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hotel in isle of wight

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A hotel, in a town like Isle Of Wight, , is an establishment that provides paid lodging on a short-term basis.
The provision of basic accommodation, in times past, consisting only of a room with a bed, a cupboard, a small table and a washstand has largely been replaced by rooms with modern facilities, including en-suite bathrooms and air conditioning or climate control.
Additional common features found in hotel rooms are a telephone, an alarm clock, a television, a safe, a mini-bar with snack foods and drinks, and facilities for making tea and coffee.
Luxury features include bathrobes and slippers, a pillow menu, twin-sink vanities, and jacuzzi bathtubs.
Larger hotels may provide additional guest facilities such as a restaurant, swimming pool, fitness center, business center, childcare, conference facilities and social function services.
Hotel rooms are usually numbered (or named in some smaller hotels and B&Bs) to allow guests to identify their room.
Some hotels offer meals as part of a room and board arrangement.
In the United Kingdom, in a town like Isle Of Wight, , a hotel is required by law to serve food and drinks to all guests within certain stated hours.
In Japan, capsule hotels provide a minimized amount of room space and shared facilities.
The word hotel is derived from the French hotel (coming from hote meaning host), which referred to a French version of a townhouse or any other building seeing frequent visitors, rather than a place offering accommodation.
In contemporary French usage, hotel now has the same meaning as the English term, and hotel particulier is used for the old meaning.
The French spelling, with the circumflex, was also used in English, but is now rare.
The circumflex replaces the 's' found in the earlier hostel spelling, which over time took on a new, but closely related meaning.
Grammatically, hotels usually take the definite article - hence "The Astoria Hotel" or simply "The Astoria.
" Hotel operations in a hotel vary in size, function, and cost.
Most hotels and major hospitality companies that operate hotels have set widely accepted industry standards to classify hotel types.
General categories include the following; * Upscale Luxury.
o Examples include Conrad Hotels, InterContinental Hotels, Ritz-Carlton, Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts, Dorchester Collection,and JW Marriott Hotels.
* Full Service.
o Examples include Hilton, Marriott, Hotel Indigo, Doubletree, and Hyatt.
* Select Service.
o Examples include Holiday Inn, Courtyard by Marriott and Hilton Garden Inn.
* Limited Service.
o Examples include Hampton Inn, Holiday Inn Express, Fairfield Inn, Days Inn, and La Quinta Inns & Suites.
* Extended Stay.
o Examples include Staybridge Suites, Homewood Suites by Hilton, Residence Inn by Marriott, and Extended Stay Hotels.
* Timeshare.
o Examples include Holiday Inn Club Vacations, Marriott Vacation Club International, Westgate Resorts, and Disney Vacation Club.
* Destination Club.
Hotel management is a significant career.
Larger hotels may operate with an extensive management structure consisting of a General Manager which serves as the head executive, department heads that oversee various departments, middle managers, administrative staff, and line-level supervisors.
Degree programs such as hospitality management studies, a business degree, and/or certification programs prepare hotel managers for industry practice.
Some hotels, a hotel in isle of wight for instance, have gained their renown through tradition, by hosting significant events or persons, such as Schloss Cecilienhof in Potsdam, Germany, which derives its fame from the Potsdam Conference of the World War II allies Winston Churchill, Harry Truman and Joseph Stalin in 1945.
The Taj Mahal Palace & Tower in Mumbai is one of India's most famous and historic hotels because of its association with the Indian independence movement.
Some establishments have given name to a particular meal or beverage, as is the case with the Waldorf Astoria in New York City, United States where the Waldorf Salad was first created or the Hotel Sacher in Vienna, Austria, home of the Sachertorte.
Others have achieved fame by association with dishes or cocktails created on their premises, such as the Hotel de Paris where the crepe Suzette was invented or the Raffles Hotel in Singapore, where the Singapore Sling cocktail was devised.
A number of hotels have entered the public consciousness through popular culture, such as the Ritz Hotel in London, through its association with Irving Berlin's song, 'Puttin' on the Ritz'.
The Algonquin Hotel in New York City is famed as the meeting place of the literary group, the Algonquin Round Table, and Hotel Chelsea, also in New York City, has been the subject of a number of songs and the scene of the stabbing of Nancy Spungen (allegedly by her boyfriend Sid Vicious).
Many hotels can be considered destinations in themselves, by dint of unusual features of the lodging or its immediate environment: Boutique hotels are typically hotels like with a unique environment.
