Buxton

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Buxton


Buxton from Solomon's Temple looking northwards

Buxton (Derbyshire)
Buxton

Buxton shown within Derbyshire
Population 25,000
OS grid reference SK059735
District High Peak
Shire county Derbyshire
Region East Midlands
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town BUXTON
Postcode district SK17
Dialling code 01298
Police Derbyshire
Fire Derbyshire
Ambulance East Midlands
European Parliament East Midlands
UK Parliament High Peak
List of places: UKEnglandDerbyshire

Coordinates: 53°15′32″N 1°54′40″W / 53.259, -1.911

Buxton is a spa town in Derbyshire, England. Located close to the county boundary with Cheshire to the west, Buxton is described as "the gateway to the Peak District National Park". A municipal borough until 1974, Buxton was then merged with other localities including Glossop, lying primarily to the north, to form the local government district and borough of High Peak within the county of Derbyshire. Buxton is within the sphere of influence of Greater Manchester due to its close proximity to the county.

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[edit] Geology

Built on the boundary of the Carboniferous limestone and the Derbyshire shale and gritstone, the original settlement was largely of limestone construction, of which only the parish church of St. Anne, built in 1625, remains. The present buildings, of locally quarried sandstone, mostly date from the late eighteenth century.

The river Wye has carved an extensive limestone cavern at the South edge of the town, known as Poole's Cavern, that is open to the public for viewing along more than 300 metres of chambers.

[edit] History

People filling up bottles of water at St Ann's Well
People filling up bottles of water at St Ann's Well

Built on the River Wye, and overlooked by Axe Edge Moor, Buxton has a long history as a spa town due to its geothermal spring which rises at a constant temperature of 28 °C. The source of the spring is behind Eagle Parade and piped to St. Ann's Well (often mistaken for the source) opposite The Crescent near the town centre.

Each summer the wells are decorated according to the local tradition of well dressing. The Well Dressing weekend has developed to become something of a town carnival, including live music and funfair.

Initially developed by the Romans around AD 78, the settlement was known as Aquae Arnemetiae (or the spa of the goddess of the grove), although little evidence remains to be seen today. The town largely grew in importance in the late 18th century when it was developed by the Dukes of Devonshire, with a second resurgence a century later as the Victorians were drawn to the reputed healing properties of the waters.

The Dukes of Devonshire have been closely involved with Buxton since 1780, when the 5th Duke used the profits from his copper mines to develop the town as a spa in the style of Bath. Their ancestor Bess of Hardwick had taken one of her four husbands, the Earl of Shrewsbury, to "take the waters" at Buxton shortly after he became the jailer of Mary, Queen of Scots, in 1569, and they took Mary there in 1573 — she called Buxton "La Fontagne de Bogsby", but stayed at the site of the Old Hall Hotel.

Corbar hill and the dome
Corbar hill and the dome

[edit] Notable architecture

  • The Crescent (1780–1784) was modelled on Bath's Royal Crescent by John Carr along with the neighbouring irregular octagon and colonnade of the Great Stables. The crescent incorporates a grand assembly room with a fine painted ceiling. Nearby stands the elegant and imposing monument to Samuel Turner (1805 - 1878), treasurer of the Devonshire Hospital and Buxton Bath Charity, built in 1879 and accidentally lost for the latter part of the 20th century during construction work before being found and restored in 1994.
  • The Devonshire (1780–1789) was created from the Great Stables, converted by Henry Currey, in 1859. It became the Devonshire Royal Hospital (now the Devonshire Campus of the University of Derby). Later phases of the conversion were by local architect Robert Rippon Duke including his design for what was the world's largest unsupported dome with a diameter of 44.2 m, beating the Pantheon (43 m) and St Peter's Basilica (42 m) in Rome, and St Paul's Cathedral (34m). However, this record is now routinely beaten by space frame domes such as the Georgia Dome (256 m). The main building and its surrounding Victorian villas is now part of the University of Derby.
  • Buxton Opera House was designed by Frank Matcham in 1903. He was a prolific theatrical architect and also designed several London theatres, including the London Palladium, the London Coliseum, and the Hackney Empire. It is attached to the Pavilion Gardens, Octagonal Hall (built in 1875) and the smaller Paxton Theatre. The Pavilion Gardens contain 23 acres of gardens and ponds and were opened in 1871. Opposite is an original Penfold octagonal post box (one of only 101 remaining).
Buxton Opera House
Buxton Opera House
Buxton Crescent and St. Anne's Well
Buxton Crescent and St. Anne's Well
Buxton Wells
Buxton Wells
  • The Natural Baths, by Henry Currey, sit on the site of the original Roman Baths. The building was opened in 1854 and re-developed as an arcade in 1987, featuring a barrel valuted stained glass canopy - the largest stained glass window in Britain - designed by Brian Clarke.
  • The Pump Room, also by Henry Currey, was built in 1884 opposite The Crescent. Visitors could 'take the waters' until 1981. Between 1981 and 1995 the building housed the unique Micrarium exhibition.[1] The building is being refurbished as part of the National Lottery-funded Buxton Crescent and Thermal Spa re-development. Beside it, added in 1940, stands St Ann’s Well.
  • The 122-room Palace Hotel, built in 1868, is a prominent feature of the Buxton skyline, situated on the hill above the railway station. It was designed by Henry Currey, architect to the 7th Duke of Devonshire.[2]
  • The Old Hall Hotel is one of the oldest buildings in Buxton. It was owned by the 6th Earl of Shrewsbury, George Talbot. He and his wife, Bess of Hardwick, were the "jailers" of Mary Queen of Scots. She came to Buxton several times to take the waters, the last of which was in 1584. The present building dates from 1670 and has a five-bay front with a Tuscan doorway.[3]
  • The town is overlooked by two highly visible landmarks; atop Grinlow Hill (1441 ft above sea level) is Grinlow Tower (locally also called "Solomons Temple"), a 2 story granite, crooked, crenelated folly built in 1834 by Solomon Mycock to provide work for the towns unemployed and later restored in 1996 after a lengthly closure to the public. In the other direction, on Corbar hill (1433 ft above sea level) stands Corbar Cross, a tall, simple, wooden crucifix given to the Roman Catholic Church by the Duke of Devonshire in 1950, to commemorate Holy Year.

