The Rams Head Inn, in the centre of the village, was built by the Legh family in c.1640, though the current exterior was built around 1840. It was formerly a lodge belonging to the Lyme Park estate. It became a main
coaching stop on the
Manchester to London route. In 1790, after three visits, Viscount Torrington voted it the best inn in England. The Rams Head is now a restaurant and pub; only part of what once was its extensive stabling block still remains. The pub and its adjoining former stables are Grade II listed buildings.
Lyme Park is in the civil parish of
Lyme Handley, rather than in the Disley parish, but it is sufficiently close to be associated with the village. It is owned and managed by the
National Trust. The hall was used by the
BBC as a setting in its 1995 adaptation of
Pride and Prejudice. The
Bowstones are two upright crosses on moorland above Lyme Park on the route of the
Gritstone Trail. Their origins are unknown but they are believed to be religious. From here it is possible to see seven counties: Derbyshire, Lancashire, Yorkshire, Cheshire, Staffordshire, Shropshire and Clwyd. The village is home to Disley Cricket Club, Disley Golf Club, still in operation to the north of the village, opened in 1889 and is "one of the oldest inland courses in the UK". Stanley Hall Farmhouse is a Grade-II-listed building from the 16th-century. Stanley Hall was given to the Stanleys by the
Black Prince in 1388 and bought by the Leghs in 1488. Part of the barn, also Grade II listed, was used as the first clubhouse of the Disley golf club. ==Education==