Some hotels are built with living trees as structural elements, for example the Costa Rica Tree House in the Gandoca-Manzanillo Wildlife Refuge, Costa Rica; the Treetops Hotel in Aberdare National Park, Kenya; the Ariau Towers near Manaus, Brazil, on the Rio Negro in the Amazon; and Bayram's Tree Houses in Olympos, Turkey.
In Nax Mont-Noble, a little ski resort situated on 1300 metres in the Swiss Alps, construction for the Maya Guesthouse will start in September 2011.
It will be the first hotel in Europe built entirely with straw bales.
Due to the isolation values of the walls it will need no heating.
The Null Stern Hotel in Teufen, Appenzellerland, Switzerland and the Concrete Mushrooms in Albaniaare former nuclear bunkers transformed into hotels.
Shoe hotels are hotels built into a giant shoe.
The idea was inspired by the "Old Woman who lived in a shoe" myth.
The largest such hotel is currently in Hokkaido, Japan.
The most popular shoe hotels are modelled after a woman's platform dancing shoe.
The Cuevas Pedro Antonio de AlarcOn (named after the author) in Guadix, Spain, as well as several hotels in Cappadocia, Turkey, are notable for being built into natural cave formations, some with rooms underground.
The Desert Cave Hotel in Coober Pedy, South Australia is built into the remains of an opal mine.
Capsule hotels are a type of economical hotel that are found in Japan, where people sleep in stacks of rectangular containers.
The Ice Hotel in Jukkasjarvi, Sweden, and the Hotel de Glace in Duschenay, Canada, melt every spring and are rebuilt each winter; the Mammut Snow Hotel in Finland is located within the walls of the Kemi snow castle; and the Lainio Snow Hotel is part of a snow village near Yllas, Finland.
Garden hotels, famous for their gardens before they became hotels, include Gravetye Manor, the home of garden designer William Robinson, and Cliveden, designed by Charles Barry with a rose garden by Geoffrey Jellicoe.
Some hotels have accommodation underwater, such as Utter Inn in Lake Malaren, Sweden.
Hydropolis, project cancelled 2004 in Dubai, would have had suites on the bottom of the Persian Gulf, and Jules Undersea Lodge in Key Largo, Florida requires scuba diving to access its rooms.
Other unusual hotels - RMS Queen Mary, Long Beach, California, United States.
* The Library Hotel in New York City, is unique in that each of its ten floors is assigned one category from the Dewey Decimal System.
* The Burj al-Arab hotel in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, built on an artificial island, is structured in the shape of a boat's sail.
* The Jailhotel Lowengraben in Lucerne, Switzerland is a converted prison now used as a hotel.
* The Luxor, a hotel and casino on the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada, United States is unusual due to its pyramidal structure.
* The Liberty Hotel in Boston, used to be the Charles Street Jail.
* Built in Scotland and completed in 1936, The former ocean liner RMS Queen Mary in Long Beach, California, United States uses its first-class staterooms as a hotel, after retiring in 1967 from Transatlantic service.
* There are several hotels throughout the world built into converted airliners.
Some hotels are built specifically to create a captive trade, example at casinos and holiday resorts.
Though of course hotels have always been built in popular destinations, the defining characteristic of a resort hotel is that it exists purely to serve another attraction, the two having the same owners.
In Las Vegas there is a tradition of one-upmanship with luxurious and extravagant hotels in a concentrated area known as the Las Vegas Strip.
This trend now has extended to other resorts worldwide, but the concentration in Las Vegas is still the world's highest: nineteen of the world's twenty-five largest hotels by room count are on the Strip, with a total of over 67,000 rooms.
In Europe Center Parcs might be considered a chain of resort hotels, since the sites are largely man-made (though set in natural surroundings such as country parks) with captive trade, whereas holiday camps such as Butlins and Pontin's are probably not considered as resort hotels, since they are set at traditional holiday destinations which existed before the camps.
Frequently, expanding railway companies built grand hotels at their termini, such as the Midland Hotel, Manchester next to the former Manchester Central Station and in London the ones above St Pancras railway station and Charing Cross railway station also in London is the Chiltern Court Hotel above Baker Street tube station and Canada's grand railway hotels.
They are or were mostly, but not exclusively, used by those travelling by rail.
A motel (motor hotel) is a hotel which is for a short stay, usually for a night, for motorists on long journeys.
It has direct access from the room to the vehicle (for example a central parking lot around which the buildings are set), and is built conveniently close to major roads and intersections.
In 2006, Guinness World Records listed the First World Hotel in Genting Highlands, Malaysia as the world's largest hotel with a total of 6,118 rooms.
Similarly, the Venetian Palazzo Complex, in Las Vegas, has the most number of rooms.
