Ashbourne Derbyshire. Southern gateway to the Peak District.

Ashbourne, Derbyshire is the southern gateway to the Peak District. Close to the River Dove and famous for its ancient football match held at shrove-tide each year. A Saxon town, it has associations with Dr Johnson.

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 Ashbourne


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Ashbourne is the southern gateway to the Peak and lies on the boundary of the Old Red Sandstone of southern Derbyshire and the Limestone which surrounds Dovedale and the White Peak. Although the town lies a short distance away from the River Dove, it commands the approach to Dovedale.

It is a colourful and historic town, already a Royal Borough by the time of the Domesday survey. Church Street, which leads out west from the town centre, has many fine buildings, including of course St Oswald's church, the former Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School (founded 1585), Owfield's Almshouses (1614-30), and The Mansion, which was the home of the Rev John Taylor from 1740 to 1787. A colourful character, Taylor was one of Dr Johnson's closest friends, and Johnson was a frequent visitor here. The town can also boast of visits by Charles I and Bonny Prince Charlie, who stayed here on his march south to Derby in 1745.

The streets in the centre of the town are quite narrow and the are overhung by the inn sign of the Green Man and Black's Head - a famous Georgian coaching inn once frequented by Dr Johnson and Boswell. To the left are the former Shambles (now called Victoria Square), which lead up to the Market Square, the hub of the modern town. (There is a market every Thursday). The town has a fairly wide range of shops and of course numerous pubs.

Probably the most famous feature of Ashbourne is its Shrove-Tide football match - an annual game of 'traditional' football, played between the 'Uppards' and 'Downards' with a leather ball stuffed with sawdust. The only rule is that the ball has to be grounded at either of the two goals, which are 3 miles apart along the valley where Ashbourne lies. Play starts at 2pm and continues until 10pm unless a goal is scored after 5pm. There are hundreds of participants and to describe it as rough would be an understatement - it is a moving brawl which continues through the roads of the town, across fields and even along the bed of the local stream. The violence involved has led to intermittent attempts to ban it, but the game has been played here for hundreds of years and fortunately it still continues.

The Tourist Information Centre is in the market square - telephone 01335 343666

Ashbourne Photo Gallery - click on the images to enlarge- Click Here for a slide show
Ashbourne - view of church
0 - Ashbourne - view of church
Ashbourne Church - stonework detail
1 - Ashbourne Church - stonework detail
Ashbourne - St Oswalds Church
2 - Ashbourne - St Oswalds Church
Ashbourne Church - East window
3 - Ashbourne Church - East window
Ashbourne Church - Bradbourne tomb
4 - Ashbourne Church - Bradbourne tomb
Ashbourne Church - Tomb of Penelope Boothby
5 - Ashbourne Church - Tomb of Penelope Boothby
Ashbourne - The Shambles
6 - Ashbourne - The Shambles
Ashbourne - Green Man and Blacks Head sign
7 - Ashbourne - Green Man and Blacks Head sign
Ashbourne - The market place
8 - Ashbourne - The market place
Ashbourne - The market place
9 - Ashbourne - The market place
Ashbourne - Plaque on Dr Taylors house
10 - Ashbourne - Plaque on Dr Taylors house
Ashbourne - the old Grammar School building
11 - Ashbourne - the old Grammar School building
Ashbourne - view of the Grammar School building
12 - Ashbourne - view of the Grammar School building

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