It’s a place of gentle beauty, where clusters of inky green woodlands lie in dips and darken buttery meadows. Within this undulating landscape, you’ll find villages of weathered stone spread out across uplands and tucked into the folds of high hedged lanes. It’s hard to imagine this tranquil corner of Derbyshire was once a hotbed of political intrigue and revolutionary fervor.
Return to the past to follow in the footsteps of saintly Florence Nightingale and would-be assassin Anthony Babington to the idyllic hamlet of Dethick. Turn the corner of a South Wingfield lane to see the ghostly ruins of Wingfield Manor, where a plot to rescue Mary Queen of Scots was foiled. Follow the Pentrich Revolution Trail, a story of ardent laborers, who rose up against their rulers with pikes, scythes, and guns in England’s last attempted revolution.
Death Oak - a walk to the home of assassination plotter Anthony Babington
Almost opposite the playground at Lea village, a signpost points to a weedy path that disappears into dank woodland. Steps drop steeply to a burbling brook then climb to Swinepark Wood. Here, tall sycamores and Scots pine vie for the skyline in an underwood of holly and rhododendrons. Over a stile, a wide grassy path heads through meadows to Dethick. The path dips then rises, and suddenly St John the Baptist Church comes into view.
As I walk towards the medieval church with its little lantern tower, I imagine Florence Nightingale, who spent the summer months at Lea Hurst, walking this very same path to the church, her long skirts swishing through the clover.
This story is from the August 2020 edition of Derbyshire Life.
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This story is from the August 2020 edition of Derbyshire Life.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
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