Shipley

Shipley

An area known for its coal, theme park and now a country park, Shipley has a very varied history.

Shipley Hall, around the turn of the 20th Century

Mentioned in the Domesday Book, the manor at Shipley had several owners over the centuries. Early in the seventeenth century ownership became a little more settled, purchased by the Leche family, who then married into the Miller Mundy family – a name synonymous with Shipley. The legacy of the Miller Mundy family can be seen as you walk around Shipley and Mapperley village with many buildings bearing initials of its builder and the date of its construction. The Shipley estate remained with the Miller Mundy family until the death of Alfred Edward Miller Mundy in 1920 when it was sold to the Shipley Colliery Company.

The original Shipley Hall before its makeover and the moving of the road, about 1700 (Malcolm Burrows / Grant Shaw)

The early Shipley site was covered by forest and was used for hunting. A hall was built some time prior to 1700 and had many alterations and extensions over the centuries. The site was also known to be rich in minerals, charcoal furnaces were in operation at one time and by the mid eighteenth century coal mining was an important activity on the estate.

‘Squire’ Alfred Edward Miller-Mundy (sitting on shooting stick, centre left) and party, late 1910’s (Malcolm Burrows)

In order to expand their coal business and to get coal to market quicker, the Miller Mundy family built a canal. The Nutbrook Canal, which ran from Shipley to the Erewash canal near Trowell, was opened in 1796.  The canal and the railways which came later all helped with the expansion of the pits, providing much employment although not without its risks.  According to Trueman in 1880 “More than a thousand persons are now employed at the collieries and the average output is about 300,000 tons annually.”

Gardening staff at Shipley Hall, about 1900 (Malcolm Burrows)

After the nationalisation of the collieries in 1948, the National Coal Board decided that the Hall was too damaged by subsidence and demolished it. The footprint of the Hall is marked out for visitors to see.

Shipley Collieries workers leaving work, early 20th Century.

The Woodside and Coppice pits were closed in the 1960s for being uneconomical, and so several hundred years of deep mining ended. In the 1970s coal was mined for a short period by opencast methods. After this the land was restored and Shipley Country Park opened to the public on 26 May 1976.   

Members of the IDLHS inspecting the outcrop mining on the Woodside Colliery site, 1971 (Malcolm Burrows)

In the 1980s the County Council agreed to part of the park – including the site of Woodside Colliery – to be used as a theme park, originally as Britannia Park and latterly as The American Adventure. This closed in 2007 and has been demolished. At the time of writing, a new housing development is being constructed on its site.

Britannia Park under construction, seen from Shipley Hill (Grant Shaw)

Related Stories

St Mary’s Parish Church

St Mary’s Parish Church

The parish church of St Mary the Virgin has stood on its present site since the mid 12th century and until 1848 served the whole town of Ilkeston. Since 1848 three new parishes were formed to serve the spiritual needs of the rapidly expanding town. The building...

Ilkeston Charter Fair

Ilkeston Charter Fair

Introduction King Henry III granted a Charter Hugh de Muskham on April 10th in the year 1252. The charter gave the Lord of the Manor and the townsfolk of Ilkeston the right to hold a market on the Thursday of every week and an annual two day fair on the Assumption of...

Lords of the Manor

Lords of the Manor

The people of Ilkeston have seen a succession of Lords of the Manor stretching back to the Conquest. In the four centuries from Domesday of 1086 through to the Battle of Bosworth in 1485, the manor was held by related members of just a few families, passing from one...