Derby

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Derby



Derby

Derby Type Governing body Leadership Executive Unitary authority, City Derby City Council Leader & Cabinet Lib Dem (council NOC) Margaret Beckett (L) Bob Laxton (L) 30.1 sq mi (78.03 km2) 236,300 7,842.5/sq mi (3,028/ km2) 236,300 85.8% White 8.9% S. Asian 2.2% Black British 1.1% Chinese and other 2.0% Mixed Race Greenwich Mean Time (UTC+0) DE1, DE3, DE21-24, DE73 01332 SK3533936187 00FK GB-DER UKF11 Derbeian www.derby.gov.uk



- MPs Area - U.A. & City Population (2006 est.) - U.A. & City - Density - Urban - Ethnicity

(Office of National Statistics 2005 Arms of Derby City Council Estimate)[1]



Motto: "Industria, Virtus, et Fortitudo" Time zone Postcode span Area code(s) Grid Ref. ONS code ISO 3166-2 NUTS 3 Demonym Website



Derby shown within England



Coordinates: 52°55.32′N 1°28.55′W / 52.922°N 1.47583°W / 52.922; -1.47583 Sovereign state Constituent country Region Ceremonial county Admin HQ Settled City Status Government United Kingdom England East Midlands Derbyshire Derby AD 600 1977



Derby (pronounced /ˈdɑrbi/, DAR-bee, listen ) is a city in the East Midlands region of England. It lies upon the banks of the River Derwent and is located in the south of the ceremonial county of Derbyshire. In the 2001 census, the population of the city was 233,700, whilst that of the Derby Urban Area was 229,407. Measured by urban area, Derby is the 18th largest settlement in England.



History

Origins

The city has Roman, Saxon and Viking connections. The Roman camp of ’Derventio’ was probably at Little Chester/Chester Green (grid



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reference SK353375); The site of the old Roman fort is at Chester Green. Later the town was one of the ’Five Boroughs’ (fortified towns) of the Danelaw.



Derby

way south to seize the British crown. The prince called at The George Inn on Irongate, where the Duke of Devonshire had set up his headquarters, and demanded billets for his 9,000 troops.



The tower of Derby Cathedral, England’s third tallest Anglican cathedral tower[2] The popular belief is that the name ’Derby’ is a corruption of the Danish and Gaelic Djúra-bý (recorded in Anglo-Saxon as Deoraby) (Village of the Deer). However some assert that it is a corruption of the original Roman name ’Derventio’. The town was also named ’Darby’ or ’Darbye’ on some of the oldest maps, e.g. Speed’s 1610 map. Derby recently celebrated its 2,000th year as a settlement. Modern research (2004) into the history and archaeology of Derby has provided evidence that the Vikings and Anglo-Saxons probably co-existed, occupying two areas of land surrounded by water. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (c. 900) says that "Derby is divided by water". These areas of land were known as Norþworþig ("Northworthy", = "north enclosure") and Deoraby, and were at the "Irongate" (north) side of Derby.[3]



Statue of Bonnie Prince Charlie located on Cathedral Green He stayed at Exeter House, Exeter Street where he held his "council of war". A replica of the room is on display at Derby Museum in the city centre. He had received misleading information about an army coming to meet him south of Derby. Although he wished to continue with his quest, he was overruled by his fellow officers. He abandoned his invasion at Swarkestone Bridge on the River Trent just a few miles south of Derby. As a testament to his belief in his cause, the prince who on the march from Scotland had walked at the front of the column - made the return journey on horseback at the rear of the bedraggled and tired army. Each year at the beginning of December, the Charles Edward Stuart Society of Derby lead a weekend of activities culminating in a parade through the city centre and a battle on Cathedral Green.



6th century - 18th century

During the Civil War of 1642-1646, Derby was garrisoned by Parliamentary troops commanded by Sir John Gell, 1st Baronet, who was appointed Governor of Derby in 1643. These troops took part in the defence of nearby Nottingham, the Siege of Lichfield, the Battle of Hopton Heath and many other engagements in Nottinghamshire, Staffordshire and Cheshire, as well as successfully defending Derbyshire against Royalist armies. Bonnie Prince Charlie set up camp at Derby on 4 December 1745, whilst on his



Industrial Revolution

Derby and Derbyshire were centres of Britain’s Industrial Revolution. In 1717, Derby was the site of the first water powered silk mill in Britain, built by John Lombe and George Sorocold, after Lombe had reputedly stolen the secrets of silk-throwing from Piedmont in what is now Italy (he is alleged to



