The Francis Frith Collection.
You are here:

Temple Normanton

Temple Normanton maps

Historic maps of Temple Normanton and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis.   View all Temple Normanton maps

Temple Normanton photos

We have no photos of Temple Normanton, although we do have photos of these nearby places:

Hardwick Hall| Brimington| Chesterfield| Bolsover| Staveley| Stretton| Old Whittington| New Whittington| Ashover| Upper Langwith| Barlborough| Clowne| Sutton-In-Ashfield

Temple Normanton area books

Displaying 1 of 11 books about Temple Normanton and the local area.   View all books for this area

Memories of Temple Normanton

No memories of Temple Normanton have been shared yet - be the first!
Add your memory of Temple Normanton or of a photo of Temple Normanton.

Derbyshire memories

Cherished Memories

I can remember taking part in the Easter Parades, hundreds of children would walk or ride on the beautifully decorated floats, we would walks round Tupton on Ankerbold Road, Station Road on towards the Royal Oak up Ashover Road and end up at someone's house were we would all have a drink of pop and a bun. I was born and bred in Old Tupton and lived up Martins Lane I can remember helping Mr Wright from Wrights Farm on Martins Lane deliver milk to the houses.

Doe Lea in WW2

I arrived in Doe Lea in June 1940 with other evacuees from Lowestoft, Suffolk. I lived in Doe Lea untill 1944. At first we were not accepted by the local children, eventually we mingled and became friends, since the war have been back many times and visited various friends.
Sadly the village was razed to the ground and most of the villagers moved elsewhere.  I strolled around this summer what is now called The Brambles but nothing is the same as it was and I think every thing is spoilt.
My war-time education was at Stainsby School which stood me in good stead all my working life.
I chuckle at times when I think what us kids got up to in the wartime black out.
I think that all us ex-evacuees left a bit of ourselves in Doe Lea when we left and came back to Lowestoft.

Incidents Remembered

Doe Lea was near to Hardwick which during the Second World War was an Airborne training camp, we could go into Hardwick and watch troops jump out of a balloon, they had to jump from a balloon a few times before jumping from a plane, I remember a lad had picked up some shrapnel which he had put into his pocket which burned a hole in his jacket. The incident I remember very clearly was when one evening a group of us children were playing on the top row of Doe Lea, it was during the evening, two lads came running towards us saying they had found a hand grenade, one of the lads had it in his hand. As he showed us, one of the lads grabbed the grenade and pulled the pin, it started smoking so it was dropped and we all scarpered, it exploded but no one was hurt, a piece of shrapnel went through a window of a house and smashed a picture on the wall. Another incident... Read more

Doe Lea

I remember playing in the streets when there was back to back houses before they knocked them down. I moved just before then, as far as I know I've still got relatives in Glapwell. I am related to the Blueits Blewits who lived there .

Good Old And COLD Glappy

I was born in 1946 and moved to Glappy when I was 3. Does anyone else remember the snow, the ice on the inside of the bathroom window, and who can name the three most popular sledging tracks down the rough meadows?

Brim Boys School

Secondary Boys School c1965
Enlarge photo |  More about this photo

This school was the eptitome of a 1960s and 1970s style working class English school. If you've ever seen the school scenes in the film 'Kes' in which a young boy rears a baby kestrel then you will have seen life at "Brim boys".

Some teachers didn't want to be there and made sure we knew it, most kids didn't want to be there and made sure the teachers knew it.

There were some good teachers, and some very bad ones ...

The teachers I can remember are: Headmaster Kelly.  Teachers Wood (woodwork), Sharpe (Geography), Clarke (dep head - Maths),  Bailey (Tech drawing), Croft (Rural studies), Lane (History) and a miriad of student teachers and temp staff over the years.

I eventually bought myself an education to make up for the wasted years I spent there.

BRIMINGTON BOYS

Secondary Boys School c1965
Enlarge photo |  More about this photo

I remember some of the teachers from your time. Mr Clarke was still deputy head with Mr Bates in English, Mr Petit was science and mr Peppit in metalwork.John Moody taught sports and it was a great school to go to if you were into sport. It must have been rotten if not. We became mixed in 1975 wth Hollingwood Girls and the rather rough edged school was calmed to some extent.
The building itself is not missed, it was freezing in winter and boiling hot in summer. Rather like a greenhouse, which is exactly what it was, a giant greenhouse.

Home > Explore your past > Derbyshire > Temple Normanton

© Copyright 1998-2012 Frith Content Inc. All rights reserved.