fbpx
Wikipedia

Darley Dale

Darley Dale, also known simply as Darley, is a town and civil parish in the Derbyshire Dales district of Derbyshire, England, with a population of 5,413. It lies north of Matlock, on the River Derwent and the A6 road. The town forms part of a built up area with both Matlock and Rowsley.

Darley Dale
St. Helen's Church, Darley Dale
Darley Dale
Location within Derbyshire
Population5,413 (Including Hackney. 2011)[1]
OS grid referenceSK270632
Civil parish
  • Darley Dale
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townMATLOCK
Postcode districtDE4
Dialling code01629
PoliceDerbyshire
FireDerbyshire
AmbulanceEast Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Derbyshire
53°09′58″N 1°35′46″W / 53.166°N 1.596°W / 53.166; -1.596

Geography

This article contains information on the area covered by the current civil parish of Darley Dale. The main built-up area of the parish extends for 2 miles along the A6 road north-west of Matlock, starting near the ARC Leisure Centre and ending near Stancliffe Quarry. It is bounded on the south-west by the River Derwent and extends over the hills and moors to the north-east as far as Darwin Forest Country Park.

The parish includes the settlements at Darley Dale, Darley Hillside, Churchtown, Two Dales, Upper Hackney and Farley, but excludes Darley Bridge and Northwood.[2] Darley Dale is sometimes confused with Darley Abbey (a mile north of Derby and with Dale Abbey (6 miles north-east of Derby).

History

  • Earlier versions of this article claimed that a Benedictine abbey was built in Darley Dale under the reign of Henry I in the 12th century – this is not supported by the evidence now available.[3]
  • St Helen's Church dates from the 12th century.[4]
  • Darley Bridge survives from the late medieval period, having been built in the 15th century.[5]
  • The Wirksworth Moor to Longstone turnpike opened in 1759.[6]
  • The Chesterfield to Matlock, Darley and Rowsley Bridge turnpike opened in 1760.[6]
  • In 1849 a railway line opened for passenger traffic between Ambergate and Rowsley, with intermediate stations at Matlock Bath, Matlock Bridge and Darley (Dale).[7]
  • In 1873 a new railway station opened at Darley on opposite side of level crossing.[7]
  • In 1877 Rowsley railway sidings brought into use.[7]
  • St Helen's Church was restored in 1877.[4]
  • Whitworth Hospital opened in 1889.[8]
  • Whitworth Institute was erected in 1890.[9]
  • In 1890 Darley railway station renamed Darley Dale.[7]
  • The town grew in the 19th and 20th centuries around the lead mining, metal forging, railway and quarrying industries.

Places of worship

St Helen's Church

 
Grave of Sir Joseph Whitworth, in the grounds of St Helen's Parish Church (Whitworth's grave is the central tomb)

Situated in the Churchtown part of Darley Dale, this Grade II* listed parish church dates from the 12th century. The church was restored in 1877. The church tower was restored and strengthened in 1902–03. Outside the church, in the south wall of the chancel, the four periods of architecture, Norman, Early English, Decorated and Perpendicular, can be seen. Inside the church, there are monuments to Sir John de Darley who was lord of the manor in 14th century. There is also a memorial window to the famous engineer, Sir Joseph Whitworth, who lived in the parish and is buried in the churchyard. The yew tree, which is situated just outside the south porch, is claimed to be 2,000 years old and is one of the thickest in England with a girth of around 33 feet, 4 feet from the ground. It is claimed that this yew tree marked a sacred site in pre-Christian times.[4][10]

Wesleyan Methodist Chapel

Situated on Chesterfield Road in Two Dales, this was built in 1827. Formally known as Hudson's Chapel, now called The Old Chapel. Superseded by the Dale Road Methodist Church in 1906. After use as a Sunday school, it was converted into a bakery. Before conversion to a residential dwelling, the property was used by a local builder as storage unit.[11]

Hackney Primitive Methodist Chapel

Situated on Greenaway Lane, this was built in 1848. Superseded by the nearby Hackney Methodist Church in 1908. After a period in use as a Sunday school, it is no longer used as a place of worship.[12]

