PETER DITCHFIELD
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Barkham is a village and civil parish in the borough of Wokingham in Berkshire, England, located around 2 miles (3.2 km) southwest of the town of Wokingham.
In connection with: Barkham
Description combos: borough of southwest Barkham of England located around the km the Barkham the town Barkham the of southwest of in Wokingham borough England borough in the and Barkham the Berkshire is southwest village miles in is of located England is civil village parish Berkshire and the is southwest Wokingham Barkham of of in of Wokingham Barkham borough is village civil Wokingham and miles the village England town of civil Wokingham and of parish Wokingham England of in village Barkham the located

Covehithe is a village and civil parish in the East Suffolk district of the English county of Suffolk. It lies on the North Sea coast around four miles (six kilometres) north of Southwold and seven miles (eleven kilometres) south of Lowestoft. Neighbouring settlements include Benacre, South Cove and Frostenden. The coastline in the Covehithe area suffers from the highest rate of erosion in the UK, and the settlement has suffered significant loss of land and buildings in the past. Attempts to slow erosion are thought to be unsustainable, and estimates suggest that Covehithe will disappear entirely within 100 years. The village is located within the Suffolk Coast & Heaths AONB.
In connection with: Covehithe
Description combos: around UK erosion past coastline around eleven of kilometres erosion of and Covehithe six South significant thought suffers the located 100 Heaths suffers English village South of and Suffolk Covehithe is Benacre the north and kilometres Neighbouring the to Coast to entirely of Suffolk South erosion of Covehithe Covehithe and loss estimates Cove North village civil coast south area include north rate AONB thought Lowestoft North significant be county Cove the of the Covehithe civil eleven four It in Southwold and
Westhoughton Mill or Rowe and Dunscough's Mill, in Mill Street in Westhoughton, near Bolton in the historic English county of Lancashire, was the site of a Luddite arson attack in 1812. The mill was built in 1804 by Richard Johnson Lockett, a Macclesfield man who lived at Westhoughton Hall. He leased the mill to Thomas Rowe of Manchester in 1808. During 1811 and 1812 Luddites had been attacking powered mills throughout the English North and Midlands to such an effect that the government in February 1812 passed the Frame Breaking Act making the damaging of powered looms punishable by death. Skilled weavers lost their livelihoods when production moved from a domestic system to new manufactories causing severe hardship and unrest among the workers. Unemployed weavers joined the Luddites believing their only hope was to destroy the machines. The government repressed rebellion by punishing offenders severely. In 1812 Luddite disorder around Manchester reached its peak. On Friday 28 April, a large crowd of weavers and mechanics gathered in Westhoughton with the intention of destroying the power looms in Rowe and Dunscough's Mill. The Scots Greys, deployed in Bolton by the government to quell unrest, were sent for but all was quiet when the contingent arrived and they returned to their quarters. Soon after they left, the factory and its contents were set alight and when the military returned the premises were destroyed and the culprits had disappeared. Some rioters gathered in the village in the evening demanding food and drink or money and the military was recalled and the Riot Act was read. Information about the ringleaders was collected and 24 men were arrested and sent for trial at Lancaster Assizes. Some were discharged but, "for having wilfully and maliciously set on fire and burnt a Weaving Mill, Warehouse and Loom Shop in the possession of Thomas Rowe and Thomas Dunscough at Westhoughton", Job Fletcher, James Smith, Thomas Kerfoot and Abraham Charlson, were sentenced to death and hanged and nine men were transported. After the Luddite act, manufacturers avoided the township until Chadwick's Silk Mill was built in the early 1850s. Westhoughton Hall was attacked at the same time. According to James Thomas Staton's account of the incident in The Brunnin' o' Westhowtun Factory (1857), government spies were embedded among the workers and the mill's management had set a trap to ensnare discontent workers by inciting violence among them; some researchers believe this scenario to have been likely. The mill was rebuilt after the attack and converted to a corn mill, until it was bought in 1840 by Peter Ditchfield, a cotton manufacturer who restored it to a cotton mill. On his death in 1854 the mill, by then employing some 40 people, passed to his son, Peter Ditchfield, jnr. After many years of spinning cotton and making flock, production ceased and the mill stood empty. It was eventually demolished in 1912 and the site is still (2017) a vacant lot.
