Tel: 0845 166 8022 - Peak District Online
Email: info@peakdistrictonline.co.uk

  Home > Peak District Villages > Villages In The Peaks > Crich
Peak District Webcam
Peak Photography
Advertising With Us
Advertising Information
Testimonials
Accommodation By Area
Barn Accommodation
Bed & Breakfast
Holiday Cottages
Hotels By Village
Pub Accommodation By Village
Recommended Places
Peak District Accommodation
4 Star Accommodation
5 Star Accommodation
Accommodation For Singles
Boutique Barns
Boutique Bed & Breakfast
Boutique Cottages
Boutique Hotels
Boutique Houses
Budget Accommodation
Camping & Caravanning
Farm Accommodation
Group Accommodation
Holiday Parks
Luxury Barns
Luxury Bed & Breakfast
Luxury Cottages
Luxury Houses
Luxury Lodges
National Trust
Peak Apartments
Peak Bed And Breakfast
Peak District Barns
Peak District Bunk Barns
Peak District Coach Parties
Peak District Cottages
Peak District Eco Friendly Accommodation
Peak District Festive Packages
Peak District Hen & Stag Parties
Peak District Hotels
Peak District Houses & Farmhouses
Peak District Lodges
Peak District Luxury Hotels
Peak District Motorhome Hire
Peak District Romantic Retreats
Peak District Short Breaks
Peak District Wheelchair Friendly
Peak Pub Accommodation
Peak Youth Hostels
Pet Friendly Places
School Residential Centres
Seasonal Offers
Self Catering Holidays
Services for Accommodation Owners
With Pool or Spa
Peak District Food
Eating Out In The Peaks
Farmers Markets
Local Produce
Peak Food and Drink
RAMSAY'S BEST RESTAURANT
Peak District Venues
Peak Conferencing
Peak Special Occasions
Peak Weddings
Peak District Villages
The Peak District
Ashbourne
Bakewell
Belper
Buxton
Chatsworth
Derby
Dronfield
Matlock
Peak Photo Gallery
Village Photographs
Villages In The Peaks
Peak District Virtual Tours
Accommodation Tours
Business Virtual Tours
Chesterfield
Chesterfield Business
Chesterfield Guide
Pubs In Chesterfield
Peak District Guide
Peak Business Guide
Peak District Charities
Peak District Health and Beauty
Accommodation In The Peak District
B&B's In The Peak Park
Country Living
Derbyshire Peak District
Golf Courses
Grindleford Gallop
Holiday Accommodation
Peak Countryside
Peak District Antiques
Peak District Art
Peak District Books
Peak District Christmas Breaks
Peak District Corporate Events
Peak District Dating
Peak District Education
Peak District Fairtrade
Peak District Farming
Peak District Holiday Cottages
Peak District Holidays
Peak District Kennels
Peak District Poetry
Peak District Recycling Centres
Peak District Safer Neighbourhood Policing Teams
Peak District Travel
Peak District Vehicle Storage
Peak District Weather
Peak District Websites
Peak Moors
Peak Shopping Guide
Stay In The Peak District
Virtual Tours
Wildlife In The Peak District
Peak District Online Recommended
East Lodge Latest News
Readers Reviews
Recommended Places
Peak District Property
Peak Property
Things To Do In The Peak District
Derbyshire Wildlife Trust
Balloon Rides
Bird Watching
Bird Watching Sites in the Peak District
Blue John
Boating & Sailing
Carsington Water
Country Houses
Cricket
Cycling The Peak District
Events In The Peak
Fishing The Peak District
Fossil Hunting In The Peak District
Gliding The Peak District
Historic Houses & Open Gardens
Horse Racing
Leisure Centres
Mills In The Peaks
Mountain Biking
Peak District Archery
Peak District Attractions
Peak District Canoeing
Peak District Car Boot Sales
Peak District Caverns
Peak District Caving
Peak District Childrens Activities
Peak District Craft Activities
Peak District Curiosities
Peak District Duck Herding
Peak District Grass Karting
Peak District Museums
Peak District Navigation
Peak District Paintballing
Peak District Quad Biking
Peak District Railways
Peak District Shooting
Peak District Stag and Hen Parties
Peak District Tank Driving and 4X4
Peak District Wet Weather Days Out
Peak Gardening
Peak Group Activities
Peak Information
Peak Tourist Information
Rivers In The Peaks
Rock Climbing
Team Building Courses
Walking In Peak District
Well Dressing
Derbyshire
Derbyshire Business
Derbyshire Cottages
Derbyshire Hotels
Derbyshire Photographs
Derbyshire Shopping
Eating Out In Derbyshire
Snapshots In Time
Villages In Derbyshire
Derbyshire Life
The Magazine
Useful Information
Site Map
Accommodation Links
Britain Express
Famous Derbyshire People
Good Food
Mountain Rescue
Partner Sites
Peak Dialects
Peak District Business
Peak District Competitions
Peak District Customs
Peak District Education
Peak District Group Sites
Peak District Maps
Peak District Memories
Peak District Partners
Peak District Postcodes
Peak District Writers
Peak Heritage
Peak People
Peak Telephone Codes
The DDA
Weather
Web Site Design
Other Group Sites
Building Supplies
Crane Hire Companies
Digger Hire Companies
Motorhome Hire Companies
Photography Website
Plant Hire Companies
Scottish Highlands
UK Model Agencies
About Us
Contact Us
Disclaimer
FAQs
Link To Us Now

