Hide

--- TEST SYSTEM --- TEST SYSTEM --- TEST SYSTEM ---

Hide
hide

Military History information for Edlaston and Wyaston and places above it in the hierarchy

Edlaston and Wyaston

A War Memorial was placed in St. James Church in the 1920s. On an oaken pulpit with accompanying panelling and plaque. The panelled polygonal pulpit has a moulded rail around the top, blind tracery on the two panels of each face and the access is by oaken steps with a brass handrail. The conjoined oaken panelling, L-shaped in plan, is attached to the adjacent walls and bears a brass plaque above and behind the pulpit. The nowy-headed plaque has a broad black border with exposed acorns and oak leaves and an Alisee cross on a red ground in a roundel at the head. The incised inscription is in upright capital roman lettering infilled in black with rubricated dates and selected initials.

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