Review of Peter Tuffrey's book Bakewell and the White Peak, 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 1st December 2003, and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
BAKEWELL AND THE WHITE PEAK
Published by Tempus
in their Images of England series, Bakewell
and the White Peak contains more than 200 postcard views taken by
Edgar Leonard Scrivens between 1905 and the 1930s. In spite of
the title, this selection by author Peter Tuffrey actually
extends beyond the White Peak, reaching as far as Castleton, one
of almost 20 villages on a pictorial journey northwards from
Rowsley.
So we can see the ford at Bakewell's Holme Bridge, Queen Mary's
Bower when it was still moated and, also at Chatsworth, Paxton's
Great Conservatory, since demolished. Painted signs recall long-lost
shops, bottles of minerals are on sale outside an old toll
bar cottage, Beeley Post Office and refreshment rooms are open
for business, as is Mr White's tearoom at Eyam, and Calver Mill
is still in production. Motorised traffic is scarce on the rutted
and dusty roads, street lighting - in the form of gas lamps - is
only for the few, and unsightly telegraph poles are commonplace,
looking particularly startling as they march out of sight through
Winnats Pass. Similarly thought-provoking are pictures of
villages hidden under a pall of smoke from domestic chimneys. On
the other hand, there is not a TV aerial in sight, nor a
satellite dish, nor a yellow line; even the signposts and
occasional road sign now look quaint.
The captions mostly give local historical detail rather than
detailed information specific to the photograph. Omissions are
niggling rather than factual but the author could have done with
support from an editor with sound local knowledge, if only to put
names to roads and streets. Nevertheless, Bakewell and The White
Peak is an enjoyable and very 'browsable' read. On sale locally
priced £12.99 (ISBN 0-7524-3042-4).