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have been poisoned by Piedmontese as revenge in 1722). In 1759, Jedediah Strutt patented and built a machine called the Derby Rib Attachment that revolutionised the manufacture of hose. This attachment was used on the Rev. Lee’s Framework Knitting Machine; it was placed in front of - and worked in unison with - Lee’s Frame, to produce ribbed hose (stockings). The partners were Jedediah Strutt, William Woollatt (who had been joined in 1758 by) John Bloodworth and Thomas Stafford, all leading hosiers in Derby. The patent was obtained in January 1759. After three years, Bloodworth and Stafford were paid off, and Samuel Need - a hosier of Nottingham joined the partnership. The firm was known as Need, Strutt & Woollatt. The patent expired in 1773, though the partnership continued until 1781 when Need died. Year Population[4] 1801 14,695 1851 48,506 1901 118,469 1921 142,824 1941 167,321 1951 181,423 1961 199,578 1971 219,558 1981 214,424 1991 225,296 2001 221,716 Messrs. Wright, the bankers of Nottingham, recommended that Richard Arkwright apply to Strutt & Need for finance for his cotton spinning mill. The first mill opened in Nottingham in 1770 and was driven by horses. In 1771 Richard Arkwright, Samuel Need and Jedediah Strutt built the world’s first waterpowered cotton spinning mill at Cromford, Derbyshire, developing a form of power that was to be a catalyst for the Industrial Revolution. This was followed in Derbyshire by Jedediah Strutt’s cotton spinning mills at Belper. They were: South Mill, the first, 1775; North Mill, 1784, which was destroyed by fire on 12 January 1803 and then rebuilt; it started work again at the end of 1804; West Mill, 1792, commenced working 1796; Reeling Mill, 1897; Round Mill, which took 10 years



Derby

to build, from 1803 to 1813, and commenced working in 1816; and Milford Mills, 1778. The Belper and Milford mills were not built in partnership with Arkwright. These mills were all Strutt owned and financed. Other famous 18th century figures with connections to Derby include Dr Johnson, the creator of the English dictionary, who married Elizabeth Porter at St. Werburgh’s Church, Derby, Derby in 1735; the painter Joseph Wright, known as Wright of Derby, who was famous for his revolutionary use of light in his paintings and was an associate of the Royal Academy; and John Whitehurst, a famous clockmaker and philosopher. Erasmus Darwin, doctor, scientist, philosopher and grandfather of Charles Darwin was also to be found in Derby and Derbyshire at much the same time, though his practice was based in Lichfield, Staffordshire. The beginning of the next century saw Derby emerging as an engineering centre with manufacturers such as James Fox, who exported machine tools to Russia. In 1840, the North Midland Railway set up its works in Derby and, when it merged with the Midland Counties Railway and the Birmingham and Derby Junction Railway, to form the Midland Railway, Derby became its headquarters. The connection with the railway encouraged others, notably Andrew Handyside, Charles Fox and his son Francis Fox. A list of the structures these three built reads like a "Who’s Who" of famous buildings. Derby was one of the boroughs reformed by the Municipal Corporations Act 1835, and it became a county borough with the Local Government Act 1888. The borough expanded in 1877 to include Little Chester and Litchurch, and then in 1890 to include New Normanton and Rowditch. The borough did not increase substantially again until 1968, when under a recommendation of the Local Government Boundary Commission it was expanded into large parts of the rural district of Belper, Repton and South East Derbyshire. This vastly increased Derby’s population from 132,408 in the 1961 census to 219,578 in the 1971 census.[2] Despite being one of the areas of Britain furthest from the sea, Derby holds a special place in the history of marine safety - it was as MP for Derby that Samuel Plimsoll introduced his bills for a ’Plimsoll line’ (and other marine safety measures). This failed on first



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Derby

Committee at the 1900 general election. The MP was Richard Bell, General Secretary of the Railway Servants Union. Bell was succeeded in 1910 by Jimmy Thomas and he in turn by the distinguished polymath and Nobel Laureate Philip Noel-Baker in 1936. Despite its strategic industries (rail and aero-engine), Derby suffered comparatively little damage in both world wars (contrast Bristol and Filton). This may in part have been due to the skilful jamming of the German radio-beam navigations systems (XVerfahren and Knickebein, camouflage and decoy techniques (’Starfish sites’) were built, mainly south of the town, e.g. out in fields near Foremark (ref. Kirk, Felix & Bartnik, 2002, see talk; see also [3]). Derby has also become a significant cultural centre for the deaf community in the UK. Many deaf people move to Derby because of its strong sign language-using community. It is estimated that the deaf population in Derby is at least three times higher than the national average, and that only London has a larger deaf population. The Royal School for the Deaf on Ashbourne Road provides education in British Sign Language and English. More recently Derby was granted the Fairtrade City status.