It has 7,117 rooms followed by MGM Grand Hotel, which contains 6,852 rooms.
According to the Guinness Book of World Records, the oldest hotel still in operation is the Hoshi Ryokan, in the Awazu Onsen area of Komatsu, Japan which opened in 718.
The Ritz-Carlton Hong Kong is the tallest building used exclusively as a hotel.
Located on the top of Hong Kong's tallest building, the 488 meter tall International Commerce Centre.
Some hotels sell individual rooms to investors.
Timeshare is an example of this kind of investment.
The buyer is allowed to stay in the room without charge or at a reduced rate for a given number of days each year.
The investor is paid a share of the takings for the room.
Rooms can be sold on a leasehold basis, sometimes on a 999 year lease.
Room owners are free to sell at any time.
A number of public figures have notably chosen to take up semi-permanent or permanent residence in hotels.
* Actor Richard Harris lived at the Savoy Hotel while in London.
Hotel archivist Susan Scott recounts an anecdote that when he was being taken out of the building on a stretcher shortly before his death he raised his hand and told the diners "it was the food.
" * Inventor Nikola Tesla lived the last 10 years of his life at the New Yorker Hotel until 1943 when he died in the hotel room.
* Millionaire Howard Hughes lived his last few years in a Las Vegas hotel.
* Egyptian actor Ahmad Zaki lived his last 15 years in Ramses Hilton Hotel - Cairo.
* Larry Fine (of the Three Stooges) and his family lived in hotels, due to his extravagant spending habits and his wife's dislike for housekeeping.
They first lived in the President Hotel in Atlantic City, New Jersey, where his daughter Phyllis was raised, then the Knickerbocker Hotel in Hollywood.
Not until the late 1940s did Larry buy a home in the Los Feliz area of Los Angeles, California.
* General Douglas McArthur lived his last 14 years in the penthouse of the Waldorf Towers, a part of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.
* American actress Elaine Stritch lived in the Savoy Hotel in London for over a decade.
* Fashion designer Coco Chanel lived in the Hotel Ritz Paris on and off for more than 30 years.
* Vladimir Nabokov and his wife Vera lived in the Montreux Palace Hotel in Montreux, Switzerland from 1961 until his death in 1977.
* British entrepreneur Jack Lyons lived in the Hotel Mirador Kempinski in Switzerland for several years until his death in 2008.
Hotels, like a hotel in isle of wight, have been used as the settings for television programmes such as the British situation comedies Fawlty Towers and I'm Alan Partridge, the British soap opera Crossroads, and in films such as the Bates Motel in Hitchcock's 1960 film Psycho and The Dolphin Hotel in 1408, a short story by Stephen King which was adapted into a 2007 film.
Another is Tipton Hotel, a fictitious hotel in Disney's "The Suite Life of Zack and Cody".
When the show later became a spinoff into "The Suite Life on Deck," the Tipton evolved into the SS Tipton, run by the same company.
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The Isle of Wight is first mentioned in writing in Geography by Claudius Ptolemaeus.
The Roman historian Suetonius mentions that the entire island was captured by the commander Vespasian, who later became emperor.
At the end of the Roman Empire, the island of Vectis became a Jutish kingdom ruled by King Stuf and his successors until AD 661 when it was invaded by Wulfhere of Mercia and forcibly converted to Christianity at sword point.
When he left for Mercia the islanders reverted to paganism.
In AD 685 it was invaded by Caedwalla of Wessex and can be considered to have become part of Wessex.
Following the accession of West Saxon kings as kings of all England, it then became part of England.
The island became part of the shire of Hampshire and was divided into hundreds as was the norm.
In 686, it became the last part of England to convert to Christianity.
The island suffered especially from Viking predations.
Alfred the Great's navy defeated the Danes in 871 after they had "ravaged Devon and the Isle of Wight".
The Norman Conquest created the position of Lord of the Isle of Wight.
Carisbrooke Priory and the fort of Carisbrooke Castle were founded.
The island did not come under full control of the Crown until it was sold by the dying last Norman Lord, Lady Isabella de Fortibus, to Edward I in 1293.
The Lordship thereafter became a royal appointment, with a brief interruption when Henry de Beauchamp, 1st Duke of Warwick was in 1444 crowned King of the Isle of Wight, with King Henry VI assisting in person at the ceremony, placing the crown on his head.
With no male heir, the regal title expired on the death of Henry de Beauchamp in 1446.
Henry VIII, who developed the Royal Navy and its permanent base at Portsmouth, fortified the island at Yarmouth, Cowes, East Cowes, and Sandown.
Much later, after the Spanish Armada in 1588, the threat of Spanish attacks remained and the outer fortifications of Carisbrooke Castle were built between 1597 and 1602.
