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Ripley, Derbyshire

Ripley is a market and industrial town as well as a civil parish in the Amber Valley district of the ceremonial county of Derbyshire, England. It is located to the north-northeast of Derby, northwest of Heanor, southwest of Alfreton and northeast of Belper. The town forms a continuous urban area with Heanor, Eastwood and Ilkeston as part of the wider Nottingham Urban Area.

Ripley
Clockwise from top: Ripley Town Hall, All Saints' Church, Grosvenor Road, Former railway line-turned greenway passing through the former railway station site and Midland Railway Heritage Railway
Ripley
Location within Derbyshire
Population20,176 (2021 Census)[1]
OS grid referenceSK 39746 50502
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Areas of the town
List
Post townRIPLEY
Postcode districtDE5
Dialling code01773
PoliceDerbyshire
FireDerbyshire
AmbulanceEast Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Derbyshire
53°03′00″N 1°24′25″W / 53.050°N 1.407°W / 53.050; -1.407
Arms of Ripley Town Council
CrestOn a Wreath of the Colours out of a Mural Crown Sable Flames proper issuant therefrom a Unicorn's Head Argent armed and crined Or charged with three Spearheads erect one and two Gules.
ShieldVert on a Chevron Or between in chief two Stags' Heads caboshed and in base a Fleur de Lys Argent a Chevronel Sable surmounted by a Tudor Rose barbed and seeded proper all within a Bordure also Argent thereon six Horseshoes also Sable.
MottoIngenium Industria Alitur (Skill Is Fostered By Diligence)
Granted to the urban district council on 8 April 1954.[2]

History edit

Little information remains as to when Ripley was founded, but it appears in the 1086 Domesday Book, when it was held by a man called Levenot. In 1251 Henry III granted a charter for "one market one day a week, on Wednesday, at [the] manor of Ryppeleg: and one fair each year lasting three days, on the Vigil Day and Morrow of St Helen". Ripley Fair antedates Nottingham Goose Fair. The market day was later altered to Saturdays, with an extra market on Fridays.[3] Medieval Ripley was just a few stone cottages and farms around a village green, with a few dwellings further afield. Corn was ground at a mill owned by the Abbot of Darley. In 1291, Ripley had "two water-mills with fish ponds".[citation needed]

The Ripley area has been industrialised since the late 18th century. One of the earliest firms to take advantage of local mineral resources was the Butterley Company. It was formed in 1790 by Benjamin Outram and Francis Beresford. Jessop and Wright joined as partners in 1791. Benjamin Outram and Jessop were pioneering engineers best known for their input into the rail industry and their engineering of the Cromford Canal. Outram developed the L-shaped flange rail and Jessop engineered the cast iron fish belly rail. The Little Eaton Gangway project was one of the engineering feats they completed. The engineering part of the company closed and the site of the Butterley Company was demolished in 2010. The company was latterly in three parts, Butterley Engineering, Butterley Brick and Butterley Aggregates as separate companies. Over the last 200 years these have dealt with steelworks, coal mining, quarrying, railway, foundry and brickworks. One of the best-known examples of the company's work is the arched roof of St Pancras railway station in London, restored as an international terminal. Post-2000 Butterley achievements were the design and construction of the Falkirk Wheel, a canal boat-lift funded by the Millennium Commission and the Spinnaker Tower seen in Portsmouth Harbour as the focus of its regeneration.

Ripley was also a mining community, with collieries owned by the Butterley Company until the Coal Industry Nationalisation Act 1946. These included Ripley colliery (1863–1948), Britain colliery (1918–1946), Ormonde 1908–1970,[4] and other pits at Upper and Lower Hartshay, Whiteley, Waingroves, Bailey Brook, Exhibition, Loscoe, New Langley and Denby Hall.