Derby Industrial Museum / Silk Mill World Heritage Site introduction, but was successful in 1876 and contributed to Plimsoll’s re-election as a deservedly popular MP.



20th century to present day

Derby was awarded city status on 7 June 1977 by Queen Elizabeth II to mark the 25th anniversary of her ascension to the throne.[5] The Queen presented the "charter scroll" in person on July 28, 1977.[6] Until then, Derby had been one of the few towns in England with a cathedral but not city status. Derby has a number of public parks, many Victorian in origin. Darley and Derwent parks lie immediately north of the city centre and are home to owls, kingfishers and a wide variety of other wildlife. Derby Rowing Club and Derwent Rowing Club are located on the banks of the river. There is also an attractive riverside walk and cycle path from Darley Park south to two other parks. West of the city centre is Markeaton Park, while to the north is Allestree Park and its lake. Derby also has the first public recreational park in the country to have an arboretum (Derby Arboretum), which lies to the south of the city centre. The arboretum was set up by the philanthropic landowner and industrialist Joseph Strutt in 1840. The arboretum’s website states that the arboretum’s design was the inspiration for the vision of great urban parks in the USA, notably Central Park in New York City. Derby holds an important position in the history of the Labour movement, because it was one of two seats (the other being Keir Hardie’s in Merthyr Tydfil) gained by the recently formed Labour Representation



Governance

By traditional definitions, Derby is the county town of Derbyshire, although Derbyshire’s administrative centre has in recent years been Matlock. On 1 April 1997 Derby City Council became again a unitary authority (a status it had held, as a county borough, up until 1974), with the rest of Derbyshire administered from Matlock.



Geography

Derby is split into 17 Wards.[7]



Nearest settlements

Borrowash, Ockbrook, Draycott, Melbourne (Derbyshire, England, UK), Elvaston, Coxbench, Quarndon, Little Eaton, Morley (Derbyshire, England, UK), Duffield, Belper, Heanor, Ripley, Ilkeston, Ripley (Derbyshire Constabulary HQ), Langley Mill, Alfreton, Chesterfield, Matlock (Derbyshire County Council is based here), Bakewell, Alfreton,



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Ward Abbey Allestree Alvaston Arboretum Blagreaves Boulton Chellaston Darley Derwent Littleover Mickleover Oakwood Sinfin Spondon Areas within the Ward St Lukes and Normanton (part of) Allestree and Markeaton Park



Derby



Alvaston, Crewton, Litchurch, Pride Park, Wilmorton and Allenton (Part of) City Centre, Pear Tree and Rose Hill Sunny Hill and Littleover (part of) Boulton and Allenton (part of) Chellaston and Shelton Lock Darley Abbey, Five Lamps, Little Chester (aka Chester Green), Strutt’s Park and West End Breadsall Hilltop and Chaddesden Heights Littleover (most of) and Heatherton Village Mickleover Oakwood and Chaddesden (part of) Sinfin, Osmaston and Stenson Fields (part of) Spondon Agriculture[5] 2 1 1 Industry[6] 1,130 1,819 1,806 Services[7] 1,377 2,145 2,614



Chaddesden Chaddesden



Mackworth Mackworth and Morley Estate Normanton Normanton (most of) and Austin Estate



Year Regional Gross Value Added[4] 1995 2,509 2000 3,965 2003 4,421 Buxton, Breaston, Long Eaton, Sandiacre, Sawley Nottingham, Sandiacre, Beeston, Coalville, Loughborough, Ashby-De-La-Zouch, Measham Castle Donington, Leicester, Burton-upon-Trent.



