Buxton
This elegant Georgian town is less than an hour journey from
the cities Manchester, Sheffield, Stoke on Trent and Derby
and an hour and a half from Nottingham. Set 1000 feet above
sea level amidst the dramatic Peak District
landscape, Buxton has been a popular holiday resort for centuries,
blessed with stunning scenery, magnificent architecture, wealth
of shops, a thriving arts scene and its world-famous spa water.
Buxton is the largest town in the Peak
District & lies on the divide between the limestone
White Peak & the gritstone of the Dark
Peak. The Romans name for Buxton was Aquae Arnemetiae
– The Spa of the Goddess of the Grove. The water is
famous for its purity & rejuvenating properties &
you can fill your bottle up from the spring which still bubbles
up, opposite the Tourist Information Centre near to the Colonnade.
Buxton Country Park
Poole's Cavern lies to the south-west of Buxton centre, below
Grin Low and Grin Low woods. The whole area is a country park
in the care of Buxton Civic Association.
The cavern was formed by the action of the river Wye, which
rises on Axe Edge (The name ‘Axe’ is derived from
the old English word Isca, which is also where the word ‘whisky’
come from).
The cavern gains its name from 'The robber Poole', who is
reputed to have lived in the cave in the 15th century. However,
the cave has been used by Man since Neolithic times and archaeological
digs have revealed Stone Age tools and artefacts, Bronze Age
pottery and a wealth of Roman material. It seems that at one
time in the Roman period the cave was used as a workshop by
a craftsman who made bronze brooches and other metal items.
Many Roman coins and pottery were also found.
The cavern has attracted visitors for hundreds of years,
and there is a local tradition that Mary Queen of Scots came
to visit on one of her trips to take the waters at Buxton
during her imprisonment at Chatsworth.
The top of Grin Low, which once had a Bronze Age tumulus,
is now capped by Solomon's Temple, a folly built in 1895 by
public subscription to provide work for the local jobless.
It makes a fine viewpoint.
The Cavern is open to visitors from mid-February - end of
October from 10.00 - 5.00 daily. Adult £5.50, Child
£3.00, Concessions £4.50 and Family ticket £15.
Entry to the country park is free. 01298 73563.
Website: www.poolescavern.co.uk
Buxton Crescent
In the late 18th century Buxton followed the fashion of Bath
and other centres and was developed as a spa by the great
local landowner, the 5th Duke of Devonshire. At the time,
he was making vast profits from his copper mines at nearby
Ecton in the Manifold valley, and these are reputed to have
paid for his building work in Buxton.
The most famous building of the time is The Crescent, consciously
modelled on that of Bath. It was built for the Duke between
1780 and 1784 by John Carr, out of locally quarried gritstone,
and included a ballroom and an Assembly Room as well as a
town house for the Duke and shops along the ground floor.
Above it, on the west side, he built a fine circular set
of stables, which the 6th Duke gave to charity in 1859 to
be converted into the Devonshire Royal Hospital. The architect,
Henry Curry, covered the circular exercise area in the centre
of the stables with a huge iron-framed dome covered in slate.
Until recently this was the largest unsupported dome in the
world.
The hospital has recently closed and the building has been
sold to the University of Derby, to be used as the centrepiece
of their new Buxton campus.
Next door to The Crescent are the former Thermal Baths (built
1851-3), now the Tourist Information Centre, and then the
Old Hall Hotel - once the town house of Bess of Hardwick and
her husband the Earl of Shrewsbury, the jailers of Mary Queen
of Scots. This is where she stayed when she visited Buxton,
though the building has been much altered since.
Buxton Museum
Buxton Museum is housed in the buildings of the former Peak
Hotel, almost opposite the Town Hall. It is small but well
worth a visit.
It is an excellent place from which to begin to appreciate
the landscape and history of the Peak. Upstairs there is the
Peak District display, which deservedly won
a 'Museum of the Year' award in 1990 - this is an excellent
show which illustrates how the landscape of the Peak
District developed, and the animals and people who
lived here in ancient times.
Also upstairs is an art gallery used for regular exhibitions
of work by local artists, while downstairs there are a range
of important geological and historical finds (such as the
Boyd-Dawkins material), but displayed in the familiar musty
cases of traditional museums.
The museum is opposite the Town Hall in Higher Buxton.
Buxton Opera House (Tel. 0845 12 72190)
Designed by Frank Matcham in grand Edwardian style, was completed
in 1905. Following a period when it had fallen into disuse,
it was lovingly restored in 1979, and re-opened as an opera
house. In the same year the Buxton International Festival
of Music and Arts was born, which has developed into one of
this country’s largest opera-based festival.
Pavillion Gardens
The Opera House stands in 23 acres of ornamental gardens in
the heart of Buxton. Laid out in 1871 by Edward Milner, with
money donated by the Duke of Devonshire the Pavilion Gardens
are a pleasant place to wander.
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