Nether Langwith

[4] Whaley Thorns lies just north of Nether Langwith and 5 miles (8.0 km) of Bolsover.

The village has a coffee shop, named The Lemon Tree, located on Main Road – which has a very high customer rating.

Nether Langwith was home to Major Samuel William Welfitt, who was a colonel and a landowner.

The four-storey Cotton Mill was built in 1760, and its source of power came from the nearby River Poulter through a contoured canal from Langwith Lodge Lake.

The mill was made from limestone and had a slate roof; it was in a poor state of repair and is listed on the Buildings at Risk Register.

Whereas for women, they were more often engaged in less physical jobs, with 14.5% of the total female population worked in domestic services.

According to the 2011 Census data,[16] the field of work for both males and females has changed considerably throughout Nether Langwith.

The 2011 Census showed a much greater and more detailed range of occupations that the dwellers of Nether Langwith are involved in.

Results from the 2011 Census show in total, 146 residents of Nether Langwith are classed as having no qualifications.

The majority of Nether Langwith people did not suffer from a health disability which strongly limited their daily activities – this applied to 361 citizens.

Major Samuel William Welfitt, 1861, by Camille Silvy
Total Population of Nether Langwith Parish, Nottinghamshire, as reported by the Census of Population from 1881–2011
Occupations for Male and Females in Nether Langwith, based on the 2011 Census.
The occupational field of local population in 1881.