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Ripley Bouncy Castle Hire

We Have Been Serving The Customers at Ripley near Belper and Alfreton For Nearly 10 Years. So If You Need Confidence In Booking A Reliable Friendly Bouncy Castle Company, You've Come To The Right Place!

Inflatamania Bouncy Castle Hire Offer Safe, Great Designed Bouncy Castles & Inflatables To Hire, So If It's Either A Childrens Party, Family Bbq, School Event, Wedding, Or Even A Stag Do Or Hen Do, Inflatamania Have All Boundaries Covered!

For All You Adults We Have Inflatables Like The Bungee Run, Inflatable Games, Adult Obstacle Courses, Adult Bouncy Castles Or Even Sumo Suits To Hire

All Of Our Inflatables And Bouncy Castles Come With A Valid Rpii Test (Pipa) And We Have £10,000.000 Liability Insurance And All Of Our Equipment Have The Relevant Tests To Comply With HSE Legislation. All Risk Assessments And Method Statements Are Available Upon Request.

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ripley bouncy castles, bouncy castle hire ripely

In 1251 Henry III granted a charter for "One market, one day a week, on Wednesday, at [the] manor of Ryppeleg: and one fair each year, lasting three days on the Vigil Day and Morrow of St Helen". Ripley Fair pre-dates the Goose Fair at Nottingham and the market day was later altered to Saturdays with an extra market added on Fridays.[2]

In the Middle Ages, Ripley was just a few stone cottages and farms around the village green with a few dwellings further afield. Corn was ground at the mill owned by the Abbot of Darley and in 1291 there were "two water-mills with fish ponds" in Ripley.

The Ripley area has been industrialised since the late 18th century.

One of the earliest companies to take advantage of mineral resources around Ripley was the Butterley Company. The company was formed in 1790 by Benjamin Outramand Francis Beresford. Jessop and Wright joined as partners in 1791. Benjamin Outram and Jessop were pioneering engineers best known for their input into the rail industry and also their engineering of the Cromford Canal. Outram developed the L shaped flange rail and Jessop engineered the cast iron fish belly rail. The Little Eaton Gangwayproject was one of the engineering feats they completed. The engineering part of the company closed and the site of the Butterley Company was demolished in 2010. The company was latterly in three parts, Butterley Engineering, Butterley Brick and Butterley Aggregates (all separate companies). Over the last 200 years the companies have been a steelworks, coal mining, quarrying, railway, foundry, brickworks. One of the early, and most well-known, examples of the work of the company includes the arched roof of St. Pancras Station in London, recently restored as an international rail terminal. Recent major Butterley achievements were the design and construction of the Falkirk Wheel, a canal boat lift funded by the Millennium Commission and the Spinnaker Tower seen in Portsmouth Harbour as the focus of the Regeneration of Portsmouth Harbour.

Ripley was also a mining community with collieries owned until the Coal Nationalization Act of 1947 by Butterley Company. These included Ripley colliery worked from 1863–1948, Britain colliery worked 1918-1946, Ormonde 1908-1970[3] and more pits at Upper and Lower Hartshay, Whiteley, Waingrove, Bailey Brook, Exhibition, Loscoe, New Langley and Denby Hall.

Governance[edit]

Town Hall

What is now Ripley Town Hall (on the north side of the Market Place) was erected in 1880 as a market hall by the Local Board. The architect was George Eyre of Codnor. It was built on the site of a much older dwelling known as The White House. The Market Hall was originally open on the ground floor. In 1907, the building was converted to a Town Hall by the Urban District Council. In the 1990s, the building was greatly extended to the west and remodelled by the Amber Valley Borough Council to form that council's headquarters. In 2012, Amber Valley Borough Council proposed to sell off some of the buildings on this headquarters site, as part of a plan to rationalise its office accommodation.[4]

Demography[edit]

According to research and the analysis of names in Britain in 2006, Ripley has the highest proportion of people of ethnic-English origin.[5] Of Ripley's inhabitants, 88.5 percent have an English-ethnic background.

