the bloody peak - thedms
the bloody peak - thedms
the bloody peak - thedms
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THE BLOODY<br />
<strong>the</strong> <strong>bloody</strong> <strong>peak</strong><br />
a sanguinous journey<br />
around <strong>the</strong> <strong>peak</strong> districts<br />
myths and legends<br />
Part financed by <strong>the</strong><br />
European Union<br />
Economic Regional<br />
Development Fund
Beware <strong>the</strong> shadows<br />
of <strong>the</strong> night<br />
Welcome to <strong>the</strong> witches,<br />
ghosts, highwaymen and<br />
horrors of <strong>the</strong> Bloody Peak.<br />
Do <strong>the</strong> hairs rise on <strong>the</strong><br />
back of your neck?<br />
They should.This is a most<br />
haunted place.<br />
“... hairs rise on <strong>the</strong><br />
back of your neck...”<br />
A strange light at night, a<br />
suspicious breeze or <strong>the</strong><br />
sound of distant<br />
voices might not<br />
be what you<br />
thought.<br />
And if <strong>the</strong>se pages aren’t<br />
scary enough you can find<br />
out more about each story<br />
and discover o<strong>the</strong>r haunted<br />
places on<br />
www.<strong>peak</strong>-experience.org.uk.<br />
You have been warned.<br />
Now take a torch and some<br />
courage and go…<br />
Listen<br />
for <strong>the</strong> creak of floorboards<br />
in a haunted hotel, drink<br />
with an apparition in a<br />
paranormal pub.<br />
Written by Carolyn Luscombe.<br />
Photographs by Bill Bevan, Si Homfray, Julia Reid, and Dan Boys.<br />
Sources include; Julie Bunting, David Clarke, Clarence Daniel,Tony J. Hollins,<br />
L. Hutchinson, Charles Maltby, James Merrill, Peter K. Naylor and Doug Pickford.<br />
Design by www.hammerdesign.co.uk Printed with vegetable dye inks on recycled paper
THE BLOODY<br />
Headless ghosts on <strong>the</strong> roads<br />
Gives you a headache just<br />
thinking about it!<br />
Beware when you wander<br />
some of <strong>the</strong> Peak<br />
District’s shady lanes at<br />
night.You might come<br />
across one of many<br />
headless ghosts.<br />
Twelve headless men<br />
carry a coffin along Shady<br />
Lane, near Thornbridge<br />
Hall, between Great<br />
Longstone and Ashford in<br />
<strong>the</strong> Water.<br />
Ano<strong>the</strong>r headless man<br />
travels <strong>the</strong> road from<br />
Youlgrave to Wenley Hill.<br />
A headless lady was seen<br />
at Stoke Hall to <strong>the</strong> south<br />
of Grindleford.<br />
“was he a beheaded<br />
pedlar or knight killed<br />
by <strong>the</strong> Scots?”<br />
And a headless horseman<br />
rides <strong>the</strong> Onecote to<br />
Warslow road over<br />
Butterton Moor.<br />
Was he a beheaded<br />
pedlar, or knight killed by<br />
<strong>the</strong> Scots? His headless<br />
doppelgänger rides a<br />
phantom white horse on<br />
moonlit nights through<br />
<strong>the</strong> Manifold Valley.<br />
Stoke Hall, home to a headless lady
Bakewell:<br />
Beware witches, ghosts and <strong>the</strong><br />
woman in white!<br />
1501:The ill-fated<br />
son of King<br />
Henry VII<br />
“...predicted his early<br />
marriage and early<br />
death.”<br />
Beneath <strong>the</strong> Saxon cross<br />
now in All Saints<br />
churchyard, 15-year-old<br />
Prince Arthur saw a<br />
woman in white. She<br />
predicted his early<br />
marriage and early death.<br />
Within four months all<br />
came true.