Crich

Bringing you information on Peak District Holiday Accommodation , Peak District Holiday Cottages, Campsites and Caravan sites in the Peak District, Pubs In The Peak District, Peak District B&B , Peak District Hotels , Tourist Attractions or Town & Village Business of any kind in the Peak District and Derbyshire.



Browse these subcategories:
Crich > Holiday Accommodation In Crich

Crich - The National Tramway Village

The large and sprawling village of Crich sits high in the rolling Derbyshire hills five miles south-east of Matlock, where the White Peak extends a thin finger of carboniferous limestone into the gritstone country east of the wooded Derwent Valley. This ancient settlement has long been a `gateway to the Peak District’, and sits strategically placed on the route of an old ridgeway which runs north from the Trent Basin and on up into Yorkshire.

The familiar landmark of Crich Stand rises from the highest point of the limestone outcrop known as Crich Cliff, whose massive white face looks westward and can be seen by travellers as far away as the A6 between Cromford and Ambergate. The lighthouse-like monument is itself visible from five counties, and on a clear day Lincoln Cathedral can be seen from it’s base.

Modern roads converge on the village from every direction, providing evidence of it’s importance as a regional centre of industry and commerce, which it has been at varying times thoughout it’s two thousand year history. This reached a peak during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries when Crich was caught up in the Industrial Revolution and railways and knitting machines were added to the lead-mining, quarrying, smelting, lime burning and farming which had previously occupied the increasingly growing population.

By 1851 lead mining had declined and the census for that year shows only 23 lead miners in the village, although the Wakebridge, Old End and Jingler mines were worked until the 1950’s. Employment in 1851 was focussed mainly on quarrying and frame-knitting, with 85 quarry workers and 5 lime-burners in the parish, along with 270 people working mainly at home engaged as stockingers.

Limestone extraction was under way from two quarries by 1734 and was carted away by packhorse trains until the Butterley Company built a narrow-guage railway from Crich to the lime kilns beside the Cromford Canal at Bull Bridge over a mile away in 1792. The wagons ran downhill by gravity and were hauled back up by teams of horses until steam traction was introduced in 1860.

George Stephenson built the second mineral railway in 1841, linking Church Quarry and Cliff Quarry with his lime kilns beside the canal at Ambergate. The Butterley Company’s line closed in 1932, whilst Stephenson’s original line latterly used deisel locomotives before eventually closing in 1957.

These days Crich’s economy is mainly fuelled by tourism - and the village seems to have developed a bit of an identity crisis!