[edit] Culture

The annual Buxton Festival, Four Four Time music festival, and International Gilbert and Sullivan Festivals are held in the refurbished Opera House.

The Buxton Festival, founded in 1979, which runs for about two weeks in mid-July, is particularly noted for its Handel productions and the presentations of rare operas, with top-quality artists and orchestras. Running alongside it is the Buxton Festival Fringe. It is popular as a warm-up for the Edinburgh Fringe, and it now claims to be the largest 'true' fringe festival in the UK and is the second-largest Arts festival in the country after Edinburgh, which is itself the largest annual festival in the world.

The International Gilbert and Sullivan Festival, founded in 1994, which runs for over three weeks from the end of July through most of August, is an adjudicated competition among amateur G&S societies and also presents professional performances and fringe events.

In 1992, American actor Carl Weathers visited Buxton and declared it to be his "favourite town in the north of England". [4]

Since 2004, the Opera House and the neighbouring Pavilion Gardens have also hosted the annual Four Four Time music festival which sees a wide variety of performers appearing over one week in February.

Buxton has a range of other cultural activities including Screen Buxton, an innovative new film club.

[edit] Economy

Shops in Spring Gardens, Buxton
Shops in Spring Gardens, Buxton

Buxton's mixed economy includes revenue derived from the commercialisation of the local spring waters, bottled and marketed by the Buxton Mineral Water Company (now owned by Nestlé Waters UK). Buxton Blue is a blue cheese with PDO status that can only be made in and around Buxton.

Other major economic activities include tourism and limestone quarrying. The presence of the opera house and the festivals in the summer generate a good deal of economic activity, and Buxton has a considerable number of hotels (including the large Palace Hotel), B&B establishments and restaurants. There is a pedestrian-only street, Spring Gardens, that caters to tourists; an enclosed mall with various stores, including a Marks & Spencer, and a market square in the town.

In 2004 Barclays Bank published a survey of its customers showing that the High Peak borough had the largest percentage year-on-year increase of people earning over £60,000 of anywhere in Britain.

Buxton is twinned with two other towns - Oignies in France and Bad Nauheim in Germany.

[edit] Sport

It the high land above the town there are two small motorcycle speedway stadia. The original High Edge Raceway was the original home of the speedway team Buxton High Edge Hitmen in the mid 1990s before the team moved to the custom build track immediately to the north of the original circuit. The original track in the High Edge Raceway was amongst the shortest and trickiest tracks in the UK. The custom built track is of a more conventional shape and length. Buxton have been regular competitors in the Conference League[5][6].

There is also a local football team, Buxton F.C..

[edit] Climate

At 307 metres (1,000 feet) above sea level, Buxton is the highest market town in England. Alston, Cumbria also makes this claim (but lacks a regular market). Buxton has an annual rainfall (1959-1995) of 1,286 mm with a mean temperature (1959-1995) of 7.8 °C. The town is sometimes described by Derbyshire locals as being 'a top coat colder'.

[edit] Public transport

Buxton is served by a railway line with frequent trains to Stockport and the nearby city of Manchester. The journey from Buxton to Manchester city centre takes just under an hour. Like most busy towns, Buxton had two stations, but one was demolished in the 1960s to make way for the Spring Gardens shopping centre. The trackbed of the Manchester, Buxton, Matlock and Midlands Junction Railway has in part been utilized as a walk and cycleway called the Monsal Trail. Peak Rail, a heritage railway group, have restored the section from Rowsley to Matlock, with the long-term objective of trying to re-open back to Buxton.

The town's buses offer affordable travel into the Peak District National Park. Other buses run to the nearby towns of Chapel en le Frith, New Mills and Glossop, and the 'Transpeak' coach service offers an hourly link to Taddington, Matlock, Derby and Nottingham. There is a Trent Bus directly from the Manchester Airport to Buxton. Other buses provide roughly two-hourly services linking Buxton with Stoke-on-Trent and Sheffield.

[edit] Famous Buxtonians

[edit] References

  1. ^ Micrarium Enterprises
  2. ^ Palace Hotel's website
  3. ^ Information about Buxton buildings
  4. ^ Derbyshire Evening News, 14 June 1992
  5. ^ Speedway in Derbyshire, You and Yesterday, Accessed on 16/12/2007[1]
  6. ^ Neil Hubbert, Victory for the Hitmen, 2 August 2007, Buxton Advertiser, [2]
  7. ^ Tim Brooke Taylor Bigraphy at IMDb
  8. ^ Elizabeth Spriggs Biography at IMDB
  9. ^ Robert Stevenson at IMDb
  10. ^ DLT Biography

[edit] External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica article Buxton.