Governance edit

 
Ripley Town Hall

What is now Ripley Town Hall on the north side of the Market Place was erected in 1880 as a market hall. The architect was George Eyre of Codnor. It occupied the site of a much older dwelling known as The White House. The Market Hall was originally open on the ground floor. In 1907, it was converted into a Town Hall by the Urban District Council. In the 1990s, the building was much extended to the west and remodelled by Amber Valley Borough Council to form its headquarters. In 2012, the Council proposed to sell off some of the buildings under a rationalisation scheme.[5]

Demography edit

According to the 2021 census, Ripley's population was recorded at 20,176. The ethnic makeup of the town was recorded at 98% White British out of 19,703 residents, followed by Mixed Race at 1% out of 231 residents and 1% Asian out of 135 residents. The other ethnic groups made up less than 1% of the local population. In terms of religious makeup, Ripley's residents were recorded to be mostly non-religious at 51% of the local population at 9,696 residents followed by 48% of the towns residents identifying as Christian out of 9.044 residents. Other religions practiced in Ripley include Other religion (121 residents), Islam (57 residents) and Buddhism (57 residents). The town has a high ratio of Women compared to Men at 51% (Women) and 49% (Male).[6]

Education edit

Primary schools edit

  • Ripley Junior School, Poplar Avenue, DE5 3PN
  • St Johns C of E Primary School, Dannah Street, Ripley
  • Lons Infant School, Tavistock Avenue, Ripley
  • Waingroves Primary School, Waingroves Road, Ripley
  • Codnor Community Primary School, Whitegates

Secondary schools edit

Pre-schools edit

  • Ripley Nursery School, Sandham Lane
  • Clowns Day Nursery, Cromford Road
  • Clowns Day Nursery, Butterley Park, A610
  • Alphabet Childminders, Ripley.
 
All Saints Church

Religion edit

The Methodist Church in Wood Street is reputed to be the oldest church in the town that is still active. At the peak of the movement there were five Methodist churches in Ripley, but the congregations combined over the years.[7] The church was rebuilt on the same site and reopened in November 2009. See History of Methodism in Ripley Derbyshire

An outcome of the nearby Pentridge (or Pentrich) Rising of 1817 was for the Vicar of Pentrich Church to call for an Anglican church to be built in Ripley as soon as possible. All Saints' Church, Ripley was erected in 1821 by the Butterley Company.

Other places of worship include the Salvation Army hall in Heath Road, which was opened in 1911, the Springs of the Living Water housed in the former St John's Church in Derby Road, the Spiritual Church in Argyll Road, and Marehay Methodist Chapel in Warmwells Lane, Marehay.

Transport edit

Running under the premises of the Butterley Company is the 2,966-yard (2,712 m) Butterley Tunnel on the Cromford Canal.[8] The central section of the canal is disused, but a charitable fund has been formed to reopen it.[9]

Ripley is the site of Midland Railway – Butterley (formerly the Midland Railway Centre), a trust dedicated to preserving railway locomotives, rolling stock and other items related to the Midland Railway.

Ripley was once served by Ripley railway station on the Midland Railway Ripley Branch. It was the northern terminus of the Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Tramways Company and later of the Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire trolleybus system.

Media edit

Local news and television programmes are provided by BBC East Midlands and ITV Central. Television signals are received from the Waltham TV transmitter.[10]

Ripley's local radio stations are BBC Radio Derby on 104.5 FM, Smooth East Midlands on 101.4 FM, Capital East Midlands on 102.8 FM, Greatest Hits Radio Midlands on 106 FM and Amber Sound FM, a community station which is based in the Unicorn Business Park off Wellington Street. The station broadcasts on 107.2FM in the Amber Valley and online.

Local newspapers are the Ripley & Heanor News and Derbyshire Times. [11]

Parks and natural features edit

Butterley Reservoir, at the bottom of Butterley Hill in the north of the town, has pairs of great crested grebe, coot, moorhens and other birds to watch, and platforms for anglers to use. There is a footpath that takes in the scenery, with the Midland Railway Trust in the background.

Wildlife and a small woodland area can be enjoyed at Carr Wood, signposted from halfway down Butterley Hill.

At the bottom of Moseley Street, next to the Red Lion pub in Ripley Town Centre, is a recreation area named after Sir Barnes Wallis, which offers views over to Crich Stand, the Sherwood Foresters Memorial. Crich Stand was built by Francis Hurt in 1778 and in 1922 dedicated to the fallen of the Sherwood Foresters Regiment (colloquially known as the Woofers) in World War I. It is now the memorial for those in the Regiment who died in all conflicts.[12]

The Pit Top is an open area with some seating and a white arch sculpture. The grassed area is the site of the original Ripley Colliery, owned by Butterley Company and worked from 1863 until 1948.[4]

Crossley Park is a few acres of grassed land opened in 1935. It is surrounded by shrubs and trees on a tract given to the town by James Crossley in 1901. It has a children's play area with a paddling pool, a paved perimeter walk, and a bandstand used as such occasionally on late Sunday afternoons in the summer.