Education[edit]

Primary schools[edit]

  • Ripley Infant School, Kirk Close, DE5 3RY
  • Ripley Junior School, Poplar Avenue, DE5 3PN
  • St Johns C of E Primary School, Dannah Street, Ripley
  • Lons Infant School, Tavistock Avenue, Ripley
  • Waingroves Primary School, Waingroves Road, Ripley
  • Codnor Community Primary School, Whitegates

Local secondary school and sixth form[edit]

  • The Ripley Academy, Peasehill Road, Ripley. Opened 1st Sept 2014, in trust with West Bridgford School. Was formed from the previous institution called Mill Hill School, which was in turn formed from the merger of Benjamin Outrams Comprehensive School and Ripley Technical School and sixth form college situated on Peasehill Road. In 2009, the school was designated a centre of excellence for English studies, thus gaining specialist status. Prior to this, Mill Hill School specialised in the media and liberal arts curriculum.

Nearby secondary schools[edit]

Pre-schools[edit]

  • Ripley Nursery School, Sandham Lane
  • Clowns Day Nursery, Cromford Road
  • Clowns Day Nursery, Butterley Park, A610
  • Alphabet Childminders, Ripley.

Religion[edit]

The Methodist Church in Wood Street is reputed to be the oldest church in town and is still active today. At the peak of the movement there were five Methodist churches in the town, but over the years they have combined.[6] The church was rebuilt on the same site and re-opened in November 2009. An outcome of the nearby Pentridge (or Pentrich) Rising of 1817 was for the vicar of Pentrich Church to call for an Anglican church to be built in Ripley as soon as possible.

Other places of worship include the Salvation Army hall, situated on Heath Road,which was opened in 1911,the Springs of the Living Water housed in the former St. John's Church on Derby Road, the Spiritual Church on Argyll Road and Marehay Methodist Chapel on Warmwells Lane, Marehay.

Transport[edit]

Constructed under the premises of the Butterley Company is the 2,966 yard long Butterley Tunnel for the Cromford Canal.[7] The central section of the canal is disused, but a charitable fund has been formed to reopen the canal.

Ripley is the site of the Midland Railway - Butterley (formerly the Midland Railway Centre) a railway preservation trust, dedicated to preserving locomotives, rolling stock and other items related to the Midland Railway.

Ripley was once served by Ripley railway station on the Midland Railway Ripley Branch. It was the northern terminus of the Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Tramways Company and, later, the Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire trolleybus system.

Media[edit]

A local radio station, Amber Sound FM is based in Ripley, in the Unicorn Business Park just off Wellington Street. It is a community radio station awarded a five-year broadcast licence in June 2008.

Parks and natural features[edit]

Butterley Reservoir situated at the north of the town at the bottom of Butterley Hill, has pairs of Great Crested Grebes, Coots, Moorhens and other birds to watch and platforms for anglers to use. There is a footpath to walk on and take in the scenery with the Midland Railway Trust in the background. This reservoir has the capacity to hold 16 million cubic feet of water!

There is Carr Wood which is signposted from halfway down Butterley Hill where wildlife and the small woodland area can be enjoyed.

All around Ripley there are footpaths which can be used to take you to places such as Devils Wood (also locally known as Bluebell Wood), around Waingroves and down Lowes Hill to Hammersmith. At Hammersmith you can see the row of terraced houses, known as 'Poker Row'. Legend has it that when a tenant saw the Rent Man from Butterley Co; advancing towards their houses, they would knock on the adjoining house wall, using the metal poker from their coal fire, and alert their neighbour of his presence and this would continue along the terraced row and they would all lock their doors and wait until he'd gone away!

At the bottom of Moseley Street adjacent to the Red Lion pub in Ripley Town Centre there is a recreation field named after Sir Barnes Wallis which offers views over to Crich Stand, the Sherwood Foresters Memorial. Crich Stand was built by Francis Hurt in 1778 and in 1922 was dedicated to the fallen of the Sherwood Foresters Regiment (colloquially known as the Woofers) in World War I, but now is the memorial to those in the Regiment who have died in all conflicts.[8]

The Pit Top is an open area with some seating and a white Arch sculpture. The area is grassed over and is the site of the original Ripley Colliery owned by Butterley Company and worked from 1863 until 1948.[9] Crossley Park is a few acres of grassed land opened in 1935. It is surrounded by shrubs and trees on a tract of land given to the town by James Crossley in 1901. The Park contains a children's play area with summer paddling pool, tarmacced walk around the perimeter and bandstand, which has Brass Bands playing occasionally in the summertime on Sunday late afternoons.

Greenwich to the east of Ripley has football pitches, a cricket pitch and pavilion. There is also a skateboard ramp area which local boarders use and a good open area within which you can walk your dogs.

There are further recreation grounds in Marehay and Upper Marehay.

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