A walk from Whitwell to Shireoaks |
During the COVID-19 Pandemic, as the various restrictions on travel were loosened, I explored the areas around the Chesterfield Canal that I could access from the Sheffield to Lincoln railway line - stopping at Shireoaks a couple of times - and during my online research, I became aware of St. Lawrence's church in Whitwell and All Saints chapel in Steetley, which Pevsner describes as “by far the richest example of Norman architecture in Derbyshire”.
For my last day out in August 2023, having been to Coal Aston, Dronfield and Beeley earlier in the month, following on from my recce of Nether Edge, Brincliffe Edge and Ecclesall Road, I decided to make the effort to go and see them.
Steetley is only 14 km away from Treeton as the crow flies and only takes 25 minutes to get there by car, but it is very remote and the nearest accessible places from Treeton by public transport are Shireoaks and Whitwell – both of which are approximately 3.5 km away from All Saints chapel.
Not since my days out to Hooton Pagnell and Ault Hucknall, did I have to put so much thought into the planning of my journey. From Treeton to Whitwell, the three separate bus journeys would take 154 minutes, plus waiting times in Sheffield and Chesterfield, over a distance of nearly 60 km.
From Whitwell, I would then have to walk to All Saints chapel across fields and alongside the very busy A619 road, where the footpaths are virtually non existent, before continuing across more fields to Shireoaks Hall and then up Shireoaks Row to the railway station – from where I would go all the way to Sheffield and then catch one of two possible buses back to Treeton.
As usual, I had prepared a British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge, identifying 7 buildings in Whitwell, 4 in Steetley and 2 more to the north-east of the village of Hodthorpe, through which the No. 77 bus passed and provided an alternative route to the one above if needed.