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Peak Forest

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Population
  
335 (2011)

Region
  
East Midlands

Sovereign state
  
United Kingdom

Local time
  
Saturday 11:19 AM

District
  
High Peak

UK parliament constituency
  
High Peak

OS grid reference
  
SK113793

Country
  
England

Post town
  
BUXTON

Shire county
  
Derbyshire

Dialling code
  
01298

Peak Forest httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Weather
  
12°C, Wind E at 10 km/h, 36% Humidity

Peak forest between 1991 and 1994 rt 86mins


Peak Forest is a small village and civil parish on the main road the (A623) from Chapel-en-le-Frith to Chesterfield in Derbyshire. The population of the civil parish at the 2011 census was 335.

Contents

Map of Peak Forest, Buxton, UK

The village grew from the earlier settlement of Dam (still inhabited, with a number of houses and farms) at the conjunction of Perrydale and Damdale. There is an inn, a church and a primary school. Its name probably derives from the Forest of High Peak.

Its church is dedicated to 'Charles, King & Martyr' (King Charles I of England, executed in 1649). First erected in 1657, it was replaced in 1878 as a gift from the Duke of Devonshire. Until an Act of Parliament was passed in 1804 its minister was able to perform marriages without the need for reading the banns, and the village was known as the Gretna Green of Derbyshire.

The Peak Forest Canal, although originally aiming for the limestone quarries in Great Rocks Dale just to the south of the village, never reached nearer than Buxworth, seven miles away, where it terminates at Bugsworth Basin. Instead, a horse-drawn tramway, the Peak Forest Tramway, was constructed in the late 18th century to connect the canal with the quarries between Dove Holes and Peak Forest.

The original limestone-carrying purpose of the canal was replaced long ago by the mineral railway line serving the quarries around Buxton and joining the Manchester–Sheffield line, via a couple of magnificent diverging viaducts over the Black Brook valley at Chapel Milton (between Chapel-en-le-Frith and Chinley). Its railway station (now closed) was built by the Midland Railway, two miles away at Small Dale. This was on its extension of the Manchester, Buxton, Matlock and Midlands Junction Railway, part of the main Midland Line from Manchester to London. It was also the northern junction for the line from Buxton.

Cab video on a 37 from buxton to sheffield via peak forest


References

Peak Forest Wikipedia