Economy

This is a chart of trend of regional gross value added of Derby at current basic prices published (pp.240–253) by Office for National Statistics with figures in millions of British Pounds Sterling. ^ includes hunting and forestry ^ includes energy and construction ^ includes financial intermediation services indirectly measured ^ Components may not sum to totals due to rounding



Industry

Derby’s two biggest employers, Rolls-Royce plc (commonly known in the area as



’Royce’s’) and the Toyota Motor Corporation, are both in the engineering manufacturing trade. Egg, the Internet and telephone bank, has its national base in Derby. Other companies of note include Bombardier who manufacture train systems and aircraft, and Alstom who manufacture large power plant boilers and heat exchangers. As already noted, Derby was for many years a significant railway centre, being the former headquarters of the Midland Railway, with both British Rail workshops and research facilities in the town. Although much less important than in years gone by, train manufacture continues in Derby and Derby railway station retains an important strategic role in the railway network. Moreover many major railway manufacturers retain a presence and, as reported in the Derby Evening Telegraph, the city is favoured as a possible site for a new national railway centre.[8] Among a number of IT houses, Derby was the home of Core Design, who developed the



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computer game Tomb Raider with its heroine Lara Croft.



Derby

editor (Elizabeth Williamson) of the 2nd edition of Pevsner for Derbyshire wrote:- ’...the character and cohesion of the centre has been completely altered by the replacement of a large number of C18 houses in the centre by a multi-lane road. As a traffic scheme this road is said to be a triumph; as townscape it is a disaster.’



Landmarks

Derby Cathedral has the third-highest Anglican cathedral tower in the country. In recent years, this has been home to a pair of breeding peregrine falcons[9] Derby Gaol is a visitor attraction based in the dungeons of the Derbyshire County Gaol which dates back to 1756. Derby Industrial Museum is situated in Derby Silk Mill and shows the industrial heritage and technological achievement of Derby, including Rolls-Royce aero engines, railways, mining, quarrying and foundries.



Places of interest

• • • • • • • Cathedral Quarter Darley Abbey Derby Arboretum Derby Canal Derby Cathedral Derby Industrial Museum (Silk Mill) Derby Friargate Station (of which all that remains is Handyside’s bridge across Friargate) Markeaton Park Light Railway, a heritage railway Pride Park Stadium (Derby County F.C.) and its predecessor the Baseball Ground (now demolished) River Derwent St Helen’s House, Derby



• •



• •



Transport

Roads

Derby’s central location in England means it has extensive transport links with other areas of the country. The M1 motorway passes about ten miles to the east of the city, linking Derby southwards to the London area and northwards to Sheffield and Leeds. Other major roads passing through or near Derby include the A6 (historically the main route from London to Carlisle, also linking to Leicester and Manchester), A38 (Bodmin to Mansfield via Bristol and Birmingham), A50 (Warrington to Leicester via Stoke-on-Trent), A52 (Newcastle-under-Lyme to Mablethorpe, including Brian Clough Way linking Derby to Nottingham) and A61 (Derby to Thirsk via Sheffield and Leeds).



Pickford’s House Museum Pickford’s House Museum was built by architect Joseph Pickford in 1770. It was his home and business headquarters. Derby Museum and Art Gallery shows paintings by Joseph Wright, as well as fine Royal Crown Derby porcelain, local regiments and archaeology. Pickford also designed St Helen’s House in King Street. Much of the skyline of the inner city changed radically in 1968 when the inner ring road with its two new crossings of the River Derwent was built. The route of the ring road went through the magnificent St. Alkmund’s Church and its wonderful Georgian churchyard, the only Georgian square in Derby. Both were demolished to make way for the road, a move still criticised today. Thus the



Railways

The railway has served Derby since 1840, being the junction of what were then the two main lines from London to Yorkshire and the North East. The present day station is Derby Midland with frequent expresses to London, the North East and South West, provided by



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East Midlands Trains and CrossCountry. There also remain small local stations at Peartree and Spondon, although services are fairly limited, especially at the former. The Great Northern Railway’s "Derbyshire and North Staffordshire Extension" formerly ran through Derby Friargate Station, from Colwick and Nottingham to Egginton Junction. After closure, part of the route west of Derby was used by British Rail as a test track. Although few traces of the route now remain, the ornate cast iron bridge by Andrew Handyside across Friargate is still in place, as is his bridge over the river.



