Financial
advice for residents of Belper, Derbyshire
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Belper is a town in Amber Valley, Derbyshire,
England. It is 8 miles north of Derby, on the River
Derwent, and has a population of 20,000. Being a relatively
small town, it contains a small shopping area around
King Street, several primary schools and a secondary
school. Belper railway station is situated on the
Midland Main Line, and is mainly served by local trains
on the Derby-Matlock service. Belper was known for
its cotton mills during the Industrial Revolution.
The town was developed by industrialist Jedediah Strutt
around his Belper North Mill (built in 1786), which
forms part of the Derwent Valley Mills. Belper was
also famous for the Belper nails which were supplied
to American cowboys. Belper was the first place in
the UK to get gas lighting, in 1820. As of 2003, Belper's
MP is Patrick McLoughlin (Conservative), the MP for
West Derbyshire. It was for many years (1945-1970)
the seat of George Brown, the then controversial deputy
leader of the Labour Party. Belper School is notable
in that it has no uniform and they call their teachers
by their first name. It contains approximately 1300
pupils, and also contains a sixth form. It used to
be named "Belper High School" when it was
originally built in 1973. The town's name is probably
a corruption of the name Beaurepair (beautiful location),
the name given by Edmund Crouchback, son of Henry
III of England, to his country seat in the 13th century.
The town made international news in 2001 after rejecting
a gift of a large fibreglass Mr. Potato Head model
from its twinned town - Pawtucket, Rhode Island, as
residents complained it was "ugly".
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Great British Finance
Limited are authorised and regulated by the Financial
Services Authority (FSA). The FSA does not regulate
some forms of Mortgage, Inheritance Tax Planning,
Credit Cards, Personal Loans, Deposit Accounts
& Insurance. If you are submitting an online
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