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Wingfield Manor

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Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Wingfield Manor
Phone:
+44 370 333 1181

Hours:
Sunday9am - 5pm
Monday9am - 5pm
Tuesday9am - 5pm
Wednesday9am - 5pm
Thursday9am - 5pm
Friday9am - 5pm
Saturday9am - 5pm


South Wingfield is a village and civil parish in the Scarsdale Hundred of Derbyshire, England, and is now part of the Borough of Amber Valley. The population of the civil parish as of the 2011 census was 1,514. An ex-mining village, it has a mixed community. Its most famous landmark is Wingfield Manor, a ruined manor house built around 1450 and now managed by English Heritage and only open to the public on one Saturday a month during the summer. It is situated about 2 miles from Crich, and 6 miles from Matlock. It sits astride one 'B' class road, the B5035, and the River Amber runs through the lower parts of the parish. The centre of the village is at the Market Place, where Manor Road, Church Lane, Inns Lane and the High Road meet. The village shop is on the Market Place, as is the Horse and Jockey public house . The Market Place has been recently renovated by the local authority with a flower bed and paved area. Other notable places in the village are the parish church of All Saints, dating from the 13th century, the Methodist Chapel, a Baptist Chapel and a Gospel Hall. The three currently active pubs are the Blue Bell on Church Lane, the Old Yew Tree on Manor Road and South Wingfield Social Club on High Road. The village school was built in 1875 and is still thriving. The post office was on Inns Lane, but closed some years ago. The parish of South Wingfield extends to cover the wider area covering the village of Oakerthorpe and the hamlets of Moorwood Moor, Wingfield Park and Uftonfields. Some feel that the origin of the name of the village is derived from Sweinfeld from the ancient English for Swine Field. Alternatively, the name may derive from 'Wynn' field, a field of heather, i.e. a moor. The so-called Pentrich Revolution of 1817 should perhaps be called the Wingfield Revolution as two of the three ringleaders came from South Wingfield . The event started from Hunt's barn to the west of South Wingfield, the weapons were hidden in a quarry in Wingfield Park, and the only death on the night occurred in Wingfield Park.Entertainment South Wingfield Social Club on High Road hosts regular Friday night live music events. Local live bands perform at the venue.
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