Chisworth Explained

Country:England
Static Image:Chisworth 3818.JPG
Static Image Width:240px
Static Image 2:Derbyshire UK parish map highlighting Chisworth.svg
Static Image 2 Width:240px
Static Image 2 Caption:Chisworth parish highlighted within Derbyshire
Official Name:Chisworth
Shire District:High Peak
Shire County:Derbyshire
Region:East Midlands
Constituency Westminster:High Peak
Post Town:GLOSSOP
Postcode District:SK13
Postcode Area:SK
Os Grid Reference:SK995920

Chisworth is a hamlet near Glossop, Derbyshire, England. It is south-west of Glossop town centre, on the south side of the Etherow valley. The parish of Chisworth was formed in 1896, out of the parish of Chisworth and Ludworth. In 1901, it had a population of 409. From 1896 until 1934 it was in the Glossop Rural District, when it was placed with Ludworth into the Chapel en le Frith Rural District.[1] The village possesses a Methodist chapel. The A626 road passes through the hamlet. In June 1930, a local cloudburst caused flooding that killed one man and destroyed equipment at the mills, one of which never reopened.

Robin Hood's Picking Rods

Robin Hood's Picking Rods are a pair of cross shafts described by Historic England as "a wayside and a boundary cross" beside a bridleway at the southern extremity of the parish, thought to be Anglo-Saxon in date. Nearby is a cup-and-ring-marked rock, likely to date from the Bronze Age.

Kinderlee Mill

Kinderlee Mill made yarn thread and baut (string) and was owned by J. H. Ratcliffe, who later sold it to the Rowbottoms. In 1930 it was damaged by a flood and the mill went bankrupt during the slump and was sold to Jacksons of Bradford, who used it to weave belting. In 2008 the mill was converted to residential use and newly built town houses were on the market the following year.

Holehouse Mill

Holehouse Mill made rope and twine, and was owned by the Rowbottoms. In 1929 it suffered two fires within six months.[2]

Lee Valley Bleach Works

Known as the Bone Mill, it burnt down in 1917. It was rebuilt but never worked.[3] [5]

Notes and References

  1. https://archive.today/20121224062619/http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/relationships.jsp?u_id=10182219 Vision of Britain
  2. Chew Wood Mill

    Chew Wood Mill was built in 1795, and was powered by water taken from the overflow from the Alma Coal Pit. It was managed by the Rowbottom family for 99 years. It was originally a carding and scrubbing mill for wool employing 14 children and women. It was used in the Boer War (1899–1902) to dye Khaki cloth for uniforms. It was flooded in June 1930 and subsequently closed and was demolished.

  3. Book: Ludworth Moor Colliery: The Mine and the Men . Geoffrey . du Feu . Roderick . Thackray . B00H1S9YTM . 1981.
  4. Coal

    The Alma Coal Pit was at the junction of Sandy and Sanders Lane; the loading bay was at the wide paved part of the road and a small brick building opposite was the weighing machine box. This pit closed towards the end of the last century when they struck an underground stream and the mine was flooded. It was a deep pit employing a lot of miners; the winding shaft was 120 yards deep and is now capped. The stream runs down a tunnel opposite Sandy Lane Farm. During the coal strike of 1921, local men and those from Glossop had some success in digging for coal in Chew Woods.

    There were opencast workings at Mount View, documented in a book Ludworth Moor Colliery by Geoffrey du Feu and Roderick Thackray.[3]

  5. See also

    Bibliography

    53.426°N -2.015°W