During the English Civil War King Charles fled to the Isle of Wight, believing he would receive sympathy from the governor, Robert Hammond.
Hammond was appalled, and imprisoned the king in Carisbrooke Castle.
Charles had originally intended to flee to Jersey but had got lost in the New Forest and missed the boat.
Osborne House and its grounds are now open to the public During the Seven Years War, the island was used as a staging post for British troops departing on expeditions against the French coast such as the Raid on Rochefort.
During 1759 with a planned French invasion imminent, a large force of soldiers was kept there so they could be moved at speed to any destination on the Southern English Coast.
The French called off their invasion following the Battle of Quiberon Bay.
A later French invasion plan involved a landing on the Isle of Wight.
Queen Victoria made Osborne House on the Isle of Wight her summer home for many years and, as a result, it became a major holiday resort for fashionable Victorians including Alfred Lord Tennyson, Julia Margaret Cameron, Charles Dickens (who wrote much of David Copperfield there) and members of European royalty.
During her reign, in 1897, the world's first radio station was set up by Marconi, at The Needles Battery, at the western tip of the island.
During the Second World War the island was frequently bombed.
With its proximity to France the island also had a number of observation stations and transmitters, and was the starting-point for one of the earlier Operation Pluto pipelines to feed fuel to the Normandy landings.
The Needles battery was used as the site for testing and development of the Black Arrow and Black Knight space rockets, subsequently launched from Woomera, Australia.
The Isle of Wight Festival was a very large rock festival that took place near Afton Down, West Wight in 1970, following two smaller concerts in 1968 and 1969.
The 1970 show was notable both for being one of the last public performances by Jimi Hendrix and for the number of attendees reaching, by many estimates, 600,000.
The festival was revived in 2002 in a different format and is now an annual event.
The Isle of Wight is approximately diamond-shaped and covers an area of 380 km2.
Slightly more than half of the island, mainly in the west, is designated as the Isle of Wight Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
The Island has 258 km2 of farmland, 52 km2 of developed areas, and 92 km of coastline.
The landscape of the Island is remarkably diverse, leading to its oft-quoted description of "England in Miniature".
West Wight is predominantly rural, with dramatic coastlines dominated by the chalk downland ridge, running across the whole island and ending in The Needles stacks - perhaps the most photographed aspect of the Isle of Wight.
The South Western quarter is commonly referred to as the Back of the Wight because it has a unique social and historical background.
The highest point on the island is St Boniface Down, at 241 m which is a marilyn.
The rest of the Island's landscape also has great diversity, with perhaps the most notable habitats being the soft cliffs and sea ledges, which are spectacular features as well as being very important for wildlife, and are internationally protected.
The River Medina flows north into the Solent, whilst the other main river, the River Yar flows roughly north-east, emerging at Bembridge Harbour at the eastern end of the island.
Confusingly, there is another entirely separate river at the western end also called the River Yar flowing the short distance from Freshwater Bay to a relatively large estuary at Yarmouth.
To distinguish them, they may be referred to as the Eastern and Western Yar.
The south coast of the island borders the English Channel.
Without man's intervention the sea might well have split the island into three; at the west end where a bank of pebbles separates Freshwater Bay from the marshy backwaters of the Western Yar east of Freshwater, and at the east end where a thin strip of land separates Sandown Bay from the marshy basin of the Eastern Yar, east of Sandown.
Yarmouth itself was effectively an island, with water on all sides and only connected to the rest of the island by a regularly breached neck of land immediately east of the town.
It is one of the few places in England where the red squirrel is flourishing, with a stable population (Brownsea Island is another).
Unlike most of England, no grey squirrels are to be found on the island, nor are there any wild deer.
Instead, rare and protected species such as the dormouse and many rare bats can be found.
The Glanville Fritillary butterfly's distribution in the United Kingdom is largely restricted to the edges of the crumbling cliffs of the Isle of Wight.
A competition in 2002 named the Pyramidal Orchid as the Isle of Wight's county flower.
The island has one of the most important areas in Europe for dinosaur fossils.
The eroding cliffs often reveal previously hidden remains particularly along the region known as the Back of the Wight.
Being one of the most southerly parts of the UK, the Isle of Wight has a milder sub-climate than most other areas, which makes it a popular holiday destination, particularly the resorts in the south east of the island.
It also has a longer growing season than most other areas in the UK.
The Isle of Wight is made up of a wide variety of different rock types ranging from Early Cretaceous times (around 127 million years ago) to the middle of the Palaeogene (around 30 million years ago).
