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Duffield and later
He studied at St Catharine's College, Cambridge, and later became the vicar of Duffield in Derbyshire in 1658.
This later became the main road to the north and, in the eighteenth century the road along Duffield Bank was improved, as the ' New Chesterfield Turnpike '.
Maxwell Caulfield was born an only child in Duffield, Derbyshire — although he later claimed birth in Glasgow, reportedly to be " more interesting ".
The young Taylor attended Duffield Academy in Elizabethton, Tennessee ; Buffalo Institute ( later Milligan College ), also in Tennessee ; and the schools of Edge Hill and Pennington Seminary ( in Pennington, New Jersey ).
Whirlywirld made their live debut at The Crystal Ballroom later that year, by which time Duffield left to join The Models and had been replaced by Philip Jackson.
His later radio work included playing Reginald Duffield and Uncle Joe Finneman on the Focus on the Family series Adventures in Odyssey in the 1980s and 1990s.
( William the older brother had been murdered in London some time before ) He was head of a family which controlled a large part of Derbyshire including an area later known as Duffield Frith.
He founded the Priory of Derby, which later moved to Darley Abbey, and its Abbot was granted many privileges in Duffield Forest and Chase.

Duffield and part
The abstractionist John Passmore ( 1904 – 1984 ) was part of the inspiration for the artist Hurtle Duffield in Patrick White's novel The Vivisector ( 1970 ).
At the time of the Norman occupation, Belper was part of the land centred on Duffield held by the family of Henry de Ferrers.
It was possibly appropriated by William de Ferrers, 4th Earl of Derby at some time after it was disafforested in 1225 and became part of Duffield Frith.
William III de Ferrers, 5th Earl of Derby ( 1193 – 28 March 1254 ) was an English nobleman and head of a family which controlled a large part of Derbyshire including an area known as Duffield Frith.
As part of his tenure of Duffield Frith in 1129-30, he is on record as having interests in lead mines at Wirksworth.
Duffield Frith was, in medieval times, an area of Derbyshire in England, part of that bestowed upon Henry de Ferrers ( or Ferrars ) by King William, controlled from his seat at Duffield Castle.
Meanwhile Duffield Castle commanded an important crossing over the River Derwent and oversaw the parts of the wapentakes of Litchurch and Morleyston, to the west of the river, and that part of his lands that would become the Frith.
Records for Duffield Frith do not begin until this time, and being part of the Duchy, the area was not properly a royal forest until the reign of Henry IV.
However Edmund was allowed to hold Forest Courts for Duffield as part of the honour of Tutbury, and King Edward I hunted in between 1290 and 1293 and Edward II visited in 1323.
The records of the Duchy of Lancaster have many references to Duffield Frith, including, in 1314, a great larder at Belper, where the venison of the deer was salted down for winter use, and a large cow-house stood in the lower part of Shottle ( Cowhouse Lane, listed by the Post Office as " Cowers Lane ").

Duffield and had
The family of Ferrers was descended from Henry de Ferrers, 1st Count of Ferrières, Lord of Longueville, Normandy, and a Domesday Commissioner ; he built Tutbury Castle and Duffield Castle and had large holdings in Derbyshire as well as 17 other counties.
Dr. Edward Duffield Neill, who had founded two schools in Saint Paul and nearby Minneapolis which were named after M. W.
He married firstly, on 7 February 1626 at St Dunstan's Church, Stepney, Judith Duffell ( or Duffield ) of Rochester, Kent, by whom, besides other children, he had a son John and a daughter Frances ( who married William Goffe, another regicide ).
The manor, which had been parcel of the Earldom and Duchy of Lancaster, was granted, with Duffield, to Ditchfield and others.
Colonel of the 2nd Staffordshire Militia and Colonel Commandant of the Lichfield Volunteer Yeomanry, who had been posted to India where he married Mary Rotton ( 1767 – 1830 ) of Duffield, Derbyshire in October 1784.
Whirlywirld was completed by two keyboardists, who got credited with ' electronics ', Andrew Duffield and Simon Smith ( Olsen, by this point, had abandoned guitar in favour of ' electronics ') together with guitarist Dean Richards.
The Hammersmith Odeon performance had been added at the last moment as a benefit for 21-year-old Bill Duffield, her lighting director, who had died at the Poole Arts Centre during the tour.
Dashwood leased Medmenham Abbey on the Thames from his friend, Francis Duffield in 1751 and had it rebuilt by the architect Nicholas Revett in the style of the 18th century Gothic revival, at this time, the motto Fait ce que voudras was placed above a doorway in stained glass, and it is thought that Hogarth may have executed murals for this building ; none, however, survive.
The family had a strong affinity with the south Derbyshire and Staffordshire area and bought a summer retreat at Dove Leys, near Denstone ( When the Claremont area of Manchester was built up, many of the streets were given names such as Duffield Road, Doveleys Road, Denstone Road, among others.
James Duffield Harding ( 1798-4 December 1863 ), English landscape painter, was the son of an artist, and took to the same vocation at an early age, although he had originally been destined for the law.
By this time the population of Duffield had increased with railway workers and management, as had traffic on the main line.
For many years, the town of Wirksworth had been campaigning for a branch line from Duffield.
The Swan River Colony was declared by Charles Fremantle in April 1829, however, Bicton was not settled until 1830, when four land grants were given to John Hole Duffield, who had arrived on the Warrior in March 1830, Alfred Waylen, Joseph Cooper and William Hapgood.
The area was named after the village of Bicton in East Devon, where Duffield had previously had an estate.
By then Shining Cliff and the manor of Alderwasley had been transferred to the Lowe family, leaving the three wards of Duffield, Belper and Hulland.