Dale Road Methodist Church

Situated on Dale Road, close to the Whitworth Institute, this was built in 1904. It superseded the Wesleyan Chapel in Two Dales.[13]

Hackney Methodist Church

 
Hackney Methodist Church

This was built in 1908 to replace a smaller Primitive Methodist chapel nearby on Greenaway Lane. It is now a private residence.[14]

Darley Hillside Methodist Church

The church was built on Moor Lane in 1912 to replace an earlier building on Lumb Lane. It was part of the same circuit as Dale Road Methodist Church,[15] but is now closed and converted into a community centre building.[16]

Whitworth legacy

 
Whitworth Hospital
 
Whitworth Institute
 
Whitworth Park
 
Whitworth Hotel

Sir Joseph Whitworth, the 19th-century machine toolmaker and engineer, lived at Stancliffe Hall in Darley Dale for the last 13 years of his life. He died in Monte Carlo in 1887, aged 83, and was buried at St. Helen's Church. During his lifetime he drew up plans for the village and these were fulfilled thanks to generous endowments from his estate. He had, according to his biographer Terence Kilburn, hoped to build a comprehensive village college but his wife, Louisa, preferred a social centre. The Institute and Park was a compromise and is just one of the things the Whitworths did to enrich the lives of Darley Dale's inhabitants.[17]

Whitworth Hospital

Lady Louisa Whitworth built Whitworth Cottage Hospital, the first of two major building projects in Darley Dale, following the death of her husband and it was opened in 1889.[8] It is still in use as an NHS hospital today, providing a minor injuries unit, two urgent care wards and some community health services.[18]

Whitworth Institute

The opening to the public of the Whitworth Institute in September 1890 marked the beginning of Lady Louisa's second major project in Darley Dale. The institute comprised an indoor swimming pool, an assembly hall, various reading and committee rooms and eventually a library, a billiard room, a museum of natural history, a convenient hotel (Whitworth Hotel, now "Barrington's") and a landscaped park. The Whitworth Institute was given to the people of Darley Dale and in 2009/10 underwent a £1.7M renovation to ensure its continued use for future generations.[9][19]

Whitworth Park

The park provides a variety of sporting activities with soccer and cricket pitches, a bowling green and a skateboard arena. Whitworth Park also provides over ten acres of landscaped grounds with pathways along tree-lined avenues. There is also a shallow lake. The centrepiece of the park is an obelisk commemorating Sir Joseph Whitworth.[20] In 2003 the park was the subject of a £750,000 refurbishment.[21]

Notable people

Notable people associated with Darley Dale include:

Notable buildings and attractions

The town was the winner of the 2003 Britain in Bloom, in the category of 'Large Village' The prize was presented by local marine expert Ben Goodwin.

A biennial arts festival, the Darley Dale Arts Festival, is held in July in odd-numbered years.[23]

At the bottom of Station Road lies Darley Dale railway station. National rail services ceased in the 1960s however the station is now occupied by the railway and heritage preservation group Peak Rail. From there, a heritage steam service operates south to Matlock and north to Rowsley South, with a route distance of approximately five miles.

An annual transport festival, the Darley Dale Festival of Transport, is held at the bottom of Station Road every September.[24]

Nearby is the holiday resort Darwin Forest Country Park.

The Square & Compass public house on Station Road is home to an annual music festival, the Ale House Rocks Music Festival.[25]

Two Dales

In nearby Two Dales, Ladygrove Mill was built for spinning cotton by Abraham Flint, but converted to flax spinning in 1789 by Daniel Dakeyne of Knabb House. It was expanded by his sons, Edward and James, who built a series of three dams on the Sydnope Valley rising to 96 feet. To cope with the water pressure, they invented a revolutionary water-pressure powered "disc engine", which they patented in 1830 as the Dakeyne hydraulic disc engine.[26][27] It was the progenitor of a type, now known as a "nutating disc engine" (which has been the subject of entrepreneurial interest in the 21st century). The mills and equipment have virtually disappeared but the remains of the dams can still be seen.