Twin towns edit

Ripley is twinned with the French towns of Château-Renault and Lons-le-Saunier.

Community and facilities edit

The headquarters of Derbyshire Constabulary is on the outskirts of Ripley at Butterley Hall.

Ripley has a community hospital with a minor accident and emergency department that opened on 7 September 1912. The hospital was built after the death of a miner injured at Pentrich Colliery, who did not survive the road journey to Derby in time for treatment.[13] The Ripley Hospital League of Friends has been an active fund-raising group for the hospital throughout its history.

Ripley has a Scout group founded in 1914. For younger children it has two Beaver colonies and a Cub pack.[14]

The Ripley Music Festival has been held in the town since 2001.

Notable residents edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Ripley (Derbyshire, East Midlands, United Kingdom) - Population Statistics, Charts, Map, Location, Weather and Web Information". citypopulation.de. Retrieved 24 January 2024.
  2. ^ "Ripley Town Council (Derbyshire)". Robert Young. Retrieved 31 October 2019.
  3. ^ Wood, Brian (2007). Ripley, Heage and Ambergate: People, places and events. Ripley Town Council.
  4. ^ a b Bell, David (2006). Memories of the Derbyshire Coalfields. Newbury, Berkshire: Countryside Books. ISBN 1846740037.
  5. ^ Historic England. "Monument No. 1319727". Research records (formerly PastScape). Retrieved 26 April 2015.
    "Ripley Town Hall". Picture The Past. Retrieved 26 April 2015.
    Pevsner, Nikolaus (2002). The Buildings of England – Derbyshire. Yale University Press. p. 309. ISBN 0-300-09591-0.
    Wright's Directory of Melbourne and Ripley. C. N. Wright. 1878.
  6. ^ "Ripley (Derbyshire, East Midlands, United Kingdom) - Population Statistics, Charts, Map, Location, Weather and Web Information". citypopulation.de. Retrieved 25 January 2024.
  7. ^ "Welcome to Ripley Methodist church". Ripley Methodist Church. Retrieved 23 December 2021.
  8. ^ Witter, Robin (7 October 2002). . Friends of the Cromford Canal. Archived from the original on 10 March 2009. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  9. ^ The Charity Friends of the Cromford Canal. Retrieved 20 July 2023
  10. ^ "Full Freeview on the Waltham (Leicestershire, England) transmitter". UK Free TV. 1 May 2004. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
  11. ^ "Ripley & Heanor News". British Papers. 27 May 2014. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
  12. ^ Jewell, Rod (1998). Memory Lane: Belper, Ambergate and Districts. Derby: Breedon Books Publishing Co. ISBN 185983132X.
  13. ^ Buxton, David (1994). Pocket Images: Ripley and Codnor. Gloucestershire: Nonsuch Publishing Ltd. ASIN B00SLVVHXE.
  14. ^ "Home page". 1st Ripley Scouts. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  15. ^ Colpus, Eve. "Slack, Agnes Elizabeth (1858–1946)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/103418. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  16. ^ Stewart, Iain. "Grave Location for Holders of The Victoria Cross in The County of: Derbyshire". The Victoria Cross: Britain's Highest Award for Gallantry. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  17. ^ Vetch, R. H. "Outram, Sir James, first baronet (1803–1863)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/20962. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)

