Showing up to 15 places from this collection.
CastletonSouth Yorkshire • S33 8WG • Scenic Point
Castleton in the Peak District is one of the most comprehensively interesting villages in the national park, a settlement in the Hope Valley beneath Mam Tor whose combination of the remarkable concentration of show caves, the ruins of Peveril Castle on the limestone ridge above the village, the Blue John mineral unique to this area and the walking available on the surrounding gritstone and limestone hills creates a destination of exceptional variety and scientific interest. The four show caves accessible from the village represent different aspects of the remarkable cave system that honecombs the limestone below Castleton.
Peak Cavern, accessible from the village centre through a dramatic gorge entrance, is the largest natural cave entrance in Britain, its great arched opening once housing a rope-making village of considerable complexity. The Blue John Cavern and Treak Cliff Cavern contain deposits of Blue John, a semi-precious fluorspar mineral found only in the mines of Castleton and unique to this area of Derbyshire, whose purple and yellow banding has been worked into decorative objects since the Roman period. Speedwell Cavern, entered by boat along an underground canal, provides a different and entirely memorable cave experience.
Mam Tor above the village, its summit accessible by a fine ridge walk, provides outstanding views of the Hope Valley and the contrast between the limestone White Peak to the south and the gritstone Dark Peak to the north, one of the most informative single viewpoints for understanding the Peak District geology.
Edale Peak DistrictSouth Yorkshire • S33 7ZA • Scenic Point
Edale in the Hope Valley of the Peak District is the southern terminus of the Pennine Way, Britain's first and most celebrated long-distance walking route, a small valley village beneath the great escarpment of Kinder Scout that provides the starting point for the 430-kilometre walk to Kirk Yetholm in the Scottish Borders. The combination of the Pennine Way tradition, the excellent walking available from the village on the Kinder Scout plateau and the dramatic Dark Peak landscape that begins immediately above the valley makes Edale one of the most historically significant and most visited walking destinations in Britain.
The Kinder Scout plateau above Edale was the scene of the Mass Trespass of 1932, when a group of Manchester ramblers deliberately trespassed on the private moorland in defiance of the landowners who excluded public access to the high moors. The subsequent prosecution of the trespassers created national publicity and contributed to the long campaign for access to open country that eventually resulted in the Countryside and Rights of Way Act of 2000. The event is commemorated each year and has been recognised as one of the most significant acts of civil disobedience in the history of outdoor recreation in Britain.
The village of Edale provides the visitor services, cafes and the Moorland Visitor Centre of the national park that serve both Pennine Way walkers beginning their journey and day visitors using the Hope Valley railway line to access the Peak District walking without a car.
EyamSouth Yorkshire • S32 5QH • Scenic Point
Eyam in the Derbyshire Peak District is the village that sealed itself off during the bubonic plague outbreak of 1665 to prevent the disease spreading to the surrounding communities, a remarkable act of collective self-sacrifice that has made the village one of the most celebrated examples of communal heroism in English history and one of the most visited heritage destinations in the Peak District. The plague was brought to Eyam in a consignment of cloth from London and under the leadership of the rector William Mompesson and the nonconformist minister Thomas Stanley the village agreed to quarantine themselves rather than flee and risk carrying the disease to neighbouring settlements.
The plague killed approximately 260 of the village's 800 inhabitants between 1665 and 1666, the plague graves scattered across the surrounding fields and gardens rather than concentrated in the churchyard providing the most tangible evidence of the scale of the mortality. The Plague Cottages where the outbreak began and the Boundary Stone where money was left in vinegar-filled holes to pay for supplies brought by outsiders are among the most visited sites in the village.
The Eyam Museum provides an excellent account of the plague year and the village's response to it, and the annual Plague Commemoration service held in August at the outdoor Cucklett Delph church, where services were held in the open air during the plague to reduce infection risk, provides a living connection to the events of 1665.
Hathersage Peak DistrictSouth Yorkshire • S32 1BB • Scenic Point
Hathersage in the Hope Valley on the edge of the Dark Peak is one of the most scenically and historically interesting villages in the Peak District, a settlement beneath the great gritstone escarpment of Stanage Edge whose combination of the magnificent walking immediately accessible on the surrounding gritstone moorland and edges, the Charlotte Brontë associations from her visits to the village in 1845 that contributed to the Jane Eyre character of Morton, and the grave of Little John, the legendary companion of Robin Hood, in the churchyard creates a destination of unusual literary and legendary depth.
The walking from Hathersage is among the finest available from any Peak District village, Stanage Edge immediately above the village providing over a thousand rock climbing routes on the gritstone and the ridge walk along the edge providing views across the Hope Valley and Sheffield to the east and the Dark Peak moorland to the west. The Burbage and Millstone edges visible from the village provide further superb gritstone walking in a landscape that has attracted climbers and walkers from Sheffield since the late Victorian period.