THE BLOODY<br />
1608:The witches of<br />
Bakewell?<br />
A ne’er-do-well Scotsman<br />
accused of robbery in<br />
London made a bizarre<br />
defence. He claimed to be<br />
only just transported to<br />
London, by <strong>the</strong> power of<br />
a spell he’d heard his<br />
Bakewell landlady<br />
chanting.<br />
“...by <strong>the</strong> power of<br />
a spell...”<br />
Indeed his clo<strong>the</strong>s, he<br />
said, were still in<br />
Bakewell, where <strong>the</strong><br />
landlady held <strong>the</strong>m as<br />
room rent. By a strange<br />
logic of <strong>the</strong> times, <strong>the</strong><br />
clo<strong>the</strong>s were taken as<br />
evidence of <strong>the</strong> woman’s<br />
guilt and she and a friend<br />
were killed as witches.<br />
The Friday-night<br />
ghost<br />
At Castle Hill House on<br />
<strong>the</strong> A619, Jim Marlow, a<br />
former butler, still walks<br />
to <strong>the</strong> old gunroom each<br />
Friday – where he shot<br />
himself many years ago.<br />
Contact Nicky Crewe for<br />
Bakewell ghost walks.<br />
Tel. 01629 815405.<br />
Access and orientation<br />
Bakewell has plenty of<br />
accommodation and visitor<br />
attractions, with interesting and<br />
unusual shops. Bakewell visitor<br />
centre has information, books<br />
and displays.
Castleton<br />
Murders, torture and haunted hotels<br />
In <strong>the</strong> highly haunted<br />
Castle Hotel, you’re sure<br />
to meet a ghost! There’s a<br />
jilted bride in room 4, a<br />
nurse and legless soldier<br />
in <strong>the</strong> cellar, a small<br />
elderly woman in grey, a<br />
middle-aged man in a pinstriped<br />
suit in rooms 7<br />
and 10; and a legless<br />
woman travelling<br />
corridors waist deep in<br />
<strong>the</strong> floorboards.<br />
“<strong>the</strong> song of a<br />
medieval lady.”<br />
At Peveril Castle some<br />
have heard a long-dead<br />
knight and <strong>the</strong> song of a<br />
medieval lady.An unlucky<br />
prisoner was starved for<br />
six days before his hand<br />
was cut off, in 1403.<br />
Privately owned Goosehill<br />
Hall hosts a ghostly<br />
medieval tournament and<br />
ano<strong>the</strong>r grey lady. Shiver<br />
as you pass <strong>the</strong> driveway,<br />
on <strong>the</strong> left towards<br />
Winnats Pass.<br />
Allan and Clara still roam<br />
past Speedwell Cavern. In<br />
1758 <strong>the</strong> Scots lovers<br />
were riding to be married<br />
in Peak Forest, when local<br />
miners robbed and killed<br />
<strong>the</strong>m.Ten years later <strong>the</strong>ir<br />
bodies were found in a<br />
mineshaft. Nobody was<br />
charged for <strong>the</strong> murder<br />
but <strong>the</strong> suspected<br />
murderers suffered
THE BLOODY<br />
madness and untimely<br />
deaths. See Clara’s<br />
saddle in <strong>the</strong> shop by<br />
Speedwell Cavern at<br />
<strong>the</strong> foot of dramatic<br />
Winnats Pass.<br />
Access and orientation<br />
Excellent visitor facilities in<br />
<strong>the</strong> village including an<br />
information centre and<br />
museum, accommodation,<br />
restaurants and shops. Peveril<br />
Castle and Speedwell Cavern<br />
are open to <strong>the</strong> public.<br />
“bodies found in a<br />
mineshaft.”
