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Military History information for Clay Cross and places above it in the hierarchy

Clay Cross

  • Lieut.-Colonel Jeffrey M. JACKSON of the Sherwood Foresters resided in the parish in 1911. He would latter reach the rank of Brigadier General. His wife was Jessie C. C. JACKSON. Their son, Geoffrey Laird JACKSON, an active Cricket player, would die of wounds in World War I.
     
  • In 1912, G Company of the 6th Territorial Battalion of the Sherwood Foresters were headquartered here at the Drill Hall. Sergt.-Major John SHEPPARD was the drill instructor.
     
  • There is a photograph of the War Memorial at the Traces of War website.
     
  • Alan HEARDMAN's original photograph of the War Memorial is on the Geo-graph website, taken in April, 2000.
     
  • Alan HEARDMAN also has a photograph of the Danesmoor War Memorial on Geo-graph, taken in January, 2007.

Derbyshire

  • A very comprehensive site featuring Castles and Fortifications - CastleUK.net.
     
  • The Age of Nelson - a website providing general information about the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars 1793-1815, and specifically searchable databases of those present at Trafalgar (and more) and of all Commissioned Naval Officers 1787-1822.
     
  • Jean DURBIN has extracted the Derbyshire entries from a list of Military Deserters 1828-1840 posted in the Police Gazette (hosted on John PALMER's Wirksworth site).
     
  • The Whitworth Rifle was a muzzle-loaded musket with a percussion lock and a rifled barrel introduced in 1857 by designer Sir Joseph WHITWORTH of Darley Dale, DBY. It's superior accuracy won it the nickname of "Sharpshooter."
     
  • The High Peak Rifles, later 6th Battalion, Sherwood Foresters, was a volunteer unit of Britain's Territorial Army. First raised in the High Peak area of Derbyshire in 1860

England

This section is, approximately, in reverse chronological order.

UK and Ireland