Review of Laurence Knighton's book Hassop: A Chronology of Railway 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 9th August 2004, and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
HASSOP
A Chronology of Railway History
Hard to imagine now, but the unassuming hamlet of Hassop, near
Bakewell, once boasted a busy station on the Derby to Manchester
section of the Midland Railway. It was one of three stations for
Chatsworth, and Chatsworth Estate built an inn at the station for the
convenience of travellers.
That building, now a private house, still stands at the entrance to
Country Bookstore, which today occupies the impressive old station
buildings. The former railway track is now the Monsal Trail, but a
vastly different picture emerges from the abundance of historic old
photographs in this engaging new publication by Laurence Knighton.
Earlier this year Laurence co-authored Rowsley - A Rural Railway
Centre, revealing that it was the great George Stephenson who surveyed
the route for this railway line. Hassop station opened on 1 August 1862
and one of the travellers on that first day was Robert Thornhill of
Longstone, whose first class ticket survives.
The author has had access to a wealth of documents detailing the
everyday minutiae of railway life. Thus we learn that post horses were
available at Hassop station, that tickets were blue one way and pink
the other, and that in 1897 Baslow Gas Company invited tenders for the
carting of 500 tons of coal from Hassop or Grindleford. Numerous local
employees are mentioned by name including an engine driver nicknamed
'Sitting Bull'. On the wider scene, we learn of abandoned proposals for
a 13-mile single line Hassop, Hathersage and Castleton railway, a
Hassop and Padley line, and the Grindleford, Baslow and Bakewell
Railway.
Hassop was an important transfer point for convalescing soldiers in the
First World War, and during the Second War was the destination of large
consignments of ammunition. Some readers will recall seeing crates of
'ammo' stacked on grass verges in the neighbourhood. And perhaps the
word 'soap' will jog memories (and consciences) concerning a certain
sticky derailment.
By the middle years of the 2nd World War, trains which used to stop at
Hassop no longer did, and this service was finally withdrawn in August
1942.
Hassop, A Chronology of Railway History is published by the
Midland Railway Society
priced £6.50. Available locally, or to order quote
ISBN 0-9537486-5-0.