Birchover<br />
Home to husband killers and druids<br />
Joan Waste was a Protestant<br />
martyr, executed for heresy<br />
in August 1556 during <strong>the</strong><br />
Marian persecutions.<br />
You can read an account of<br />
what little is known about<br />
her here:<br />
http://www.otteryreformed<br />
.freeola.net/jwaste.htm<br />
Some say ancient druids<br />
worshipped at Rowter Rocks.<br />
“...druids worshipped<br />
at Rowter Rocks”<br />
Access and orientation<br />
Rowter Rocks is accessible from<br />
<strong>the</strong> village.There are two pubs in<br />
<strong>the</strong> village.<br />
“Joan Waste was a<br />
Protestant martyr,<br />
executed for heresy”<br />
Here <strong>the</strong> Revd Thomas<br />
Eyre (died 1717) carved<br />
out armchairs and<br />
reputedly dabbled in<br />
witchcraft. If you sit in <strong>the</strong><br />
middle armchair just after<br />
midnight on Halloween<br />
you will hear <strong>the</strong> name of<br />
your true love.<br />
Birchover church
THE BLOODY<br />
Chapel-en-le-Frith<br />
From Civil War to UFO<br />
In 1648 1,500 Royalist<br />
soldiers were imprisoned<br />
at St Thomas Becket<br />
church during <strong>the</strong> English<br />
Civil War.When <strong>the</strong><br />
doors opened after 2<br />
weeks, 44 men had died<br />
inside. O<strong>the</strong>rs died later.<br />
More happily, Chapel-enle-Frith<br />
parish registers<br />
record <strong>the</strong> very first Peak<br />
District UFO sighting. It<br />
“...<strong>the</strong> very first Peak<br />
District UFO sighting.”<br />
was in March 1716. Some<br />
now believe it was <strong>the</strong><br />
Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Lights. In any<br />
case, <strong>the</strong> locals were<br />
terrified.<br />
Access and orientation<br />
Shops, food and accommodation<br />
in Chapel-en-le-Frith market<br />
town. St Thomas church is at <strong>the</strong><br />
east end of <strong>the</strong> cobbled market<br />
square.<br />
St Thomas Becket church
Edale<br />
Mermaids and ghostly airmen<br />
Ghostly figures of WWII<br />
airmen haunt Edale’s The<br />
Olde Nags Head pub in<br />
Grindsbrook Booth.<br />
“...spirits remain to<br />
this day.”<br />
Many customers see and<br />
hear <strong>the</strong>m.When a<br />
bomber plane crashed on<br />
Kinder Scout, locals<br />
brought <strong>the</strong> airmen’s<br />
bodies to <strong>the</strong> pub.<br />
The Olde Nags Head pub in Edale<br />
Their spirits remain to<br />
this day.<br />
Climb Kinder Scout to<br />
visit <strong>the</strong> immortal<br />
mermaid in <strong>the</strong><br />
bottomless Mermaid’s<br />
Pool. She rises on Easter<br />
Eve to reward visitors<br />
with <strong>the</strong> gift of long life...<br />
or to lure down her<br />
admirers to <strong>the</strong>ir doom!<br />
“she rises on Easter Eve to<br />
reward visitors with <strong>the</strong><br />
gift of long life...”<br />
Access and orientation<br />
Edale has good accommodation<br />
and food with excellent walking<br />
and climbing including <strong>the</strong><br />
challenging Kinder Scout.<br />
Mermaid’s Pool is at SK075887.
THE BLOODY<br />
Boggarts and<br />
ghostly black dogs<br />
A shaggy dog story?<br />
Boggarts and barghasts<br />
are troublesome spirits<br />
like poltergeists.Their<br />
name comes from <strong>the</strong><br />
German, Geist (spirit),<br />
with barghast <strong>the</strong> ‘spirit of<br />
<strong>the</strong> (funeral) bier’.They<br />
are soundless, about half<br />
<strong>the</strong> size of a calf, with a<br />
shaggy black coat.<br />
“...miners connected<br />
certain accidents with<br />
sightings of a ghostly<br />
black dog.”<br />
They forewarn of death<br />
or disaster, and Peak<br />
District lead miners<br />
connected certain<br />
accidents with sightings<br />
of a ghostly black dog.<br />
Boggarts or barghasts live<br />
all over <strong>the</strong> Peak District.<br />
If you glimpse something<br />
dark in <strong>the</strong> shadows it<br />
might be one. Keep an<br />
eye out (or hide your<br />
eyes!) at Birchover Shale<br />
Hillock, Kinder, <strong>the</strong> Tips at<br />
Edale, Bradwell, Bradnop,<br />
Ipstones and Swinscoe, to<br />
name just a few.
