This week we went to the village of Calver to have a look at the famous Mill. We went in Geoff's new car and parked just opposite the school in a lay by. Geoff has had another Ford Focus and its the same colour as his old one.
It was a pleasant start to the day with a lie in due to the clocks changing. We walked past the school, the church and the Bridge pub before taking the footpath just before the bridge.
The footpath took us behind the Mill and then across fields to Stocking Farm which has an unusual building with a bell tower on top, it looks like an old church.
In the early
19th century, an upper room in the barn was used for religious services and
later, it was also utilised as a school. When All Saints Church was consecrated
in 1868, services were transferred and a few years later, the barn lost its
school and bell.
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Geoff's new car |
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A very picturesque Bridge Inn |
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Hungry calf getting its breakfast |
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Stocking Farm with its unusual bell tower. |
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Stocking Farm. In the early 19th century, an upper room in the barn was used for religious services and later, it was also utilised as a school. When All Saints Church was consecrated in 1868, services were transferred and a few years later, the barn lost its school and bell. |
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Rob & Ike with Curbar Edge above the tree's. |
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This is part of the mill race to provide water for Calver mill |
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Overlooking the weir from New Bridge with Curbar Edge in the background. |
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Reflections in the River Derwent. |
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Turmoil on the slope of the weir. |
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Calver Marshes is a part of the Calver Weir restoration project. |
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The 3 wise men? |
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Ike found a nice seat in the sun. |
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Lovely footpath alongside the river Derwent |
This is the bridge leading into the village of Froggatt where we stated last week.
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Another shot of the bridge at Froggatt. |
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I think these two have had an argument and they re not speaking to each other. |
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This was in a private garden |
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This house was on Under the Hammer TV program not long ago. |
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Reflections on top of the weir |
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Calver Weir |
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Calver Weir |
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Breakfast time overlooking the weir. |
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More turmoil on the water. |
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River Derwent |
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Ike |
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Rob |
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Siddalls Well next to the road. SIDDALL has long been a common
name in Curbar and surrounds. Several children of an Antonious (Anthony)
Siddall were recorded as being baptised in Baslow in the 1600s. One Siddall
family farmed for several generations in Curbar, and their fields apparently
played an important role in Derbyshire history. In 2003 Kenneth Siddall of Fence Farm,
Sheffield (a great-grandson of John Siddall), located and restored the old
overgrown well still referred to by locals as "Siddall's Well", and
placed a carved stone plaque in commemoration.
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Rapids near to the Calver Mill |
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It was only after the first bridge had been built across the Derwent and lead mining became popular, that the village began to take shape from an isolated community of scattered dwellings. In 1778, a small mill was built close to the new bridge and this was soon followed by the building of a much larger water-powered cotton mill. The second building was destroyed and replaced by the impressive seven-storey granite building that still remains today. No longer used for industry, it has been converted into luxury apartments. The Mill achieved national recognition shortly after the Second World
War, when it was featured as ‘Colditz,’ the notorious German POW camp, in a
popular television series. During the series the swastika flew high above the
mill, but no one was fooled. This was not the case during the war itself, when
lights were lit on the moors nearby, fooling the German bomber pilots into
thinking that Sheffield lay below and releasing their loads harmlessly onto the
moors.
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All Saints Church |
This was another cracking little walk through glorious Derbyshire scenery alongside the River Derwent. Once again very lucky with the weather, the rain started when we were on our way back home. The Calver Mill is a fantastic building complex but is very difficult to get a decent image because of all the tree's blocking the view.
That's it for this week
Cheers
Hi There is a large tree down that stretches almost 2/4 of the way across the river just above Calver bridge. There is also a very big tree leaning heavily on the small footbridge across the stream near the reed ponds near the bridge. It has a large crack on the underside of the trunk. It is a serious hazard to people crossing the bridge if it comes down, and it will certainly crush the bridge when it falls.
ReplyDeletePlease ask someone to take this tree down for safety reasons.
I don't know who else to contact regarding this problem.
Thanks
Sheila