Broughton, West

Settlement in Derbyshire Derbyshire Dales

England

Broughton, West

Minor road at Hill Farm
Minor road at Hill Farm Credit: Ian S

Broughton is a small village located in the West Derbyshire district of Derbyshire, England. Situated in the heart of the Peak District National Park, Broughton is surrounded by picturesque countryside, offering stunning views and a tranquil atmosphere.

The village is nestled along the A515 road, which connects it to nearby towns such as Ashbourne and Buxton. Despite its small size, Broughton boasts a close-knit community, with a population of around 200 residents.

Broughton is renowned for its beautiful stone-built cottages, which add to the village's charm and traditional character. Many of these cottages date back several centuries, providing glimpses into the area's rich history.

One of the notable landmarks in Broughton is the Church of All Saints, a Grade I listed building that showcases stunning medieval architecture. The church, which dates back to the 13th century, stands as a testament to the village's long-standing heritage.

The village also offers several amenities for its residents and visitors. These include a village hall, a primary school, and a pub, providing a sense of community and convenience. Additionally, Broughton is well-placed for outdoor enthusiasts, with numerous walking and cycling routes in the surrounding countryside, including Dovedale and the Tissington Trail.

Overall, Broughton is a picturesque village that offers a peaceful escape from the bustle of city life. With its idyllic setting, historic buildings, and strong community spirit, it is a delightful place to visit or call home.

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Broughton, West Images

Images are sourced within 2km of 52.895473/-1.7881686 or Grid Reference SK1433. Thanks to Geograph Open Source API. All images are credited.

Minor road at Hill Farm
Minor road at Hill Farm
Minor road joins the A515
Minor road joins the A515
Grove Lane Grove Lane looking down the hill to a cottage or two.
Grove Lane
Grove Lane looking down the hill to a cottage or two.
The road to Sudbury A road that has a sign saying narrow road with passing places, though I did not notice many passing plces, so it is a good job no traffic came in the opposite direction.
The road to Sudbury
A road that has a sign saying narrow road with passing places, though I did not notice many passing plces, so it is a good job no traffic came in the opposite direction.
Near Sudbury Prison Sudbury Prison is an Open Prison and used to have a large number of walk out prisoners in the 1980's though that now appears to have stopped.
Near Sudbury Prison
Sudbury Prison is an Open Prison and used to have a large number of walk out prisoners in the 1980's though that now appears to have stopped.
Twelve Acres Farm The fields of Twelve Acres Farm. I assume the farm is actually larger than twelve acres, otherwise it would be a very small farm.
Twelve Acres Farm
The fields of Twelve Acres Farm. I assume the farm is actually larger than twelve acres, otherwise it would be a very small farm.
Sheep grazing in a field near Sudbury
Sheep grazing in a field near Sudbury
Derby Road
Derby Road
Derby Road near Doveridge
Derby Road near Doveridge
Sudbury Hall The south west elevation of Sudbury Hall, a National Trust manor house.
Sudbury Hall
The south west elevation of Sudbury Hall, a National Trust manor house.
Sudbury Hall from rear gardens Sudbury Hall is a country house in Sudbury, Derbyshire. It is regarded as one of the country's finest Restoration mansions but is based on a Jacobean design. It has Grade I listed status.

The present house at Sudbury was built between 1660 and 1680 by George Vernon. He also built the estate village near the Hall to provide housing for his servants, labourers and tradesmen. The estate village buildings survive intact today.