External links edit

  • Ripley Town Council

ripley, derbyshire, ripley, market, industrial, town, well, civil, parish, amber, valley, district, ceremonial, county, derbyshire, england, located, north, northeast, derby, northwest, heanor, southwest, alfreton, northeast, belper, town, forms, continuous, u. Ripley is a market and industrial town as well as a civil parish in the Amber Valley district of the ceremonial county of Derbyshire England It is located to the north northeast of Derby northwest of Heanor southwest of Alfreton and northeast of Belper The town forms a continuous urban area with Heanor Eastwood and Ilkeston as part of the wider Nottingham Urban Area RipleyClockwise from top Ripley Town Hall All Saints Church Grosvenor Road Former railway line turned greenway passing through the former railway station site and Midland Railway Heritage RailwayRipleyLocation within DerbyshirePopulation20 176 2021 Census 1 OS grid referenceSK 39746 50502DistrictAmber ValleyShire countyDerbyshireRegionEast MidlandsCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomAreas of the townList Butterley Village Codnor Village Cross Hill Village MarehayPeasehillTown CentreWaingroves Village Post townRIPLEYPostcode districtDE5Dialling code01773PoliceDerbyshireFireDerbyshireAmbulanceEast MidlandsUK ParliamentAmber ValleyList of places UK England Derbyshire 53 03 00 N 1 24 25 W 53 050 N 1 407 W 53 050 1 407Arms of Ripley Town CouncilCrestOn a Wreath of the Colours out of a Mural Crown Sable Flames proper issuant therefrom a Unicorn s Head Argent armed and crined Or charged with three Spearheads erect one and two Gules ShieldVert on a Chevron Or between in chief two Stags Heads caboshed and in base a Fleur de Lys Argent a Chevronel Sable surmounted by a Tudor Rose barbed and seeded proper all within a Bordure also Argent thereon six Horseshoes also Sable MottoIngenium Industria Alitur Skill Is Fostered By Diligence Granted to the urban district council on 8 April 1954 2 Contents 1 History 2 Governance 3 Demography 4 Education 4 1 Primary schools 4 2 Secondary schools 4 3 Pre schools 5 Religion 6 Transport 7 Media 8 Parks and natural features 9 Twin towns 10 Community and facilities 11 Notable residents 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksHistory editLittle information remains as to when Ripley was founded but it appears in the 1086 Domesday Book when it was held by a man called Levenot In 1251 Henry III granted a charter for one market one day a week on Wednesday at the manor of Ryppeleg and one fair each year lasting three days on the Vigil Day and Morrow of St Helen Ripley Fair antedates Nottingham Goose Fair The market day was later altered to Saturdays with an extra market on Fridays 3 Medieval Ripley was just a few stone cottages and farms around a village green with a few dwellings further afield Corn was ground at a mill owned by the Abbot of Darley In 1291 Ripley had two water mills with fish ponds citation needed The Ripley area has been industrialised since the late 18th century One of the earliest firms to take advantage of local mineral resources was the Butterley Company It was formed in 1790 by Benjamin Outram and Francis Beresford Jessop and Wright joined as partners in 1791 Benjamin Outram and Jessop were pioneering engineers best known for their input into the rail industry and their engineering of the Cromford Canal Outram developed the L shaped flange rail and Jessop engineered the cast iron fish belly rail The Little Eaton Gangway project was one of the engineering feats they completed The engineering part of the company closed and the site of the Butterley Company was demolished in 2010 The company was latterly in three parts Butterley Engineering Butterley Brick and Butterley Aggregates as separate companies Over the last 200 years these have dealt with steelworks coal mining quarrying railway foundry and brickworks One of the best known examples of the company s work is the arched roof of St Pancras railway station in London restored as an international terminal Post 2000 Butterley achievements were the design and construction of the Falkirk Wheel a canal boat lift funded by the Millennium Commission and the Spinnaker Tower seen in Portsmouth Harbour as the focus of its regeneration Ripley was also a mining community with collieries owned by the Butterley Company until the Coal Industry Nationalisation Act 1946 These included Ripley colliery 1863 1948 Britain colliery 1918 1946 Ormonde 1908 1970 4 and other pits at Upper and Lower Hartshay Whiteley Waingroves Bailey Brook Exhibition Loscoe New Langley and Denby Hall Governance edit nbsp Ripley Town HallWhat is now Ripley Town Hall on the north side of the Market Place was erected in 1880 as a market hall The architect was George Eyre of Codnor It occupied the