THE BLOODY<br />
where to stay,<br />
shop and eat<br />
accommodation<br />
attractions & activities<br />
shopping & eating
Accommodation<br />
Heaton House Farm<br />
Rushton Spencer, Nr Macclesfield, Cheshire<br />
SK11 0RD<br />
Contact: Mick Heath<br />
Tel: 01260 226203<br />
Email: mick@heatonhouse.fsnet.co.uk<br />
Web: www.heatonhousefarm.co.uk<br />
Set in scenic Staffordshire Moorlands, Heaton<br />
House Farm is situated between Leek and<br />
Macclesfield, just off <strong>the</strong> A523 at Rushton Spencer.<br />
We have five bedrooms. Four of <strong>the</strong>m are en-suite<br />
and have been awarded Four Star “Silver” Award<br />
from <strong>the</strong> Heart of England Tourist Board.<br />
Roaches Tea Rooms and Cottages<br />
Upper Hulme, Nr Leek, Staffs ST13 8TY<br />
Contact: Karen Oliver and Dianne Oliver<br />
Tel: 01538 300345<br />
Email: diane@roachescottages.co.uk<br />
Relaxed, olde world accommodation with fantastic<br />
views, breakfast available in tea rooms.<br />
Swiss House Hotel & Nero’s<br />
Ristorante Italiano<br />
How Lane, Castleton, Hope Valley, Derbyshire<br />
S33 8WJ<br />
Contact: Mary or Martha Holmes<br />
Tel: 01433 621098<br />
Email: info@swiss-house.co.uk<br />
Web: www.swiss-house.co.uk<br />
Clean, very friendly, very comfortable. Best<br />
breakfast this side of <strong>the</strong> Pennines. 8 en-suite<br />
bedrooms, sleeping 20 people. Ideal for groups<br />
or individuals, business or pleasure.<br />
Castle Hotel<br />
Castle Street, Castleton, Hope Valley, Derbyshire<br />
S33 8WG<br />
Contact: Glen Mills<br />
Tel: 01433 620578<br />
Web: www.innkeeperslodge.com<br />
Good food, friendly service, pub part of Vintage<br />
Inns. Rooms part of Innkeepers Lodge.<br />
The Olde Nags Head<br />
Edale, Hope Valley S33 7ZD<br />
Contact: Malcolm & Sarah France<br />
Tel: 01433 670 291<br />
Fax: 01433 670 429<br />
The official start of <strong>the</strong> Pennine Way.A<br />
Traditional pub with cask ales, that takes pride<br />
in serving good quality food. Offering a warm<br />
welcome to walkers, bikers, locals and visitors alike.
THE BLOODY<br />
Underleigh House B&B<br />
Off Edale Road, Hope, Hope Valley, Derbyshire<br />
S33 6RF<br />
Contact: Philip and Vivienne Taylor<br />
Tel: 01433 621372<br />
Email: info@underleighhouse.co.uk<br />
Web: www.underleighhouse.co.uk<br />
Secluded cottage and barn conversion near <strong>the</strong><br />
village of Hope with magnificent countryside views.<br />
Delicious breakfasts featuring local and homemade<br />
specialities, served in flag-stoned dining hall.We<br />
provide information about <strong>the</strong> local area to our<br />
guests and also provide walking routes to follow.<br />
Attractions & Activities<br />
Bakewell Ghost Walks<br />
6 Calton View,Yeld Road, Bakewell, Derbyshire<br />
DE45 1FN<br />
Contact: Nicky Crewe<br />
Tel: 01629 815405<br />
Mob: 07791 952255<br />
Email: nickyc@synergynet.co.uk<br />
Discover <strong>the</strong> haunted houses and ghostly tales of<br />
old Bakewell with a walking tour of <strong>the</strong> town.<br />
Please ring or email me for fur<strong>the</strong>r details and<br />
to arrange a tour.<br />
Shopping & Eating<br />
Stocks Café and Bistro<br />
4 - 6 Market Place, Chapel-en-le-Frith,<br />
Derbyshire SK23 0EN<br />
Contact: Helen Williams<br />
Tel: 01298 814906<br />
Email: iloveit@stockscafeandbistro.co.uk<br />
