The Fairy Battery across Cadshaw Brook by munki-boy
Fairy Battery
The Fairy Battery is a rock outcrop above Cadshaw Brook now a popular climbing spot known as Cadshaw Rocks or Cadshaw Castle.
18th Century sources reckon the name is a corruption of ‘buttery’ - Andrew’s Buttery is on the moors to the west - the large slabs of gritstone found in the area being likened to slabs used in traditional butter making. However, the name in many places refers to old archery ‘butts’ which were quite common, and in the medieval period archery practice was mandatory by order of the King. I think this most likely. There are also places where promintent landscape features are used as the edge of boundaries - places which ‘abutt’ the boundary, though this doesn’t seem the case here, the boundary here follows the river and is not quite near the rock outcrop.
The rocks that can be seen in the outcrop at Fairy Battery are of the local gritsone in interesting layers of ripple-bedding with large, vertical cracks between - this creates strange-looking patterns in the rock that are actually formed by flows of water depositing sediment. I would assume this is an old quarry as there are several above and there has been substantial quarrying directly across the brook.
Created: 16 May 2021 Edited: 29 November 2023
Fairy Battery
Local History around Fairy Battery
There are some historic monuments around including:
Stone circle, ring cairn and two round cairns on Cheetham CloseSteam tramway reversing triangleRound cairn 280m west of Old Harpers FarmCoking ovens and associated coal workings on Aushaw Moss 450m south west of Lower HouseRoman road at Bottom o' th' Knotts Brow.