Derby



Number 60 bus travelling from Derby to Chellaston on Shelton Lock Bridge Derby’s former bus station was an innovative art deco design by borough architect C.H. Aslin. Originally built in 1933, it was closed in 2005, and subsequently demolished, despite the protests of environmentalists and conservationists. The unique cafe building is planned to be rebuilt at Crich Tramway Museum. A new bus station is set to be built on the site as part of the Riverlights development. As a result of this work, services are currently using a number of temporary stops on streets around the Morledge area. Local bus services in and around Derby are run by a number of companies, but principally Trent Barton and Arriva Midlands. The city is not particularly well served by long distance coaches, although it is on National Express’s London to Manchester and Yorkshire to the South West routes. Additionally a regional route between Manchester and Nottingham is run by Trent Barton via its TransPeak and Red Arrow services. Between 1932 and 1967, Derby Corporation operated a trolleybus system. The last trolleybus ran on 9 September 1967. Several Derby vehicles have been preserved at Sandtoft and the East Anglia Transport Museum.



Air

East Midlands Airport is situated about fifteen miles (24 km) from Derby city centre, making Derby the closest city to the airport. Its proximity to Derby, the fact that the airport is in Leicestershire, and the traditional rivalry between the three cities (Derby, Leicester and Nottingham), meant that there was a great deal of controversy locally about the airport’s decision to prefix its name with Nottingham in 2004. Later on, in 2006, Nottingham East Midlands Airport reverted to its previous name, seen by many to be a victory for both Derby and Leicester, and promoting a more unified East Midlands. The airport is served by several budget airlines, including Bmibaby (for which East Midlands is a main base), Ryanair and EasyJet, with services to a variety of internal and European destinations.



Bus and coach



Culture, entertainment and sport

Music

A Derby Corporation trolleybus in Victoria Street, Derby, 30 July, 1967. The trolleybus system closed on 9 September, 1967. (Photograph by Alan Murray-Rust). The annual open-air concert at Darley Park is one of the biggest free concerts of its kind. It is one of many performances given throughout the year by Sinfonia Viva, a professional chamber orchestra based in Derby. The Derby Jazz group caters for the jazz



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interest in the city and is regarded as one of the UK’s leading live jazz organisations. There is also a summer rock music festival Prom in the Park which takes place in late July every year.



Derby

members of the Football League Championship. They have played at Pride Park Stadium since 1997, having been previously based at the Baseball Ground (originally built in 1890 as a baseball stadium, a use which discontinued when the sport failed to attract the expected support) for 102 years. Notable former managers include Brian Clough, Arthur Cox, Jim Smith, John Gregory and George Burley. Notable former players include Colin Todd, Roy McFarland (who both later had brief and unsuccessful stints as manager at the club), Peter Shilton, Dean Saunders, Craig Short, Marco Gabbiadini, Horacio Carbonari, Nick Pickering and Tom Huddlestone. There are currently three senior nonleague football clubs based in the city. Mickleover Sports play at Station Road, Mickleover and are members of the Northern Counties East League Premier Division (the ninth level of the English football league system). Graham Street Prims and Borrowash Victoria are both members of the East Midlands Counties League (level ten) and play on adjacent grounds at the Asterdale complex in Spondon. Derbyshire County Cricket Club are based at the County Ground in Derby and play almost all home matches there, although matches at Chesterfield were re-introduced in 2006. One of the designated first class county sides, they have won the County Championship once, in 1936. Derby also has clubs in both codes of rugby. In rugby union, Derby RFC play in Midlands Division Two East (the seventh level of English rugby union) at their Haslams Lane ground. Rugby league team Derby City RLFC were formed in 1990 and compete in the Midlands Premier Division of the National Rugby League Conference. From 2008 they are ground sharing with Derby RFC at Haslams Lane. The city is also represented in the English Basketball League Division One by Derby Trailblazers, who play at the Moorways Sports Centre. They were formed in 2002 following the demise of British Basketball League side Derby Storm. Local industrialist Francis Ley introduced baseball to the town in the late 19th century, and built a stadium near the town centre. The attempt to establish baseball in Derby was unsuccessful, but the stadium survived for some 100 years afterwards as the home of Derby County Football Club. It was finally



Theatre and arts

Derby Playhouse regularly received acclaim in the national press for its productions, particularly, in recent years, for its staging of shows by Stephen Sondheim. After a lengthy period of financial uncertainty, the theatre closed in February 2008. It was resurrected in September of that year after a new financing package was put together but forced to close again just two months later because of further financial problems. QUADSee Derby QUAD is a new centre for art and film which opened on Friday 26 September, 2008. This new building has two cinema screens showing both independent and mainstream cinema, two gallery spaces housing contemporary visual arts, a digital studio, participation spaces, digital editing suites, artists studio and the bfi Mediatheque. The Robert Ludlam Theatre is a 270 seat venue with a diverse programme of entertainment including dance, drama, art, music, theatre in the round, comedy, films, family entertainment, rock and pop events, workshops and provides a home for many of Derbyshire’s amateur production groups. You have to go through St Benedict’s School to get there, however.



