Park Hall Country Park and Hulme Quarry - Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England, UK.
N 53° 00.012 W 002° 06.330
30U E 560029 N 5872667
This 'You Are Here' map is located at the main car park for Park Hall Country Park and Hulme Quarry, one of the city's most important natural sites, located on Hulme Road, Weston Coyney in Stoke-on-Trent.
Waymark Code: WMY0C2
Location: West Midlands, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 03/27/2018
Views: 1
Park Hall Country Park is one of the city's most important natural sites. It was declared as Stoke-on-Trent's only National Nature Reserve in 2002, and the sandstone canyons are a Site of Special Scientific Interest for their geology.
Its major sandstone ridge is 250 million years old and is a site of special scientific interest for its geology. The ridge includes the highest point in Stoke-on-Trent - at 813 feet." Source: (
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The map located on the edge of the main car park shows pathways and trails that cross the area and also gives some information about the location.
"Park Hall Country Park covers an area of over 135 hectares and has a varied landscape of sandstone canyons, open heathland, hay meadows, deciduous and coniferous woodland and wetland areas.
Just under one third of the Country Park is designated as a geological Site of Special Scientific Interest and National Nature Reserve, which is known as Hulme Quarry.
The whole site is owned by Stoke-on-Trent City Council and managed by the City Council’s countryside staff." Source: (
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Park Hall Country Park is located in Weston Coyney, a suburb on the west side of Longton in Stoke-on-Trent. Weston Coyney is recorded as a manor in the Domesday Book, 1086, as Westone, part of the lands of Robert de Stafford and held by Ernulf de Hesding. During the Middle Ages the manor was held by the Coyney family. There was an extensive mediaeval deer park, created out of the woodland, and which is now absorbed into Park Hall Country Park. (
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In WWII there was a Secret QL Site on the top of Park Hall Hills, which was used as a night-time decoy for the nearby Meir Aerodrome and aircraft factories. (
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The site is 'open access' on foot to all and is a popular site with dog walkers and cyclists. There are numerous waymarked paths and trails across the site, that offer both easy and more challenging walks. (
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The visitor centre at the car park (coordinates given) was destroyed by fire in 2011, but plans to build a new £376,000 visitors’ centre at the city beauty spot were displayed to the public for consultation in September 2017. (
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