The Plough Inn public house in Two Dales was the reason behind former England international footballer Eddie Shimwell's transfer from Sheffield United to Blackpool in December 1946. Shimwell wanted to buy the pub, but Sheffield United would not allow it, due to their ban on players becoming publicans, so the full-back put in a transfer request.[28]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Neighbourhood Statistics". Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 18 October 2014.
  2. ^ Explorer OL24 Peak District (White Peak) (Map) (A4 (2002) ed.). Ordnance Survey.
  3. ^ The information about an abbey at "Darley (St Helen)" was found in the 1831 edition of the Lewis Topographical Dictionary of England <http://places.wishful-thinking.org.uk/DBY/DarleyDale/index.html>. This information had been removed by the time of the 1848 edition of the same dictionary <http://www.british-history.ac.uk/topographical-dict/england/pp8-15#h3-0004>. In addition, the List of monastic houses in Derbyshire contains no reference to an abbey here. The most likely explanation is confusion between Darley Dale and either Darley Abbey or Dale Abbey.
  4. ^ a b c "St Helen's HER". Heritage Gateway. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  5. ^ Historic England. "Darley Bridge (over River Derwent) (Grade II*) (1248041)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 29 April 2021.
  6. ^ a b "Derbyshire Turnpikes". Turnpike Roads in England. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  7. ^ a b c d "Railway History". Rowsley Association. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  8. ^ a b "Whitworth Hospital History". Andrews Pages. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  9. ^ a b "Whitworth Institute History". Andrews Pages. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  10. ^ "St Helen's Interesting Features". Parish Church Website. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  11. ^ "Wesleyan Methodist Chapel HER". Heritage Gateway. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  12. ^ "Hackney Methodist Church HER". Heritage Gateway. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  13. ^ "Dale Road Methodist Church HER". Heritage Gateway. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  14. ^ "Hackney Methodist Church HER". Heritage Gateway. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  15. ^ . Church Website. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  16. ^ "Detached house for sale". Rightmove. Retrieved 31 August 2020.
  17. ^ "Whitworth Family". The Andrews Pages. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  18. ^ "Services provided at Whitworth Hospital". NHS. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  19. ^ "Whitworth Institute Refurbishment". Peak District Online. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  20. ^ "Whitworth Park Facilities". About Derbyshire. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  21. ^ "Whitworth Park Refurbishment". Peak District Online. Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  22. ^ Tom Chambers' biography at IMDb Retrieved June 2007
  23. ^ The bi-annual Arts Festival
  24. ^ . festivaloftransport.org. Archived from the original on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 22 September 2009.
  25. ^ "Gomez lead singer Ben Ottewell heads Ale House Rocks in Darley Dale". Matlock Mercury. Johnston Publishing Ltd. Retrieved 27 January 2016.
  26. ^ "The Romping Lion" – The story of the Dakeyne Disc Engine by Phil Wigfull
  27. ^ . The Romping Lion, Peakland Heritage site. Archived from the original on 11 October 2006.
  28. ^ Gillatt, Peter (30 November 2009). Blackpool FC on This Day: History, Facts and Figures from Every Day of the Year. Pitch Publishing Ltd. ISBN 1-905411-50-2.

External links

  • Darley Dale Town Council
  • "Geograph" Darley Dale station in the 1990s

Further reading

  • Taylor, Keith (2002). Darley Dale Remembered: through 50 years of war and peace. Derbyshire: Country Books. ISBN 1-898941-79-3.
  • Taylor, Keith; Brown, Trevor (2000). A Derbyshire Parish at War: South Darley and the Great War 1914–1918. Derbyshire: Country Books. p. 244. ISBN 1-898941-53-X.
  • Taylor, Keith; Brown, Trevor (2001). A Derbyshire Parish at Peace and War: South Darley 1925–1955. Derbyshire: Country Books. p. 304. ISBN 1-898941-59-9.

