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Milltown Methodist Church

Churches completed in 1824Grade II listed churches in Derbyshire
Milltown Chapel geograph.org.uk 2335070
Milltown Chapel geograph.org.uk 2335070

Milltown Methodist Church (known alternatively as Milltown Chapel, Milltown Primative Methodist Chapel and Ashover Hay Primative Methodist Chapel) is a now-closed, listed Methodist chapel in the village of Milltown, Derbyshire. The chapel was founded by Hugh Bourne who formed a society in the district. The building, which also has a graveyard (though this no longer present), was opened in 1824, and was expanded in 1870. The building is built from coursed gritstone with a roof of Welsh slate. The chapel became Grade II listed in 1995. Worship ceased at an unrecorded date after c. 2007.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Milltown Methodist Church (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Milltown Methodist Church
North East Derbyshire

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.14595 ° E -1.46703 °
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S45 0HF North East Derbyshire
England, United Kingdom
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Milltown Chapel geograph.org.uk 2335070
Milltown Chapel geograph.org.uk 2335070
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Nearby Places

Ashover
Ashover

Ashover is a village and civil parish in the English county of Derbyshire. It is in the North East Derbyshire district of the county. The population of the civil parish taken at the 2011 Census was 1,905. It sits in a valley, not far from the town of Matlock and the Peak District national park. The centre of the village is a conservation area. The River Amber flows through the village. Although Ashover is a small settlement, the actual ward boundaries of the village extend for many miles, including the nearby settlements of Alicehead, Alton, Ashover Hay, Farhill, Kelstedge, Littlemoor, Milltown, Spitewinter, Stone Edge and Uppertown. The two major roads, running through the parish, are the A632 from Matlock to Chesterfield, and the A615 from Matlock to Alfreton. The area along that part of the A615 is named Doehole. Slack is a small hamlet, within the parish, which is south west of Kelstedge on the A632; nearby to there, on Robridding Road (off Wirestone Lane), is the Eddlestow Lot Picnic Site, which has been developed in the former Wirestone Quarry: it is surrounded by heathland vegetation. The picnic site provides a good base to explore the local Public Rights of Way. Circular walks are waymarked from the car park, a leaflet is available by contacting the County Council. There is public access into many of the adjacent Forestry Commission owned woodlands. The site has plants including heather and bilberry. The other numbered roads in the parish are the B5057 from near North Brittain to Stone Edge, the B6036 between Kelstedge and Dalebank running past Ashover itself, and the B6014 from near Butterley to just past Ashover Hay. Fallgate is a hamlet beside the River Amber, in the south-east corner of the parish, off the B6036 to Woolley Moor and Handley.