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| A panoramic view from the A629 road in Wortley |
Following on from my visits to Walkley and St. Marie’s Cathedral Church in Sheffield, as part of the 2022 Heritage Open Days (HOD) festival, my next day out a few days later was to Wortley – a small village that I had passed through many times in my MG Midget, when living just a couple of miles away in High Green.
| Treeton and Wortley as shown on Google Map |
The only time I have spent any time there was back in 2018, when the gardens of Wortley Hall were chosen by the wedding photographers Photogenick as the backdrop for the modelling of my Glowing Edges Designs silk scarves.
St. Leonard’s church regularly opens for the HOD but, being a Georgian church that isn’t easy to get to by public transport, it wasn’t high on my priorities but, when seeing that a British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge showed that were 14 other buildings in the village that didn’t have a photo, including Wortley Hall, I decided to make the effort to get there.
Although only 17 km from Treeton as the crow flies, the only bus that I could catch was the No. 29 operated by South Pennine Community Transport, which first leaves Sheffield at 8:25 am but the next bus departs from Chapeltown at 11:25 am.
Having first caught a bus to Sheffield and then taking the train to Chapeltown, I alighted from the bus at the Halifax Road/Park Avenue stop at approximately 11:39 am, which gave me nearly 2½ hours to explore Wortley before returning on the 14:08 pm bus.
The first building on my list to photograph was No. 6 Halifax Road (1840), which I saw only from a distance but, despite the considerable blackening of the massive sandstone, the distinctly yellowish colour makes me think that this is Grenoside Sandstone - one of the principal sandstones in the Pennine Lower Coal Measures Formation (PLCMF).
Looking at the Building Stones Database for England map explorer, this was worked from the Laycock quarry to the south and the Huthwaite Quarries to the north-west, which I visited when undertaking surveys for the South Yorkshire RIGS (Regionally Important Geological Sites) Group back in 1996 and 1997.
I simply didn’t enough time to have a close look at any of the other buildings along Halifax Road, very many of which appear on the 1892 Ordnance Survey map, but from my photos I can still see that the stone used to build these is very probably Grenoside Sandstone.
The A629 road follows an escarpment of an unnamed PLCMF sandstone and, heading north-west through open countryside, there are some fine views of the scarp and vale topography formed by the sandstones and the intervening strata, which dip to the north-east.
From here, there are also very good views of the dip slope of the thinly bedded Greenmoor Rock, which forms a prominent feature at Hunshelf Bank, where it forms a strong escarpment overlooking Stocksbridge and was extensively quarried for the best quality paving stone. The flaggy sandstone used for the boundary walls in Wortley looks very much like Greenmoor Rock, but the Penistone Flags or other unnamed PLCMF sandstones may be the source of this.








































