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Church History information for Chapel en le Frith and places above it in the hierarchy

Chapel en le Frith

  • The first chapel in the town was originally built by the Normans, but was replaced with a larger church only 100 years later.
     
  • Buried in the churchyard are soldiers of the Scottish army of the Duke of Hamilton who marched south in support of Charles I in 1648. After their defeat at Preston, they were marched to Chapel and imprisoned in the church for sixteen days in such squalid conditions that forty died; a further ten died when they were marched towards Cheshire.
     
  • The Anglican parish church is dedicated to Saint Thomas a Becket.
     
  • This church was restored in 1886, 1890, 1894 and again during the period 1895-1898.
     
  • This church seats 750.
     
  • Neil THEASBY has a photograph of St Thomas Becket Church on Geo-graph, taken in May, 2017.
     
  • Christ Church was a mission church erected in the extreme north-east of the parish near Whaley Bridge. It was served by the clergy of the parish church.
     

Derbyshire

  • Search for Derbyshire Anglican Churches on The Diocese of Derby website..
     
  • Hoskyns, Edwyn - Under the Heavy Clouds. Merton Priory Press, 2005, ISBN 1-898937-63-X
     Subtitled ‘The Church of England in Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire, 1911-1915’, this book is an account of Edwyn Hoskins, Bishop of Southwell's parochial visitation of the diocese between 1911 and 1915.
     
  • Combes, Isobel - Anglican Churches of Derbyshire. Landmark Collector's Library, 2005, ISBN 13: 9781843061526.
     
  • Information about Derbyshire's Parishes, 1811 is available from Ann ANDREWS.
     
  • You may also find it worthwhile searching in the GENUKI Church Database. Enter the name of the place in which the church is located:

UK and Ireland