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![[Chesterfield Town Football Club]](../images/g/gb@chsfc.gif) image by Eugene Ipavec, 11 June 2006
 
image by Eugene Ipavec, 11 June 2006See also:
Chatsworth House is the seat of the Dukes of Devonshire. In the chapel the 
personal Garter standards of the 10th, 11th, and 12th Dukes of Devonshire were 
suspended from the roof, but they were too high for me to make out the details. 
However, these three gentlemen have all been Chairmen of the Chesterfield Town 
Football Club, which has languished in the Second and Third Divisions of the 
Football League for most of the previous century. The flag of the club is 
mounted on a floor stand in the Duke's private study. Using the description on a 
card mounted on a card alongside the flag, one can say that the flag is 'claret 
coloured, with a golden fringe around the three outer edges of the flag. The 
centre of the flag contains the arms of the Town of Chesterfield embossed in 
gold, and beneath these arms are the words "CHESTERFIELD TOWN F. C.,".' To be 
more precise, the words CHESTERFIELD TOWN are in gold block lettering. Beneath 
these words the letters F. C. are similarly written, with the F. written beneath 
the letter 'I' in CHESTERFIELD, and the letter C. beneath the space between 
CHESTERFIELD and TOWN. The flag there was made of heavy silk.
Ron Lahav, 11 June 2006
Interesting balance with the F.C. - I can only assume that the club was at 
some point A.F.C. (which is a common abbreviation for *association* football 
club), and when the A. was removed the letters weren't evened up.
James Dignan, 11 June 2006