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Whirlow Brook Hall |
Continuing my investigation of the geology in the Limb Valley, having located the stream bank exposure of the Local Geological Site (LGS) strata above the Ringinglow Coal, my plan was to try and find the next LGS that is recorded by the Sheffield Area Geology Trust – an exposure of the Redmire Flags at grid reference SK 30839 82960.
Having retraced my steps across the boulders that form stepping stones in the Limb Brook, I took the public footpath across the footbridge to Whirlowbrook Hall - as marked by the Peak & Northern Footpaths Society with Signpost 475.
Diverting from the footpath, I followed the course of the brook for some distance and only found various stone walls and associated structures associated with the weirs that diverted the brook to the mill pond a little further downstream, which in turn supplied water to power the Whirlow Wheel – the ruins of which can be seen to the east of Ecclesall Road South.
With no obvious paths to follow and not having my Garmin etrex GPS device with me, I decided not to continue my search for the outcrop of the Redmires Flags and instead made my way up the public footpath to Whirlow Brook Park.
I was hoping to get a look at Whirlow Brook Hall, the house built in 1906 by Peter Fawcett, who was a director of Thomas Firth and Sons, an important steel maker in Sheffield whose prosperity and reputation was largely achieved as a major manufacturer of armaments.
Although the house isn’t a listed building, I was keen to try and get a close look at the sandstone used in its construction. The nearby quarries in Whirlow and the Brown Edge Quarries both produced predominantly stone slates and flagstones from the Rough Rock, which tends to be thinly bedded in the Sheffield region.
When previously visiting Crosspool and Fulwood - as described in my Language of Stone Blog posts Parts 1, 2 and 3 - I came to the conclusion that the mainly thinly bedded building stone in walls and older houses, which commonly has dark brown iron staining, was quarried from the Rough Rock and the quoins, dressings and gateposts came from the Chatsworth Grit.
Whirlow Brook Hall is a popular venue for various events, with a wedding taking place at the time of my visit, and I therefore just took a few photos of the building at a discreet distance. From these, I can see that the sandstone is quite massive and not thinly bedded, with quite a high proportion of iron stained blocks, which is not uncommon in the Chatsworth Grit.
Realising that I would have to have a close look at another time, I finished my walk by having a quick wander around the Commemorative Garden, where I didn’t notice any obviously thinly bedded blocks of sandstone here, except the paving.
For those that have a greater botanical knowledge and appreciation than myself, this public park is full of interest and, although Sheffield City Council have somewhat neglected it due to budget cuts, the Friends of Whirlow Brook Park do their best to maintain it. Since 2011, the Sheffield U3A Gardening Group have taken responsibility of the rockery and lily pond, which is very attractive, and I assume that they arranged for the simple grey granite memorial that marks the centenary of the end of World War I.
Since alighting from the bus at the Norfolk Arms in Ringinglow, I had been walking for just over 2½ hours, but I had managed to take a good look the geology and geomorphology of a part of Sheffield that I didn't know very well. By the time I reached the bus stop at Ecclesall Road South in Whirlow, after a very enjoyable afternoon in the sunshine, I had walked nearly 8 km.