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Bretton, Derbyshire is a hamlet in Derbyshire, England. [1] [2] Set on a ridge with a panoramic view, it has few inhabitants but boasts a pub called the Barrel Inn, and the Bretton youth hostel. The hamlet lies above Bretton Clough, a narrow, steep-sided valley which Bretton Brook runs through. [3]
The radio mast on top of Sir William Hill is a prominent local landmark. Sir William Hill Road is an ancient packhorse route across the moor and was part of the Sheffield to Buxton Turnpike of 1758. The Barrel Inn on Sir William Hill Road at Bretton is the highest pub in Derbyshire. [3] Chair Stone of Wet Withens
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Deadman's Clough is a stream in the civil parish of Hazlebadge in the Derbyshire Peak District. [1] The stream rises to the south of Bradwell, where it meets the Bretton Brook to the west of Abney. [2] [3]
The Abney family inherited the manor of Willesley in Derbyshire (the village is now in Leicestershire). The baronetcy was created in 1806. The title became extinct when the 2nd baronet died in 1858. The 17th century red brick hall was remodelled in the 1700s and 1800s, within a park of 155 acres. The hall was demolished in 1953. [43] Burdett ...
The parish is roughly bounded by land features such as Bretton Clough to the west, the Derwent and Dunge Brook to the north, Highlow Brook to the east, and Bole Hill to the south. This area lies in the far north of the Derbyshire Dales district and north region of Derbyshire county. Highlow is completely within the Peak District National Park. [4]
Bretton, Derbyshire; Bretton, Peterborough in Cambridgeshire; Monk Bretton in South Yorkshire; West Bretton in West Yorkshire; Bretton Hall College of Education; Bretton Hall, West Yorkshire; Monk Bretton Priory, South Yorkshire
Highlow Brook is a stream in the civil parish of Highlow in the Derbyshire Peak District. [1] The stream is a tributaries of the River Derwent, flowing southeast from the river, south of Hathersage, before meeting the Bretton Brook in Abney. [2] [3]