The suburb has a historical association with the
civil parish of
Brampton in
North East Derbyshire district, which is still outside the town. The civil parish includes the villages of
Old Brampton (from which the suburb derives its name),
Wadshelf and Cutthorpe which is a small village about north-west of Chesterfield with a village school, a butcher's shop and a small post office/grocery store, three public houses and two historic halls; the main road straggles through the village for three miles, reaching the Grange at its highest point, with commanding views all around. The suburb of Brampton until the late 19th century was a part of the ancient Brampton parish which was a large area centred on the village of Brampton and
St Peter and St Paul's Church. Very little was recorded at the location of what would become the built-up area until the
Industrial Revolution caused Chesterfield to expand. The Brampton parish boundary lay by the
River Hipper to within a mile of Chesterfield centre, and around which began to develop many varied industries, concerns included
iron foundries,
potteries,
tobacco manufacturing,
woollen cloth production,
bobbin making, brewing pillbox making and
lint manufacture, these works and surrounding residential areas becoming conterminous with the town and necessitating a new parish church,
St Thomas's built in 1832. By the late 19th century the suburb had become known as New Brampton while the original village was termed Old Brampton, which remained small and rural. New Brampton later on in everyday local parlance was abbreviated to just Brampton, and then formally removed from Brampton parish and absorbed into Chesterfield in 1892. == Entertainment ==