Review of Peter J Naylor's book Cromford - A 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,
on 13th January 2003, and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
CROMFORD - A HISTORY
by Peter J. Naylor
Peter Naylor's Celtic Derbyshire was my first purchase of a local book,
to be joined over the years by others from the same author, each one
still in regular use for providing elusive details on all manner of
subjects. Cromford - A History will be no exception. It is the story
of the village Peter chose to live in and which, he declares, he does
not intend to leave.
So what is it that makes Cromford so special? For one thing, this was
the first industrial village in the world, forever associated with Sir
Richard Arkwright. The author tells of another Cromford Mill, this one
in Germany using machinery invented by Arkwright, giving that country
too a foothold in the factory system. Naturally enough, the inventor and
his legacy take central stage in this book, including a surprising
revelation of the true reason why the great man received a knighthood.
But Peter Naylor investigates his village both before and after
Arkwright. He points out that the Roman Hereward Street ran through
Cromford, and tells of Roman pigs of lead discovered in the churchyard
and of a skeleton found with a hoard of Roman coins.
Moving forward to the Domesday Survey, the author takes issue with the
very name of Crunford, as it was then recorded. Have scholars been
correct in identifying the actual ford as lying on the Derwent near
Willersley? Willersley was once an individual hamlet under its own name
so it may make sense to consider another proposed location for the ford.
The story of Cromford is deeply interwoven with that of lead mining, to
the extent that mining terms can still be heard locally, where the waste
from a sink is a sough and the gutter round the eaves, a launder. One
cottage actually has a lead mine in its backyard! And oatcakes, that
mainstay of a mining family's diet, are still made and sold in the
village. One term connected with mining is the Lord of the Field, still
invested in the Duke of Lancaster - whose identity may catch the reader
completely unawares.
Cromford feeds the imagination far more than many a prettier village,
making it a fascinating place to explore. This book will ensure that the
visitor misses nothing, from a link with Little Grey Rabbit to fine
ideas for walks taking in places of interest: Scarthin with its mill
pond and water-wheel, the old cotton mills, Cromford Canal and Leawood
Pumphouse, the Cromford and High Peak Railway and local oddities from a
lock-up to a 'bear pit'.
Copies of Cromford - A History are available from Watnay Publishing, PO
Box 6350, Matlock DE4 3ZS, price £6.95 post free. Cheques/Postal Orders
payable to 'Watnay Publishing'.