Peak Dale
Peak Dale maps (2 available)
Map of Derbyshire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of Derbyshire
Personalised maps
Create an historic map centred directly on any postcode!
Peak Dale books (12 available)
- 5 photos on Peak Dale appear in 2 Frith books - View photos of Peak Dale
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Peak Dale and Derbyshire
Peak Dale memories
loss of a school chum
I was born in Peak Dale 6.9.40, at which time Peak Dale was very much a limestone quarry village. As it is coming round to Easter it reminds me of the first tragic loss that I vividly remember. While we were in school our teacher asked us to bring some pussy willow for the setting up of our Easter decorations. A boy named Brian Sidall who always eager to please said he knew where the best Pussy Willow could be found but he wouldn't tell any of us where it was in case we got there first. Brian lived in the first house of a little row of quarry houses just inside the entrance of a quarry. He got up one ...read more here
Contributed by donald keworth
Derbyshire memories
loss of a school chum
I was born in Peak Dale 6.9.40, at which time Peak Dale was very much a limestone quarry village. As it is coming round to Easter it reminds me of the first tragic loss that I vividly remember. While we were in school our teacher asked us to bring some pussy willow for the setting up of our Easter decorations. A boy named Brian Sidall who always eager to please said he knew where the best Pussy Willow could be found but he wouldn't tell any of us where it was in case we got there first. Brian lived in the first house of a little row of quarry houses just inside the entrance of a quarry. He got up one ...read more here
A memory of Peak Dale contributed by donald keworth
Paper Boy
I was a 16 year old boy and lived with my family on a hillside opposite Tunstead quarry known as The Lees. Every Sunday morning I would pick up the papers (News of the World , People etc) on my bicycle from the post office in Peak Dale, sort them out into household lots and then ride the path through to the bottom of Wormhill and deliver them to the individual houses and farms finishing at a Mansion type house with a High stone wall around it at the very top of the village. Walking through the farmyards and fields sometimes had its dangers and I was chased more than once by the odd Bull, scattering the papers in the mud ...read more here
A memory of Wormhill contributed by Don Edwards
James S. Blair
My great grandfather was James Simoson Blair. He lived at Moorcroft in Buxton up to 1927. When he died he was quite a prominent figure and was captain of the golf club, and a trophey is presented each year even now in memory of him. Does anyone know or have information on him or the family? Thanks.
A memory of Buxton contributed by jeanette czyzyk
Extracts From Peak Dale & Derbyshire books
We are high on the limestone White Peak plateau with this photograph of farm buildings and cottages in the hamlet of Small Dale, north of Peak Dale, to the north east of Buxton. This whole area is now blighted by huge limestone quarries, including the one at Tunstead, which has one of the longest quarry faces in Europe.
An extract from from"Derbyshire Revisited Photographic Memories".
The station and extensive sidings at Peak Dale were mainly for the transportation of limestone from the surrounding quarries - we can see some of them in the background of this photograph. A steam locomotive waits at left centre.
An extract from from"Derbyshire Revisited Photographic Memories".
Across the road the half-round windows, on the ground floor of the
single-storey building on the right, show the site of the original Roman
Bath, in constant use from that time. Beyond is the Hall of 1573.
An extract from from"Buxton Town and City Memories".
The fame of Buxton as a Medieval spa grew and in
Tudor times was greatly enhanced by the visits of Mary
Queen of Scots who came to take the waters for her various
illnesses, including rheumatism and a recurring pain in the
side.
An extract from from"Buxton Town and City Memories".
With increases in both population and numbers of
visitors to the town, provision had to be made for their
shopping requirements. Although there are shops in
higher Buxton, on High Street and the Market Place,
the major commercial centre is Spring Gardens in
the lower town. Originally known as Town Street or
Sheffield Road, it was developed into a busy shopping
street selling, among other things, tourist gifts. Here
you could buy ornaments made of Blue John, Ashford
Black Marble and Derbyshire Spar - locally mined stones
which were worked in the Petrifaction and Spar shops.
The number and type of shops in Spring Gardens has
altered greatly over the years but the architecture on
either side remains largely unchanged. An increase in
traffic through the street led to calls for pedestrianisation
which was completed in 1997.
An extract from from"Buxton Town and City Memories".






