Review of Sheila Hine's book Around Longnor, 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.
AROUND LONGNOR
'This book means a lot to a lot of people ... it's full of surprises for me. I'm 84 and still
learning something new every day.'
'It's fascinating to discover the history of the old properties.'
'How different things were - the characters in the villages are no more. I wouldn't like to
be born today!'
Just a few condensed comments from the local readership of Around Longnor. This is the
third 'Around' title compiled by Sheila Hine, who harnesses wonderful memories of country
life from almost 30 contributors. Septuagenarians and their elders pass on stories they were
told, interspersed with historical detail from the indefatigable Claude Fearns. It is Claude
who describes how cattle urine used to be stored in stone troughs at the farm, to be
transported in packhorse barrels for various early industrial uses. And he surprises us with
the fact that Reapsmoor cheese factory was the first genuine farmers' co-operative in the
world.
One octogenarian begins his rich memoirs with a mention of Gorby Day. Though before
his time, this was the New Year's Day hiring fair at Longnor, when lads stood on Longnor
Market place waiting to be hired. One colourful yarn centres on a poacher and Owd Bony
the gamekeeper, who "got 'im 6 months in jail on the treadmill ... a belt where they used
grind corn an' yer 'ad keep walkin' t' keep it goin' ... Thee were buggered be nate, I'll tell
thee!" Then there is the inventor of the family who made money in the literal, illegal sense.
Many memoirs centre on hard work on the family farm. One lad was only eight when he
milked his first cow - and one farmer's wife still helps with the milking aged almost 80.
Children grew up familiar with pig-sticking, pole-axing, fetching water from the springs, and
quite legally collecting curlew and peewit eggs for sale at Leek market. Pigs were fattened
on whey from Hartington cheese factory, the neighbourhood bull 'performed' at half-a-crown
a time, and one farmer treated himself to a pair of horn trainers for his shorthorn bulls ('you
liked them just on the curve forward and slightly up'.) One chap, now nearly 80, learnt the
mysterious secret of horse whispering from the blacksmith. Talking of old secrets, there is
the spinster school teacher who "used get canned up ... 'Er'd still be tiddly on Monday", the
neighbour with a forbidden coal shaft in his hencote but no hens, and the headmaster who
refused to go on strike but was promised physical protection by 'the lads' - i.e. the local tug
o' war team.
Sheila leaves several narratives in their natural, relaxed dialect, giving readers the real
pleasure of 'hearing' voices that come to life on the page. Regional words (chelp and cad for
example) may not make the dictionary but make perfect sense in context. Let the lady who
brings the book to a close have the last word: ' I've known these families since year one. I
am thrilled with it and have bought eight copies, mainly for presents.'
Around Longnor is published by
Churnet Valley Books and is available through local
outlets [and via their website - Ed], priced £9.95 (ref. ISBN 1-904546-47-1).