A small local-history museum is based in what was once the village grammar school. A local park is used for sport and includes a playground for children. Adjacent to Heptonstall lie the
National Trust woodlands of
Hardcastle Crags with walking paths and a restored 19th-century mill. Half a mile out of the village is
Lumb Bank, the second of the
Arvon Foundation's residential centres for writers. Each year on
Good Friday there are performances of the Heptonstall version of the traditional
Pace Egg play. These are held in Weavers' Square next to the old graveyard. Heptonstall Festival, a free, day-long music festival, is usually held in early July also in Weaver's Square. It usually begins with a
fell race. The village is a day-trip destination for tourists and walkers, especially in the summer months. The two public houses are the Cross and the White Lion. There is a small post office – the original post office, on Smithwell Lane, is now a residential property. A cafe/delicatessen is situated in Towngate. The village's oldest house is Stag Cottage (c.1580), which is within a small courtyard called Stag Fold. At the back of the cottage, on the level of a public car park, is a doorway to a dungeon, once used as a
lock-up. Nearby there is a
pinfold, built to hold livestock, but now a picnic area. grave, Heptonstall
Parish church Heptonstall's original church was dedicated to
St Thomas Becket. It was founded c.1260, and was altered and added to over several centuries. The church was damaged by a gale in 1847, and is now only a shell. A new church,
St Thomas the Apostle, was built in the same churchyard. This suffered a lightning strike in 1875. The old church ruin is occasionally used for open-air services. The tower of the new church contains eight bells, cast in 1912 by
John Taylor & Co. These were removed to a bell foundry for refurbishment on 31 August 2012 and were returned, with new bearings, in October 2012. The American poet
Sylvia Plath, who was married to Poet Laureate
Ted Hughes from nearby
Mytholmroyd, is buried in the graveyard extension, to the south-west of St Thomas Becket's churchyard. Plath's headstone has been several times vandalised by removing Hughes's surname from the memorial. Another poet buried here is the American
expatriate Asa Benveniste, a co-founder in London of the publisher Trigram Press. In the 1980s Benveniste and his partner Agnetha Falk ran a second-hand bookshop in Hebden Bridge. His gravestone reads: "Foolish Enough to Have Been a Poet".
Methodist chapel John Wesley laid the foundation stone of the octagonal chapel situated off Northgate, which was completed in 1764 – he recommended the shape to avoid conflict with the established church. Local people attended the parish church and
Methodist preaching. The chapel also provided teaching in reading and writing for the poor. The chapel was originally built as a symmetrical octagon but by 1802, with the Society including 337 members and 1,002 scholars, one end of the chapel was pulled down and the side walls were extended to provide extra space. ==Media==