Review of Julie Bunting's book Bygone Industries of The Peak, by Alan Jacques
This review is by Alan Jacques, and was published originally in
The Peak Advertiser, the Peak District's local free newspaper,
on 22nd May 2006, and is reproduced with Alan's kind permission.
"Bygone Industries of the Peak" by Julie Bunting
"Eagerly awaited", is a much-hackneyed phrase used by publishers when promoting
a forthcoming book, but sometimes it can be overstretching the mark! When it comes
to a new book penned by one of the Peak District's most prolifically popular writers,
however it is then a case of understatement!
Grandly subtitled "The Peak District Journal of Natural History and Archaeology
Volume 3, 2006, "Bygone Industries of the Peak" by Julie Bunting, contains an
extended series of comprehensive articles, originally published in serial form in this
paper over the last twenty years.
It is a book that will richly reward the reader revisiting it time and again, yielding
some fascinating titbits of information within the wealth of material on industrial
archaeology. Some of the archaic terms that Julie has, almost literally in some
cases, unearthed would make excellent material for a remake of that classic BBC
panel game "Call My Bluff".
"Stinting and trucking" are terms from the hosiery trade; "Castleton Inkle" sounds
quaint but it ain't! Whilst a "Clog Block Cutter" worked only when in season! "Kits and
Piggins", "Rags and Spatches", "Black-wad and Caulk" and "Queedling" all these and
more are explained in a fascinating guide to the bygone days when the Peak was a
veritable hive of industry.
A wide variety of trades are covered, from the ghoulish business of Bone Milling
and Dung Processing through to more genteel arts of Lace Making and Stay
Manufacture (corsets to you and me!) Amongst the more well known traditional
Peakland industries, like Lead Mining and Rope Works, more obscure ones are also
well documented, including Pigments and Paintmills and a surprisingly early example
of diversification into crop husbandry at Cressbrook.
The book is expertly and meticulously researched, including a description of early
cheese production, which would have EEC Officials in a state of apoplexy, were it
done now! Illustrated with some early photographic images and line drawings of
times pre-dating the Welfare State, Health and Safety at work and the minimum
weekly wage, virtually all of the occupations featured within the various industries
involved dangerous hard graft for low wages and poor working conditions.
For workers in these bygone industries, they certainly were not the Good Old
Days, but Julie Bunting's book shows that what has gone before in our industrial past
has also gone towards making the Peak and its people what it is today. It also
explains why a gentleman's tailcoat has two buttons right in the middle of the back!