Hulme End

Hulme End (/hjm/) is a small hamlet in Staffordshire, England. It is located in the Peak District National Park about 10 miles north of Ashbourne. A natural gateway to the Manifold valley, the settlement is located beside the river Manifold where it crosses the road from Hartington (the nearest village) to Warslow.

Hulme End
Hulme End
Location within Staffordshire
OS grid referenceSK 10630 59273
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townBuxton
Postcode districtSK17
PoliceStaffordshire
FireStaffordshire
AmbulanceWest Midlands
UK Parliament

Hulme End station (left) is now a visitor centre. On the right is the rebuilt former engine shed; built to resemble the original, a small part of the original framework exists inside.

Although in the county of Staffordshire, the hamlet lies close to the Derbyshire border, and in fact has a Derbyshire postal address, i.e. Hulme End, Hartington, Buxton, Derbyshire.

The Leek and Manifold Light Railway

A timetable poster of 1904, now framed in the old station at Hulme End.

The hamlet's primary significance stems from its position as the northern terminus of the former Leek and Manifold Valley Light Railway, an independent narrow gauge (2 ft 6 in (762 mm)) line built following the legislation of the Light Railways Act 1896 which let companies to construct short lines to serve more isolated places.

The line primarily acted as a service for milk trains and tourism. On the timetable Hulme End was described as "Hulme End for Hartington" (Hartington is some 3 miles distant).

During the railway's lifetime there was some talk of extending the line northwards towards Buxton (10 miles to the north), whereby Hulme End, with its engine and carriage sheds, would have become a natural half-way point of the line, with probable considerable resultant growth - and survival of the railway - but this never materialised.

Today the old station building has been fully restored, complete with mock beams, and is now a staffed visitor centre, open most weekends & during school holidays. Information displays outline a brief history of the railway and there is a small collection of memorabilia from the line. The centre supplies the usual range of souvenirs, guide books, maps & leaflets. Within the building are public toilets, and there is a pay-and-display car park. A cycle hire centre opened inside the visitor centre in July 2019, known as the Manifold Valley Cycle Hire.[1]

Adjacent to the station, the former engine has been rebuilt to a similar design as the original; a small part of the original frameworks exists inside. The former coach sheds, which similarly had two roads, have not survived. The rebuilt engine shed is now utilised as the Tea Junction cafe beside the visitor centre,[2] open since August 2009.[3]

In 1937 the former railway was re-opened by the County Council as the Manifold Way, an 8-mile tarmacked leisure route for walkers and cyclists, some of whom use the local campsite. The only such route in the Peak District to have a metalled surface throughout its entire length, it is also ideally suited to wheelchairs and prams, though in places the route forms part of the public highway network so shares motorised traffic on a single track lane. Hulme End, which is served by buses, is now the start point at its northern end.

The Manifold Inn

The Manifold Inn, formerly called The Light Railway, is located beside the river Manifold. Despite its name, it is a 200-year-old coaching inn. Opposite the pub is the Old Toll House, which at one time served the turnpike and river ford. The bridge that the Toll House sits on was originally built in 1790, but most of the original bridge has subsequently been replaced due to damage and collapse. The current bridge has been there since 1819.

Around the Village

The village has no shop, the nearest is in Hartington. Opposite the Manifold Inn there are farm buildings which are now part of a campsite. The three-storeyed Hulme End Farm on the site was bought in the late 1880s by a doctor who enlarged the house and renamed it Bank House. In 1967 his grandson rebuilt the older part, which was suffering from subsidence. This campsite and farm buildings are now collectively called Bank House Farm run by the Bester family.

References

  1. "New cycle hire business and tourism service at Manifold Visitor Centre". Stoke-on-Trent Live. Stoke-on-Trent Live. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
  2. "10 Best Tea Rooms & Cafés in the Peak District & Derbyshire". Explore Buxton. Explore Buxton. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
  3. "The Tea Junction, Hulme End". The Captains Guide. The Captains Guide. Retrieved 25 July 2019.

Keys R and Porter L (1972) The Manifold Valley and its Light Railway, Moorland publishers

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