The Norfolk Arms is a Grade II listed coaching inn built around 1840 on the old turnpike road between Sheffield and Buxton, in the hamlet of Ringinglow on the edge of the Peak District. It began life under the Rawson's Brewery empire, offering food, drink and beds to travellers before the toll booth at the neighbouring Round House. The building was known as the Ringinglow Inn on an 1888 map before taking its present name. Today it operates thirteen en-suite bedrooms above a bar and restaurant, serving walkers, cyclists and climbers who use the surrounding moorland as well as overnight guests. Rooms were redecorated in recent years while retaining the character of the original building. It functions as a single independent inn rather than a branch of a wider hotel group, run under local management.
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