Prockter, actor, moved to Stroud from London. Co-wrote the TV programme Luna and has appeared in Doctor Who * Sophie Ward, actor, lives in France Lynch. [37]
Artists
* Leo Baxendale, creator of Minnie the Minx lives nearby [31] * Lynn Chadwick, sculptor [32] * Damien Hirst, artist, has a studio in Chalford and another in Stroud [33] * Robert Charles "Jack" Russell, former Gloucestershire and England cricketer, and now artist. Attended Archway School. [34] * Alan Thornhill, Sculptor [35]
Authors
* Michael Horovitz political poet and publisher lives in the area * W. V. Awdry, creator of Thomas the Tank Engine, moved to the area [26] * Jilly Cooper, author, moved to the area * Alan Hollinghurst, author, born in Stroud [27] * Jamila Gavin, children's author, moved to Stroud [28] * Jenny Joseph, writer of "I Shall Wear Purple" lives in nearby Minchinhampton * Laurie Lee was born in Stroud and bred in the Slad Valley, the setting of Cider with Rosie * Matthew Fort, food writer, critic, and Guardian food columnist [29] * Katie Fforde, author, moved to the area [30]
Business
There is still a small textile industry (the green baize cloth used to cover snooker tables is made here), but today, the town functions primarily as a centre for light engineering and small-scale manufacturing, and a provider of services for the surrounding villages. The Stroud and Swindon Building Society has its headquarters here. Stroud is also home to the headquarters of the renewable energy provider Ecotricity and is a Fairtrade Town.
Campaigns
Stroud citizens have a history of protest going back to the Stroudwater Riots of 1825.[14][15] In the late 1970s Stroud Campaign Against The Ringroad saw off Gloucestershire County Council's attempt to impose unwanted traffic plans. The public won the day at a Planning Inquiry. A few years later Stroud District Council tried to demolish 18th century buildings in the town centre. Stroud High Street Action Group, with some rooftop protests and a high court judgement, came to the rescue. The restored buildings are now a feature of the High Street. After a short occupation a compromise was reached in the demolition of buildings in Cornhill with many being saved, including one identified as a medieval house. This campaign led to the formation of the Stroud Preservation Trust. which has been instrumental in saving many of the town's oldest buildings like Withey's house, the Brunel Goods Shed and the Hill Paul building.[16] Stroud Save The Trees Campaign came to national prominence in August 1989 when Stroud District Council tried to implement a road-widening scheme by a midnight raid on thirteen trees it wished to fell within the perimeter of Stratford Park. However local people got wind of the 'secret' and were there first to protect the trees. After a stand-off that lasted till dawn the police called off the operation on the grounds of public safety. The following year instead of road-widening the first 'traffic calming' in the county was installed. The trees remain to this day. A few years later Stroud District Council planned to fell the only mature tree in the town centre - the hornbeam on the Subscription rooms forecourt. A quickly mobilised citizenry persuaded them otherwise and the hornbeam survived and survives- just peeping into the photo above. In 2000 Stroud District Council gave permission for the Victorian landmark Hill Paul building to be demolished. After thwarting demolition, local activists quickly formed a company and sold enough shares at £500 each to take an option on the building, which they subsequently passed on to a local developer. The building has now been fully restored and converted into apartments (see photo on the right).[17][18] The Save Stroud Hospitals Taskforce has been campaigning since spring 2006 against a range of cuts to health services in and around Stroud, with thousands of people taking part in street demonstrations. Stroud Maternity Hospital was saved in September 2006.[19] The Uplands Post Office branch in Stroud was one of 26 in the county to shut as part of a nationwide programme to cut losses. Following massive local opposition, the Post Office agreed to talks with civic chiefs to look at how it could reopen. The town council agreed to provide £10,000 of funding for the service in 2008 and up to £25,000 for 2009. In November 2008 it was confirmed that Stroud has become only the second place in Britain to save one of its Post Offices.[20] However, it must be noted that despite the protests, Tesco opened a store near Stratford park in 1989, McDonalds built a fast food restaurant at Rowcroft in 2005 and Soon after, the bus station just down the road was replaced with a cinema.
