Both of these smaller henges are also Scheduled Monuments, as well as numerous prehistoric cairns spread across the moor. Nearby is Eyam Moor 3, a third Bronze Age small circle of 13m diameter with six remaining free-standing stones, without an embankment. The other embanked stone circle (Eyam Moor 2) on the eastern edge of the moor is also Bronze Age and is about 13m across. The prehistoric henge of 10 upright stones ( orthostats) is a protected Scheduled Monument. Wet Withens (known as Eyam Moor 1) is a Bronze Age stone circle at the centre of Eyam Moor with an earthen bank over 30m wide. There are three stone circles on Eyam Moor. The Barrel Inn on Sir William Hill Road at Bretton is the highest pub in Derbyshire. Sir William Hill Road is an ancient packhorse route across the moor and was part of the Sheffield to Buxton Turnpike of 1758. The radio mast on top of Sir William Hill is a prominent local landmark. Candidates include the four Dukes of Devonshire called Sir William Cavendish, Sir William Saville (Lord of the Manor of Eyam) and Sir William Bagshaw (High Sheriff for Derbyshire in 1805). It is unclear whom Sir William Hill is named after.
The summit of Sir William Hill is 429 metres (1,407 ft) above sea level. Eyam Moor is a plateau-topped hill between the villages of Eyam and Hathersage in Derbyshire, in the Peak District of England.