Froggatt, Derbyshire

Froggatt, Derbyshire

Froggatt Bridge
Froggatt, Derbyshire
 Froggatt, Derbyshire shown within Derbyshire
DistrictDerbyshire Dales
Shire countyDerbyshire
RegionEast Midlands
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post town HOPE VALLEY
Postcode district S32
Dialling code 01433
Police Derbyshire
Fire Derbyshire
Ambulance East Midlands
EU Parliament East Midlands
UK ParliamentDerbyshire Dales
List of places
UK
England
Derbyshire

Coordinates: 53°17′00″N 1°38′00″W / 53.2833°N 1.6333°W

Froggatt is a village and a civil parish on the A625 road and the River Derwent in the English county of Derbyshire. It is near the village of Calver. The name Froggatt could take its name from several derivations including Frog Cottage (Old English Frogga Cot[1]), and in 1203 a document recorded the settlement here as being Froggegate. There is a gritstone escarpment called Froggatt Edge nearby. Froggatt has a place of worship, a Wesleyan chapel and a pub, The Chequers Inn. The village has a quaint 17th-century bridge, unusual in that it has two different shaped and sized arches.


Froggatt History. The Derbyshire Record Office holds Froggatt family documents in their D3331 and D1490 Collections.These documents contain information about the Froggatt family and Froggatt the place.There are more documents in the National Archives at Kew, the Sheffield Archives and the Nottingham Archives.

More information is available in the Baslow Manor Court Rolls which can be read and or downloaded from the Internet.

In the 13th century The Manor of Baslow was divided into two moieties, one going to the Vernon's and the other to the Bassetts. Froggatt or Froggecotes as it was at that time was held by the Bassets. About 1290 John Froggecotes of Froggecotes bought land and property including a grove of trees from Simon Bassett.This land, plus more that was purchased from time to time, remained in the family until 1752 when the senior branch of the family died out.

John Froggecotes has many living descendants from a junior branch of the family headed by Thomas Froggott of Folds Farm, Calver.

References

  1. "Froggat". Key to English Place-names. English Place Name Society at the University of Nottingham. Retrieved 19 August 2013. perhaps referring to its damp situation on the left bank of the River Derwent.

Derbyshire Record Office D3331 and D1490