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Eagle Stone

Access here is pretty easy. Park at Curbar Gap car park and take the main path across Baslow Edge (or wander along the edge itself if you wish and take in the views). The main path leads straight to it and you can see it coming a mile off.

Eagle Stone

170m to the east of the Eagle Stone is a ruined ring cairn on the northern edge of a small cairnfield.
The ring cairn is roughly 17m in diameter, the rubble bank is very overgrown but is on average 40cm high and 2m wide. The northern section of the bank is lost to 2 hollow trackways.
Hardly impressive it does however have some excellent views to the White Peak in the south.

Folklore

Eagle Stone
Natural Rock Feature

According to ‘Household Tales with other traditional remains’ by Sidney Oldhall Addy (1895), the Eagle Stone turns around when the cock crows (p56).

The book may be seen online here.

Stubob’s ‘Aigle Stone’ idea maybe comes from here
https://www.archive.org/stream/cu31924028029035#page/n349/mode/2up/search/eagle
but Jennings imagined it a Saxon god. It’s interesting that the folklore is repeated in loads of places on the internet, but these days it’s more likely to be a Celtic god. That’s fashion for you? As a wildlife watcher, I’d rather prefer the easier explanation, that eagles like(d) to sit on the stone.

Folklore

Eagle Stone
Natural Rock Feature

The Eagle Stone is similar in appearance to the Mother Cap Stone and lies at the edge of a cairnfield, on Baslow Edge.
On certain mornings of the year the stone is said to bounce around the moors. Eagle Stone is thought to be a corruption of Aigle’s Stone a Celtic deity who threw large stones.

Sites within 20km of Eagle Stone