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Francis Ley

Sir Francis Ley, 1st Baronet was an English industrialist. He founded Ley's Malleable Castings Vulcan Ironworks in Derby. He (re-)introduced baseball into the United Kingdom town of Derby with the Ley's Recreation Club and owned Ley's Recreation Centre from 1890 to 1924, which was home to Derby County Football Club.

Biography
Francis Ley was born on 3 January 1846 in Winshill which at the time was in south-west Derbyshire (it's now in Staffordshire). He was the only son of George Phillips Ley and Sarah (born Potts). He started work at Andrew Handyside & Co. as a draughtsman and learnt about engineering. At the age of 28 he established a malleable iron castings foundry on Osmaston Road, Derby in 1874. The business became the Ley's Malleable Castings Company Ltd. The Vulcan Iron Works at Osmaston Road occupied an 11-acre site by the Birmingham and Derby Junction Railway. In 1878 he was sued for patent infringement by an American drive chain belt company; the case was settled and Ley's company was awarded sole manufacturing rights. By the 1880s Ley was demolishing his old works and rebuilding on a grander scale. The new factory was to include expensive sporting facilities. Ley was never sporting himself but he was an enthusiast for sport and sat on the board of Derbyshire County Cricket Club. ==Sport==
Sport
; however, pressure from other teams in the league over the number of American professionals (three) on the team led to Derby withdrawing when they would have been the first British champions. Derby did win the amateur British title three times in the 1890s. Derby County Football Club become tenants of Ley's grounds in 1895. Ley's Derby Baseball Club continued on, dominating baseball until 1900, at which point (at Ley's behest) local football clubs formed baseball clubs to join the league, including a Derby County Baseball Club. The Baseball Ground continued to be used under that name as the home of Derby County F.C. until 1997. Ley's grounds were used for a variety of sports. A picture below shows Ley's 1912 cricket team. Remarkably it contains three players who were capped for England at football. These were S. Bloomer on the right of the back row, H. Barnes on the left but one of the middle row and J. Bagshaw who is first on the front row. ==Family==
Family
, Ley's son, H. Gordon Ley and Ley himself Ley first married Georgina Townsend and they had a son and two daughters. His first son, Henry Gordon Ley (1874–1944), is pictured left with his father. His daughter Ethel Ley (1873–1953) married in Epperstone on 16 December 1902 Henry John Boyd-Carpenter (1865–1923), a son of William Boyd Carpenter, Bishop of Ripon, and himself a colonial official in Egypt, where he was Chief Inspector to the Ministry of Public Instruction, then Inspector General of Schools. Following his first wife's death he married Alison Catherine Jobson in 1888. They had two sons who both joined the Armed Forces. Christopher Francis Aden Ley was the elder, born in 1893. He joined the South Nottinghamshire Hussars and became a captain in the Royal Flying Corps. He died in March 1918 having survived the 1915 Gallipoli campaign and outlived his younger brother. Maurice Aden Ley was two years younger and a Lieutenant; he died in November 1914. ==Honours and legacy==
Honours and legacy
Ley bought Epperstone Manor in Nottinghamshire and he was created a Baronet, of Epperstone Manor, on 27 December 1905. Earlier the same year he was appointed High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire. When Ley died he owned the company and Derby County F.C.'s sports ground. He also owned 6,500 aces of farmland and was the Lord of the Manor at Epperstone, Lazonby, Staffield, Glassonby around Kirkoswald in Cumbria. His Manor and grounds have been converted to residential dwellings, and there is an industrial estate named after him in Derby. ==Notes==
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