Review of Peter Lomas's book Buxton Hydro (Spa Hotel), 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.
THE BUXTON HYDRO (SPA HOTEL)
When Peter Lomas began researching his family history, he little realised that he would
uncover enough information for the proverbial book. His discoveries turned out to be
inseparable from a rich source of local and social history centred on Buxton.
Similarly, in 1849 the Revd James Shore could hardly have imagined during his time in jail
that he would overcome this injustice and move to faraway Buxton, there to establish
Malvern House Hydropathic and Homeopathic establishment. Shore had meanwhile taken
the water cure at Smedley's Hydro in Matlock, gaining such relief from his rheumatism that
he opened his own hydro in the town before transferring his business interests to Buxton.
The story continues through his descendants and in particular the extensive legacy of
Herbert Reginald Pomeroy Lomas (HRP), born in 1859 and whose early diaries make
fascinating reading here in their own right. Personally observed appearances of Queen
Victoria, for instance, describe her as looking anything from merely 'rather cross' to 'most
extremely cross'.
In utilising numerous contemporary records and illustrations, Peter Lomas brings to life
Buxton in its prime, with all the social demands and complications of catering for the wealthy
in an 'honest Hydropathic sanatorium'. In fact the establishment did not have access to the
famous natural thermal waters of Buxton; it offered instead waters 'strongly "activated" with
added radium' alongside power showers and massages - or rather 'medical rubbing'.
Entertainment demanded orchestral concerts, fancy dress balls, recitations and year-round
outdoor sports.
HRP expanded his business interests to the extent that he was second only to the Duke of
Devonshire as a property owner in Buxton. In his hands Malvern House became the palatial
Buxton Hydro Hotel, where 500 sat down to Christmas Dinner in 1924 amidst claims that a
further 700 were turned away 'from sheer lack of accommodation'. Changing times brought
moves towards attracting healthy guests to what next became the Spa Hotel, the last
incarnation of a magnificent institution that met a sad and ignominious end. Its story is paid
full tribute in this new publication from
Ashridge Press/Country Books.
The Buxton Hydro by Peter Lomas is on sale locally priced £14.99
(ref. ISBN 9-781901-214833).