Review of Louis McMeeken's book Peak Place-Names, 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 8th September 2003, and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
PEAK PLACE-NAMES
by Louis McMeeken
My guess is that Louis McMeeken has been working on this book for years, without
even being aware of it. The breadth of his knowledge is not acquired simply by research
and he will have gleaned a rich hoard of facts through his post in the Tourist Information
Centre at Bakewell. As far as both visitors and Peaklanders are concerned, queries
about place names are what is known in modern jargon as a FAQ (frequently asked
question).
This book is packed with information as surprising as it is fascinating, and how the
author enjoys himself. He reveals that Goatscliffe owes more to marigolds than goats
and Endcliffe hides a connection with ducks. Then there is the revelation that Abba
used to live in the High Peak, and how appropriate the derivations of Matlock and
Bakewell turn out to be ... but wherefore Toilet Wood and Mincing Wood? Kiss Wood
sounds acceptable enough but it has lost a central word which developed shock value
and had to be dropped.
It transpires that Peak place-names owe much to the Celts, something to the
Anglo-Saxons and a little to the Normans. In unravelling the meaning of rivers 'and other
wet places', Louis McMeeken writes that 'they retain names which could be unchanged
since they were first named by the first prehistoric settlers'. From now on I will think of
the lovely Wye as the 'moving one' or 'carrier'.
Here and there are history lessons in cultivation: flax (Latin: linum) at Lin Dale,
Cranberry Clough, Parsley Hay and Cressbrook, Thatch Meadows and Candlerush
Edge all speak for themselves. Not so easy are Cinnamon Hill and the wonderful
Cacklemackle.
This entertaining and informative book is broken down into 18 chapters. With a
full-colour cover and a generous selection of clear black and white photographs only one
thing is missing, and that is an index. My own bound-to-prove invaluable copy already
bristles with bookmarks for future reference!
Peak Place-Names, published by
Halsgrove, is on sale locally at £6.95, or to order by quoting
ISBN 1-84114-271-9.