hello iclok.i live local to butterley works in swanwick. 🙂 🙂 🙂 ive been taking some photos of the site because to locals its a landmark,the place,the sheds,the amazing history,the old furnaces,and i want to keep a record of what will soon be gone.i didnt know what had happened to butterley after the final redundancies and have wondered.i have read the forum and obviously found out wellman booth bought all the debt/name etc.i cant believe the sheds and the site is being torn down,its really sad.i collered a couple of the cawarden demolition blokes the other day and they reckon the stone buildings on butterley corner are being saved,along with the orginal blasts.my grandad is 91 and knows loads about butterley.he built the red brick building on the main road,under the 'butterley 1790'sign just after the war when he worked for a local building firm.he's always told me about the camo being painted on the buildings during the war,infact you can still see it on the ones on butterley corner.it was a munitions factory during the war aswell.i remember as a kid going into my mum and dads bed early in the morning,and at 7am the 'butterley blower' as we called it,went off alerting the workforce of the morning shift starting.its such a shame that so much history is coming to an end.about 20 years ago i went with my dad to an open day at butterley taking in a tour of the entire site.ive got vivid memories of that day,i couldnt belive the size of the place,i was fascinated by the size of the sheds and cranes,and the stockyard where the new houses are now was massive.i hope they've piled the stockyard deep where the houses are,alot was backfilled and had to have big groundworks done for the houses,i wouldnt fancy living in one of them,i bet they will get subsidence in years to come! Hopefully i will see my grandad tomorrow and will ask him if he knows anything about the possibilty of those planes being taken there during the war,although he was away fighting,and if there is any more tantilising historical stories about the site.keep up the good work iclok.