Web: www.stockscafeandbistro.co.uk/<br />
Ideally located in <strong>the</strong> centre of <strong>the</strong> historic market<br />
place of Chapel-en-le-Frith.At Stocks, <strong>the</strong> menu<br />
is inspired by <strong>the</strong> spirit of traditional home cooking,<br />
with dishes freshly made from local seasonal<br />
ingredients. Look out for <strong>the</strong> painting of Chapel<br />
in 1897 on original tiles inside <strong>the</strong> café.<br />
The Post Office<br />
Fountain Square,Youlgrave, Bakewell, Derbyshire<br />
DE45 1UR<br />
Contact: Roger Easton<br />
Tel: 01629 636201<br />
Post office, also selling sweets, drinks, ice creams,<br />
stationery, birthday cards and walking maps.<br />
More info: www.visit<strong>peak</strong>district.com
The Druid Inn<br />
Main Street, Birchover, Derbyshire DE42BL<br />
Contact: Daniel Reed<br />
Tel: 01629 650302<br />
Contemporary style gastro pub.<br />
Eyam Tea Rooms & Bistro<br />
The Square, Eyam, Hope Valley, Derbyshire S32 5RB<br />
Tel: 01433 631274<br />
High-quality snacks and meals in peaceful, friendly<br />
surroundings.<br />
Moon Inn<br />
Town End, Stoney Middleton, Derbyshire S32 4TW<br />
Contact: Suzanne Su<strong>the</strong>rland<br />
Tel: 01433 630203<br />
Warm and friendly country pub. Home cooked<br />
quality food. Traditional Sunday lunches. Attractive<br />
walled beer garden. Cask Ales. Walkers and dogs<br />
welcome in bar area. OAP lunchtime specials. Open<br />
all day, every day from 12 noon.<br />
Pitstop Homemade Pies<br />
2 Buxton Rd, Bakewell, Derbyshire DE45 1DA<br />
Contact: Diane Hawksworth<br />
Tel: 01629 815831<br />
Homemade pies and sandwiches.<br />
The Winking Man<br />
Buxton Road, Upper Hulme, Staffs ST138UH<br />
Contact: Peter Harvey<br />
Tel: 01538 300361<br />
Country pub and function facilities.<br />
The Linden Tree<br />
Frog Hall Road, Ipstones, Staffordshire ST10 2NA<br />
Contact: B J Allett<br />
Tel: 01538 266370<br />
Country pub situated in Staffordshire Moorlands<br />
very close to <strong>the</strong> Manifold Valley and Dovedale<br />
offering fine cuisine in a friendly environment.<br />
More info: www.visit<strong>peak</strong>district.com
THE BLOODY
Ipstones<br />
Boggarts and <strong>the</strong> stooped man<br />
Three-hundred-year-old<br />
Hermitage farmhouse has<br />
more than one ghost.<br />
A stooped old man with a<br />
tall hat haunts <strong>the</strong> building.<br />
“a servant heard ghostly<br />
screams beneath her<br />
bedroom window...”<br />
A sudden draught or<br />
rustling sound could be<br />
him.<br />
In 1916 a servant heard<br />
ghostly screams beneath<br />
her bedroom window, a<br />
relative lay in bed and<br />
heard an organ played<br />
downstairs.<br />
The hauntings occurred<br />
regularly at Easter,<br />
Christmas and haymaking<br />
time.<br />
A phantom large dog – or<br />
boggart – has been seen<br />
many times at <strong>the</strong> end of<br />
<strong>the</strong> lane to <strong>the</strong> farm. One<br />
man kicked at <strong>the</strong> beast<br />
only for his boot to touch<br />
nothing as <strong>the</strong> dog<br />
vanished.<br />
Access and orientation<br />
Ipstones is on <strong>the</strong> B5053 sou<strong>the</strong>ast<br />
of Leek.There are several<br />
shops and pubs in <strong>the</strong> village and<br />
accommodation in <strong>the</strong> surrounding<br />
area.
