Review of Lindsey Porter's book The Spirit of Ashbourne: 2, by Julie Bunting
This review is by Julie Bunting, and was published originally in
The Peak Advertiser, the Peak District's local free newspaper,
on 2nd December 2002, and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
THE SPIRIT OF ASHBOURNE: 2
Author Lindsey Porter published the first volume of 'The Spirit
of Ashbourne' to commemorate the millennium. That book led to
the location of more than enough additional photographs to
bring this new volume into being. Its title actually extends to
'The 20th Century in Photographs'.
As the author's own interests include both history and
photography, his must have been a labour of love - not for the
first time in the Landmark Collector's Library series. Although
Lindsey Porter knows Ashbourne very well indeed, he has been
surprised at the changes which have taken place during his own
lifetime and there is a certain amount of sadness in realising
what has been lost.
Here we can see the river before it was culverted, flowing
openly along Dig Street; a rooftop school playground apparently
three storeys above ground; sides of meat, whole hams and
feathered poultry hanging outside shops (now against EU
regulations); milk being delivered to Nestlé in churns; a steam
roller at work; and banners calling upon God to bless the King
at the coronation of the first British monarch of the 20th
century.
We find the unmistakable figure of General Booth of Salvation
Army fame and whose wife was a native of Ashbourne, and the
all-male preserve of a bathing club, very fetching too in their
long woollen bathing suits ready for a dip in their local
'swimming pool' - a section of the river. Un-named inhabitants
are dressed to kill - dignitaries in top hats and dandies in
boaters, men in uniform from soldiers and constables to
bandsmen and a very 'non-PC' fire brigade, big lads in short
trousers and little lads in frocks, and of course ladies with
bizarre hairstyles and the latest style in millinery.
The great delight of such old photographs often lies in the
detail. Caught by the camera just in time, many old Dickensian
properties are on their last legs with deep cracks in the
walls, smashed windows and boarded-up doorways. Tin baths hang
on outhouse walls, barrels catch rainwater at the bottom of
drainpipes, and ornate gas lamps and striped barbers' poles add
interest to the street scenes. Peer closely and you will see
the advertisements - Dale Robertson starring at the town's
Empire cinema, Allans Teeth, Colman's Starch, Omo, The Weekly
Sentinel (Family Paper) and cigarettes with names to conjure up
the past - Robin, Players Weights, Park Drive, Wills's
Woodbines, Craven 'A' and more besides.
All this is not to say that the elegance of Ashbourne is
omitted from this wonderful collection of 375 photographs, with
space also given to scenes of Mayfield and other nearby
villages, all touched in one way or another by the 20th
century.
'The Spirit of Ashbourne: 2' is published by
Landmark
Publishing of Ashbourne, price £19.95. Stocked by local shops
or to order by quoting ISBN 1-84306-065-5.