Sport



Pride Park Stadium Derby is home to several high profile sports clubs. Derby County, who were FA Cup winners in 1946, Football League champions in 1972 and again in 1975, and are currently



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demolished in 2003, six years after County’s move to Pride Park.



Derby

the older parts of the city centre where independent shops have traditionally been located. Some of these have experienced a downturn in trade and some have ceased trading since the development opened. In Westfield itself, a combination of relatively high rents and rising rates have made things difficult for smaller traders.[11] The Friar Gate area contains a high number of clubs and bars, making it the centre of Derby’s nightlife. Derby is also well provided with pubs, many of which have been applauded nationally for their support of real ale.



Recreation



Education

The newly restored Grove Street Lodge and "Grand Entrance" at the northern end of the arboretum Derby Arboretum was the first public park in the country and is thought to have been one of the inspirations for Central Park in New York. Although it suffered from neglect in the 1990s, it has recently undergone extensive improvement and renovation. Markeaton Park is Derby’s most used leisure facility.[10] It is the venue for the city council’s annual Guy Fawkes Night firework display and contains its own light railway. Other major parks in the city include Allestree Park, Darley Park, Chaddesden Park, Alvaston Park, Normanton Park and Osmaston Park.



Chellaston School in Derby Like most of the UK, Derby operates a nonselective primary and secondary education system with no middle schools. Pupils attend infant and junior school (often in a combined primary school) before moving onto a comprehensive secondary school. Many secondaries also have sixth forms, allowing pupils to optionally continue their education by taking A Levels after the end of compulsory education at age 16. For those who want to stay in education but leave school, the large Derby College provides a number of post-16 courses. Outside the state sector, there are four fee-paying independent schools. Derby Grammar School was founded in 1994 and was for boys only, until 2007, when they accepted girls into the sixth form for the first time, who aim to continue the work and traditions of the former Derby School, closed in 1989, one of the oldest schools in England; Derby High School is for girls-only at secondary level and for boys at primary level; and Ockbrook School is an independent school for



Shopping and nightlife

Shopping in Derby is divided into two main sections. The first is a recently opened Westfield Shopping Centre, controlled by the Westfield Group. The second is the older section known as the Cathedral Quarter. This area includes a range of boutiques and coffee shops and is focused around the cathedral and the area around Irongate. Westfield Derby (incorporating the former Eagle Centre) is the city’s main indoor shopping centre. It opened on 9 October 2007 after major extension work costing £340 million. It contains a brand new food court and a 12 screen cinema (Showcase - Cinema De Lux) which was opened on 16 May, 2008. The development was controversial and local opponents accuse it of drawing trade away from



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girls aged 3–18) and boys aged 3–11). Lastly, Michael House Steiner School can be found in Shipley, Heanor and caters for pupils from kindergarten age through to 16. Derby also has a City Academy, Landau Forte College, partially state-funded, but also with business backing. It was one of fifteen City Technology Colleges set up in the late 1980s and early 1990s which was converted into a City Academy in September 2006. Derby also has a number of special needs establishments including Ivy House School (which takes pupils from nursery to sixth form) and the Light House which is a respite facility for children and parents. The University of Derby has its main campus on Kedleston Road. There is another campus in north Derbyshire at Buxton. A new building at the university was recently opened by Sir Richard Branson. In 2003 the University of Nottingham opened a graduate entry medical school based at Derby City General Hospital.



Derby

managed Big Screen Derby in the Market Place in conjunction with Derby City Council and the University of Derby, as part of the BBC Big Screen project. RAM FM, the independent local radio station for Derbyshire and East Staffordshire, is also based in the city and offers a mixture of adult contemporary music and entertainment, with regular news and traffic bulletins. It broadcasts on 102.8 FM, and is also streamed on the internet, and is listened to by around 120,000 people each week. RAM FM is part of the Gcap One Network, and hosts many big local events, such as the Darley Park Concert, the city bonfire and fireworks, the Christmas lights switch-on, and the Race For Life, raising money for Cancer Research UK.



