Financial
advice for residents of Chapel en le Frith,
Derbyshire
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If
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contact us or request a call back and one of our advisers
will be only to pleased to help.
Chapel-en-le-Frith is a small Derbyshire
town in the heart of the Peak District in Northern
England – part of the Pennine Range. Styled
"Capital of the Peak District" on the town
signs, it was established by the Normans in the 12th
century, originally as a hunting lodge in a densely
forested area. The Church of St Mary, prominently
at the highest point of the town, is Norman in origin,
but now almost entirely of 18th century construction.
There is a regular market place, cobbled and raised
above the High Street, and a certain amount of industry
– especially down behind the church at the lowest
part of the town, where is to be be found the brake-lining
manufacturer, Ferodo (an anagram of Froode, the 19th
cent. founder's name), which was a family concern
for over a hundred years, but is now part of an international
conglomerate. Chapel (as the locals normally refer
to it) is the location of the High Peak Borough Council
offices which have recently been moved there from
Buxton. There is a railway station, a mile from the
town centre, on the commuter line from Buxton to Manchester.
The other line passing through the town – once
one of the main lines from London to Manchester –
now carries a constant stream of roadstone from the
quarries around Buxton. It terminates in its junction
with the Manchester-Sheffield trans-Pennine line by
way of two magnificent viaducts, diverging east and
west, above the Black Brook valley at Chapel Milton.
To the north lie the Dark Peak highlands made up of
millstone grit – heather covered, rugged and
bleak. Here we have Chinley Churn and South Head,
with, a little further off, Kinder Scout which looms
above the whole area. To the south and west is the
gentler and more pastoral White Peak consisting of
limestone grass lands, nevertheless with spectacular
bluffs and the occasional gorge. Combs Moss (a gritstone
'edge') dominates the valley in which Chapel lies
from the south and Eccles Pike rises sharply above
the town to its west.
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