All the rocks found on the island are sedimentary, made up of mineral grains from previously existing rocks.
These are all consolidated to form the rocks that can be seen on the island today, such as limestone, mudstone and sandstone.
Rocks on the island are very rich in fossils and many of these can be seen exposed on the beaches as the cliffs erode.
Cretaceous rocks on the island, usually red, show that the climate was previously hot and dry.
This provided suitable living conditions for dinosaurs.
Dinosaur bones and footprints can be seen in and on the rocks exposed around the island's beaches, especially at Yaverland and Compton Bay.
As a result, the isle has been nicknamed Dinosaur Island.
Along the northern coast of the island there is a rich source of fossilised shellfish, crocodiles, turtles and mammal bones.
The youngest of these date back to around 30 million years ago.
The island is mainly made up of Tertiary clays, in most of the northern parts of the island, limestone, upper and lower greensands, wealden and chalk.
About ten thousand years ago, sea levels began to rise and the great ice sheets of the last Ice Age melted.
As sea level rose higher, the Isle of Wight became separated from the mainland.
This is thought to have occurred about 7,000 years ago.
The Isle of Wight is a ceremonial and non-metropolitan county.
Since the abolition of its two borough councils in 1995 and the restructuring of the county council as the Isle of Wight Council, it has been a unitary county.
It also has a single Member of Parliament, and is by far the most populous constituency in the United Kingdom (more than 50% above the average of English constituencies).
As a constituency of the House of Commons, it is traditionally a battleground between the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats.
The current MP Andrew Turner is a Conservative, and his predecessor Dr Peter Brand was a Liberal Democrat.
The Isle of Wight Council election of 2009 was a victory for the Conservative Party, which took 24 of the council's 40 seats.
There has been a minor regionalist movement, in the form of the Vectis National Party and Isle of Wight Party, but they attracted little support in elections.
* Newport, located in the centre of the island, is the county town of the Isle of Wight and is the island's main shopping area.
Recent developments include a new bus station with retail complex and a new retail park on the outskirts.
Located next to the River Medina, Newport Quay was a busy port until the mid 19th century, but has now been mainly converted into art galleries, apartments and other meeting places.
* Ryde, the island's largest town with a population of around 30,000, is located in the north east of the island.
It is a Victorian town with an 800 metre long pier and 6 km of beaches, attracting many tourists each year.
Every year there is a Ryde Carnival in two parts, spread over more than one day: one in the daytime, and one at night with many coloured lights.
Ryde is also home to the ice hockey club Isle of Wight Raiders, who play in the English Premier League.
* Cowes is the location of Cowes Week every year and a international sailing centre.
It is also the home of the record-setting sailor Dame Ellen MacArthur.
* Sandown is another seaside resort, attracting many tourists each year.
It is also home to the Isle of Wight Zoo and Dinosaur Isle geological museum, and one of the island's two 18-hole golf courses.
* Shanklin just south of Sandown, also attracts tourists, with its sandy beaches, Shanklin Chine and the old village.
* Ventnor, built on the steep slopes of St Boniface Down on the south coast of the island, leads down to a picturesque bay that attracts many tourists.
Recent developments include Ventnor Haven, a small harbour built around a Victorian-style bandstand.
In addition there are smaller towns along the coasts, particularly on the eastern side of the island.
There are also a number of smaller villages.
Some of these (for example, Godshill) also attract many tourists.
The accent of the Isle of Wight is similar to the traditional dialect of Hampshire, featuring the dropping of some consonants and an emphasis on longer vowels.
It is similar to the West Country dialects heard in SW England, but less removed in sound from the Estuary English of the SE.
As with many other traditional southern English regional dialects and accents, a strong island accent is not now commonly heard, and, as speakers tend to be older, this decline is likely to continue.
The island also has its own local and regional words.
Some words, including grockle (visitor, tourist – hence grockle-can, tour coach) and nipper/nips (a younger male person), are still commonly used and are shared with neighbouring areas of the mainland.
A few are unique to the island, for example overner (a mainlander who has settled on the island), caulkhead (someone born on the island and born from long-established island stock) and 'somewhen' (a derivative of sometime, with similar meaning).
Other words are more obscure and now used mainly for comic emphasis, such as mallishag (meaning "caterpillar") and nammit ("noon-meat", meaning food).
Some other words are gurt meaning "great", and gallybagger ("scarecrow").
There has been and still is some confusion between the identities of the Isle of Wight as a separate county and, as it once was, a part of the nearby county of Hampshire.
At least one mainstream newspaper article as recently as 2008 refers to the "Isle of Wight in Hampshire".
