Review of David G Owen's book Under Grin Low : A Burbage History, by Julie Bunting
This review is by Julie Bunting, and was published originally in
The Peak Advertiser, the Peak District's local free newspaper,
and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
UNDER GRIN LOW : A BURBAGE HISTORY
Author David G. Owen, who last year published a history of Fairfield, has now turned
his attention to Burbage, where he has spent much of his married life, where his wife
was born and where both families have deep local connections. David modestly
describes this work as 'another foundation from which historians of the future can
hopefully build upon and develop'.
And all the building blocks are here, beginning with prehistoric settlement and
continuing through the years when Burbage variously boasted a corn mill, church,
school, public house, village institute and the Burbage Permanent Building Society.
One contributor looks back half a century to recall some 16 shops, one of them a
confectionery owned by a French chef. The former vicarage is now three dwellings,
stretches of open fields 'have gone forever' and David voices present-day concerns
as to whether the special identity of Burbage will survive 21st-century expansion and
change. So strong has been this identity that in the First World members of Burbage
Band signed up together rather than get split up, and marched off together to the
Somme.
Many people are brought back to life - one centenarian recalls his childhood at
Ladmanlow, where in just three neighbouring houses there were 21 children plus
adults but no mod cons whatsoever. Strange field names have also been set down
for posterity, along with such places as Dolly Peg Row, Nickety Nell's lime house,
the Cottage of Content, the 'spitfire shop' and a grand residence built for a former
Bishop of Madras.
Fading memories have been gathered in from a time when house building had yet
to get under way and trees 'seemed to arch the road'. David himself recalls playing
football on the road, using small roadside trees as the proverbial goalposts; in later
years he played for the local team in a legendary match that resulted in a 36-0 loss.
Enough said!
Profits from Under Grin Low will be shared by Burbage Band, Burbage School and
Christ Church, Burbage. Copies priced £7 are available from Burbage News in the
village and Best Sellers Bookshop on Bridge Street, Buxton.