Buxton Derbyshire. A Peak District spa town.

Buxton, Derbyshire lies just out side the Peak District National Park boundaries. It was founded by the Romans, who built baths to use the warm spa water. In the 18-19th centuries Buxton was famous as a spa. It has an Opera House and an annual Festival.

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 Buxton


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Buxton lies just outside the National Park boundaries, but is the most important town for most of the western and central Peak. The town is situated in a natural bowl on the boundary between the gritstone and limestone areas and the River Wye has had to carve a gorge through the limestone to find an exit. At 300m above sea level the town is the highest town of its size in England and winters are often quite severe.

The site has been occupied continuously since at least Roman times, when a fort and settlement called Aquae Arnemetiae was established here, probably on the high ground between the market place and the bluff which overlooks the river by the police station. As well as its strategic situation, the Romans were attracted to the site by the warm springs which emerge near the River Wye with a constant temperature of 28 degrees Celsius. They built baths here and for the following centuries these springs have been a major source of importance and income for Buxton.

The spring at St Ann's well was probably a place of pilgrimage as early as the Middle Ages, but certainly by Tudor times it was fairly well established as a spa and in Elizabeth I's time it was visited for this purpose by The Earl of Leicester, Lord Burghley and no less than Mary Queen of Scots, who was being held captive by the Earl of Shrewsbury and his wife Bess of Hardwick at nearby Chatsworth.

The great period of Buxton as a spa began when the 5th Duke of Devonshire started the construction of the Crescent in 1780. This magnificent building took ten years to build and was constructed over the river alongside the site of St Ann's well. It cost the huge sum of £38,000. From this time until the early 20th century a series of fine buildings were constructed in Buxton, starting with the Duke's stables in 1785 - this was converted to a hospital in the 1880s and a huge dome erected over the exercise area in the centre. In 1851-3 a new set of thermal baths were built, but in 1863 the railway arrived in Buxton to usher in its golden age.

The town boomed now that access was easy. Large hotels were built, (of which only The Palace now survives), the Opera House was constructed, and Pavilion Gardens. Fashionable town houses sprang up and the town expanded to almost its present limits. This period is best captured by Vera Brittan's 'Testament of Youth', which recounts her childhood experiences in Buxton.

At the same time, limestone quarrying became a major industry, now that the stone and lime products were easily transported by railway across the country. The large quarries which we now see around Buxton began at this time.

After the First World War, the spa industry went into a gradual decline and by the 1950s Buxton was a decaying backwater. A recovery began in the 1980s with the reopening of the Opera House and the establishment of the annual Opera Festival, but the fragility of this is illustrated by the fact that The Crescent currently lies empty. More recently still, the town has undergone a second revival, with the University of Derby moving into the former Devonshire Royal Hospital building, and and ambitious project begun to reopen the spa and The Crescent.

The town has a full range of shops, centred around a shopping arcade built over the culverted River Wye, just off Spring Gardens. There is a market every Tuesday and Saturday. The town's information centre is in the former mineral baths, next door to The Crescent. Telephone: 01298 25106, fax: 01298 73153.

Other things to see in Buxton include the Museum and Poole's Cavern and Grin Low country Park. Buxton has a well-dressing and carnival which starts on the second Sunday in July. The annual Festival is in mid-late July (information on 01298 70395) and this is followed by the annual Gilbert and Sullivan Festival. The Opera House box office: 01298 72190.



Useful local links:
Buxton Festival The annual opera, music and arts festival in Buxton.Buxton Festival Fringe A guide to fringe events at Buxton Festival.Buxton Opera House Buxton Opera House offer a full range of cultural events.Buxton Gilbert and Sullivan Festival The country's (if not the world's) leading festival of Gilbert and Sullivan music. Buxton Weather Station An enthusiast's Buxton Weather station.Saint Peters Church, Fairfield St Peter's is one of the Anglical churches in Buxton.Let's Stay Peak District's guide to Buxton The Let's Stay Peak District web site is one of the most comprehensive and most successful sites devoted to the Peak District.

Buxton Photo Gallery - click on the images to enlarge- Click Here for a slide show
Buxton's Edwardian Opera House
0 - Buxton's Edwardian Opera House
Buxton Crescent
1 - Buxton Crescent
Buxton Crescent in snow
2 - Buxton Crescent in snow
Buxton Old Hall Hotel
3 - Buxton Old Hall Hotel
Buxton - St Johns church
4 - Buxton - St Johns church
Buxton - St Anns well
5 - Buxton - St Anns well
Buxton - inside the old Thermal Baths
6 - Buxton - inside the old Thermal Baths
Buxton Museum
7 - Buxton Museum
Pavilion Gardens - The minature train
8 - Pavilion Gardens - The minature train
Pavilion Gardens - View across the gardens
9 - Pavilion Gardens - View across the gardens
Pavilion Gardens - Inside the hot house
10 - Pavilion Gardens - Inside the hot house
Pavilion Gardens - the River Wye and Bandstand
11 - Pavilion Gardens - the River Wye and Bandstand
Pavilion Gardens - View across the boating lake
12 - Pavilion Gardens - View across the boating lake
Pavilion Gardens - The Octagon
13 - Pavilion Gardens - The Octagon
Buxton - Grin Low - Solomons Temple
14 - Buxton - Grin Low - Solomons Temple
Buxton view from Grin Low
15 - Buxton view from Grin Low
Buxton - Pooles Cavern
16 - Buxton - Pooles Cavern
Buxton Palace Hotel
17 - Buxton Palace Hotel
Axe Edge view down the Upper Dove valley
18 - Axe Edge view down the Upper Dove valley
Buxton - the former Devonshire Hospital, now Derby University
19 - Buxton - the former Devonshire Hospital, now Derby University
Pavilion Gardens - the Octagon and the River Wye
20 - Pavilion Gardens - the Octagon and the River Wye

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