Jump to content

Chinley Churn

Coordinates: 53°21′22″N 1°56′45″W / 53.356179°N 1.9459626°W / 53.356179; -1.9459626
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chinley Churn
Highest point
Elevation457 metres (1,499 ft)
Prominence127 metres (417 ft)
Coordinates53°21′22″N 1°56′45″W / 53.356179°N 1.9459626°W / 53.356179; -1.9459626
Geography
Map
LocationChinley, Derbyshire, England
OS gridSK037844
Topo mapOS Explorer OL1

Chinley Churn is a prominent gritstone hill between the villages of Chinley and Hayfield in the Derbyshire Peak District, England. The summit is 457 metres (1,499 ft) above sea level.[1]

The hilltop ridge area is designated as open access land, following the Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000. The trig pillar at the lower secondary summit further south is on private land.[2]

Craken Edge Quarry (worked from at least 1640 until the 1900s) is designated a Regionally Important Geological Site.[3] A burial barrow (near the site of the now removed modern trig pillar) was reported in 1901 as the resting place of an ancient Celtic chieftain called Taro Trin (the Bull of Conflict), according to tradition.[4]

Chinley Churn is one of the 95 Ethels hills of the Peak District, launched by the countryside charity CPRE in 2021.[5]

The trig pillar on the hill was removed sometime after April 2024 - thought to be by the farmer. A video posted by "The Peak District Viking" is thought to be the last pictures of the trig, which show it at an angle and uprooted. A further video from "Wild Days Adventure" on the 23rd of June show the hill top with no trig pillar and the original site covered by hay.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Chinley Churn". Hill Bagging – Database of British and Irish Hills. Retrieved 4 November 2020.
  2. ^ OL1 Dark Peak area (Map). 1:25000. Explorer. Ordnance Survey. West sheet.
  3. ^ "MDR491 - Cracken Edge quarry, above Chinley". Derbyshire Historic Environment Record. Retrieved 4 November 2022.
  4. ^ Turner, William M (1901). Romances of the Peak. Simpkin and Marshall. pp. 159–160.
  5. ^ Gough, Julie (7 May 2021). "Our Peak District hill walking challenge: climbing the 95 'Ethels'". CPRE Peak District and South Yorkshire. Retrieved 13 May 2021.