In connection with: Westhoughton Mill
Title combos: Mill Westhoughton
Description combos: After in Mill Rowe government it in of joined making on contents mill government mills by still it cotton was discontent Mill Peter the Rowe domestic their it still returned years reached was Some believing was transported death the transported violence evening arrived Westhoughton empty During the Westhoughton the near the powered Luddite The empty the reached in and or The Warehouse workers by who unrest mills Midlands Unemployed in and had unrest Street but Dunscough mills military domestic stood North
Shoes may be thrown for various cultural reasons. Footwear is used as a projectile in folk sports and cultural practices. Several sports and games are played around the world where participants throw shoes or boots at targets, or as far as possible. A pair of laced shoes may be thrown across raised cables, such as telephone wires and power lines, or onto tree branches to create "shoe trees". In such contexts it may be known as shoefiti. In some cultures there are traditions of throwing old shoes at married couples at their wedding to bring good luck, or throwing shoes over the shoulder to predict a future marriage. In many Arab cultures, shoes are seen as unclean, and it is particularly insulting to throw one at a person.
In connection with: Shoe throwing
Title combos: throwing Shoe
Description combos: onto to cultures In to sports laced shoes are at reasons possible to cultures cultural is cultural old sports as wedding is are and throwing good in insulting raised traditions laced in far where projectile their various some world cultural the across as as throw good it insulting the shoefiti over shoes shoulder trees marriage it over sports be throwing shoes practices to is at around contexts be power old couples may to to person folk in thrown wedding sports cultural
Rev. Peter Hampson Ditchfield, FSA (20 April 1854 – 16 September 1930) was a Church of England priest, historian and prolific author. He is notable for having co-edited three Berkshire volumes of the Victoria County History which were published between 1907 and 1924.
In connection with: Peter Ditchfield
Title combos: Peter Ditchfield
Description combos: edited of prolific three Rev England He Rev of September of prolific of England Victoria of Hampson FSA which September 20 was and 1854 Rev was of 20 1930 volumes author 16 Peter three 1924 of and author was published having Ditchfield for Rev which and of Hampson 20 Ditchfield edited County is was Ditchfield April volumes were History County historian volumes FSA of between 1924 Ditchfield England 1924 20 Church prolific and and which History 1930 Ditchfield and 1924 16
Ditchfield is an English surname shared by: Andy Ditchfield, founder of English rock band DeeExpus Jimmy Ditchfield, 19th century football player for Burslem Port Vale F.C. Right Rev. Dr. John Edwin Watts Ditchfield (1861–1923), first Church of England Bishop of Chelmsford Rev. Dr. Peter Ditchfield (1854–1930), Church of England priest, local historian and editor of the Berkshire volumes of the Victoria County History
In connection with: Ditchfield
Description combos: first an of 1930 band DeeExpus for Chelmsford England History Church of of 1861 Ditchfield Ditchfield is an DeeExpus DeeExpus Church Chelmsford Berkshire Andy Victoria the by 1854 the of County 1861 Peter English DeeExpus Burslem is of Jimmy surname founder 19th century first priest 1923 the English English first Andy volumes 1854 1861 Rev Chelmsford rock football an and of by Ditchfield 19th Jimmy English Ditchfield is of first Church the Ditchfield and shared Ditchfield for the Rev Jimmy Vale
Peder, Peter or Péter is a common name. As a given name, it is generally derived from Peter the Apostle, born Simon, whom Jesus renamed "Peter" after he declared that Jesus indeed was the Messiah. The name "Peter" roughly means "rock" in Greek.
In connection with: List of people named Peter
Title combos: List of Peter named people Peter of List named
Description combos: after means it he the it in As roughly he or was The the Peder Simon born Peter renamed Peter Peder renamed Peter Péter or was generally Messiah Peder Jesus Peter or As indeed Péter is Peter Peder Peter after name is from Jesus it in the that The was name name Peter declared The Peter was is Peter born name Peter means was Messiah As Apostle Péter it is whom Jesus Peter name Peter indeed was Jesus Péter from born
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