Trivia

• Derby’s emblem is the Derby Ram, about which there is a folk song entitled The Derby Ram. It is found in a number of places, most notably in the nickname of Derby County FC of "The Rams." A stylised depiction forms the logo of the City Council’s services. A ram provided by the Duke of Devonshire is the mascot of the Worcestershire and Sherwood Foresters Regiment from the 95th (Derbyshire) Regiment of Foot which was incorporated within it. • Bold Lane Car Park in Derby is one of the top ten most secure places in the world according to a study published in a science magazine. [8]



Media

The Derby Evening Telegraph is the city’s daily newspaper. In addition, a free newspaper, the Derby Express, is delivered to households weekly. The former free Derby Trader weekly newspaper is no longer in print. The daily freesheet ’Metro’ is distributed in the city centre every morning, although this only has a very small amount of local content. Another local paper is the weekly Derbyshire Times published every Thursday, which mainly covers news from the north of the county. BBC Radio Derby, the BBC’s award-winning local station for Derbyshire and East Staffordshire, is based on St. Helen’s Street in the city and offers a mixture of local, national and international news, features, music and sports commentaries. It has around 150,000 weekly listeners and is available locally on 104.5 FM and 1116 AM, on 95.3 FM in North and Mid Derbyshire and on 96.0 FM in the Buxton area, as well as being streamed on the internet. The BBC in Derby also have their own local website for the area which provides news, travel and weather information, as well as other features. From 1983 to 2008 Radio Derby organised the Money Mountain Appeal, an annual on-air charity auction which raised more than £1 million for local causes. Since July 2007, the BBC has



Notable people

• Alan Bates (1934-2003), actor • Freda Bedi (1911-1977), Tibetan buddhist nun • Ronald Binge (1910-1979), composer • Steve Bloomer (1874-1938), footballer • Henry Cavendish (1731-1810), scientist • Brian Clough, OBE (1934-2004), football player and manager • William John Coffee (1774-1846), artist and sculptor • Daniel Parker Coke (1745-1825), barrister and Member of Parliament • William George Constable (1887-1976), art historian • John Cotton (1585–1652), New England Puritan



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• Kevin Coyne (1944-2004), rock musician and singer. • Erasmus Darwin (1731–1802), physician • John Dexter (1925-1990), theatre director • James Dobb (born 1972), former motocross world champion • John Dobson (born 1930), opera singer • Ralph Downes (1904-1993), organist and organ designer • John Flamsteed (1646-1719), first Astronomer Royal • Lianna Fowler (born 1987), fashion model • Sir Charles Fox (1810-1874), engineer • Sir Francis Fox (1844-1927), engineer • James Fox (1780-1830), engineer • Sir Francis Seymour Haden (1818-1910), surgeon and artist • Andrew Handyside (1806-1887), iron founder • Geoff Hoon MP (born 1953), politician • Sir Robert Howe (1893-1981), last British Governor-General of the Sudan • Arthur Keily (born 1921), marathon runner • William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne (1779-1848), former prime minister • Stephen Layton (born 1966), choral conductor • John Lombe (1693-1722), industrial pioneer • Stephen Marley, novelist and video game designer • Captain Godfrey Meynell (1904-1935), recipient of the Victoria Cross • Sir Howard Newby (born 1941), educationalist and sociologist • Florence Nightingale (1820-1910), pioneer of modern nursing • Colin Osborne (born 1975), PDC Darts professional • Ben Pridmore (born 1976), World Memory Champion 2004 • Samuel Richardson (1689–1761), novellist • Sir Henry Royce (1863-1933), co-founder of Rolls-Royce • Max Sciandri (born 1967), Olympic medalist • George Sorocold (1668?-1738?), engineer • Herbert Spencer (1820–1903), philosopher • Jedediah Strutt (1726-1797), industrial pioneer • John Whitehurst (1713–1788), clockmaker and scientist • Sir Henry Wilmot (1831-1901), recipient of the Victoria Cross • Joseph Wright (1734-1797), painter



