Shallcross

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Shallcross
Derbyshire
The Shall Cross (geograph 5541904).jpg
The Shall Cross, Shallcross
Location
Location: 53°18’56"N, 1°58’45"W
Data
Post town: High Peak
Postcode: SK23
Dialling code: 01663
Local Government
Council: High Peak
Parliamentary
constituency:
High Peak

Shallcross is a small village in north-western Derbyshire, at the edge of the Peak District, on the eastern side of the River Goyt, which marks the border of Cheshire to the west. It stands between Whaley Bridge and Fernilee, and 15 miles south of Manchester.

The area attracts many outdoors enthusiasts, especially hikers, because of the beauty and variety of the scenery. The country rises steeply as it ascends the Goyt Valley from the canal terminal at Whaley Bridge, past the Fernilee Reservoir, and onto the highlands of Axe Edge Moor, which spreads across Derbyshire, Cheshire and Staffordshire.

History

There is much evidence of ancient settlement in the area, and ancient barrows and stones are found on nearby Ladder Hill.[1]

The village of Shallcross is not mentioned in the Domesday Book, but it was known before 1108, as it mentioned in the charter bestowed on the Lenton Priory by William Peverel before that date:

Two parts of the tithes of his demesne pastures in the Peak, namely in Shalcross, Fernilee, Darnall, Quatford, Buxton, Shirebrook, Stanton, Cowdale, Crochil Callow, Dunningestede, Chelmorton, and Sterndale, also the whole tithe of colts and fillies, wherever there was a stud-farm in his Peak demesnes, together with the tithes of his lead and of his venison both in skins and meat, all in Derbyshire.[2]

From 1108 onwards, the name occurs in various phonetic variations, both as a village and as a family name, as in Shallcross, Shalcrosse, Shawcross, de Shakelcrosse, and similar on land deeds and church records.[3]

The name Shallcross itself comes from an ancient stone cross, known as the Shall Cross, only the shaft of which is still standing. This cross is traditionally dated to the year 832, when St Paulinus visited the area, although the existing stone shaft may have been erected at a later date. The name comes from the Old Norse shakal, denoting a tapering pole, which describes the shape of the shaft. For a time it was removed and used as the pedestal for a sun-dial in the garden of one of the local homes, but it was discovered and has been restored to its original location.[4]

Shallcross was once a stop on the Cromford and High Peak Railway line, which crossed the hills to connect the Peak Forest Canal terminal at Whaley Bridge with the Cromford Canal 30 miles to the south. The Shallcross Incline was a notable feature of this line, as the rail cars had to be pulled up the steep incline by a steam engine at the top of the hill. Opened in 1831, the northern end of the railway, including the Shallcross station, was abandoned in 1892, although a short section of the line serving a goods yard, identified on Ordnance Survey maps as Shallcross Yard, remained in use until 1965.[5][6]

About the village

Other notable features in the village included the Shallcross Colliery, a mill, and a large gunpowder factory, all of which are now closed.

Shallcross Hall was the ancestral home of the Shallcross family, but it was damaged by fire and torn down in 1968.[7]

In popular fiction

The Shallcross family is featured in the novel A World of Profit (1968) by Louis Auchincloss.

Outside links

References

  1. Memorials of Old Derbyshire, Marsden (1907)
  2. A History of the County of Nottingham, William Page, (1910)
  3. Shawcross, William: 'The Shallcross Pedigree' (1908)
  4. Sharpe, Neville: 'Crosses of Derbyshire' (Landmark Books, 2000)
  5. Kingscott, George: 'Lost Railways of Derbyshire' (Countryside Books, 2007)
  6. Ordnance Survey 1:10,560 scale map, dated 1954-5
  7. Craven, Maxwell: 'Lost Houses of Derbyshire' (Landmark Publishing, 2002)