THE BLOODY<br />
Hob Hurst’s houses<br />
Farmer’s blessing or curse!<br />
Rushton Spencer church, built<br />
on a Hob Hurst's house<br />
Hob Hurst, <strong>the</strong> wood<br />
sprite or elf, is like a giant<br />
Puck or Robin<br />
Goodfellow. Hob blesses<br />
<strong>the</strong> farm, especially <strong>the</strong><br />
dairy. But woe betide <strong>the</strong><br />
farmer who crosses him!<br />
Careful people leave a<br />
bowl of milk on <strong>the</strong><br />
hearth for Hob to drink.<br />
Hob’s houses lie in<br />
isolated, often sacred,<br />
places. Seek <strong>the</strong>m out at<br />
Thor’s Cave in <strong>the</strong><br />
Manifold Valley, in Monsal<br />
Dale, at <strong>the</strong> Bronze Age<br />
burial barrow on Beeley<br />
Moor and Hob Cottage<br />
at Elkstone. Rushton<br />
Spencer church is built on<br />
top of one!<br />
“...woe betide <strong>the</strong> farmer<br />
who crosses him!”<br />
Hob Hurst's House in Monsal Dale
The Roaches – via Upper Hulme<br />
A mermaid, a knight and a highwayman<br />
One look at <strong>the</strong> Roaches<br />
crags reveals a place of<br />
legends.<br />
Lud’s Church rock chasm<br />
is reputedly <strong>the</strong> legendary<br />
Green Chapel of medieval<br />
saga, Sir Gawain and <strong>the</strong><br />
Green Knight.<br />
“...scenic and allegedly<br />
bottomless Doxey Pool...”<br />
Local ‘doxey’ (not a<br />
flattering term!) Hannah<br />
was descended from <strong>the</strong><br />
notorious highwayman,<br />
Bowyers of <strong>the</strong> Rocks.<br />
Doxey Cottage at<br />
SK006622 was<br />
certainly named<br />
for her. But many<br />
claim that <strong>the</strong><br />
scenic and allegedly<br />
bottomless Doxey Pool is<br />
named after its legendary<br />
mermaid.<br />
Access and orientation<br />
Access <strong>the</strong> Roaches from Upper<br />
Hulme off <strong>the</strong> A53.Visitor<br />
facilities at Tittesworth Reservoir<br />
nearby. Doxey Pool is on <strong>the</strong><br />
Roaches at SK003627.
THE BLOODY<br />
Rushton Spencer<br />
Buried alive! And <strong>the</strong> ghost of <strong>the</strong><br />
murdered servant girl<br />
Thomas Meakyn was<br />
buried alive in 1781, after<br />
rejecting his master’s<br />
daughter’s advances. No<br />
one was charged.The<br />
Murder Stone at St<br />
Lawrence’s church marks<br />
where Thomas was later<br />
reburied in his home<br />
village.<br />
A cruel woman murdered<br />
her servant girl in <strong>the</strong><br />
1800s. Every night <strong>the</strong><br />
girl’s ghost revisited her<br />
mistress. Locals asked 12<br />
clergymen to ‘lay’ <strong>the</strong><br />
ghost on <strong>the</strong> Cloud<br />
hillside. She still appears<br />
on <strong>the</strong> hill as a dim blue<br />
light.<br />
“...every night <strong>the</strong> girl’s<br />
ghost revisited her...”<br />
Access and orientation<br />
The village is off <strong>the</strong> A523<br />
between Macclesfield and Leek.<br />
There are three pubs selling<br />
food.<br />
Rushton Spencer graveyard
Stoney<br />
Middleton<br />
Lovers leapt,<br />
highwaymen roamed<br />
and murderers<br />
murdered<br />
Two hundred and fifty<br />
years ago a Scottish<br />
pedlar was murdered at<br />
<strong>the</strong> Moon Inn by rival<br />
local pedlars while <strong>the</strong><br />
landlord turned a blind<br />
eye. His assailants took<br />
