• A new publication available from Dronfield Hall Barn - "Grandma's Garden" by Dave Darwent. If you enjoyed Cynthia Ramsden's books, "Garden Tales" or "A Garden in My Life", this publication is for you!
  • Buy on Amazon: www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0DZNHNPPM Historically Dronfield was the centre of a large and extensive parish including the smaller settlements of Holmesfield, Unstone, Coal Aston, Dore,Totley, Dronfield Woodhouse, Little Barlow, Apperknowle, Cowley, Hundall, Stubley, Summerley, Birchett and Hill Top. The impressive size of the Parish church is an indication of the wealth of the medieval settlement as is the significant number of cruck-framed buildings first identified by Bessie Bunker, the most important of which is in Dronfield’s Church Street. Wills and inventories in the period 1530-1640 show that more than half of testators were farming but there is also evidence of other occupations including emerging metal working, coalmining, lead smelting industries as well as textile trades such as weaving (websters)and fulling, all contributing to the growing wealth of the town. Dronfield’s rich legacy of historic buildings owes much to its location on the edge of the Peak District’s lead-ore wealth, the local mineral wealth of coal and iron, and particularly to the entrepreneurship of individuals such as Ralph Burton and John Rotherham in the 18th century and later of the Lucas family in the 19th and 20th century. This book will look at the buildings left behind and the people who lived, worked and used them It was the development of the Lucas works, the creation of Wilson Cammells and the growth of the mining industry which led to Dronfield’s most rapid period of growth in the second half of the nineteenth century and particularly in the decade 1871-1881. This period saw the development of housing in The Alma, the Dronfield Freehold Land Society estates in Hartington Road and Scarsdale Road, and the many small developments such as West Street and Quoit Green. It also saw the rapid population rise in the town centre with the development of the historic burgage plots behind HIgh Street and down Farwater Lane which in 1881 had a population of 711, many working in metal industries and coal mining. This was the period in which the village of Dronfield acquired the trappings of a town with a local council, new town hall, school board school, town cemetery and railway station. Fortunately it was also a period when the historic houses were protected through their ownership by local manufacturers. The threat to their existence came much later in the post war years when we did lose some important buildings.
  • Buy on Amazon: www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0DY5BHKK8 A book charting the histories of 4 remarkable women who were born, lived or died in Dronfield. Sarah Outram, born in Dronfield in 1868, spent 47 years as a teacher and local councillor. Her story gives an insight into what it was like being a woman of authority in the late Victorian and early Edwardian periods. Charlotte Mary Ward, born in Barnsley in 1889, into a humble grocer’s family but in time would become one of the wealthiest women and landowners in Dronfield and the surrounding villages. Olive Adlington, born in Dronfield in 1921, into a shop keepers’ family. Became one of the few WRNS to come from Dronfield during World War II and spent the wars years in a secret establishment in Liverpool working in intelligence. Edith Gregory, born in Hull in 1921 to a barrel maker. She moved to Dronfield 4 years later where she became part of the Women's Land Army during World War II but lost her life whilst on active service.
  • This package includes both "A Garden in my Life" and "Garden Tales".
  • A package of our exhibition publications - including A Stroll Along Dronny Bottom, and Dronfield's Untold Stories.
  • The survival of what was once a high quality medieval house inside the barn that now forms the core of the Dronfield Heritage Centre surprised many people. But Dronfield has many surprises from its medieval past once we start looking for them.
    • Chapter One - Dronfield and its Ancient Parish
    • Chapter Two - The Parish Church, Beauchief Abbey and Henry Fanshawe’s School
    • Chapter Three - The Guild of St Mary and St John the Baptist
    • Chapter Four - Timber-Framed Buildings
    • Chapter Five - Dronfield Hall Barn
  • Nowadays it is hard to imagine that Dronfield ever had any connection with the Derbyshire Lead Industry. It comes as a surprise to most people to hear that the oldest houses in the town and surrounding countryside were built through the profits of this trade.
    • Chapter One - The Derbyshire Lead Trade
    • Chapter Two - The Burtons of Cartledge, Holmesfield and Dronfield
    • Chapter Three - The Emergence of the Rotherhams of Dronfield
    • Chapter Four - Dronfield Hall
    • Chapter Five - John Rotherham II, The Entrepreneur
    • Chapter Six - The End of an Era
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