site of a much older dwelling known as The White House The Market Hall was originally open on the ground floor In 1907 it was converted into a Town Hall by the Urban District Council In the 1990s the building was much extended to the west and remodelled by Amber Valley Borough Council to form its headquarters In 2012 the Council proposed to sell off some of the buildings under a rationalisation scheme 5 Demography editAccording to the 2021 census Ripley s population was recorded at 20 176 The ethnic makeup of the town was recorded at 98 White British out of 19 703 residents followed by Mixed Race at 1 out of 231 residents and 1 Asian out of 135 residents The other ethnic groups made up less than 1 of the local population In terms of religious makeup Ripley s residents were recorded to be mostly non religious at 51 of the local population at 9 696 residents followed by 48 of the towns residents identifying as Christian out of 9 044 residents Other religions practiced in Ripley include Other religion 121 residents Islam 57 residents and Buddhism 57 residents The town has a high ratio of Women compared to Men at 51 Women and 49 Male 6 Education editPrimary schools edit Ripley Junior School Poplar Avenue DE5 3PN St Johns C of E Primary School Dannah Street Ripley Lons Infant School Tavistock Avenue Ripley Waingroves Primary School Waingroves Road Ripley Codnor Community Primary School WhitegatesSecondary schools edit The Ripley Academy Peasehill Road Ripley Swanwick Hall School Swanwick Hill Swanwick 2 miles north on B6179 road John Flamsteed School Derby Road Denby 2 5 miles south on B6179 Pre schools edit Ripley Nursery School Sandham Lane Clowns Day Nursery Cromford Road Clowns Day Nursery Butterley Park A610 Alphabet Childminders Ripley nbsp All Saints ChurchReligion editThe Methodist Church in Wood Street is reputed to be the oldest church in the town that is still active At the peak of the movement there were five Methodist churches in Ripley but the congregations combined over the years 7 The church was rebuilt on the same site and reopened in November 2009 See History of Methodism in Ripley DerbyshireAn outcome of the nearby Pentridge or Pentrich Rising of 1817 was for the Vicar of Pentrich Church to call for an Anglican church to be built in Ripley as soon as possible All Saints Church Ripley was erected in 1821 by the Butterley Company Other places of worship include the Salvation Army hall in Heath Road which was opened in 1911 the Springs of the Living Water housed in the former St John s Church in Derby Road the Spiritual Church in Argyll Road and Marehay Methodist Chapel in Warmwells Lane Marehay Transport editRunning under the premises of the Butterley Company is the 2 966 yard 2 712 m Butterley Tunnel on the Cromford Canal 8 The central section of the canal is disused but a charitable fund has been formed to reopen it 9 Ripley is the site of Midland Railway Butterley formerly the Midland Railway Centre a trust dedicated to preserving railway locomotives rolling stock and other items related to the Midland Railway Ripley was once served by Ripley railway station on the Midland Railway Ripley Branch It was the northern terminus of the Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Tramways Company and later of the Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire trolleybus system Media editLocal news and television programmes are provided by BBC East Midlands and ITV Central Television signals are received from the Waltham TV transmitter 10 Ripley s local radio stations are BBC Radio Derby on 104 5 FM Smooth East Midlands on 101 4 FM Capital East Midlands on 102 8 FM Greatest Hits Radio Midlands on 106 FM and Amber Sound FM a community station which is based in the Unicorn Business Park off Wellington Street The station broadcasts on 107 2FM in the Amber Valley and online Local newspapers are the Ripley amp Heanor News and Derbyshire Times 11 Parks and natural features editButterley Reservoir at the bottom of Butterley Hill in the north of the town has pairs of great crested grebe coot moorhens and other birds to watch and platforms for anglers to use There is a footpath that takes in the scenery with the Midland Railway Trust in the background Wildlife and a small woodland area can be enjoyed at Carr Wood signposted from halfway down Butterley Hill At the bottom of Moseley Street next to the Red Lion pub in Ripley Town Centre is a recreation area named after Sir Barnes Wallis which offers views over to Crich Stand the Sherwood Foresters Memorial Crich Stand was built by Francis Hurt in 1778 and in 1922 dedicated to the fallen of the Sherwood Foresters Regiment colloquially known as the Woofers in World War I It is now the memorial for those in the Regiment who died in all conflicts 12 The Pit Top is an open area with