Distance: 8.3 miles
Difficulty of the Terrain: Medium
Get the route: via Ordnance Survey Maps or download the GPX. file from Dropbox
Walk through the West and East Midlands borderlands between the Staffordshire town of Tamworth and Netherseal perportedly Derbyshire’s most southerly village. Takes in 3 (nearly 4…) and much surprisingly hilly countryside.
The Story
The Walk
Getting Back
Vying to be Derbyshire’s Most Southerly Settlement
Netherseal is a quiet little village, home to fewer than 1,000 people, on the north bank of the River Mease which forms Derbyshire’s southernmost boundary. It dukes it out with nearby Lullington, on a very similar latitude, for the status of the most southerly village in Derbyshire.
The village was home to the steam train engineer Nigel Gresley when he was a child. During the interwar period when the UK’s rationalised, amalgamated, but still privately owned “Big Four” railway companies competed with each other in PR battles over speed Gresley worked for the London North Eastern Railway, who owned the East Coast route from London to Edinburgh. The company’s design and engineering unit led by Gresley developed a reputation in the 1930s for the speed of its trains. Something the East Coast Mainline retains to this day. During this period projects Gresley oversaw included the Flying Scotsman, and the Mallard, which remains the fastest steam train ever constructed.Â
Gresley is memorialised with a life sized bronze statue by Hazel Reeves at King’s Cross Station from where the Flying Scotsman and Mallard used to embark up the East Coast Mainline from London. There was a long running controversy, with high profile supporters on both sides, both before and after its installations, about the rights and wrongs of including a life size duck as well. Eventually the supporters of including a duck lost out, and a duck-less statue was installed in King’s Cross.
Interestingly, Gresley also designed the electric trains which were used on the – now shut – Woodhead transpennine route between Sheffield and Manchester. In Derbyshire’s far north, the opposite end of the county and completely different from the landscape around Netherseal. The old railway route’s trackbed now forms the Longdendale Trail, and part of the far longer Trans-Pennine Trail, across the north of the Peak District. They however, were built long after his death in 1941, only entering service in the mid-1950s. Nigel Gresley is buried in Netherseal village’s churchyard.
The Walk
Get the route: via Ordnance Survey Maps or download the gpx. from Dropbox
I create the Walk Midlands routes via Ordnance Survey Maps Explorer enabling me to take them on my phone. Subscribe yourself via the banner above.
This walk to Moira in Leicestershire begins at Tamworth Railway Station.
Exiting the station through the main concourse past the ticket offices leads onto the forecourt.

Walk along the forecourt in the direction of a roundabout which has an impressive metal statue of Aethelflaed – a legendary 10th Century Anglo Saxon warrior queen – in a gesture to the town’s heritage as a major centre in central England prior to the Norman conquest.

Before you reach the roundabout and the end of the forecourt, turn left towards the embankment that carries the railway line. Here there is a footpath sign pointing down a small road beside a Jehovah’s Witness meeting hall.

Turning left down this road you will see a bridge up ahead underneath the railway line.

Heading under this bridge you find yourself in a static caravan park.

Once inside the park turn left and walk between the vans.

On the far side of the park adjacent to the West Coast Mainline turn right.
Soon on your left there appears a snicket close to the railway line.

Head towards this snicket and walk through a gate.

Follow the path down the snicket.


Soon you pass under a vaulted low ceilinged bridge beneath the West Coast Mainline.

You also pass very close to the River Anker.
After the bridge you walk through a thicket.

This leads out onto some scrubby meadow land near the river. It lies close to an area called Warwickshire Moor, so called because whilst today the boundary with the County of Warwick lies several miles east, historically, this is where the border sat.

Ahead of you the path runs up towards a recently constructed housing estate (some of the houses were occupied, others were having the finishing touches added to them by the builders and some were still being built when I walked the route in mid-February 2022).


