Saddleworth
church - dedicated to St Chad - has a sighting legend associated
with it.
It is said that the original site for the church
was on nearby Brown Hill, but every night the stones were mysteriously
moved to their present location. Eventually the builders gave up moving
the stones back to Brown Hill, and built it where the stones were placed.
The fairies (who were held responsible for the nocturnal moving of
the stones) were said to have been driven out of Saddleworth when the
church received its bells. The loud chiming knocked the smaller fairy
bells out of tune, and they went off in a "huff" over Stanedge
towards Marsden, Sliathwaite and other districts.

The church is also reputed to be haunted by a Grey Lady, and has some
other interesting features. There is an ancient pair of stocks situated
outside the church, and the Church Green is the scene of some old Saddleworth
folk festivals including Morris Dancing and the Rush Cart Ceremony.
Inside the graveyard is the memorial stone to a father and son who
owned the Bill o' Jacks pub, which was situated on what is known locally
as the Isle of Skye Road towards Holmfirth. They were murdered in a
horrific way in 1832; hacked and bludgeoned to death with a shovel
in what was described as one of the bloodiest murders of the time.
The murder was never solved, and the pub became a morbid attraction
until it was demolished in 1937.
Directions:The church is reached via a steep road signposted from the
main street in Uppermill. The nearby pub, The Church Inn is well worth
a visit.

St Chad's Church, Saddleworth is built on a hillside above Uppermill,
next to the Church Inn. In the annual Rushcart festival, rushes which
have been gathered on the moors are placed on a cart and pulled around
the local villages by Morrismen. On Sunday the rushes are taken to
the church.