Eckington
Eckington maps (2 available)
Map of South Yorkshire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of South Yorkshire
Personalised maps
Create an historic map centred directly on any postcode!
Eckington books (11 available)
Buxton Town and City Memories
Paperback
Derbyshire Living Memories
Paperback
Matlock Photographic Memories
Paperback
- 3 photos on Eckington appear in 2 Frith books - View photos of Eckington
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Eckington and South Yorkshire
Eckington memories
Is there a Joseph Littlewood in Eckington?
I am desperate to find the last piece of my family tree. I need to know relatives of Joseph Littlewood born 1840, married to Harriet. One of their daugters was Ellen my Great Grandma.
Contributed by Enid Green
Tracing my roots
I traced my ancestors to Eckington - they were the Littlewood Family and date back to 1798. The males were all named Joseph in each generation and they worked as first a farmer and then they worked in Applebys Foundry as iron moulders and brass moulders. My Great Grandma Ellen Littlewood delivered me in Wombwell where she lived until her death in 1971 and she told me about Eckington and I was delighted to find relatives in Eckington cemetery & Eckington churchyard. I am still searching and would be glad of any information.
Contributed by Enid Green
Station Road
My Mother has traced her family to a shop down Station Road, an ironmongers, which is still an ironmongers we believe. He was Richard Snowdon Beal and lived with his wife Lydia at number 1-3 where his shop is - anyone know of anymore?
Contributed by rachel harvey
Eckington Parish Church
I grew up in Eckington in the 1950s and 1960s. My father, Emerson, and his father, John Henry, were coal merchants in the village. My father was a member of many church activities in his youth as well as being a brass bandsman (euphonium) of high repute. My grandfather was a conductor of Eckington Silver Prize Band. Emerson joined the church choir. As a result of this, my brother John and I joined the choir and Scouts attached to the church under the leadership of Reverend Stanley Branson. John became the church organist for a while and then, at the age of 15yrs, I took over the post when John went to London to study at the Royal Academy of Music. ...read more here
Contributed by Peter Argyle
davys shop,
As young lads we (the gang) used to climb up onto the roof of the old betting office over the road from Davys, look over the top and with our pea shooters we would shoot at everyone who came out of Davys with dried peas. We always got a good laugh, but not from our targets.
Contributed by roger bell
Extracts From Eckington & South Yorkshire books
Chesterfield Road c1955
Eckington township is situated 6 miles
north-east of Chesterfield and 7 miles
south-east of Sheffield, and may be
the place mentioned in the early 11th-
century will of the Saxon earl
Wulfric Spott.
An extract from from"Chesterfield Photographic Memories".
As well as having the parish church, Eckington was a Methodist stronghold. The first Wesleyan chapel opened
in 1807, paid for by the Wells family in memory of George Wells. Eventually there were United Methodist and
Primitive Methodist chapels, and a Salvation Army Hall.
An extract from from"Chesterfield Photographic Memories".
Eckington is another north-east Derbyshire town which formerly depended on the collieries which surrounded it, but which now is finding a new focus as a commuter town for Chesterfield and Sheffield. The Market Place and Cross, now partly pedestrianised, is situated just off the mile-long High Street.
An extract from from"Derbyshire Revisited Photographic Memories".
A hundred years earlier in Eckington there were another five inns and taverns in the town: the Rose and Crown,
the Duke of York, the Coach and Horses (whose landlord Jas Robinson was also a spring knife manufacturer), the
Brown Bear and the Angel, from where William Lund also operated as a farrier.
An extract from from"Chesterfield Photographic Memories".
The original house was built by George Sitwell in 1625, much of which survives, though absorbed by the extensive
rebuilding work carried out by Sitwell Sitwell in the late 18th century. He also spent thousands on decorating the
house, most notably the dining room (1797), drawing room (1800) and the ballroom (1808).
An extract from from"Chesterfield Photographic Memories".






