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From Peveril of the Peak (Thorpe) on the Tissington Village Trail

Difficulty Leisurely

Walking time 2 hours

Length 6.8km / 4.2mi

Route developer: Jim Conibear

Route checker: Peter Somerville

Start location The Peveril of the Peak Hotel, Thorpe
Route Summary A short leisurely walk from Thorpe using the Tissington Trail to visit the unspoilt estate village of Tissington with its 17th century hall, duck pond and ancient wells, before returning on the Limestone Way, through typical White Peak scenery.
*move mouse over graph to see points on route
Getting there

By car - From Ashbourne pick up the A515 (signposted Buxton). Turn left 1 mile out of Ashbourne (signposted Thorpe/Dovedale/Ilam) and continue for about 2 miles. The road bends sharply left immediately after The Dog & Partridge on the left and the Hotel lies ahead at the bottom of the descent.

From Buxton direction take A515 towards Ashbourne. After the turning to Tissington on the left take the next right hand turning (brown sign for Thorpe/Dovedale/Ilam). At the T-junction (The Dog & Partridge opposite you) turn right and follow the road as it bends sharply left. The Hotel lies ahead at the bottom of the descent.

By bus - Bus service 101 (currently operated by High Peak, Mon-Fri) from Ashbourne to Thorpe stops at the Dog & Partridge pub ( from here walk to the start following the Ashbourne car instructions above). For timetable see www.travelineeastmidlands.co.uk. or phone 0871 200 2233 ( not 24 hours - premium call rates apply)

Description

[1] From the hotel car park head down the drive back to its entrance. On reaching the road turn right, cross over (watch out for any traffic) to use the pavement on the far side and walk towards the village of Thorpe.

On reaching the village take the first turning on the left by Thorpe cottage. Follow this minor road (with care as no pavements) up a hill, (taking in the views behind you).  Ignoring any footpaths off to the right continue on the road until you reach a T junction. Cross over the road and take a signed footpath through a gate-stile opposite. Head slightly right across the field to another gate and then downhill heading slightly to the left. Go through a stile to join the Tissington Trail.

(A) The Tissington Trail,which is now used for recreational purposes by cyclists and walkers, follows the former route of the Ashbourne to Buxton railway. The London and North-Western railway opened its line between Buxton and Ashbourne in 1899 but it was closed in 1967. The track bed was purchased by the Peak National Park and Derbyshire County Council in 1971 and reopened as the Tissington Trail, for cyclists and walkers.The trail runs for 13 miles from Ashbourne to Parsley Hay where it joins the High Peak Trial. See http://www.peakdistrict.gov.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0009/90486/hptisstrails.pdf or the interpretation boards on the walk.

[2] Turn left along the Trail (Be careful - watch out for bikes and other trail users whilst walking on the Trail) and follow this, pass Thorpe station on your left (where there is a path side picnic site and interpretation board giving further details of the Tissington Trail) and walk on through Fenny Bentley cutting.

Fenny Bentley cutting is a managed nature reserve, where there are several interpretation boards giving local information on local flora and fauna.

Continue along the Trail crossing a bridge over the A515 main road. Just after the next cutting, and immediately before crossing another small bridge, leave the Trail taking a set of steps down on the left hand side. Pass an interpretation board for Mill Pond Plantation (part of the Tissington Estate), and take the path through the gate stile on the left hand side. Follow the  fence and then a stone wall which are now on your right hand side to the wall's end and go through the squeezer stile, cross the field diagonally to its far corner and emerge on to 'The Avenue'  by a Tissington village interpretation board and a candle workshop.

[3] Walk into the village along The Avenue to your right, to the village green, with Yew Tree Well on your right.  At this point if you continue straight on, with the village green on the left and shortly later a duck pond on the right, you come to Town Well on the left. However, fork left from the Avenue by the village green and follow the road with a stream running down it on the right which leads to you towards the Hall. The Old Coach House tea room is immediately on your left, St Mary's church and then Hall Well on your right and further along Tissington Hall on your left.

(B) Tissington village has, since the 1400s. Tissington Hall was built by Francis FitzHerbert in 1609 and the house has been lived in by the FitzHerbert Family ever since. Inside there are paintings, furniture and other family artifacts. The 10 acres of surrounding gardens feature an arboretum and a rose garden.Tissington is also famous for its annual well dressings which run for a week from Accession Day each year with at least 6 wells being dressed in this ancient Derbyshire tradition. The Hall Well ] is an example of one of its wells .

St Mary's Church, Tissington dates back to Norman times, with records showing it to be a well established church by 1227 and probably built shortly after 1100. It contains an interesting Norman font and many monuments to the FitzHerbert family. See also http://www.derbyshireuk.net/tissington_church.html for further information.

Retrace your steps to The Avenue Sign at [3] when you have finished exploring the village. We now start walking along the Limestone Way.

