Calverton, Nottinghamshire

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search

Coordinates: 53°02′15″N 1°05′00″W / 53.0374°N 1.0834°W / 53.0374; -1.0834

Calverton
Calverton is located in Nottinghamshire
Calverton

 Calverton shown within Nottinghamshire
Population 6,870 (2001 census[1]
District Gedling
Shire county Nottinghamshire
Region East Midlands
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town NOTTINGHAM
Postcode district NG14
Dialling code 0115
Police Nottinghamshire
Fire Nottinghamshire
Ambulance East Midlands
EU Parliament East Midlands
UK Parliament Sherwood
List of places: UK • England • Nottinghamshire

Calverton is a village in Nottinghamshire, England, situated approximately 8 miles from Nottingham.

The inventor of the stocking frame, William Lee, was born here in the 16th century. Other famous people with connections to this village are Christopher Dean (Ice Skater) and Mick Waitt (coach of the New Zealand soccer team 2003).

Originally a small rural village, Calverton greatly expanded after the opening of Calverton Colliery in 1953. The Colliery was closed by British Coal in 1994 but reopened soon after under the ownership of RJB Mining. The colliery finally closed in late 1999 by which time it was no longer the principal employer in the village. The buildings were demolished in February 2000.

Shane Meadows' 1999 film A Room for Romeo Brass was filmed in Calverton.

[edit] Bus Services

Trent Barton

  • Calverton Connecton: Nottingham - Sherwood - Arnold - Calverton.

Premiere Travel

  • 6: City Hospital - Arnold - Lambley - Woodborough - Calverton - Lowdham - Bingham.
  • 7: Nottingham - Mapperley - Lambley - Woodborough - Calverton.
  • 7.1: Nottingham - Mapperley - Arnold - Calverton.
  • S8: Calverton - Woodborough - Lambley - Gedling - Netherfield.

Veolia Transport

  • D3: Nottingham - Arnold - Lambley - Woodborough - Calverton - Oxton - Southwell - Newark.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Interaction
Toolbox
Print/export
Languages