The Charlotte Brontë connection, established during her visit to her school friend Ellen Nussey in Hathersage in July 1845, placed the village in the landscape imagination of one of the greatest Victorian novelists. The house where she stayed, Moorseats, the local family names including Eyre that appear in her novel, and the name Morton for the village version of Hathersage all appear as direct borrowings in Jane Eyre, published in 1847.
Ladybower Reservoir Peak DistrictSouth Yorkshire • S33 0AQ • Scenic Point
Ladybower Reservoir in the Upper Derwent Valley of the Peak District is the largest of the three great Derwent Valley reservoirs and one of the most dramatically situated bodies of water in the Peak District, a Y-shaped reservoir beneath the dark gritstone moorland of the eastern Peak whose combination of the dam architecture, the reservoir landscape and the extraordinary history of the submerged villages of Derwent and Ashopton drowned when the reservoir was filled in 1945 creates one of the most historically and scenically interesting reservoir destinations in England.
The Dambusters connection is Ladybower's most celebrated historical association. The Barnes Wallis bouncing bomb was tested on the reservoir in 1943 and the bombing crews of 617 Squadron practised their low-level dam-busting approach over the Derwent Valley reservoirs. The annual Dambusters Memorial flypast by Lancaster bombers over the Derwent dam commemorates this connection each year and draws large crowds of aviation enthusiasts.
The drowned villages of Derwent and Ashopton create the most poignant dimension of the reservoir story, the communities evacuated when the reservoir was filled and the church steeple of Derwent visible above the waterline in drought years when the water level drops sufficiently. The reservoir shoreline walking and cycling provide excellent access to the surrounding Dark Peak moorland.
Mam TorSouth Yorkshire • S33 8WG • Scenic Point
Mam Tor, which takes its name from the Old English and Celtic words meaning Mother Mountain, rises to 517 metres at the head of the Hope Valley in the Peak District National Park and offers some of the finest panoramic views in the Dark Peak. The summit is connected to neighbouring peaks along the Great Ridge by a clearly defined ridgeline walk that provides a satisfying and accessible circular route from Castleton, one of the most popular in the Peak District. The hill earns its nickname the Shivering Mountain from the geological instability of its eastern face, where alternating layers of hard millstone grit and softer shale have been subject to repeated landslips over thousands of years. The largest and most significant of these landslides destroyed the road that once crossed the hill's lower slopes, leaving the famous rippled and tilted tarmac of the old Mam Tor Road as a striking demonstration of what happens when a road is built on unstable ground. The road was officially closed to traffic in 1979 and has not been repaired, the authorities having accepted that the unstable geology makes any permanent repair futile. The summit is reached by a well-maintained stone path from the National Trust car park at Mam Nick, a steep but short ascent of around fifteen minutes that brings walkers onto the broad summit plateau topped by the remains of a large Bronze and Iron Age hillfort. The hillfort at Mam Tor is one of the largest in the Pennines, with ramparts and ditches enclosing over six hectares of the summit, and archaeological excavation has revealed evidence of permanent occupation during the Bronze Age, unusually for such an exposed hilltop location. The views from the summit are exceptional and justifiably famous. To the east the Hope Valley stretches towards Sheffield, with the Kinder Scout plateau visible to the north across the Edale valley. To the west the limestone White Peak gives way to the characteristic curves of the Cheshire Plain. On clear days the views extend across multiple counties, and the position of the summit at the junction of the Dark and White Peak landscapes means that two quite different geological worlds are visible simultaneously. The Great Ridge walk east from Mam Tor to Lose Hill provides one of the finest ridge walks in the Peak District, a straightforward path along the crest with views on both sides throughout. Castleton village at the base of the hill provides excellent cafés, the magnificent Blue John Caverns and access to Peveril Castle, making the area one of the most rewarding destinations in the entire national park.
Stanage EdgeSouth Yorkshire • S32 1BR • Scenic Point
Stanage Edge in the Peak District is the most famous gritstone climbing crag in Britain, a continuous escarpment of millstone grit approximately four miles long above the Derwent Valley near Hathersage whose south-facing cliff faces provide over one thousand rock climbing routes. The edge is not only the principal centre of Peak District climbing but one of the most important venues in British rock climbing history, the location where many pioneering climbs that established British climbing culture were first achieved. The gritstone of Stanage has a distinctive friction quality that has shaped the technique of generations of British climbers, the rough granular surface requiring a different approach from limestone crags. The walking along the top of the edge provides one of the finest moorland ridge walks in the Peak District, with views westward across the Sheffield valley and eastward over the White Peak providing a panorama of the entire national park character. The Long Causeway, an ancient packhorse route crossing the edge at its highest point, provides the historic connection between the Dark Peak and White Peak. The combination of the climbing heritage, the ridge walking and the views make Stanage one of the most visited single destinations in the Peak District.