For almost forty years the National Tramway Museum - now the Crich Tramway Village -has been the main attraction for tourists but now it has a rival. The former Crich Fish & Chip Shop is now called the `Cardale Chippie’ and the village is known to millions of television viewers as `Cardale’, the original location for Central T.V.’s `Peak Practice’ series.Even the old established Allsop’s bakery just off the Market Place now doubles as a Café and photographs of the cast from the hit show decorate it’s walls. Yet Crich remains attractive, as it has always been.

The name of the village suggests Celtic origins, for Crich is an ancient Celtic word for `a hill’. Early settlers would have been attracted by this strategic location which afforded commanding views over the important fertile river valleys of the Derwent and the Amber, and by the plentiful supply of water from the numerous springs at this geological divide of limestone and gritstone.

It is likely that the Romans mined lead here, for they were certainly in the vicinity as evidenced by the pottery and hoards of Roman coins found in the parish. The Saxons were here too and fragments of their stonework, along with that of the later Norman masons survives in the fabric of the mainly 14th century parish church, whose short spire rises from a Perpendicular tower on the northern hillside overlooking the village.

Crich was once an important market-town which held a weekly Friday market and had sheep and cattle fairs in April and October in the old market place up near the church.As the village expanded alongside the road to Bull Bridge and Fritchley, so the village centre, along with the Market Place, was relocated further down the hill beyond the four-way junction with the splendid gritstone market cross in the middle, and now surrounds the four stone drinking troughs which mark the centre of the present village square which is dominated by the large pedimented gritstone Baptist Chapel of 1877.

Civic pride and enterprise flourishes today in Crich’s Market Place with a range of shops and businesses that larger towns would be proud of. A typical example is Crich Pottery owned and run by Diana and David Worthy who manufacture a unique range of superb award-winning stoneware which is exported all over the world.

Like all Derbyshire villages Crich is best explored on foot, and there is so much here of interest and fascination to the visitor. Crich Stand must be the most conspicuous war memorial in the land rising 63 feet from it’s base to reach a height of 1,018 feet above sea-level.
The magnificent panorama from the viewing platform, reached by a spiral stone staircase, is breathtaking and well worth the 10p admission fee.

This memorial to the 11,409 men of the Sherwood Foresters Regiment who fell in the Great War was opened on August 6th 1923 by General Sir Horace Lockwood Smith-Dorrien, and an annual memorial service takes place at the Stand on the first Sunday in July. Local tradition tells of an original wooden tower here surmounted by a beacon, which was one of dozens on high ground throughout the country used to signal the approach of the Spanish Armada and other events of national importance.

The first stone tower was built in 1788 by Francis Hurt of Alderwasley, but was dismantled in 1849 after being struck by lightning. It’s successor suffered a similar fate and was dismantled after surviving a landslip caused by quarrying that buried two lead mines and demolished a number of buildings in 1882.The current tower was designed by Lieut-Col. A.W.Brewill and was built using the stones from the original construction.

Down below in Crich Quarry is the Crich Tramway Village, visited by many thousands of tourists between April & October each year. The first passengers were carried in a tram hauled by a mare named Bonny hired from a local farmer in 1963 on the original track-bed laid by George Stephenson over a century earlier.

Nowadays there are more than 50 trams from all over the world at the museum and visitors can ride in open-topped splendour along a spectacular rural route high in the hills above the Derwent Valley to Wakebridge and back, before sampling the delights of the Tramway Village with it’s Edwardian façade of shops and cafes. Truly a unique experience – as is any excursion to this ancient and wonderful village set high in the Derbyshire hills.

Resident Writer - Tom Bates





Peak District Holiday Accommodation Peak District GuidePeak District Top TenPeak District Town GuidesThings To Do In The Peak DistrictUseful InformationAbout Us


Search




Newsletter

Please enter your email address below to receive our newsletter emails



 Powered by Global Web Store.  All Software Copyright Global Web Store Ltd 2001- 2010
 All content Copyright © Peak District Online - For all Hotels, Cottages, Campsites, and Other Peak District Accommodation - 2010