Review of Margaret Wombwell's book Barm and Battleships, 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 25th November 2006, and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
BARM AND BATTLESHIPS
Last year a book entitled Ashover Remembered turned out to be a best seller. It
came into being through an original idea by local resident Margaret Wombwell, who
gathered many hours of recollections, and encouragement from the Local Studies
Library, Derbyshire County Council.
Ashover Remembered sparked enthusiasm from others who wanted a sequel so
that their memories of childhood in and around Ashover could be heard too - hence
Barm and Battleships.
Some memories go back as far as the First World War: making jam at school for
the troops, and Belgian refugee children who pulled the girls' plaits. From the
Second War we read of the lad who would ask his mum to let him stay up and 'watch
them bomb Sheffield'. A whole chapter is devoted to the wartime evacuation to
Overton Hall of Derby Boys' Grammar School.
Olive, who sadly passed away before the book went into print, provided endless
quotes peppered with humour and a rare vocabulary, as in this tribute to her father:
'A marvellous old man. Although he could hardly walk with beering at times ...'
Violet recalls young friends who lived in a basic hut but had the luxury of a well
down the road. Most children had to fetch water as soon as they could hold a bucket.
Young Lew, who lived in the hills, also had the job of emptying their toilet buckets
into trenches - where celery would then be grown.
Between chores, children would go out after breakfast and be out all day, except
on Sundays when there was 'no playing football. No knitting, no sewing, no nothing.'
Ellen loved the long candle-lit evenings and 'People talking to each other, family
talking, you couldn't see to do anything else, only talk.' Lucky the family whose dad
bought a gramophone: 'And we thought we'd got all and everything when we'd got
that'.
There were so many things still unheard of, greaseproof paper for example; butter
was kept cool by wrapping it in a large dock leaf. Home cooking is high on the list of
fond memories and this is where the barm of the title comes in, thanks to "Barmy
Joe". The link between Ashover and a battleship is a different story.
A captivating miscellany of nostalgia, Barm and Battleships is on sale in Ashover,
or to order for collection from any Derbyshire library, priced £4.75. Also by post from
Local Studies Library, County Hall, Matlock DE4 3AG (please include a £5 cheque
payable to Derbyshire County Council.)