Character and amenities
Stroud has a significant artistic community that dates back to the early part of the twentieth century. Jasper Conran called Stroud 'the Covent Garden of the Cotswolds', [8] the Daily Telegraph referred to it as 'the artistic equivalent of bookish Hay-on-Wye' [9] while the London Evening Standard likened the town to 'Notting Hill with wellies'.[10] Many of its residents (popularly known as 'Stroudies') support environment-friendly politics and are generally opposed to genetically-modified produce, oil companies (Esso in particular) and McDonalds, though one has now opened, after much protest. Consequently, Stroud Town Council became the first Green Party-controlled council in the country.[11] The town was one of the birthplaces of the Organic food movement and was home to Britain's first fully-organic café, Woodruffs.[11] The Biodynamic Agricultural Association is based in the town. [12] For many years Stroud has hosted a fringe festival on the second weekend in September. The town also hosts a regular Vintage Fashion, Textile and Accessories Fair in the Stroud Subscription Rooms, and will be holding the fourth annual International Textile Festival in May 2009. This is the U.K’s only festival to celebrate the diverse culture of textiles.[13] Stroud has a strong community of independent shops and cafés, which provide the mainstay of the retail experience in the town. Alongside this, the town centre has witnessed two controversial developments in the form of a new cinema (which replaced the bus station) and a branch of McDonalds which, when plans were unveiled in 2004, came against a lot of opposition from locals. The success of small businesses has, in recent years, caused a number of national retail chains to open outlets in the town. The Subscription Rooms in the heart of the town centre provide a venue for entertainment and also house the local Tourist Information Centre. On the fringes of the town are Stratford Park, originally the park of a small stately home, now home to a leisure centre with indoor and outdoor swimming pools, and the Museum in the Park, a museum of the history and culture of the Stroud valleys.
Description
Coordinates: 51°44′39″N 2°12′54″W / 51.7443°N 2.2151°W / 51.7443; -2.2151 Stroud is a town and civil parish in the county of Gloucestershire, England. It is the main town in Stroud District. Situated below the western escarpment of the Cotswold Hills at the meeting point of the Five Valleys, the town is noted for its steep streets and cafe culture.[2] The Cotswold Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty surrounds the town in all directions, and the Cotswold Way path passes by it to the west. Although not formally part of the town, the parishes of Rodborough and Cainscross lie adjacent to Stroud and are often considered part of it. The three parishes had a combined population of 23,644 at the time of the United Kingdom Census 2001. Stroud acts as a centre for many surrounding villages and small market towns including Minchinhampton, Amberley, Slad, Bisley, Stonehouse, Woodchester, Painswick, Chalford, Thrupp, Sheepscombe, Nailsworth, Dursley and Oakridge.
Education
There was a school at Stroud in 1576 but the schoolmaster, who did not have a licence and failed to teach the catechism, was then dismissed.[24] The town is now home to two of Gloucestershire's last remaining state grammar schools: Marling School for boys (founded 1889) and Stroud High School (founded in 1904 as the Girls' Endowed School). They continued on long after the comprehensive school became the norm in secondary education, and their future was the subject of long-running controversy; they were among the first schools to "opt out" and become grant-maintained. The two schools now share a mixed sixth form, called the Downfield Sixth Form, which works in a three-way consortium with Archway Sixth Form and Stroud College and attracts pupils from many surrounding schools. The town's other secondary schools are Archway School, a comprehensive school located in the Paganhill area, and Thomas Keble School in Eastcombe.
Famous inhabitants
The town's most famous children and residents are mainly authors, artists and actors:
Farmers' Market
A farmers' market, launched by Jasper Conran and Isabella Blow on 3 July 1999, [21] takes place every Saturday at the Cornhill market. It was nominated for the national Farmers' Market of the Year in 2001 and won it in 2007. It also won the Cotswold Life magazine award for the best farmers' market in Gloucestershire in 2003, 2004 and 2005. In addition to the farmers' market there is a smaller market held in The Shambles, an area adjacent to the steep High Street. John Wesley preached from a butchers block in The Shambles on 26 June 1742.[22] opposite one of the oldest existing buildings in Stroud, the Old Town Hall. Originally called the Market-house this was built in 1594 [23] and is still in occasional use today.
History
Stroud is known for its involvement in the Industrial Revolution.[citation needed] It was a cloth town; woollen mills were powered by the small rivers which surge through the five valleys, and supplied by Cotswold sheep grazed on the hills above. Particularly noteworthy was the production of military uniforms in the colour Stroudwater Scarlet.[3][4] The area was made home by a sizable Huguenot community in the 17th century, fleeing persecution in Catholic France, [5] followed by a significant Jewish presence in the 19th century, linked to the tailoring and cloth industries[6]. Stroud was a fairly major industrial and trading location in the nineteenth century, and so needed transport links. It first had a canal network in the form of the Stroudwater Navigation and the Thames & Severn Canal, both of which struggled to survive until the early 20th century. It is now planned to restore these canals as a leisure facility by a partnership of Stroud District Council and the Cotswold Canals Trust[7] with a multi-million pound Lottery grant. Stroud railway station (on the Gloucester-Swindon the Golden Valley Line) was designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel. Though there is much evidence of early historic settlement and transport, Stroud parish was originally part of Bisley, and only began to emerge as a distinct unit by the 13th century, taking its name from the marshy ground at the confluence of the Slad Brook and the River Frome called ‘La Strode’ and was first recorded in 1221. The church was built by 1279, and it was assigned parochial rights by the rectors of Bisley in 1304, often cited as the date of Stroud's foundation. Many historic buildings and places of interest can be found in the area. They include the neolithic long barrows(Uley Long Barrow) at Uley, Selsley Common and Nympsfield to the west; Roman era remains at Frocester, West Hill near Uley, Woodchester and Calcot Manor; the medieval buildings at Beverston Castle; and the outstanding Tudor houses at Newark Park and Owlpen Manor. Woodchester Mansion is a masterpiece of the Gothic Revival by local architect Benjamin Bucknall. From 1837 to 1841, Stroud's MP was Lord John Russell of the Whig party who was later to become Prime Minister. Russell was one of the most important politicians of his day, responsible for passing many acts of parliament such as the Public Health Act of 1848, but he is mainly remembered as one of the chief architects of the Reform Act 1867. This act, also known as the Second Reform Act, gave the vote to every urban male householder, not just those of considerable means. This resulted in the electorate being increased by 1.5 million voters. Lord Russell is remembered in the town by two street names, John Street and Russell Street, as well as in the name of the Lord John public house.