darley, dale, british, novelist, francesca, maria, steele, other, uses, darley, also, known, simply, darley, town, civil, parish, derbyshire, dales, district, derbyshire, england, with, population, lies, north, matlock, river, derwent, road, town, forms, part,. For the British novelist see Francesca Maria Steele For other uses see Darley Darley Dale also known simply as Darley is a town and civil parish in the Derbyshire Dales district of Derbyshire England with a population of 5 413 It lies north of Matlock on the River Derwent and the A6 road The town forms part of a built up area with both Matlock and Rowsley Darley DaleSt Helen s Church Darley DaleDarley DaleLocation within DerbyshirePopulation5 413 Including Hackney 2011 1 OS grid referenceSK270632Civil parishDarley DaleDistrictDerbyshire DalesShire countyDerbyshireRegionEast MidlandsCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townMATLOCKPostcode districtDE4Dialling code01629PoliceDerbyshireFireDerbyshireAmbulanceEast MidlandsUK ParliamentDerbyshire DalesList of places UK England Derbyshire 53 09 58 N 1 35 46 W 53 166 N 1 596 W 53 166 1 596 Contents 1 Geography 2 History 3 Places of worship 3 1 St Helen s Church 3 2 Wesleyan Methodist Chapel 3 3 Hackney Primitive Methodist Chapel 3 4 Dale Road Methodist Church 3 5 Hackney Methodist Church 3 6 Darley Hillside Methodist Church 4 Whitworth legacy 4 1 Whitworth Hospital 4 2 Whitworth Institute 4 3 Whitworth Park 5 Notable people 6 Notable buildings and attractions 7 Two Dales 8 See also 9 References 10 External links 11 Further readingGeography EditThis article contains information on the area covered by the current civil parish of Darley Dale The main built up area of the parish extends for 2 miles along the A6 road north west of Matlock starting near the ARC Leisure Centre and ending near Stancliffe Quarry It is bounded on the south west by the River Derwent and extends over the hills and moors to the north east as far as Darwin Forest Country Park The parish includes the settlements at Darley Dale Darley Hillside Churchtown Two Dales Upper Hackney and Farley but excludes Darley Bridge and Northwood 2 Darley Dale is sometimes confused with Darley Abbey a mile north of Derby and with Dale Abbey 6 miles north east of Derby History EditEarlier versions of this article claimed that a Benedictine abbey was built in Darley Dale under the reign of Henry I in the 12th century this is not supported by the evidence now available 3 St Helen s Church dates from the 12th century 4 Darley Bridge survives from the late medieval period having been built in the 15th century 5 The Wirksworth Moor to Longstone turnpike opened in 1759 6 The Chesterfield to Matlock Darley and Rowsley Bridge turnpike opened in 1760 6 In 1849 a railway line opened for passenger traffic between Ambergate and Rowsley with intermediate stations at Matlock Bath Matlock Bridge and Darley Dale 7 In 1873 a new railway station opened at Darley on opposite side of level crossing 7 In 1877 Rowsley railway sidings brought into use 7 St Helen s Church was restored in 1877 4 Whitworth Hospital opened in 1889 8 Whitworth Institute was erected in 1890 9 In 1890 Darley railway station renamed Darley Dale 7 The town grew in the 19th and 20th centuries around the lead mining metal forging railway and quarrying industries Places of worship EditSt Helen s Church Edit Grave of Sir Joseph Whitworth in the grounds of St Helen s Parish Church Whitworth s grave is the central tomb Situated in the Churchtown part of Darley Dale this Grade II listed parish church dates from the 12th century The church was restored in 1877 The church tower was restored and strengthened in 1902 03 Outside the church in the south wall of the chancel the four periods of architecture Norman Early English Decorated and Perpendicular can be seen Inside the church there are monuments to Sir John de Darley who was lord of the manor in 14th century There is also a memorial window to the famous engineer Sir Joseph Whitworth who lived in the parish and is buried in the churchyard The yew tree which is situated just outside the south porch is claimed to be 2 000 years old and is one of the thickest in England with a girth of around 33 feet 4 feet from the ground It is claimed that this yew tree marked a sacred site in pre Christian times 4 10 Wesleyan Methodist Chapel Edit Situated on Chesterfield Road in Two Dales this was built in 1827 Formally known as Hudson s Chapel now called The Old Chapel Superseded by the Dale Road