(C)The Limestone Way is a waymarked long distance walking route of around 50 miles from Castleton, in the Hope Valley, south through the limestone scenery of the Peak District to Rocester on the banks of the River Dove, where it links with the Staffordshire Way. On this walk we join a section of it as we leave Tissington through an avenue of lime trees and follow it to nearly the end of the walk at Thorpe . Further details of the entire Limestone Way route can be found at  http://www.simonholtmarketing.com/PDFs/LimestoneWay.pdf

[3] Head along The Avenue away from Tissington (being careful of any traffic), cross a cattle grid and walk along the verge of the road through an avenue of lime trees to a gate by a cattle grid. Go through the gate and cross over the busy A515 and head down the road opposite (no pavement) towards Thorpe, Ilam and Dovedale. (Again being careful of any traffic). Follow this minor road down hill, passing a barn on the right hand side and opposite the end of the field on the right hand side at the bottom of the hill, take a footpath through a hidden stile on the left hand side of the road by a stream.

[4] Climb the field to a gate and squeeze stile in the top right hand corner, cross the road and take the sign posted path bearing left into Bollington End farm caravan site to a stile in the fence ahead (there may be caravans parked in front of the stile) . Proceed on the path (marked with yellow Limestone Way markers) through a series of fields with squeeze stiles and gates in the same direction, crossing a farm track  and through further fields to join a tarmac lane.   Bear left down the lane and shortly take a footpath signed on the right to Thorpe.

Walk downhill following the wall on right hand side, go through a small gate and continue ahead following the hedge on the right, to a hidden stile.  Go through this stile and bearing left, walk down the field with a wall and a ditch on your left. Go through a pair of gates and follow the wall on the left hand side. (Beware: keep to the path by the left hand wall and away from the rifle range on your right particularly when the red flags are flying). 

Continue on the footpath signed Dovedale which follows the wall, ignoring a path signed off to the left. In front of you is conical hill of Thorpe Cloud.Take the next stile on the left hand side to arrive back at the hotel car park where you started.

POI information

The Peveril of the Peak Hotel (http://www.thepeverilofthepeak.com), which gets its name from the novel by Sir Walter Scott, dates back from the 1830s.  It is in a fine setting at Thorpe village the gateway to the bottom of Dovedale in the Peak District, a well known National Trust beauty spot.  The Peveril of the Peak Hotel  is currently operated as a country house by HF Holidays Limited offering walking and other activity holidays (http://www.hfholidays.co.uk) but also is open for other users.

Thorpe was originally a Danish settlement from the 9th Century and is mentioned in the Doomsday Book. A "thorpe" being a farm or hamlet in Danish.The Church, St Leonard's dates back predominantly to Norman times with some Saxon items. Overshadowing the village is the conical hill known as Thorpe Cloud. (942ft/287m high) which marks the southern entrance to Dovedale. This is a limestone reef and takes its name from the old English word 'Clud' meaning rocky hill.

 Tissington is one of the best villages to see the unique Derbyshire tradition of dressing wells with elaborate  themed pictures made for the most part of individual flower petals pressed onto clay covered boards.This tradition seems to date from Victorian times.The blessing of the watersupply, in the form of the well, is an ancient custom which is unique to the Peak District and the surrounding areas and is still continued in many places in the Peak District with a succession of different villages dressing their wells between the end of May and early September. Traditionally, Tissington is one of the first, usually in late May (depending on when Accession day is that year). Further details of the timings and venues for all these well dressings can be found at http://www.welldressing.com/index. This site also has photographs of well dressings in all the villages from previous years.

Notes

Ordnance Survey Explorer OL24  The Peak District - White Peak Area

Refreshments and toilets at Tissington Station

This walk is mainly on good paths throughout, through fields or along the Tissington Trail, with some stretches on roads as indicated. There is one short uphill section on leaving Thorpe towards point [2] and a further one after point [4]. There are numerous 'squeezer' (narrow) stiles and small gates to negotiate on route and it is not suitable for pushchairs.

There are live stock and birds in the fields so dogs should be kept on leads throughout.

The village of Tissington can be busy when events are being held there (including the well dressings) and also on sunny summer and bank holiday weekends. Details of events can be found at http://www.tissingtonhall.co.uk.

The Hall is open at selected times during the summer. See http://www.tissingtonhall.co.uk for further details of opening times of the Hall and other information on the village.

Other information from interpretation signs on route, local brochures (including Tissington Village 2012), websites referred to in text, http://www.peakdistrictonline.co.uk and http://www.peakdistrictinformation.com.

Acknowledgements

 

 

  • Tissington Trail near Fenny Bentley Cutting
    Tissington Trail near Fenny Bentley Cutting
    By - Jim Conibear
  • View of St Mary
    View of St Mary's church Tissington from near waypoint 3
    By - Jim Conibear
  • Hall Well, Tissington
    Hall Well, Tissington
    By - Jim Conibear
  • Tissington Hall
    Tissington Hall
    By - Jim Conibear
  • Tissington Hall
    Tissington Hall
    By - Jim Conibear
  • Tissington Hall
    Tissington Hall
    By - Jim Conibear
  • Thorpe Cloud from near the Peveril of the Peak
    Thorpe Cloud from near the Peveril of the Peak
    By - Jim Conibear
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