A square of cobbles adjacent to the stocks marks the spot where
Will Scarlet, the legendary companion of Robin Hood, is said to have died on 14 December 1283. The 18th-century town
stocks, for the punishment of petty crimes, still stand on the side of Chapel-en-le-Frith Market Place.
Chapel-en-le-Frith Town Hall in Market Street was completed in 1851. Ford Hall in the east of the parish, northeast of Slacke Hall and Bowden Hall, was the home of the Reverend
William Bagshaw, the 'Apostle of the Peak', after he was ejected from the vicarage of
Chinley on the
Act of Uniformity in 1662. Also in the east of the parish, next to a lake alongside the A623 and not nationally listed for its architecture, is the modest Bennetston Hall, which is being renovated as a hotel. Nearby are the site of Peaslow's Cross, and Rushup Hall, a modest but ornate 19th-century private house. Stodhart Lodge, a care home, is north of the town centre on Hayfield Road, the old road to
Chapel Milton and the rest of the neighbouring parish of Chinley. It has a later 19th-century extension in the
neo-gothic architectural style with a datestone inscribed "JB 1869". Along the B5470 road west of the town are the linear settlements of Bridgefields, Cockyard and Tunstead Milton. Ollerenshaw Hall dates from c.1800 and stands below Eccles Pike.
Combs The village of Combs, west of the town, gives its name to the adjacent
Combs Reservoir. The Old Brook House (and its barn), close to the Beehive Inn in the centre of Combs, are listed buildings; parts of the house's grand layout clearly date from the 17th and 18th centuries and, as such, it is similar to Marsh Hall closer to Chapel. In the rolling hills between Combs and Chapel is Bank Hall, extensively altered in 1872–74 for Henry Renshaw of Manchester on an ornate aerial plan with an elaborate stone balcony over the door, a bay window with fine botanical painted glass and canvas panels to the doors, formerly with painted panels by Armstrong and Caldecott. The south elevation of the house has a central Venetian doorway with columns either side of double-glazed doors—here too are
voussoirs decorated with floral motifs, set in an imposing
ashlar surround. Its nearby lodge, by
W.E. Nesfield, is also listed, as is nearby Chapel railway station.
Dove Holes Dove Holes, in the southeast of the parish, has its own
station. Within the village lie the earthworks of a
Neolithic henge known as the
Bull Ring; the site also includes an oval and
bowl barrow. ==Notable people==