Methodist Church in 1906 After use as a Sunday school it was converted into a bakery Before conversion to a residential dwelling the property was used by a local builder as storage unit 11 Hackney Primitive Methodist Chapel Edit Situated on Greenaway Lane this was built in 1848 Superseded by the nearby Hackney Methodist Church in 1908 After a period in use as a Sunday school it is no longer used as a place of worship 12 Dale Road Methodist Church Edit Situated on Dale Road close to the Whitworth Institute this was built in 1904 It superseded the Wesleyan Chapel in Two Dales 13 Hackney Methodist Church Edit Hackney Methodist ChurchThis was built in 1908 to replace a smaller Primitive Methodist chapel nearby on Greenaway Lane It is now a private residence 14 Darley Hillside Methodist Church Edit The church was built on Moor Lane in 1912 to replace an earlier building on Lumb Lane It was part of the same circuit as Dale Road Methodist Church 15 but is now closed and converted into a community centre building 16 Whitworth legacy Edit Whitworth Hospital Whitworth Institute Whitworth Park Whitworth HotelSir Joseph Whitworth the 19th century machine toolmaker and engineer lived at Stancliffe Hall in Darley Dale for the last 13 years of his life He died in Monte Carlo in 1887 aged 83 and was buried at St Helen s Church During his lifetime he drew up plans for the village and these were fulfilled thanks to generous endowments from his estate He had according to his biographer Terence Kilburn hoped to build a comprehensive village college but his wife Louisa preferred a social centre The Institute and Park was a compromise and is just one of the things the Whitworths did to enrich the lives of Darley Dale s inhabitants 17 Whitworth Hospital Edit Lady Louisa Whitworth built Whitworth Cottage Hospital the first of two major building projects in Darley Dale following the death of her husband and it was opened in 1889 8 It is still in use as an NHS hospital today providing a minor injuries unit two urgent care wards and some community health services 18 Whitworth Institute Edit The opening to the public of the Whitworth Institute in September 1890 marked the beginning of Lady Louisa s second major project in Darley Dale The institute comprised an indoor swimming pool an assembly hall various reading and committee rooms and eventually a library a billiard room a museum of natural history a convenient hotel Whitworth Hotel now Barrington s and a landscaped park The Whitworth Institute was given to the people of Darley Dale and in 2009 10 underwent a 1 7M renovation to ensure its continued use for future generations 9 19 Whitworth Park Edit The park provides a variety of sporting activities with soccer and cricket pitches a bowling green and a skateboard arena Whitworth Park also provides over ten acres of landscaped grounds with pathways along tree lined avenues There is also a shallow lake The centrepiece of the park is an obelisk commemorating Sir Joseph Whitworth 20 In 2003 the park was the subject of a 750 000 refurbishment 21 Notable people EditNotable people associated with Darley Dale include Nigel Bond snooker player was born there Tom Chambers actor was born there in 1977 22 Mike Hendrick English cricketer was born there in 1948 Christopher Green comedy writer and performer grew up there Joseph Paxton architect and gardener for the nearby Chatsworth House Crichton Porteous author Joseph Whitworth engineer see the Whitworth legacy section above Sir Godfrey de Foljambe politician and judge was the local landowner in the 1360s and 1370s Notable buildings and attractions EditThe town was the winner of the 2003 Britain in Bloom in the category of Large Village The prize was presented by local marine expert Ben Goodwin A biennial arts festival the Darley Dale Arts Festival is held in July in odd numbered years 23 At the bottom of Station Road lies Darley Dale railway station National rail services ceased in the 1960s however the station is now occupied by the railway and heritage preservation group Peak Rail From there a heritage steam service operates south to Matlock and north to Rowsley South with a route distance of approximately five miles An annual transport festival the Darley Dale Festival of Transport is held at the bottom of Station Road every September 24 Nearby is the holiday resort Darwin Forest Country Park The Square amp Compass public house on Station Road is home to an annual music festival the Ale House Rocks Music Festival 25 Two Dales EditIn