some seating and a white arch sculpture The grassed area is the site of the original Ripley Colliery owned by Butterley Company and worked from 1863 until 1948 4 Crossley Park is a few acres of grassed land opened in 1935 It is surrounded by shrubs and trees on a tract given to the town by James Crossley in 1901 It has a children s play area with a paddling pool a paved perimeter walk and a bandstand used as such occasionally on late Sunday afternoons in the summer Twin towns editRipley is twinned with the French towns of Chateau Renault and Lons le Saunier Community and facilities editThe headquarters of Derbyshire Constabulary is on the outskirts of Ripley at Butterley Hall Ripley has a community hospital with a minor accident and emergency department that opened on 7 September 1912 The hospital was built after the death of a miner injured at Pentrich Colliery who did not survive the road journey to Derby in time for treatment 13 The Ripley Hospital League of Friends has been an active fund raising group for the hospital throughout its history Ripley has a Scout group founded in 1914 For younger children it has two Beaver colonies and a Cub pack 14 The Ripley Music Festival has been held in the town since 2001 Notable residents editGavin Butt born 1967 an art historian based at Goldsmiths University of London was born in Ripley Arthur Octavius Edwards 1876 1960 a civil engineer who built and managed the Grosvenor House Hotel in London was born in Ripley Agnes Elizabeth Slack a leading temperance campaigner was born here in 1858 15 John Bamford Slack 1857 1909 Liberal MP and prominent Methodist was born in Ripley Andy Sneap born 1969 a heavy metal record producer and thrash metal musician whose company Backstage Productions is based in the town Bombardier Charles Stone 1889 1952 awarded the VC was born in Ripley 16 Sir James Outram 1st Baronet 1803 1863 born in Ripley fought in the Indian Rebellion of 1857 and became known as the Bayard of India He was buried in Westminster Abbey 17 Sir Barnes Wallis 1887 1979 inventor of the bouncing bomb was born in Ripley He has a town park named after him and a pub The Sir Barnes Wallis until it was demolished in 2021 His house of birth bears a blue plaque His father was a doctor at The Elms in Derby Road See also editListed buildings in Ripley DerbyshireReferences edit Ripley Derbyshire East Midlands United Kingdom Population Statistics Charts Map Location Weather and Web Information citypopulation de Retrieved 24 January 2024 Ripley Town Council Derbyshire Robert Young Retrieved 31 October 2019 Wood Brian 2007 Ripley Heage and Ambergate People places and events Ripley Town Council a b Bell David 2006 Memories of the Derbyshire Coalfields Newbury Berkshire Countryside Books ISBN 1846740037 Historic England Monument No 1319727 Research records formerly PastScape Retrieved 26 April 2015 Ripley Town Hall Picture The Past Retrieved 26 April 2015 Pevsner Nikolaus 2002 The Buildings of England Derbyshire Yale University Press p 309 ISBN 0 300 09591 0 Wright s Directory of Melbourne and Ripley C N Wright 1878 Ripley Derbyshire East Midlands United Kingdom Population Statistics Charts Map Location Weather and Web Information citypopulation de Retrieved 25 January 2024 Welcome to Ripley Methodist church Ripley Methodist Church Retrieved 23 December 2021 Witter Robin 7 October 2002 Butterley Tunnel The Illustrated Report Friends of the Cromford Canal Archived from the original on 10 March 2009 Retrieved 24 December 2021 The Charity Friends of the Cromford Canal Retrieved 20 July 2023 Full Freeview on the Waltham Leicestershire England transmitter UK Free TV 1 May 2004 Retrieved 6 October 2023 Ripley amp Heanor News British Papers 27 May 2014 Retrieved 6 October 2023 Jewell Rod 1998 Memory Lane Belper Ambergate and Districts Derby Breedon Books Publishing Co ISBN 185983132X Buxton David 1994 Pocket Images Ripley and Codnor Gloucestershire Nonsuch Publishing Ltd ASIN B00SLVVHXE Home page 1st Ripley Scouts Retrieved 24 December 2021 Colpus Eve Slack Agnes Elizabeth 1858 1946 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 103418 Subscription or UK public library membership required Stewart Iain Grave Location for Holders of The Victoria Cross in The County of Derbyshire The Victoria Cross Britain s Highest Award for Gallantry Retrieved 24 December 2021 Vetch R H Outram Sir James first baronet 1803 1863 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 20962 Subscription or UK public library membership required External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ripley Derbyshire Ripley Town Council Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ripley Derbyshire amp oldid 1211985012, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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