Review of Keith Taylor's book Darley Dale Remembered, 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 18th November 2002, and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
DARLEY DALE REMEMBERED:
THROUGH 50 YEARS OF WAR AND PEACE
by Keith Taylor
This book has your attention from the very first full page
photograph, indeed all the illustrations are of exceptional
interest far beyond local level, showing a way of life which is
gradually passing beyond living memory. Many of the 400 pictures
have been loaned to author Keith Taylor by appreciative readers of
his two popular books on neighbouring South Darley, co-authored
with Trevor Brown.
As with those titles, full tribute is paid to the local men who
gave their lives in both World Wars. Illustrated with evocative
family photographs, one or two pages of text is allocated to every
man so that we can read how they lived and died. Says Keith Taylor,
'Their story is part of a wider shared sense of history that has
shaped our age and merits the respect of Darley folk in the 21st
century.'
With almost 450 pages, this book also contains an enormous variety
of information about Darley Dale in peacetime. We can see for
ourselves pictures of the horse-drawn grass cutter, the Laburnum
Inn at Hackney as a working farm, Dad's Army, 'Big Bertha', the
Rum-Tum Band, and the swimming pool in the Whitworth Institute - on
one page full of water and swimmers and on another as a converted
Red Cross hospital ward for wounded soldiers. Another unusual scene
shows Christmas time in Darley Telephone Exchange just 50 years
ago, enjoyable as much for the accompanying text telling how the
system worked. Who today would put up with the operator cutting in
every three minutes?
Schoolday memories come thick and fast, recalling lessons on 'the
Empire and Patriotism' on Empire Day and schoolrooms decorated with
oak on Trafalgar Day. But then there were pupils excluded from
school on account of ringworm, and large numbers of boys playing
truant to work in James Smith's nurseries, from where countless
boxes of lucky white Scottish heather were despatched every year -
to Scotland!
Darley Dale has been a hive of industry in the past century with
businesses great and small, from the record-breaking Mill Close
leadmine, the railway, quarries and flour mills (turning out
'Ladygrove' porridge oats and cattle food) to farms and family
undertakings like the pop factory in Ladygrove, a wartime eiderdown
factory and many a front-room shop. Almost all gone now. Even the
weather has changed. Who can remember when top-hatted attendants
swept the surface of the frozen lake in Whitworth Park, keeping it
clear for skaters to enjoy themselves into the evening, gliding
along by lamplight?
'Darley Dale Remembered: Through 50 Years of War and Peace' will be
appreciated for generations to come, and deservedly so. Published
by Country Books
at £9.50, on sale locally or to order by quoting
ISBN 1-898941-79-3