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Coal Aston

Coordinates: 53°18′43″N 1°27′29″W / 53.312°N 1.458°W / 53.312; -1.458
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Coal Aston
Looking east along Eckington Road in the direction of Chesterfield
Coal Aston is located in Derbyshire
Coal Aston
Coal Aston
Location within Derbyshire
OS grid referenceSK362795
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townDRONFIELD
Postcode districtS18
Dialling code01246
PoliceDerbyshire
FireDerbyshire
AmbulanceEast Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Derbyshire
53°18′43″N 1°27′29″W / 53.312°N 1.458°W / 53.312; -1.458

Coal Aston is in the county of Derbyshire, in England. It is by the town of Dronfield.

Geography

Coal Aston sits on a ridge overlooking Sheffield and Dronfield. To the south there is Frith Wood, which is made up of mixed woodland rich in many species of fauna and flora and is thought to be an ancient wood. The wood is now a conservation area and although it is spelt Frith Wood on, for example, Ordnance Survey maps many locals call it Firth wood as in the neighbouring Firthwood Road..The name Coal Aston is due to the a number of walk in coal mine in the area. There are many stone built houses and terraces dating back to the mining era during the 19th century. That last mine Sicklebrook Colliery on Sicklebrook Lane (off Eckington Road) closed in 1938 There still an Aston Hall in the centre of the village. The large Victorian village school has now been converted into a private house.

Southern entrance to Firth Wood, late Winter

Local Amenities

The Methodist Church on Eckington Road

Coal Aston has a Methodist church on Eckington Road, a chapel, several local shops on Barnard Avenue and a village hall. It is also close to the Coal Aston airstrip at Apperknowle and has bus services to Sheffield and Chesterfield run by Stagecoach, and TM Travel. The Victorian Primary school was closed and is now converted to a house.

Annually a well dressing is held on the site of the former village pond opposite the Royal Oak (hence the local nickname of "The Pond").

The Village Hall is located next to the Royal Oak and was originally built by the villagers, and has since been rebuilt and modernised funded, in part, by the Millennium Lottery . The annual Village Gala held early July based at The Village Hall is a Coal Aston highlight. Recent years have seen an RAF Historic Flight flypast as a feature. The Village Hall hosts regular plays with the local acting group having been based there for many years. Popular with the local community are the regular "Coal Aston Live" music events which have featured a good many professional artistes from the folk music scene and wider afield. These include local pop star Dave Berry and The Cruisers, comedians Phil Cool and Richard Digance many nationally recognised folk musicians ranging from Jake Thackray to Kerfuffle, Jez Lowe and in 2009 the late Dave Swarbrick and his 1980's band Whippersnapper . Kiki Dee and Carmelo Luggeri appeared at the Village Hall in 2011 and in March 2017 Los Pacaminos featuring 80's Pop Legend Paul Young are booked to appear, Kiki and Paul both appeared on stage at the 1985 Wembley Live Aid Concert.

Sports Facilities

Behind the Village Hall are playing fields, a hard tennis court and a bowling green, which is home to the local bowling club with its club house and separate changing rooms for the football pitches.

The local cricket club has its home ground in neighbouring Dronfield.

Next to these sports facilities there is a park and a big field for the local children to play safely and is secluded.

Pubs

Coal Aston is known locally for its many pubs including "The Cross Daggers", "The Yew Tree", "The Chequers" and the "Royal Oak" (locally known as "The Pond").

Shops

Barnard Avenue in Coal Aston hosts a number of local shops including a butcher noted for its hot pork sandwiches, a greengrocery known for its fresh produce and a bakery known for doing a fine scone. There is also a gift and card shop [citation needed]

Next to the shops is a patch of grass on which no ball games are allowed to be played. This rule has caused some controversy over the years and caused tension between the local residents and children wishing to play.[citation needed]

Dyche Lane, the main route from the village to Sheffield has a Petrol station which is also now a [Spar] store and [Gulf] petrol station. Next door is the "Ferndale Garden centre", with another one called "New Leaf Nurseries" at the bottom of the hill on the boundary with Sheffield.

A mile along Eckington Road from the village on the way to Eckington and Apperknowle is "Wards Garden Centre".

The local Post Office, a butcher, two newsagents and the old Co-op have closed down over the last 2 decades. Replaced by a large hairdressers[citation needed]

References

http://www.dronfield.gov.uk/uploads/coal-aston-character-statement-part-1.pdf