In 1967 the Hall, its contents and gardens were sold to the National Trust in part-payment of death duties. In 2020 the hall was rebranded as the Children’s Country House at Sudbury with some of the  contents removed and the visitor experience remodelled for children. This change has raised controversy
Sudbury Hall from rear gardens
Sudbury Hall is a country house in Sudbury, Derbyshire. It is regarded as one of the country's finest Restoration mansions but is based on a Jacobean design. It has Grade I listed status. The present house at Sudbury was built between 1660 and 1680 by George Vernon. He also built the estate village near the Hall to provide housing for his servants, labourers and tradesmen. The estate village buildings survive intact today. In 1967 the Hall, its contents and gardens were sold to the National Trust in part-payment of death duties. In 2020 the hall was rebranded as the Children’s Country House at Sudbury with some of the contents removed and the visitor experience remodelled for children. This change has raised controversy
Gateway between Sudbury Hall and All Saints Church, Sudbury The gateway and attached walls are dated 1626. To the south, on each side, are ashlar panels, That on the left is inscribed OMNE BONUM/DEI DONUM (all good comes from God). The panel on the right  is inscribed with the initials V, E and M and the date ANNO/1626. The gateway and wall are grade II listed.
Gateway between Sudbury Hall and All Saints Church, Sudbury
The gateway and attached walls are dated 1626. To the south, on each side, are ashlar panels, That on the left is inscribed OMNE BONUM/DEI DONUM (all good comes from God). The panel on the right is inscribed with the initials V, E and M and the date ANNO/1626. The gateway and wall are grade II listed.
Inscription on left side of gateway between Sudbury Hall and church The inscription OMNE BONUM/DEI DONUM (All good comes from God) appears on an ashlar panel on the south side of the wall in which the gateway connecting Sudbury Hall and All Saints church is inset.
Inscription on left side of gateway between Sudbury Hall and church
The inscription OMNE BONUM/DEI DONUM (All good comes from God) appears on an ashlar panel on the south side of the wall in which the gateway connecting Sudbury Hall and All Saints church is inset.
Inscription on right side of gateway between Sudbury Hall and church To the right of the gateway connecting Sudbury Hall and All Saints church is inscribed the initials V, E and M and the date ANNO/1626 on an ashlar panel on the south side of the wall in which the gateway is inset.
Inscription on right side of gateway between Sudbury Hall and church
To the right of the gateway connecting Sudbury Hall and All Saints church is inscribed the initials V, E and M and the date ANNO/1626 on an ashlar panel on the south side of the wall in which the gateway is inset.
Sudbury Hall, Main Road, Sudbury, Ashbourne Grade I Listed country house and stable block now museum. George Vernon inherited the estate in 1660 and immediately began to rebuild his ancestor’s smaller mansion. He moved the village of Sudbury to its present location and set about building the current hall. It is believed he designed the house himself and it has been suggested that the design of the hall was based on Crewe Hall in Cheshire. His son, Henry, inherited Sudbury upon George’s death in 1702. It was his son who became the 1st Lord Vernon in 1762. Sudbury Hall was leased for three years from 1840 by Queen Adelaide, the widow of William IV. The east wing was added by George Devey in 1876–83. In 1919 the 9th Lord Vernon sold land - as well some of the contents of Sudbury Hall - to pay debts and taxes, following the death of his elder brother in World War I. In 1967 Sudbury Hall, its principal contents, part of its gardens and a small acreage of parkland were transferred to the National Trust by the 10th Lord Vernon, in part payment of death duties. In 2020 Sudbury Hall closed to the public for a renovation, during which the National Trust consulted 100 child ‘ambassadors’ to redesign the visitor experience for children. It reopened in October 2022, rebranded as The Children’s Country House at Sudbury.
Sudbury Hall, Main Road, Sudbury, Ashbourne
Grade I Listed country house and stable block now museum. George Vernon inherited the estate in 1660 and immediately began to rebuild his ancestor’s smaller mansion. He moved the village of Sudbury to its present location and set about building the current hall. It is believed he designed the house himself and it has been suggested that the design of the hall was based on Crewe Hall in Cheshire. His son, Henry, inherited Sudbury upon George’s death in 1702. It was his son who became the 1st Lord Vernon in 1762. Sudbury Hall was leased for three years from 1840 by Queen Adelaide, the widow of William IV. The east wing was added by George Devey in 1876–83. In 1919 the 9th Lord Vernon sold land - as well some of the contents of Sudbury Hall - to pay debts and taxes, following the death of his elder brother in World War I. In 1967 Sudbury Hall, its principal contents, part of its gardens and a small acreage of parkland were transferred to the National Trust by the 10th Lord Vernon, in part payment of death duties. In 2020 Sudbury Hall closed to the public for a renovation, during which the National Trust consulted 100 child ‘ambassadors’ to redesign the visitor experience for children. It reopened in October 2022, rebranded as The Children’s Country House at Sudbury.
Path to the Car Park at Sudbury Hall Footpath to the National Trust car park for Sudbury Hall.
Path to the Car Park at Sudbury Hall
Footpath to the National Trust car park for Sudbury Hall.
National Trust Museum of Childhood, Sudbury Hall The National Trust Museum of Childhood, with its reconstructed Victorian schoolroom and nursery with old toys and games, is housed in the 19th-century servants' wing of Sudbury Hall.
National Trust Museum of Childhood, Sudbury Hall
The National Trust Museum of Childhood, with its reconstructed Victorian schoolroom and nursery with old toys and games, is housed in the 19th-century servants' wing of Sudbury Hall.
Lawns at Sudbury Hall Sudbury Hall is a country house in Derbyshire, regarded by many as one of the country's finest Restoration mansions. It has Grade I listed building status (English Heritage Building ID: 416186 <span class="nowrap"><a title="http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-416186-the-hall-and-attached-stable-block-sudbu#.VgENF3mFOHs" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-416186-the-hall-and-attached-stable-block-sudbu#.VgENF3mFOHs">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span>  British Listed Buildings).