Prior to 1890, the Isle of Wight was normally regarded and was administered as a part of Hampshire.
With the formation of the Isle of Wight County Council in 1890, the distinct identity became officially established: see also Politics of the Isle of Wight.
In January 2009, the new Flag of the Isle of Wight, the first general flag for the county, was accepted by the Flag Institute.
Cowes is a centre for sailing, playing host to several racing regattas.
Cowes Week is the longest-running regular regatta in the world, with over 1,000 yachts and 8,500 competitors taking part in over 50 classes of yacht racing.
In 1851 the first America's Cup race took place around the island.
Other major sailing events hosted in Cowes include the Fastnet race, the Round the Island Race, the Admiral's Cup, and the Commodore's Cup.
The Isle of Wight Marathon is the United Kingdom's oldest continuously held marathon, having been run every year since 1957.
The course starts in Ryde, passing through Newport, Shanklin and Sandown, before finishing back in Ryde.
It is an undulating course with a total climb of 459 metres.
The island is home to the Isle of Wight Islanders speedway team, who compete in the sport's third division, the National League.
The club was founded in 1996, with a first-night attendance of 1,740.
The island is also home to the Wightlink Raiders, an ice hockey team based at Ryde Arena.
They compete in the 1st Tier of the English National Ice Hockey League, the 3rd Division in the country.
There is also an amateur team the Vectis Tigers of the 2nd Tier English National Ice Hockey League, and four youth teams including the Isle of Wight Wildcats, all based at Ryde Arena.
The Isle of Wight Hockey Club run three senior teams and a junior side, with the 1st XI competing in Hampshire's top division, just one below the regional leagues.
The island also has a ladies team - the Vectis Ladies - which is a separate organisation from the IW Hockey Club.
Ventnor Middle School on the Isle of Wight runs a successful hockey set-up, producing a number of players who have since gone on to play at high standards.
The now-disbanded Ryde Sports FC founded in 1888 and became one of the eight founder members of the Hampshire League in 1896.
There are several other non-league clubs such as Newport (IW) FC.
There is an Isle of Wight Saturday Football League with three divisions, and a rugby union club, plus various other sporting teams.
Beach football is particularly prevalent on the island and has several of the nation's premier clubs with almost all of the England Beach Soccer team made up from players from the island.
Many of the stadiums are used when the island hosts the Island Games as it has done twice.
The Isle of Wight is the 39th official county in English cricket, and the Isle of Wight Cricket Board organise an internal cricket league between various local clubs.
Ventnor Cricket Club compete in the Southern Premier League, and have won the Second Division several times in recent years.
There is a new County Ground near Newport, which held its first match on 6 September 2008.
As of November 2010, the Isle of Wight Cricket Board have been in discussion with the Minor Counties Cricket Association and the England and Wales Cricket Board regarding proposals to enter a side in the Minor Counties tournaments.
The island has recently produced some notable cricketers, such as Danny Briggs, who plays county cricket for Hampshire County Cricket Club and is a member of the England Lions.
Hampshire have played a number of first-class matches on the island, at J Samuel White's Ground (originally built and owned by J Samuel White Shipbuilders) and the Victoria Recreation Ground.
The Isle of Wight competes in the biennial Island Games, which it hosted in 1993.
The Isle of Wight hosted these games again in 2011 with events taking place across the island.
The Isle of Wight is home to the Isle of Wight Festival and the Bestival.
The Isle of Wight is also the home of the band The Bees.
Recently they have been having more national success and often perform at smaller concerts on the island.
The band Trixie's Big Red Motorbike as well as Mark King of Level 42 also came from the Isle of Wight.
The Isle of Wight has also done a one day festival called 'Summer Madness'.
It started in 2009 when Madness headlined it; in 2010 Paul Weller headlined.
In January 2011 it was reported that the promoter of Summer Madness was insolvent.
The largest industry on the Isle of Wight is tourism, but the island has a strong agricultural heritage, including sheep and dairy farming and the growing of arable crops.
Traditional agricultural commodities are more difficult to market off the island because of transport costs, but island farmers have managed successfully to exploit some specialist markets.
The high price of these products overcomes the transport costs.
One of the most successful agricultural sectors at present is the growing of crops under cover, particularly salad crops, including tomatoes and cucumbers.
The Isle of Wight has a longer growing season than much of the United Kingdom and this also favours such crops.
Garlic has been successfully grown in Newchurch for many years, and is even exported to France.
This has led to the establishment of an annual Garlic Festival at Newchurch, which is one of the largest events of the island's annual calendar.
The favourable climate has led to the success of vineyards, including one of the oldest in the British Isles, at Adgestone near Sandown.