his body to a nearby cave.<br />
Find Lover’s Leap Café to<br />
see where poor jilted<br />
“...murdered at <strong>the</strong><br />
Moon Inn...”<br />
Hannah Baddeley leapt<br />
over <strong>the</strong> cliff – and<br />
survived! Her crinoline<br />
dress acted as a<br />
parachute and checked<br />
her fall.<br />
“trace highwaymen’s<br />
steps up... to Black<br />
Harry Lane”<br />
Trace highwaymen’s steps<br />
up <strong>the</strong> bridleway to Black<br />
Harry Lane as far as Black<br />
Harry Gate. He was <strong>the</strong><br />
scourge of packhorse<br />
trains crossing <strong>the</strong> moors<br />
around Longstone and<br />
Wardlow until he swung<br />
on <strong>the</strong> gibbet at Wardlow<br />
Mires.<br />
Access and orientation<br />
Parking, toilets, a pub and café<br />
in <strong>the</strong> village. Black Harry Lane<br />
is opposite <strong>the</strong> B652 Eyam<br />
turning.<br />
Left: Lover's Leap
THE BLOODY<br />
Swythamley<br />
Phantoms of <strong>the</strong> Pretender<br />
Ghosts of Bonnie Prince<br />
Charlie’s Scottish soldiers<br />
still haunt <strong>the</strong> Old Way<br />
around Bearda Hill at<br />
Swythamley.The Prince,<br />
Young Pretender to <strong>the</strong><br />
English crown, led his<br />
army south in <strong>the</strong><br />
Jacobite Rebellion of<br />
1745.They turned back at<br />
Derby and nearly all lost<br />
<strong>the</strong>ir lives in a massacre.<br />
“ghosts of Bonnie<br />
Prince Charlie’s Scottish<br />
soldiers still haunt <strong>the</strong><br />
Old Way...”<br />
The Old Way around Bearda Hill<br />
They retreated along <strong>the</strong><br />
Old Way, an ancient route<br />
between Manchester and<br />
Ashbourne.<br />
“...ghosts of black dogs...<br />
guarding <strong>the</strong> soldiers’<br />
graves”<br />
The ghosts of black dogs<br />
are still sighted along <strong>the</strong><br />
route, allegedly guarding<br />
<strong>the</strong> soldiers’ graves.<br />
Access and orientation<br />
Bearda Hill is south of Wincle<br />
where <strong>the</strong>re is a pub.The Old<br />
Way is followed by <strong>the</strong> line of<br />
<strong>the</strong> modern road. Bearda Hill is<br />
at SJ963643.
Tideswell<br />
A haunted pub and invisible choristers<br />
Look out for <strong>the</strong> ghost of<br />
Old Sarah, a Victorian<br />
serving wench, at <strong>the</strong><br />
George Hotel. If you see<br />
“foretelling <strong>the</strong> deaths of<br />
important villagers...”<br />
a woman in a long dress<br />
and cap it could be her.<br />
Listen for an underground<br />
choir. Some say <strong>the</strong><br />
former Catholic Chapel<br />
on Church Street had a<br />
secret passage to <strong>the</strong> new<br />
church. Invisible<br />
choristers sang below<br />
ground, foretelling <strong>the</strong><br />
deaths of important<br />
villagers.<br />
One night a young lad<br />
woke screaming.When<br />
his mo<strong>the</strong>r arrived he<br />
pointed to <strong>the</strong> empty<br />
chair saying he didn’t like<br />
<strong>the</strong> old man sitting in it.<br />
She realised he could see<br />
his dead grandfa<strong>the</strong>r and<br />
destroyed <strong>the</strong> chair.<br />
Access and orientation<br />
Good shops, tearooms and<br />
accommodation.Tideswell’s<br />
beautiful church is <strong>the</strong><br />
‘Ca<strong>the</strong>dral of <strong>the</strong> Peak’.