The house was built between 1660 and 1680 by George Vernon, grandfather of George Venables-Vernon the 1st Baron Vernon and is notable for its 17th-century craftsmanship, featuring exquisite plasterwork, wood carvings and classical story-based murals. It contains many fine rooms, the most interesting being, the Long Gallery and the Main Hall with the superb Great Staircase, featured in the BBC's dramatisation (1995) of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice <span class="nowrap"><a title="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pride_and_Prejudice_(1995_TV_series)" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pride_and_Prejudice_(1995_TV_series)">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span> . The formal garden and meadows at the rear of the house lead down to the tree-fringed lake.

The property was leased for three years from 1840 by Queen Adelaide, the widow of William IV of the United Kingdom. The east wing was added by George Devey in 1876–83. The building is now owned and maintained by the National Trust to whom it was gifted by the Vernon family in 1967 and is open to the public (<span class="nowrap"><a title="http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/sudbury-hall-and-museum-of-childhood/" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/sudbury-hall-and-museum-of-childhood/">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span>  National Trust).
Lawns at Sudbury Hall
Sudbury Hall is a country house in Derbyshire, regarded by many as one of the country's finest Restoration mansions. It has Grade I listed building status (English Heritage Building ID: 416186 LinkExternal link British Listed Buildings). The house was built between 1660 and 1680 by George Vernon, grandfather of George Venables-Vernon the 1st Baron Vernon and is notable for its 17th-century craftsmanship, featuring exquisite plasterwork, wood carvings and classical story-based murals. It contains many fine rooms, the most interesting being, the Long Gallery and the Main Hall with the superb Great Staircase, featured in the BBC's dramatisation (1995) of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice LinkExternal link . The formal garden and meadows at the rear of the house lead down to the tree-fringed lake. The property was leased for three years from 1840 by Queen Adelaide, the widow of William IV of the United Kingdom. The east wing was added by George Devey in 1876–83. The building is now owned and maintained by the National Trust to whom it was gifted by the Vernon family in 1967 and is open to the public (LinkExternal link National Trust).
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Broughton, West is located at Grid Ref: SK1433 (Lat: 52.895473, Lng: -1.7881686)

Administrative County: Derbyshire

District: Derbyshire Dales

Police Authority: Derbyshire

What 3 Words

///faced.scouting.chosen. Near Doveridge, Derbyshire

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Nearby Amenities

Located within 500m of 52.895473,-1.7881686
Motorway Junction
Ashbourne Interchange
Lat/Long: 52.8949465/-1.7808599
Parking
Lat/Long: 52.8981209/-1.7909954
Phone
Emergency: phone
Lat/Long: 52.8982974/-1.7915115
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 52.8916065/-1.7868769
The data included in this document is from www.openstreetmap.org. The data is made available under ODbL.

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