Lavender is also grown for its oil.
The largest sector of agriculture has been dairying, but due to low milk prices, and strict UK legislation for UK milk producers, the dairy industry has declined.
There were nearly one-hundred and fifty dairy producers of various sizes in the mid-eighties, but this has now dwindled down to just twenty-four.
Due to modern farming practices, the Island has noted increased levels of pesticide poisoning in local farmers and other local residents living near crops and vineyards.
The making of sailcloth, boats and other connected maritime industry has long been associated with the island, although this has somewhat diminished in recent years.
Cowes is still home to various small marine-related companies such as boat-builders.
Although they have reduced the extent of the plants and workforce, including the sale of the main site, GKN operates what was once the British Hovercraft Corporation a subsidiary of, and known latterly, when manufacturing focus changed, as Westland Aircraft.
Prior to its purchase by Westland, it was the independent company known as Saunders-Roe.
It remains one of the most notable historic firms, having produced many of the flying boats, and the world's first hovercraft.
The island's major manufacturing activity today is in composite materials, used by boat-builders and the wind turbine manufacturer Vestas, which has a wind turbine blade factory and testing facilities in Newport and East Cowes.
Bembridge Airfield is the home of Britten-Norman, manufacturers of the Islander and Trislander aircraft.
This is shortly to become the site of the European assembly line for Cirrus light aircraft.
The Norman Aeroplane Company is a smaller aircraft manufacturing company operating in Sandown.
There are have been three other aircraft manufacturers that built planes on the island.
In 2005, Northern Petroleum began exploratory drilling for oil, with its Sandhills-2 borehole at Porchfield but ceased operations in October that year, after failing to find significant reserves.
There are three breweries on the island.
Goddards Brewery in Ryde opened in 1993.
David Yates, who was head brewer of Burts and Island Brewery, started brewing as Yates Brewery at the Inn at St Lawrence in 2000.
Ventnor Brewery, under new management, is the latest incarnation of Burt's Brewery, which has been brewing on the island since the 1840s in Ventnor.
Until the 1960s most pubs were owned by Mews Brewery sited in Newport near the old railway station, but it closed and the pubs taken over by Strongs and then by Whitbread.
By some accounts Mews beer was apt to be rather cloudy and dark.
They pioneered the use of cans in the 19th century for export to British India.
The old brewery was derelict for many years but was then severely damaged in a spectacular fire.
The heritage of the island is a major asset, which has for many years kept its economy going.
Holidays focused on natural heritage, including both wildlife and geology, are becoming a growing alternative to the traditional British seaside holiday, which went into decline in the second half of the 20th century, due to the increased affordability of air travel to alternative destinations.
Tourism is still the largest industry on the island.
In 1999, the 130,000 island residents were host to 3 million visitors.
Of these, 2 million stayed overnight, and 1 million visits were day visits.
Only 150,000 of these visitors were international visitors.
Between 1993 and 2000, visits increased at a rate of 3% per year, on average.
At the turn of the nineteenth century the island had ten pleasure piers including two at Ryde and a "chain pier" at Seaview.
The Victoria Pier in Cowes succeeded the earlier Royal Pier but was itself removed in 1960.
The piers at Ryde, Seaview, Sandown, Shanklin and Ventnor originally served a coastal steamer service that operated from Southsea on the mainland.
The piers at Seaview, Shanklin, Ventnor and Alum Bay were all destroyed by storms during the last century.
Today only the railway pier at Ryde and the piers at Sandown, Totland Bay (currently closed to the public) and Yarmouth survive.
Blackgang Chine is arguably the oldest theme park in the UK, and one of the oldest in the world.
As well as more traditional tourist attractions, the island is often host to walking holidays or cycling holidays through the attractive scenery.
Almost every town and village on the island plays host to hotels, hostels and camping sites.
Out of the peak summer season, the island is still an important destination for coach tours from other parts of the United Kingdom and an annual walking festival has attracted considerable interest.
The 108 km Isle of Wight Coastal Path follows the coastline as far as possible, deviating onto roads where the route is impassable closer to the sea.
A major contribution to the local economy comes from sailing and marine-related tourism.
The Isle of Wight has a total of 787 km of roadway.
Major roads run between the main island towns, with smaller roads connecting villages.
It is one of the few counties in the UK not to have a motorway, although there is a dual carriageway from Coppins Bridge in Newport towards the north of Newport near the island's hospital and prison.
A comprehensive bus network operated by Southern Vectis links most island settlements, with Newport as the central hub.
The island's location 8 km off the mainland means that longer-distance transport is by boat.
