Knowledge (XXG)

Shipley Hall

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Colliery Company, which his family had founded, who took over complete control of the mines and the family moved out mainly because life at the Hall was seriously affected by the noise and pollution of the colliery. The hall became seriously affected by subsidence due to the mining and was demolished
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In the 1980s the County Council controversially agreed to the use of part of the park and a lake to form a theme park, initially as Britannia Park. That business closed soon after and the park re-opened as The American Adventure. The last incarnation of this park closed in 2007 and has been partly
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The National Coal Board reclaimed land near the closed collieries by opencast methods between 1970 and 1974. Two years were spent contouring the site, planting trees, seeding fields and meadows, and building facilities for the public: Shipley Country Park opened to the public on 26 May 1976.
323:. The Woodside and Coppice coalpits, regarded as uneconomical, were closed in the 1960s, ending over 250 years of deep mining at Shipley. There was a residual legacy of spoil heaps, derelict buildings, polluted lakes and thirty abandoned mine shafts. 225:
opened in 1796 to serve the Shipley Colliery, and the income led to extensive development of the estate. The Hall was rebuilt in 1799 (the building in the above photo) to the design of William Linley of Doncaster, and the grounds were landscaped by
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Shipley Hall was built in 1700, and by 1722 coal mining was an important activity on the Shipley estate. The Hall became the property of the Miller-Mundy family who in around 1765 started running the mines themselves. The
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the 19-year-old Earl of Shrewsbury, and then left the country with her three brothers who had skipped bail. They were accused of drawing lots to decide who would kill the eldest brother and heir of
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demolished. The area has now been developed upon with the new Shipley Lakeside development which contains the site of the former Woodside Colliery.
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In the late 19th century, under Alfred Edward Miller Mundy, the colliery was becoming increasingly prosperous, especially with the opening of the
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Shipley Country Park includes a visitor centre, children's play areas, a wildlife garden, wildlife and nature walks, a cafe, disabled access,
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A cricket ground, created in 1899, is still functioning today, and as of 2018 is the home of
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on Shipley Hill. From the 16th century, coal mining began to provide income for the owners.
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Bygone Derbyshire The History of Shipley Country Park - Miner's dial is a pointer...
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In 1887 there was a scandal when Captain Miller Mundy's wife, Ellen, ran off with
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decided to create a Country Park as a memorial to mining in the area.
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After Captain Miller Mundy died, the Hall was sold in 1922 to the
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Shipley Hall's foundations are marked out on Shipley Hill
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British country houses destroyed in the 20th century
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Index


Location in Derbyshire, England
Derbyshire
England
Coordinates
52°59′37″N 1°20′55″W / 52.9937°N 1.3486°W / 52.9937; -1.3486
William Linley
Shipley
Derbyshire
Heanor
Ilkeston
Country Park
manor
Domesday Book
hunting lodge
Nutbrook Canal
William Emes
Capability Brown

Midland Railway
W. E. Nesfield
Walter Tapper
Charles Chetwynd-Talbot
Alfreton Hall
Edward VII
World War I
Shipley Hall Cricket Club

Shipley
nationalised

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