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Don Wingrove Jointing Ltd.

Address

1 Hazel Grove
Kirkby In Ashfield
Nottingham
NE17 7EW



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Don Wingrove Jointing Ltd. Details:

Plastering

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Information about words in this company name or address

kirkby in ashfield

Kirkby-in-Ashfield is a market town in Nottinghamshire, England, with a population of 25,265 . It is a part of the Mansfield Urban Area. The Head Offices of Ashfield District Council are located there.

Kirkby-in-Ashfield lies on the eastern edge of the Erewash Valley which separates Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire. Kirkby-in-Ashfield, or Kirkby as it is locally known, was originally a Danish settlement and is a collection of small villages including Old Kirkby, The Folly , Nuncargate and Kirkby Woodhouse. It is mentioned in the Domesday Book and has two main churches, St Wilfrid''s, a Norman church, which was gutted by fire 6 January 1907 but quickly re-built to its former glory and St Thomas''s built in the early 1910s in neo-gothic style.

Kirkby-in-Ashfield was once an important centre of coal mining and railways in west Nottinghamshire, with three active coal mines and a central junction where both the London Midland and Scottish Railway and the Great Central Railway met. The town rapidly expanded during the Victorian era. However the closure of the coal mines in the 1980s and early 1990s lead to a major slump in the local economy and the area suffered a high level of socio-economic depression.

nottingham

Recorded in a wide variety of forms, some very obscure, this surname is English. It is locational from the famous city of Nottingham, the county town of Nottinghamshire, and famous amongst other things for being associated with the outlaw Robin Hood and his claimed disputes with the sheriff of Nottingham. The spellings of this place name are quite extraordinary, and are known to include such forms as Nottingham, Nottingam, Nottyngam, Nottram and exotics such as Nodrum, Notram, Knoweltone, and apparently even Noteyoung! The placename then spelt as Snotengaham is first recorded in the year 868 a.d. in the Anglo Saxon Chronicles, and two centuries later in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Snotingeham. This is from the old English pre 7th century word "ham", meaning a village or homestead, with "-ing", "the people of" and "Snot" an early personal name; hence "the homestead of the Snot tribe". The "s" became lost in the 11th century, whilst the surname itself is first recorded in the mid 13th Century, with early examples of recordings including Ralph de Notingham of Oxfordshire, and Robert de Notingham of Nottinghamshire, both in the Hundred rolls of 1273. Other early examples taken at randon include Annes Nattingham, christened at St. Giles, Cripplegate, on June 11th 1567, Sarah Knowetone, christened at St Katherines by the Tower on May 27th 1610, both city of London, and Thomas Nottram of Stanhope in Durham, on Septemner 17th 1783. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of William de Nottingham. This as dated 1240, in the the year of his election as fourth provincial minister, during the reign of King Henry 111rd of England 1216 - 1272.