Walk towards these houses.
Once inside the fenced boundary of the new estate turn right and follow the pavement running along the road.





Do this for some distance.
Presently the path loops off to your right in the direction of the river.


Near the river back take the path running to your left.


After a short distance you see a wooden bridge ahead of you on your right crossing a brook.

Head across this bridge. Then walk up a steep bank.

The path then runs alongside several of the newly constructed homes for a short distance.


Soon you come to a wooden style leading out into open fields.

Having crossed the style, follow the path through some scrubby bushes.

Once past the bushes follow the path towards a straggly hedgerow in the distance.

On the other side of the hedgerow follow the path downhill across an open field.



It is very clear to follow as the route is well walked.
Presently the path begins to gently slope upwards.

You then come to a style leading into another field.

Here take a slight left and head uphill in the direction of a power line.


Once past the power lines and near the top of the hill head for the hedgerow on your right.


In amongst the hedge you will see a wooden style.

Head across the style and then follow the path across the field in front of you heading diagonally steadily in the direction of a road situated to your left.



At the far side of the field near a house you will find a style – of sorts – out onto the verge at the side of the road.

Once on the road turn right and walk along the grass verge.

You remain on the road for quite some way, over a mile.
The road is mostly quite flat, but there are ups and downs along the way. The road is fairly busy (it eventually intersects with a cluster of A-Roads north east of Tamworth where the M42 ends) but the grass verge is wide and good for walking on all the way, so this is not much of an issue for walkers.













Presently you pass a terrace of three old stone cottages on your left.


At this point on your right you can see the spire of the church in the little village of Seckington. This lies just over the county line in Warwickshire.


After you pass the cottages begin looking out on your left for a style set in a hedgerow. It is not especially easy to spot. It lies not much more than 100 metres from what is more or less the eastern edge of Warwickshire.

When you find the style leave the grass verge and cross into the field beyond.

As the condition of the style implies this is not an especially popular footpath. In fact it is very much the route less travelled, and an alternative would be to carry a couple of hundred metres further along the road and then turn left onto the lane running up to the village of Thorpe Constantine.
I, however, opted to walk across the fields. This was largely out of a strong, but perhaps overwrought, sense that I should claim the route for everybody, by exercising my customary right to do so.
Once on the other side of the hedgerow and off the side of the road, as I was directed by the Ordnance Survey Map App, walk across the field towards some promising gaps into the field beyond.

Here you are confronted by a larger field, which was apparently planted out with some kind of brassica when I walked the route.

As is sometimes the way with more obscure footpaths across fields there is no obvious rut to follow across the field.

Having waded across taking care not to unduly trample the crop, turn right at the fenceline on the far side.


Walk down the side of the field to where there is a waymark on a concrete post pointing across the field beyond.

Crossing over a track walk diagonally left across the field ahead of you.



Presently the line of a footpath becomes apparent.

Here turn right and follow the now much clearer path through the hedge and across a field.


Soon you see a small cluster of quite weathered looking trees on your right.

You reach a farm track, here turn right and walk towards these.

Amidst the trees you will find a footgate.

Turn through the footgate.
Then follow the well trodden, clear path across the field.




On the other side you come to a thicket of hedgerow.

Pass through the gate set within the hedge.

Then continue on your way following the path on your right along the edge of the field you are in.


You eventually reach a gate leading out onto a lane.

Once on the lane turn left.

After a little bit of walking along the road you come to a sign welcoming you to the village of Thorpe Constantine.

Thorpe Constantine is an estate village built to serve the large Thorpe Hall which sits at its heart. There is also a big parish church with a significant spire.
Follow the road into the village.



On the edge of the settlement it curves you to your right.


Before swinging back round to the left.
After the left turn, continue walking along the road for a few minutes, passing a Victorian cottage along the way.





Presently a style appears in the hedgerow.

Cross over this style and walk across the field beyond.





