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History information for Bugsworth (Buxworth) and places above it in the hierarchy

Bugsworth (Buxworth)

  • The Navigation Inn has been a place to catch up on the latest local gossip for over 200 years.
     
  • Roger KIDD has a photograph of the Navigation Inn on Geo-graph, taken in September, 2014.
     
  • John TUSTIN has a photograph of the Navigation Inn on Geo-graph, taken in 2010.
     
  • John COTTON, the last man to be hanged in Derby Gaol in 1898, murdered his wife in Bugsworth basin after drinking heavily in the Rose & Crown (now demolished) at Bugsworth.
     
  • Brierley Green adjoins Buxworth and in the early 19th century it was the home of the CLAYTON family. The eldest son, Joel Henry CLAYTON, emigrated to the US to live with an uncle at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Other members of the CLAYTON family followed him and eventually they settled in a valley at the foot of Mount Diablo, some 30 miles from San Francisco, California where they founded the small town of CLAYTON. Buxworth and Clayton are now twinned.

Derbyshire

  • A digital library of mediaeval and modern sources of the history of the British Isles - British History Online. Notable sources include Journals of the House of Commons and House of Lords, Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae, and the Victoria County History.
     
  • A list of Contents of Topographical and Historical Account of Derbyshire, 1817, by Daniel and Samuel Lysons, transcribed by Barbarann AYARS.
     
  • The Domesday Book Online "to enable visitors to find out the history of the Domesday Book and to give an insight into life at the time of its compilation". Note this site does not provide the original text, but does include a list of settlements existing in 1086.
     
  • An Encyclopaedia of British History: 1700-1950 - useful for seeing local events against a national perspective. Scroll down the introductory page on this site to see topics - Child Labour, British Railways, &c.
     
  • In 1828, a Dr. SMITH who was a chemist found that the air in Manchester (in Lancashire) contained thirty tons of soot and thirty tons of tar which was renewed daily. These solids in the air were equivalent to over sixty tons per square mile.
     

England

  • England - History - links and information.

UK and Ireland

  • UK & Ireland - History - links and information.