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Osmaston Hall was a country house built in 1696 in extensive grounds at Osmaston, Derbyshire, now an area of the city of Derby. The house was the home of the Wilmot baronets, [1] and the Fox family before being used for a golf club [2] and railway business. It was demolished in 1938, with the site now occupied by an industrial estate.
Back issues from 1879 until the present day can be viewed at the Derby Local Studies Library or the British Library Newspaper Collection at Colindale, London. The current average circulation is 20,090 daily (as of 01/10/2015) [12] The paper was known as the Derby Evening Telegraph until April 2009 when it changed its name to simply the Derby ...
Evening Telegraph is a common newspaper name, and may refer to: Evening Telegraph, Scotland; Evening Telegraph, Ireland, published 1871–1924. Coventry Evening Telegraph, England, now the Coventry Telegraph; Derby Evening Telegraph, England, now the Derby Telegraph; Northamptonshire Evening Telegraph, England
Powell first played for Derby County on Christmas Day 1941 as a wartime guest player aged 16 whist still a pupil at Bemrose School, he featured alongside future Derby County teammate Chick Musson and Jackie Parr, Derby lost the match 3–1 to a Royal Air Force Football Association XI but the 16-year did impress the over 10,000 spectators at the Baseball Ground with the Derby Evening Telegraph ...
In April 2019, Rippon ended the column that he had written every week in the Derby (Evening)Telegraph for the past 20 years (over 1,000 in all) as well as the Derby County column that he had written for the past 10 years. He also covered news stories for the paper, and news features on subjects such as the work of Macmillan Cancer nurses, and ...
Gerald Mortimer (1937 – 30 December 2013) was an English author and sports journalist, whose career spanned over four decades.. Mortimer began his career in July 1970, as a sports journalist for the Derby Telegraph (then Derby Evening Telegraph), a job which he held until his death in December 2013.
The manor in Derby was the home of the ancient family of the Wilmot baronets. [1] These baronets built Osmaston Hall, including its chapel of James the Lesser. The hall was demolished to make way for the Ascot Drive industrial estate in 1938, while the chapel survived until 1952. Looking west along Osmaston Park Road from the Spider Bridge
Bemrose himself died in 1986, but his widow survived him for many years, celebrating her hundredth birthday on 7 May 2008. An interview with Lady Bemrose in the Derby Evening Telegraph for her birthday described her life in music and her travels with her husband in America, South Africa, Australia, Egypt and Israel. She said "When we visited ...