nearby Two Dales Ladygrove Mill was built for spinning cotton by Abraham Flint but converted to flax spinning in 1789 by Daniel Dakeyne of Knabb House It was expanded by his sons Edward and James who built a series of three dams on the Sydnope Valley rising to 96 feet To cope with the water pressure they invented a revolutionary water pressure powered disc engine which they patented in 1830 as the Dakeyne hydraulic disc engine 26 27 It was the progenitor of a type now known as a nutating disc engine which has been the subject of entrepreneurial interest in the 21st century The mills and equipment have virtually disappeared but the remains of the dams can still be seen The Plough Inn public house in Two Dales was the reason behind former England international footballer Eddie Shimwell s transfer from Sheffield United to Blackpool in December 1946 Shimwell wanted to buy the pub but Sheffield United would not allow it due to their ban on players becoming publicans so the full back put in a transfer request 28 See also EditListed buildings in Darley DaleReferences Edit Neighbourhood Statistics Office for National Statistics Retrieved 18 October 2014 Explorer OL24 Peak District White Peak Map A4 2002 ed Ordnance Survey The information about an abbey at Darley St Helen was found in the 1831 edition of the Lewis Topographical Dictionary of England lt http places wishful thinking org uk DBY DarleyDale index html gt This information had been removed by the time of the 1848 edition of the same dictionary lt http www british history ac uk topographical dict england pp8 15 h3 0004 gt In addition the List of monastic houses in Derbyshire contains no reference to an abbey here The most likely explanation is confusion between Darley Dale and either Darley Abbey or Dale Abbey a b c St Helen s HER Heritage Gateway Retrieved 31 March 2015 Historic England Darley Bridge over River Derwent Grade II 1248041 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 29 April 2021 a b Derbyshire Turnpikes Turnpike Roads in England Retrieved 31 March 2015 a b c d Railway History Rowsley Association Retrieved 31 March 2015 a b Whitworth Hospital History Andrews Pages Retrieved 31 March 2015 a b Whitworth Institute History Andrews Pages Retrieved 31 March 2015 St Helen s Interesting Features Parish Church Website Retrieved 31 March 2015 Wesleyan Methodist Chapel HER Heritage Gateway Retrieved 31 March 2015 Hackney Methodist Church HER Heritage Gateway Retrieved 31 March 2015 Dale Road Methodist Church HER Heritage Gateway Retrieved 31 March 2015 Hackney Methodist Church HER Heritage Gateway Retrieved 31 March 2015 Darley Hillside Methodist Church Church Website Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 31 March 2015 Detached house for sale Rightmove Retrieved 31 August 2020 Whitworth Family The Andrews Pages Retrieved 31 March 2015 Services provided at Whitworth Hospital NHS Retrieved 31 March 2015 Whitworth Institute Refurbishment Peak District Online Retrieved 31 March 2015 Whitworth Park Facilities About Derbyshire Retrieved 31 March 2015 Whitworth Park Refurbishment Peak District Online Retrieved 31 March 2015 Tom Chambers biography at IMDb Retrieved June 2007 The bi annual Arts Festival Festivaloftransport org festivaloftransport org Archived from the original on 26 July 2011 Retrieved 22 September 2009 Gomez lead singer Ben Ottewell heads Ale House Rocks in Darley Dale Matlock Mercury Johnston Publishing Ltd Retrieved 27 January 2016 The Romping Lion The story of the Dakeyne Disc Engine by Phil Wigfull Inventors The Romping Lion Peakland Heritage site Archived from the original on 11 October 2006 Gillatt Peter 30 November 2009 Blackpool FC on This Day History Facts and Figures from Every Day of the Year Pitch Publishing Ltd ISBN 1 905411 50 2 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Darley Dale Darley Dale Town Council Geograph Darley Dale station in the 1990s Peak Rail WebsiteFurther reading EditTaylor Keith 2002 Darley Dale Remembered through 50 years of war and peace Derbyshire Country Books ISBN 1 898941 79 3 Taylor Keith Brown Trevor 2000 A Derbyshire Parish at War South Darley and the Great War 1914 1918 Derbyshire Country Books p 244 ISBN 1 898941 53 X Taylor Keith Brown Trevor 2001 A Derbyshire Parish at Peace and War South Darley 1925 1955 Derbyshire Country Books p 304 ISBN 1 898941 59 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Darley Dale amp oldid 1117436752 Two Dales, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.