Belper
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Belper | |
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Belper shown within Derbyshire |
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| Population | 20,548 |
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| OS grid reference | |
| Parish | Belper |
| District | Amber Valley |
| Shire county | Derbyshire |
| Region | East Midlands |
| Constituent country | England |
| Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
| Post town | BELPER |
| Postcode district | DE56 |
| Dialling code | 01773 |
| Police | Derbyshire |
| Fire | Derbyshire |
| Ambulance | East Midlands |
| UK Parliament | Amber Valley |
| European Parliament | East Midlands |
| List of places: UK • England • Derbyshire | |
Belper is a town within the local government district of Amber Valley in Derbyshire, England.
It is eight miles north of Derby, on the A6, by the River Derwent, and has a population of 20,548 (2001 census); Belper town council claims to be responsible for 10,000 households. It has regular bus services to Derby and to the north, to Ripley and many surrounding villages. Belper railway station is situated on the Midland Main Line, and is mainly served by local trains on the Derwent Valley Line Derby-Matlock service.
As a relatively small town, it has three supermarkets (Morrisons, Somerfield, Co-op), supplemented by a small but busy shopping area mainly centred around King Street, several primary schools and a secondary school.
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At the time of the Norman occupation, Belper was part of the Manor of Duffield held by Henry de Ferrers. It is thought to have originated in a chapel in Duffield Frith provided by Henry for the use of his foresters. Originally consecrated in 1250 as the Chapel of St. Thomas, it was rededicated to St. John during the reign of King Henry VIII.
The town's name is probably a corruption of the name Beaurepair (beautiful location), the name given by Edmund Crouchback, son of Henry III of England, to his country seat in the 13th century. (Duffield Frith by that time having passed to the Duchy of Lancaster)
The area had long been associated with the working of iron. It is thought that this was important for the de Ferers family, who were also ironmasters in Normandy. By the fourteenth century it was a major source of income, particularly nail making. By the end of the eighteenth century there were around 500 'naylor's' workshops in the town. It was hot exhausting work for very little remuneration and by the end of the century they had been superseded by machinery.
Much of their output was used in the expansion of the town from 1776, for Belper was one of the first 'mill towns', as a result of events at nearby Cromford. The industrialist Jedediah Strutt was a partner of Richard Arkwright and built a water-powered cotton mill of his own, the second in the world, at Belper. In 1784 he built the North Mill, and across the road joined by a bridge, the West Mill. In 1803 the North Mill was burnt down to be replaced by an innovative new structure designed to be fireproof. Other extensions followed, culminating in the East Mill in 1913, a present day Belper landmark. To this day the mill derives power from the river, using turbine-driven electrical generators.
Strutt had previously patented his "Derby Rib" for stockings, and the plentiful supply of cotton encouraged the trade of framework knitting which had been carried on in the town and surrounding villages since the middle of the previous century. Mechanisation arrived about 1850, but, in any case, the fashion for stockings for men was disappearing. However elaborately patterned stockings, for ladies especially, were coming into vogue, and the output of the Belper "cheveners" was much in demand.
The coming of the North Midland Railway in 1840 brought further prosperity and, in 1820 Belper was the first place in the UK to get gas lighting, at a works erected by the Strutts at Milford. Demand was such that in 1850, the Belper Gas and Coke Company was formed, with a works in the present Goods Road. Electricity followed in 1922 from the Derby and Nottingham Electrical Power Compay's works at Spondon. The first telephones came in 1895 from the National Telephone Company. The end of the century also brought the motor car, CH218, owned by Mr. James Bakewell of The Elms being possibly the first.
Belper remained a textile and hosiery centre well into the Twentieth Century. Meanwhile other companies were developing in various ways. Iron founding led to the Park Foundry, with Gloworm at Milford, becoming pre-eminent in the gas appliance and central heating industries. Adshead and Ratcliffe had developed Arbolite putty for iron-framed windows, while Dalton and Company which had been producing lubricating oils, developed ways of recovering used engine oil which proved especially useful during the Second World War. In 1938, A.B.Williamson had developed a substance for conditioning silk stockings. The introduction of nylons after the war seemed set to make it redundant, however mechanics and fitters had discovered its usefulness in cleaning hands and it is marketed to this day by Deb Proprietaries as Swarfega.
Before 1983 the town gave its name to the Belper constituency which from 1945 to 1970 was the seat of George Brown, the often controversial deputy leader of the Labour Party.