Car ferry and passenger services are run by Wightlink and Red Funnel as well as a hovercraft operated by Hovertravel.
Fixed links, in the forms of tunnels or bridges, have been proposed.
The island formerly had its own railway network of over 88 km, but only one line remains in regular use.
The Island Line is part of the United Kingdom's National Rail network, running a little under 14 kilometres from Ryde to Shanklin.
The line was opened by the Isle of Wight Railway in 1864, and from 1996 to 2007 was run by the smallest train operating company on the network, Island Line Trains.
It is notable for utilising ex-London Underground rolling stock.
Branching off the Island Line at Smallbrook Junction is the heritage Isle of Wight Steam Railway, which runs for 5+ miles to the outskirts of Wootton.
There are currently two airfields for general aviation, Isle of Wight Airport at Sandown and Bembridge Airport.
The island has over 322 km of cycleways, much of which can be enjoyed by families off road.
Major Trails are.
* The Sunshine Trail, which incorporates Sandown, Shanklin, Godshill, and Wroxall in a 19 km circular route.
* The Troll Trail' between Cowes and Sandown (21 km, 90% off road) .
* The Round the Island Cycle Route, which circumnavigates the island on a reported 100 kilometre ride.
All the island telephone exchanges are broadband-enabled, although some areas, such as Arreton, have no broadband access.
Some urban areas such as Cowes and Newport are also covered by cable lines.
The Isle of Wight's main local newspaper is the Isle of Wight County Press, which costs 75p.
It discusses local issues and is published each Friday, or the previous working day if the Friday is a public holiday.
In May 2008 the Isle of Wight Gazette was launched as a free newspaper supporting the local Earl Mountbatten Hospice.
Both these newspapers have websites.
The Isle of Wight Chronicle is another local news magazine, based on the Internet.
The Chronicle has great heritage as it was originally a best selling island paper in the 1950s.
The island has one local commercial radio station and also falls within the coverage area of a number of local stations on the near mainland.
Isle of Wight Radio has broadcast in the medium-wave band since 1990 and on 102 and 107 MHz FM since 1998, as well as streaming on the internet.
The island's not-for-profit community radio station opened in 2007, Angel Radio began broadcasting from studios in Cowes and a transmitter near Newport.
On 1 February 2009, Wight FM began broadcasting as an internet radio station.
It closed down 6 months later.
This was replaced in February 2010 by Internet station Vectis Radio.
On-line blogs for the Isle of Wight include VentnorBlog.
The island has had several television stations in the past, first TV12 and then Solent TV from 2002 until its closure on 24 May 2007.
The geography of the island, and its location near the densely populated south of England, led to it hosting three prisons: Albany, Camp Hill and Parkhurst, all located outside Newport near the main road to Cowes.
Albany and Parkhurst were among the few Category A prisons in the UK until they were downgraded in the 1990s.
The downgrading of Parkhurst was precipitated by a major escape: three prisoners (two murderers and a blackmailer) made their way out of the prison on 3 January 1995 for four days of freedom before being recaptured.
Parkhurst especially enjoyed notoriety as one of the toughest jails in the United Kingdom and housed many notable inmates, including the Yorkshire Ripper Peter Sutcliffe, New Zealand drug lord Terry Clark and the Kray twins.
Camp Hill is located to the west of, and adjacent to, Albany and Parkhurst, on the very edge of Parkhurst Forest, having been converted first to a borstal and later to a Category C prison.
It was built on the site of an army camp (both Albany and Parkhurst were barracks); there is a small estate of tree-lined roads with well-proportioned officers' quarters (of varying grandeur according to rank, but now privately owned) to the south and east.
The management of all three prisons was merged into a single administration, under the name of HMP Isle of Wight in April 2009.
There are sixty-nine Local Education Authority-maintained schools on the Isle of Wight, and two independent schools.
As a rural community, many of these schools are small, with average numbers of pupils lower than in many urban areas.
There are currently primary schools, middle schools and high schools.
However, education reforms have led to plans for closures (for full details on these see Education reforms on the Isle of Wight).
There is also the Isle of Wight College, which is located on the outskirts of Newport.
From September 2010, there is a transition period from the "3-tier system" of primary, middle and high schools.
Some schools have now closed their doors, such as Chale CE Primary School.
Other schools have become "federated", such as Brading CE Primary School and St Helens Primary School.
Christ the King College started as a "middle school" but is being converted into a High School so that eventually it will have a Sixth Form.
From September 2011, there will be 5 new schools, with an age range of 11 to 18 years, which will replace the existing High schools.
When the transition is complete, there will be fewer schools on the Isle of Wight.
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