Great
Hucklow Area
Great
Hucklow in Derbyshire and the Peak District
is a small, ancient lead mining village
situated 6 miles to the north of Bakewell.
The original settlement was probably
influenced by its position at the junction
of limestone and shale, where spring
waters often emerge.
Britain's
first and most popular national park
The
Peak National Park is commonly known
as the Derbyshire Peak District. This
is, however, not strictly accurate,
as, although three-quarters of the Park's
555 square miles are within the county,
its boundaries also include parts of
no less than six other counties.

Encircled by the industrial cities of
the East and West Midlands, Sheffield
and Manchester, the Peak is the last
unspoilt landscape of the south Pennines.
The forbidding gritstone moors and edges
of the Dark Peak frame the lovely limestone
dales of the White Peak in the centre
and south of the Park. These reach their
summit on the bleak plateau of the 2,088
ft Kinder Scout at the start of the
Pennine Way.
Between
these two contrasting landscapes lie
the gentle shale valleys, where stately
homes, such as Chatsworth and Haddon,
grace beautiful parklands by the Rivers
Derwent and Wye. Here, too, are the
main settlements, such as Bakewell,
the 1,000-year-old 'capital' of the
Peak.
The
Peak National Park was set up 40 years
ago, to protect and enhance this precious
landscape, and to provide quiet, open-air
recreational opportunities for visitors.
Today, with 22 million annual visitors,
the Peak is the most popular national
park in Britain.

Within
walking distance of Great Hucklow is
Eyam the village devastated by the plague,
and Tideswell’s ‘Cathedral
of the Peak’. A short drive will
take you to Castleton with the Blue
John and other show caves, the market
town of Bakewell - famous for its tarts
- and the elegant and lively spa town
of Buxton.
Great Hucklow
There is evidence of human occupation
in these parts since prehistoric times
and just north of the village at Burr
Tor is the site of an ancient Iron Age
fort. Lead had been mined in these parts
since the 11th century and Great Hucklow
was a busy lead mining centre up to
the end of the 19th century.
Great Hucklow was once noted for its
theatre company, created by Dr L.Du
Garde Peach, a local author and playwright.
The Hucklow Players entertained people
from a wide area with their classic
productions, which were often planned
to coincide with a full moon so that,
both audience and players had light
to walk home by.
In
more recent times the Tor above Great
Hucklow has been popular with gliding
enthusiasts and flights can be arranged
with the Derbyshire and Lancashire Gliding
Club which has its headquarters there
The
village has a population of around a
hundred inhabitants, a school built
in 1873, a popular pub - The Queen Anne
- and a small Unitarian Chapel dating
from the 17th century. And, of course,
the focal point of the village, The
Nightingale Centre.