Anyone who has watched the BBC Two drama The Gallows Pole could be forgiven for thinking of Cragg Vale and its surrounding villages in Calderdale, West Yorkshire, as bleak and unforgiving.

But a surge of visitors captivated by the true story of a village’s illegal coin minting operation in the 1700s are finding it is anything but.

The nearby large village of Mytholmroyd and, in particular, the smaller Heptonstall, where most of the Shane Meadows series was filmed, are already experiencing an increase in tourism
thanks to the popularity of the three-parter. The series tells the story of the Cragg Vale Coiners, who were said to be so successful they devalued the pound by 9% before their counterfeit operation came crashing down around them.

Clues of a proud association with the gang are scattered everywhere in Mytholmroyd – in the Coiners restaurant, Coiners Wharf and the bar Barbary’s, named after the pub in the story. In Heptonstall, cakes in the window of the Towngate tearoom have chocolate coins poking out of the top.

Outside the tearoom, Amy Schofield, a local resident, said tourism to the area tended to increase as the summer began but over the last week there had been a noticeable boost.

“It’s definitely a lot busier,” she said. “And yes, it’s what they’re all coming for.”

Helen Jones, from St Ives in Cornwall, was visiting with her brother Geoffrey Martin, who lives in Wakefield.
Helen Jones, from St Ives in Cornwall, was visiting with her brother Geoffrey Martin, who lives in Wakefield. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian

Schofield welcomed the new interest in her hometown. The Gallows Pole is the third high-profile BBC show to have been set and filmed in Calderdale in recent years. It followed the Sally Wainwright shows Gentleman Jack, which attracted an influx of visitors to Halifax from all over the world, and Happy Valley, which was so popular it spawned a number of bus tours in Hebden Bridge.

Schofield said most residents were delighted the Coiners’ story had grabbed so much attention but that the repeated periods of filming had caused a few disruptions, which had led to complaints locally. She said there was another problem too.

“People here don’t like it [the story] because it puts a negative light on the area and they say it makes it look bad.”

A passerby interjected: “It hasn’t put people off though has it?”

Benjamin Myers, who wrote the book that inspired the series, said so many people had contacted him after its publication in 2017 to say they were visiting, that it led him to produce a map. The Gallows Pole has sold thousands of copies, said Myers, “so for seven years there has been a regular stream of walkers visiting the real-life (and sometimes fictional) locations”.

These maps are still in regular use, said Lisa Thwaites, the owner of the Blue Teapot, a vegetarian cafe in Mytholmroyd. She had been forced to binge the series because customers were coming into the cafe and talking about it.

Thwaites said: “The first episode I thought it wasn’t for me, the second I was getting into it and by the third I loved it.”

St Thomas the Apostle church is not only the resting place of Sylvia Plath but the Coiners’s ringleader, David Hartley.
St Thomas the Apostle church is not only the resting place of Sylvia Plath but the Coiners’s ringleader, David Hartley. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian

St Thomas the Apostle church sits at the top of Heptonstall, on a hill that drops off into a breathtaking valley. It is known to literary fans as the resting place of the US poet Sylvia Plath but it is also where the 25-year-old ringleader of the counterfeiters “King” David Hartley is buried. He was hanged for masterminding the operation.

Hartley’s grave, in the cramped and uneven older part of the graveyard, was dotted with modern coins placed there in tribute to the man who brought desperately needed wealth to a place so deprived that children were starving.

Modern coins are left on the gravestone of David Hartley.
Modern coins are left on the gravestone of David Hartley. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian

Helen Jones, from St Ives in Cornwall, was visiting the grave with her brother Geoffrey Martin, who lives in Wakefield. The siblings had made the trip after watching the show and falling in love with the story.

Jones said: “[Hartley] is such an interesting character, you really empathise with him trying to help his family and the community. He’s a likeable rogue.”

Hilary Dawes and John Cooke were visiting the churchyard on their last stop of a mini-tour of Heptonstall.
Hilary Dawes and John Cooke were visiting the churchyard on their last stop of a mini-tour of Heptonstall. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian

Hilary Dawes and John Cooke had come from Bolton, already being fans of Meadows and his ad-libbed style. “It feels a really authentic way of telling the story,” said Dawes.

Their visit to the churchyard was their last stop in a mini-tour of Heptonstall, which took in a mixture of real-world historical sites and the filming locations of the series. “It’s beautiful here. It’s unspoilt, it almost seems forgotten,” said Cooke.

Some local residents wanted it to stay that way.

Lyndsey Place who works at the Cross Inn where a significant scene was filmed featuring the pub’s large fireplace.
Lyndsey Place who works at the Cross Inn where a significant scene was filmed featuring the pub’s large fireplace. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian

Lyndsey Place, a bar worker at the Cross Inn, said: “I don’t want it to get touristy.” A fireplace in the bar was the scene of a real-life murder, where a man who was prepared to snitch on the Coiners died after having hot coals put down his trousers.

But Place said she gladly welcomed visitors and understood the appeal of Heptonstall, having moved to the village only last year. She said: “I was absolutely blown away by it. I’ve never been as spoilt in my life.”

A local antiques collector said he had some counterfeit Portuguese coins from the operation that he had bought before the story was well known. But its newfound popularity meant you could “get Coiner stuff anymore”, he added.

All this attention had left him with a lingering feeling the counterfeit antics of the Coiners would give enterprising people ideas. “There’ll be people thinking about doing it,” he said.

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