It is a long field which gently slopes downhill. The path is clear all the way down.
At the bottom there is a plank bridge across the stream at the bottom, which you cross over,


Take a slight right on the far side.

Then turn left and follow the path as it begins to run uphill past a small copse on your right.



At the top of the hill there stands another copse.
Take a slight left turn and walk into the trees.

Follow the path to your left through the woodland.



On the other side follow the path across the field keeping close to a hedge and a ditch on your left.



This ditch actually marks the northernmost boundary between Staffordshire and Warwickshire.
Presently you approach a hedgerow in front of you.

Walk through the gap between the two fields.
Then keep walking across the field beyond.





On the far side of the field you come to a road.

Once out of the field and on the side of the road take a slight right turn and cross over to the other side.

Here there is a gateway leading into another field. This is the point at which you cross between Staffordshire and Leicester, and therefore the West and East Midlands. It is also where Leicestershire, Warwickshire and Staffordshire meet, making for a pretty, but not especially dramatic three shires head.

What’s more, by my reckoning it is roughly the midway point between Tamworth and Moira.
Walk down the path at the side of the field, keeping to the left.





At the bottom of the field turn right and follow the path along the line of the hedge at the bottom.


Turn right again when you reach the opposite side of the field.

Then walk a little way uphill until you reach a track on your left running through the hedge.

Walk along the track some distance past two pools of water, one on each side of you.


Soon you enter an area that is apparently used as some kind of plant nursery.


Having walked some way through the nursery you come to a fork in the track.

Take the right fork, which presently twists round to the left before approaching a gate.


Instead of heading through the gate, follow the footpath sign next to it and head left down the side of a hedgerow.

Walk a short way along this side of the hedge past some of the nursery units to your left.

When I walked the route the hedge was damaged in one place as if a car had hit it.
This location is also where there is a yellow topped waymark pointing to your left.
When you reach this waymark turn right and walk between a gap between the plant nursery units.

This was fairly straightforward apart from a trailing pipe at waist level which I had to really stoop to get under.
Once past the farming equipment take a slight left turn.

Then turn right and walk in the direction of a static caravan on the far side of the nursery units.

In the corner of the field on your right there stands a waymarking post.

Turn right and walk through a gap in the hedge.
This leads out onto a field with the village of Chilcote in the distance.

Follow the path across the field.


On the far side cross the style and walk through the grounds of the village’s tiny hall.

Then exit out onto a lane.

It’s worth looking back at Chilcote village hall from the lane. It is a tiny but incredibly ornate late Victorian building, probably of a similar vintage, but a rather different style, to the small parish church standing near it.

Once on the lane take a slight right turn and cross over.

Here there is a style leading out onto an unkempt paddock like field.


Once on the other side, begin walking across the field.

When more or less parallel with a power line running across the field, turn right and begin walking up the hill.


You will see a style set in the fenceline at the top, so make for this.
Having reached the style cross over.

On the other side of the style there is a large grassy field.

Take a slight right turn and begin walking diagonally across the field, aiming approximately for some trees standing in the field near the far side.

As you approach the trees you will see a gateway leading out of the field just up from a house.


Walk over to this gateway and cross over a style onto the road beyond.

Once on the road turn left and begin walking along it.

The lane is fully paved and was very quiet when I walked the route (I do not recall any vehicles at all), so it is possible to make good time.








Presently in the distance the large village of Netherseal comes into view.
Continue walking gently downhill towards it.
On the edge of the village you cross the River Mease which is the major natural waterway in the immediate area.


It also serves as the boundary between Leicestershire and Derbyshire, as you realise when having turned right just after crossing the river, you pass a sign welcoming you to the South Derbyshire District.

The road then takes a left turn, leaving the river to run uphill into the village.
Soon you come to a junction.
To your left stands a primary school, whilst to your right after a series of terraces of old workers’ cottages stands the parish church.

At this junction head right and walk towards the church.

This is where the walk ends.