After the Second World War, J.W.Thornton, the chocolate maker moved into the town from Sheffield, which helped to alleviate the employment problems arising from the contraction of the earlier industries. Cotton spinning and textile production has virtually ended and all that nowadays remains of Strutt's Mills is the large East Mill and the smaller North Mill., preserved as part of the Derwent Valley Mills heritage sites. In 2001 the valley between Derby's silk mill, through Belper, to Cromford's Arkwright mills was given World Heritage status.
Among the Strutts' bequests to the town was the Herbert Strutt Grammar School, which is now a Primary School. Notable among its students were the actors Alan Bates and Timothy Dalton, while the actress Suzy Kendall was born and grew up in the town.
Belper is twinned with Pawtucket, Rhode Island , the connection being Samuel Slater of Milford who was an apprentice of Jedediah Strutt and absconded to America to found that country's cotton spinning industry.
Belper made international news in 2001 after rejecting a gift of a large fibreglass Mr. Potato Head model from Pawtucket, as residents considered it was "ugly".
At the 2006 Commonwealth Games, Belper-born swimmer Ross Davenport won two gold medals and a silver for England.
The oldest of the current churches is Belper Central Methodist Church. Replacing a 1782 chapel, the current building opened on June 28 1807 and was originally built to hold 1400 worshippers.
A prominent landmark on its hilltop position, St Peter's Anglican Church was built in 1824 to replace the smaller 13th century St John's Chapel which is now used as a town council and heritage chamber.
The town is also home to a Baptist, a Catholic and a second Methodist church (at Kilburn), as well as Emmanuel Community Church.
Belper School and Sixth Form Centre (the town's secondary school) has approximately 1400 pupils aged 11-18. It was originally named "Belper High School" when it was built in 1973, and is adjacent to Belper Leisure Centre. Its most famous "old boy" is probably Ross Davenport, winner of two gold medals at the 2006 Commonwealth Games.
- Holbrook Primary School
- St Elizabeth's Primary School
- St Johns Primary School
- Herbert Strutt Primary School
- Pottery Primary School
- Long Row Primary School
- Ambergate Primary School
- Belper School and Sixth Form Centre
- George Brown, Baron George-Brown Labour politician
- Timothy Dalton, actor, the 4th James Bond was raised here[1]
- Monica Edwards, children's writer was born here in 1912[2]
- Ross Davenport Swimmer
- Tracy Shaw who played Maxine Peacock (1995-2003) in Coronation Street
- Bombardier Charles Stone who was awarded the VC is buried here[3].
- Samuel Slater "father of the American industrial revolution" grew up in Blackbrook and apprenticed at Milford[4]
- Andy Sneap's studio, "Backstage Recording", are located in Belper
- Jedediah Strutt, Inventor - opened his first mill in Belper (1777)[5]
- Frank Swettenham, Colonial ruler of Malaya, author, was born here[6] in 1850
- ^ Timothy Dalton biography accessed June 2007
- ^ Monica Edwards' Biography
- ^ Derbyshire at VictoriaCross.org Accessed June 2007
- ^ Samuel Slater at Biography.com accessed June 2007
- ^ Jedediah Strutt Biography
- ^ Frank Swettenham at biography.com accessed June 2007
- Naylor, P. (Ed) (2000) An Illustrated History of Belper and its Environs Belper: M.G.Morris
- Belper Town Council
- Belper Today - newspaper
- Derwent Valley Mills
- Site specific to the North Mill
- BBC: Historical account of the Belper nailers
- Belper School and Sixth Form Centre
- Belper Historical Research Website
- Belper Rugby Club
- Belper Town Football Club
- Belper Sub Aqua Club
- Belper Forum
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| Unitary authorities | Derby |
| Boroughs or districts | Amber Valley • Bolsover • Chesterfield • Derbyshire Dales • Erewash • High Peak • North East Derbyshire • South Derbyshire |
| Cities and towns | Alfreton • Ashbourne • Bakewell • Belper • Bolsover • Buxton • Chapel-en-le-Frith • Chesterfield • Clay Cross • Derby • Dronfield • Glossop • Heanor • Ilkeston • Killamarsh • Long Eaton • Matlock • New Mills • Ripley • Sandiacre • Shirebrook • Staveley • Swadlincote • Whaley Bridge • Wirksworth See also: List of civil parishes in Derbyshire |