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Fairies Chapel



 & Witches at




 Healey Dell






 Well-known for its nature and beautiful   told them he never wanted to leave, so there he still
 surroundings, Healey Dell’s almost mystical setting   stands. The dwarf was said to be the size of a small
 carries its own rich folklore and legends. Visiting its   child with a huge ginger beard, always dressed in
 hidden nooks and secret niches, it is not hard to   green and brown checked trousers and a white shirt
 envisage how the area lent itself to stories of magic   rolled up at the sleeves.
 and supernatural mischief, involving fairies, dwarves,
 witches, elves and evil spirits.   If you want to find fairies in the Dell, one good way is
 to imagine the many small creatures that live there as
 Perhaps the best known of these is the ‘Fairies’   carrying their spirits, such as the bright blue
 Chapel’, once clearly visible in the ‘Thrutch’, a narrow   kingfisher or the grey wagtail.
 gorge in the heart of the Dell, until it was submerged
 by a great flood in the summer of 1838. It was said to   The Healey Dell Heritage Centre & Tea Rooms at
 contain a pulpit, reading desk and seats, carved from   Dell Road, Rochdale OL12 6BG is open on Thursday
 the rock by the relentless force of rushing water. The   to Sunday and is a good starting point.  Here you will
 old Spodden Bridge and many of the surrounding   find maps and further information on the Fairies’
 mills and other structures were destroyed or   Chapel and other interesting points.  These photographs have been
 damaged in the flood, and the ‘chapel’ disappeared                      taken by local amateur
 into a fissure of the rock.
                                                                         photographer Mark Chrimes.
 In one version, the ‘chapel’ was created as a place of
 banishment for witches and evil spirits by the King of                  Mark was born in Rochdale and
 the Fairies. He had freed Robin Hood, who in earlier                    enjoys all types of photography
 versions of his story originates in western Yorkshire,
 of their bewitchment. On the King’s advice, Robin                       including wildlife, motorsport
 dropped a magical ring into the witches’ cauldron                       and people.
 from a tree on a cliff above the gorge. The cauldron
 exploded in a thousand pieces with a clap of thunder.

 Another legend concerns Lady Eleanor Byron, an
 ancestor of the poet Lord Byron, during the reign of
 Edward IV (1461-1483). A local fortune-teller and
 communer with the Fairy Queen, Mother Bagden,
 whose son owned the ‘Owd Mill i’ th’ Thrutch’, had
 predicted Lady Eleanor would become a bride and a
 widow on the same day. Indeed she did. Her groom,
 Oliver Chadwick, was killed in a feud with the
 rivalling Trafford family on his wedding night.


 Dating back much further is the legend of the
 ‘Healey Dwarf’, a small stone sentinel in the middle
 of the river. He cavorted with the fairies there and



 Thanks to Mark Chrimes for his photograph and David
 Lowe for his contribution to this article.

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