Literature
With novelists Sue Limb, Jilly Cooper and Katie Fforde, children's authors Jamila Gavin and John Dougherty, poet Jenny Joseph, plus national newspaper journalists like The Guardian's food critic Matthew Fort following in the footsteps of Rev W Awdry, and W H Davies by making the Stroud area their home, the town is steadily gaining a reputation as a magnet for literary talent. Two of its most famous sons are the authors Laurie Lee, whose most notable creation Cider with Rosie is set in the nearby Slad valley, and Booker Prize-winning author Alan Hollinghurst. Poets such as Dennis Gould, Michael Horovitz and Adam Horovitz have grown up and/or live in the area.
Musicians
* Geoffrey Burgon Composer[38] * Eamon Hamilton, frontman of Brakes and former keyboard player of British Sea Power, was raised in Stroud[39]. * Rodney Orpheus, lead singer of The Cassandra Complex, lives in Stroud. * Tom Smith, lead singer of Editors, was born in Stroud[40]. * Jamie Hornsmith, Bass Guitarist of The Rakes and award winning print artist[citation needed].
Others
* Alastair Hignell, former sportsman and commentator [41] * Peter Hennessy, English historian of government and Attlee Professor of Contemporary British History at Queen Mary, University of London, attended Marling School. [42] * Edwin Beard Budding, (1795-1846) inventor of the lawnmower and adjustable spanner, born and died in Stroud [43] * John Canton (1718–1772), physicist [44] * Isabella Blow, fashion stylist extraordinaire, lived in Edge, nearby * Sir Martin Evans, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was born in Stroud. [45] * Jasper Conran, designer and son of Terence Conran lives nearby * Molly Scott Cato, academic, author, Green Party's economics spokesperson [46]
Politics and media
The current Member of Parliament for the Stroud constituency is David Drew of the Labour & Co-op Parties. In 2008 Stroud Town Council comprised 11 Green Party councillors, with 5 independents, one Conservative and one Liberal Democrat. [25] In March 2008, a community radio station, Stroud FM, was launched in the town, broadcasting 24 hours a day on 107.9FM. The station, staffed by volunteers and funded by donations, has an output mainly focused on local news and music, but also plays a range of national and international music. The local newspaper is the Stroud News & Journal, a paid-for weekly Newsquest title with a circulation of around 19,000. A rival weekly newspaper, Stroud Life was launched in 2008.
Songs about Stroud
* "Stroud, The Town Of Make Believe" by Blurt, on the album "Kenny Rogers' Greatest Hit"
Sport
Stroud Rugby Club, founded in 1873, play in the Western Counties North league. Their home ground is Fromehall Park, near the town centre. Stroud Cricket Club is over 150 years old and plays its home games at Farmhill. The club has three senior teams with the first eleven playing its cricket in the South West Premier league. Since 1982 Stroud Athletic Club has organised an annual half marathon which takes place in October. Nearly two and a half thousand runners from all over the country entered in 2007. Members of the club include the UK number one Olympic Marathon runner Dan Robinson. Stroud Swimming Club was officially formed in 1978, but can trace its origins back to 1905 when it was known as Stroud Swimming and Water Polo Club. In 2006 and 2007 club members made up two thirds of the County team that finished in silver and bronze place respectively in the National Open Water Championships. Stroud Hockey Club was founded in 1928 and has produced some top class hockey players including Simon Mason.
Transport
Public bus transport in Stroud is run by Stagecoach, operating from its depot on London Road. The town is also served by First Great Western trains from Stroud railway station, with frequent services to Gloucester, Cheltenham, Swindon, Reading and London. The A46 road links Stroud to Gloucester in the north and Bath to the south, with the A419 connecting Stroud to Cirencester in one direction and the M5 motorway at Junction 13 in the other. National Express coaches serve the town, and Stroud also lies on the traffic-free section of Sustrans National Cycle Network Route 45.
Twin towns
* Saint-Ismier, Isere, France * Stroud, Oklahoma, USA * Duderstadt, Lower Saxony, Germany * Stroud, New South Wales, Australia