Duffield and been
For such a small village, Duffield seems to have been well served with public houses.
Duffield cricket club have recently been given planning permission to create another cricket field on Eyes Meadow.
From April 2011 onward, passengers are now able to board and alight heritage services at Duffield where in recent years a station platform ( 3 ) has been re-constructed.
Although its sidings, and the station goods yard, at Wirksworth are still listed by Network Rail, the connection to the main line at Duffield has been severed and fenced off, There is hope that one day the EVR could " once possible funding would be made " purchase and re-use both the goods yard and the sidings for further / extra space for some rolling stock and train storage.
The line has now been brought up to passenger-carrying standards to allow trains to run through from Wirksworth to Duffield.
It is believed that this signal has been permanently lit for nearly forty years and is still powered from the main Duffield signalling station.
Having been excavated at the end of the nineteenth century, the castle at Duffield has been sadly neglected, since there is little to see.

Duffield and by
This practice is described by Duffield and Van Cleave in Foundations of Pentecostal Theology:
Rolling stock was augmented by Sir Arthur Heywood's Duffield Bank line, following Sir Arthur's death in 1916.
Portrait of Maharaja Gulab Singh in 1847, a year after signing the Treaty of Amritsar, when he became Maharaja by purchasing the territories of Kashmir " to the eastward of the river Indus and westward of the river Ravi River | Ravi " for 75 lakhs rupees from the British ( Artist: James Duffield Harding ).
The show was created by Eric Morley, the founder of Miss World, and began in 1949 by broadcasting from regional ballroom studios, with professional dancers Syd Perkin and Edna Duffield on hand to offer teaching.
The initial version of the group did not stay together for long as Sutcliffe was soon replaced on bass guitar by Mark Ferrie ( ex-Myriad ), then in August 1979, Wednesday was replaced by Andrew Duffield ( born on 9 February 1958 ) from Whirlywirld on keyboards.
Models ' line-up of Duffield, Freud, Kelly and Price issued the highly regarded The Pleasure of Your Company in October 1983, produced by Nick Launay.
By late 1984, Models relocated to Sydney and Duffield – with his crucial influence on the band's sound – was forced out by Murphy under acrimonious circumstances to be replaced by Roger Mason ( ex-James Freud's Berlin ) on keyboards and James Valentine on saxophone.
It was a reggae influenced song co-written by Freud and Duffield ( prior to his departure ).
In Norman times, Duffield Castle was built to protect the hunting grounds of Duffield Frith, awarded to Henry de Ferrers ( or de Ferrars ) by William I.
Meanwhile, there was a growing community next to Duffield Castle built by Henri de Ferrers.
For many centuries, Duffield was by far the largest centre of population in the parish.
The village is served by Duffield railway station, the history of which is dealt with more fully there.
Less well-remembered, though revered by narrow, ' minimum gauge ', railway enthusiasts, was the Duffield Bank Railway, built by Sir Arthur Heywood at his house to the east of the village.
When the Commissioners appointed by Parliament to divide up the common and waste lands of Duffield Parish sat in 1787, they held their meetings at the King's Head.
* Bomba, the Jungle Boy ( 1926 – 1937 )-- many ghostwritten by John William Duffield
In addition to Garis and Duffield, some of these books were also written by Leslie McFarlane and W. Bert Foster.

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