THE BLOODY<br />
Youlgrave<br />
A ‘harey’ tale<br />
Sir John Rossington<br />
cornered a hare here,<br />
which miraculously<br />
became a beautiful<br />
maiden. He was so<br />
shocked his heart flew<br />
into his hands, where it<br />
still rests. Find his effigy in<br />
Youlgrave church.<br />
A Roundhead and<br />
Cavalier fought to <strong>the</strong>ir<br />
deaths in <strong>the</strong> Old Hall<br />
during <strong>the</strong> English Civil<br />
War.Their ghosts appear<br />
in <strong>the</strong> duel room every<br />
November. Nearby Old<br />
Hall Farm is haunted by<br />
ano<strong>the</strong>r grey lady.<br />
Watch out for <strong>the</strong><br />
phantom coach and<br />
“a hare... miraculously<br />
became a beautiful<br />
maiden”<br />
horses at Roughwood<br />
Hollow, on <strong>the</strong> road<br />
between Youlgrave and<br />
Middleton. Eerie lights<br />
could be <strong>the</strong>ir lamps.<br />
Access and orientation<br />
Choice of pubs, tearoom and<br />
shops in <strong>the</strong> village.<br />
Sir John Rossington's effigy in Youlgrave church
What does quality assessed accommodation mean?<br />
When you choose to stay in Peak District quality<br />
assessed accommodation you can be confident<br />
that it has been checked out before you check in.<br />
The majority of <strong>the</strong> accommodation featured in<br />
this leaflet has been assessed by VisitBritain or <strong>the</strong><br />
AA. You will see a star rating and <strong>the</strong> type of<br />
accommodation. Each property that chooses to take part in<br />
<strong>the</strong> quality assurance scheme is assessed annually and you<br />
can check <strong>the</strong>ir latest rating online at<br />
www.visit<strong>peak</strong>district.com. We cannot vouch for <strong>the</strong><br />
quality of any accommodation that is not part of a scheme.<br />
The National Accessibility Scheme will show you properties<br />
that can provide a certain level of accessibility and that <strong>the</strong><br />
needs of disabled guests have been considered. Please call<br />
to check <strong>the</strong> facilities available before you book.<br />
This leaflet is one of a series of new<br />
Peak Experience guides to <strong>the</strong><br />
heritage of <strong>the</strong> Peak District. Explore<br />
<strong>the</strong> wild and <strong>the</strong> historic starting<br />
from here. Inside, you’ll find places<br />
to visit in <strong>the</strong> Peak’s beautiful<br />
countryside and historic villages,<br />
well-served by holiday<br />
accommodation, cafés, restaurants<br />
and shops. Look out for o<strong>the</strong>r guides<br />
in <strong>the</strong> series or visit <strong>the</strong> web site for<br />
fur<strong>the</strong>r details and even more places<br />
to visit.<br />
www.<strong>peak</strong>-experience.org.uk<br />
www.visit<strong>peak</strong>district.com<br />
TRAVELINE 0870 608 2 608
Visitor Centres<br />
Ashbourne 13 Market Place, DE6 1EU Tel: 01335 343666<br />
Email: ashbourneinfo@derbyshiredales.gov.uk<br />
Bakewell Old Market Hall, Bridge Street, DE45 1DS Tel: 01629 813227<br />
Email: bakewell@<strong>peak</strong>district.gov.uk<br />
Buxton The Crescent, SK17 6BQ Tel: 01298 25106<br />
Email: tourism@high<strong>peak</strong>.gov.uk<br />
Castleton Buxton Road, S33 8WN Tel: 01433 620679<br />
Email: castleton@<strong>peak</strong>district.gov.uk<br />
Edale Main Street, S33 7HA Tel: 01433 670207<br />
Email: edale@<strong>peak</strong>district.gov.uk<br />
Glossop Heritage & Information Centre Henry Street, Glossop,<br />
Derbyshire, SK13 8BW Tel: 01457 855920<br />
Email: info@glossoptouristcentre.co.uk<br />
Leek 1 Market Place, ST13 5HH Tel: 01538 483741<br />
Email: tourism.services@staffsmoorlands.gov.uk<br />
Matlock Crown Square, DE4 3AT Tel: 01629 583388<br />
Email: matlockinfo@derbyshiredales.gov.uk<br />
Matlock Bath The Pavilion, DE4 3NR Tel: 01629 55082<br />
Email: matlockbathinfo@derbyshiredales.gov.uk<br />
Upper Derwent Valley Derwent Bamford, S33 0AQ Tel: 01433 650953<br />
Symbols<br />
A619<br />
Myths & Legends Attraction<br />
Motorway<br />
Main Road<br />
B6106<br />
Secondary Road<br />
O<strong>the</strong>r Road