South Derbyshire is still a largely rural environment, although extensive coal and clay mining during the 19th and 20th Centuries also had a significant effect on the landscape, not the least of which was a rapid expansion of the population in the area around Swadlincote and Church Gresley. Although the current usage of the term "South Derbyshire," for example by the South Derbyshire District Council, encompasses a wide swath of the southern part of the county, I will be using a much narrower definition, restricting my coverage to the area originally covered by the Repton and Gresley Hundred, as it existed in the mid-1800s. This was roughly equivalent to the portion of the county south of the River Trent, but also included the parishes of Chellaston, Findern and Normanton.
A full list of the parishes, towns, villages and hamlets which will be included, in due course, follows:
Appleby, Blackfordby, Boundary, Bretby, Caldwell, Calke, Castle Gresley, Catton, Chellaston, Chilcote, Church Gresley, Coton-in-the-Elms, Croxall, Daniel Hay, Derby Hills, Donisthorpe, Drakelowe, Edingale, Findern, Foremark, Hartshorne, Ingleby, King's Newton, Linton, Lullington, Measham, Melbourne, Milton, Netherseal, Newhall, Newton Solney, Normanton, Oakley, Oakthorpe, Osmaston-by-Derby, Overseal, Packington, Ravenstone, Repton, Rosliston, Smisby, Stanton, Stanton-by-Bridge, Stapenhill, Stretton-en-le-Field, Swadlincote, Swarkeston, Ticknall, Walton-upon-Trent, Willesley, Winshill and Woodville (Wooden Box).I don't intend for this to be in any way a definitive study. There are other web sites which cater for that side of genealogy quite capably, with transcripts of burial records and memorial inscriptions. My resources for the area are fragmentary, and as I don't have easy access, I can't drop by to take a photograph of a particular church, graveyard or headstone. So, too, will the time that have available for writing be inconsistent. Since my own ancestors are from the area, I may naturally tend to concentrate on particular villages.
However, I welcome contributions in the form of photographs and information - indeed periodic input from readers, those with ancestors buried here, and current South Derbyshire residents will be vital. I would like the primary focus to be pictorial, but I also hope to discuss the history of the area, perhaps present some biographical notes about notable, and not so notable, figures buried in the church yards and cemeteries, as well as discuss aspects of graveyard preservation relevant to South Derbyshire graveyards. Part of my purpose is also to learn, and I imagine I'll be doing a great deal of that.
3 comments:
Brett:
Welcome to the GraveYard Rabbits. Yet another obsession!
fM
Thanks for the welcome, fM, and sorry I didn't notice this comment earlier. I must remember to click the releant box in the setup options for notifications. Yes, another to add to the list of obsessions, although I think I will have to be careful to keep this one fairly low key, or it could turn out VERY expensive (South Derbyshire being such a long way from here).
Regards and best wishes, Brett
Hi Brett, I started at photo sleuth and have followed the trail to here with great interest. My great grandfather is buried in this churchyard, but only just! He is located around the back, and right up against the modern perimeter fence! You see he was a Methodist, and he died in 1879, and had to be buried in the Anglican Church yard. He would not have approved, nor would his family, so I think the positioning of his grave is linked to that sentiment. His house was in the Colliery Yard of Gresley Colliery which stood next to the church, he was the Stable Manager. Perhaps by burying him so near to the fence they thought he'd lie closer to his house and family than to the church he did not support!!
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