| GLOSSOP | Market town in Derbyshire northwest of Kinder Scout at the foot of the Pennines |
| PEAK | --- District, a region of Derbyshire, England, at the southern end of the Pennines (4) |
| DISTRICT | Tourist area at the southern end of the Pennines; first national park of England and Wales (4,8) |
| BEARGRYLLS | English adventurer, writer and television presenter appointed the youngest ever Chief Scout at the age of 35 in 2009 |
| EDALE | Village in the High Peak of Derbyshire; the starting point of the Pennine Way (5) |
| PEAKDISTRICT | 6 and 13 Tourist area at the southern end of the Pennines; first national park of England and Wales |
| LEEDS | West Yorkshire city in the eastern foothills of the Pennines (5) |
| CHESTERFIELD | Market town in Derbyshire, home to a famous 14th-Century church with a twisted spire (12) |
| PLATEAU | Flat upland area, like that of Kinder Scout (7) |
| BELPER | Market town in Derbyshire noted once for nailmaking (6) |
| BUXTON | Spa town in Derbyshire on the edge of the Peak District National Park (6) |
| TEES | River in the north of England, rising in the Pennines, and flowing 85 miles into the North Sea (4) |
| DALES | Yorkshire _, the valleys of the rivers flowing from the Pennines in West Yorkshire (5) |
| ILKESTON | Town in Derbyshire on the River Erewash whose Charter fair was established in 1252 |
| MATTERHORN | Peak of the Pennines |
| SWALE | River in North Yorkshire, rising in the Pennines nearthe Cumbria border, which joins the Ure to form the Ouse (5) |
| CHESTER | NW city or town in Derbyshire with no ground (7) |
| BAKEWELL | Noted for its speciality pudding, town in Derbyshire around three miles from Chatsworth House (8) |
| ALFRETON | Town in Derbyshire reputedly named after an Anglo-Saxon king (8) |
| WEAR | River that rises in the Pennines and flows past Durham Castle (4) |