Botany Bay, Derbyshire

Botany Bay is a small hamlet in south Derbyshire near Linton and Coton in the Elms in the National Forest (grid reference SK259154). The appropriate civil parish is Rosliston.

Botany Bay
"The small hamlet"
Coordinates: 52.73562°N 1.61786°W / 52.73562; -1.61786
Grid referenceSK259154
CountryEngland
CountyDerbyshire
Civil parishRosliston

Toponymy

Unlike the nearby town of Melbourne, Botany Bay does not appear to have a common source with its better known Australian namesake. While Botany Bay in New South Wales was named for the quantity of botanical specimens found there, the history of the naming of the Derbyshire hamlet is unclear. The name is also attached to a farm and a small lake in the area.[1]

Landlocked

Despite the maritime reference in the hamlet’s name, the Ordnance Survey have calculated that a point near Botany Bay, at Coton in the Elms, is the furthest point from the English coastline.[2] The low water line at Fosdyke, on the edge of The Wash in Lincolnshire, is around 70 miles (113 kilometres) away.

Woodland

Penguin Books together with the Woodland Trust purchased a 96-acre (390,000 m2) woodland near the hamlet in January 2007. The initiative was designed to expand the nearby National Forest and regenerate the historical wildflower and woodland environment in the area.[3]

gollark: The thing with raising taxes on rich people is that really rich ones can just switch countries or evade taxes.
gollark: * a private healthcare system
gollark: I personally support private system, but not through the US's horrible, horrible system, and UBI so people can reasonably pay for it.
gollark: What do you mean "sell it"?
gollark: The UK has the NHS, which at least mostly provides healthcare to people, but it has problems and burns vast amounts of money.

References

Media related to Botany Bay, Derbyshire at Wikimedia Commons

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