Derby



Twin cities

Twinning with Osnabrück

Derby is twinned with Osnabrück in Germany. The partnership treaty between the two cities was signed on 17 February, 1976. Osnabrück made contact with the British authorities as early as 1948, hoping to find an English twin town and therefore come to understand their former enemies from the Second World War. This attempt was unsuccessful and Osnabrück did not consider an English twin town again until 1972. The twinning agreement with Derby was signed four years later in the historical Hall of Peace in Osnabrück’s "rathaus" (town hall). Since then the two towns have exchanged envoys. Every year, Derby and Osnabrück each appoint an envoy who spends twelve months in his or her twin city. The envoy’s role is varied, but encompasses areas such as promoting the exchange of ideas between the two cities, as well as acting as an educational and general information officer to promote awareness of the twinning scheme. They can help in all sorts of ways by: translating, giving talks to local societies and schools, finding pen friends and short term host families during work placements, working in day-today contact to assist groups who want to get involved in twinning by identifying and approaching possible counterparts, planning the annual mayweek trip and a lot more. There is an annual exchange between the wind bands of John Port School, Etwall and its twin school Gymnasium Melle in Osnabrück, the two bands taking turns to visit each other and participating in joint concerts. Beginning in 1977, the exchange is one of the longest and most successful of its kind in British history. The exchange of envoys between two cities is very unusual. The team of envoys in Osnabrück changes every year and Osnabrück also sends envoys to Derby, Angers and Çanakkale. No other city in Germany participates in this exchange of envoys, and in Britain, only one other town, Wigan, receives and sends an envoy.



List of international links

• - Osnabrück, Germany



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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

• - Kapurthala, India (friendship link)



Derby



Gallery



[2] "Derby Cathedral". You & Yesterday. http://www.youandyesterday.co.uk/ • - Haarlem, Netherlands (friendship articles/Derby_Cathedral. Retrieved on link) 2008-02-04. • - Foncquevillers, France (friendship [3] The Rivers of Time Ron McKeown, ISBN link) 0 95306037-3 • - Toyota City, Japan [4] "Derby District: Total Population". A • - Changzhi, China (Memorandum of Vision of Britain Through Time. Great Understanding) Britain Historical GIS Project. http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/ data_cube_table_page.jsp?data_theme=T_POP&data_ Retrieved on 2007-04-28. [5] London Gazette: no. 47246, p. 7656, 14 June, 1977. Retrieved on 2007-11-21. [6] The Times. July 29, 1977 [7] The Local Government Commission for Part of the The Sure Start, (June 2001). __E__.pdf "Periodic Old England cathedral RollsNormanton review of Derby: Final College electoral Royce from recommendations for ward boundaries in Nurses’ Works Green Derby" (PDF). Home Lane http://www.boundarycommittee.org.uk/ files/dms/derby-maplarge_a=Continue_7177-4418 __E__.pdf. Retrieved on 2008-02-04. [8] [1]. St Mary’sSt MatSt "Peregrine Project". Derby Council The Fal[9] John’s, on-thethew’s, staff public Bridge website. http://www.derby.gov.uk/ St Luke’s, Bridge Darley Street house, LeisureCulture/MuseumsGalleries/ Stockbrook Abbey Normanton EnvironmentalProjects/ Street PeregrineProject.htm. Retrieved on 2008-02-04. [10] Markeaton Today BBC.co.uk Accessed August 29, 2007 (2007-08-29) Westfield Ex Prison., [11] "Westfield Derby - About". Islamic Part of the from Ex Greywestfieldderby.co.uk. Westfield Babington Centre, hound Wilmot http://www.westfieldderby.co.uk/ Centre Lane Stadium Street about.htm. Retrieved on 2008-02-04. St Mary’s



External links

Spa Inn, Abbey Street • Online guide to Derby • Guide to Derby • Photographs of Derby and Derbyshire Guru Arjan Derby Dev Moor Com- • Bygone Derbyshire website • Twinning link with Osnabrück Gurdwara munity Derby Derby Sports Col- • Bust of City Council Website Cathederal • Steve Community Website Derby lege & the and the Millennium Bloomer at Dolphin Pride Park 52°55′19″N 1°28′33″W / Sixth FormCoordinates: Inn Stadium 52.92194°N 1.47583°W / 52.92194; -1.47583 Centre



RC Church



References

[1] http://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/ Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Derby"



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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



Derby



Categories: Derby, Cities in England, Local government in Derbyshire, Railway towns in England, Unitary authorities in England, County towns in England This page was last modified on 20 May 2009, at 17:35 (UTC). All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.) Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a U.S. registered 501(c)(3) taxdeductible nonprofit charity. Privacy policy About Wikipedia Disclaimers



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