Review of Keith Taylor's book Tansley 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 12th September 2005, and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
TANSLEY REMEMBERED,
ASPECTS OF VILLAGE LIFE THROUGH PEACE AND WAR
Author Keith Taylor has somehow found the time and enthusiasm for another
fascinating book in the same vein as his earlier titles. This time he tells
of a way of life and the events which shaped Tansley throughout the past
century.
Chapters on wartime are sandwiched between tales of this hard-working parish
at peace, its people earning a living in quarries and textile mills, on
farms and nurseries.
Keith individually honours each of the uniformed men and women of Tansley
who lost their lives in the two world wars. During the first war, local
mills produced khaki tape and webbing for the British army, as well as
recycling thousands of foul and maggoty horse blankets returned from the
carnage of the battle front.
Lighter anecdotes recall a Spam Gang, Pig Clubs and Tansley lads being
stoned out of Youlgrave because they had 'dared to win' a football match.
That same village provides a pub yarn about a man fighting a live rat -
using only his teeth.
An early 20th-century school log book shows attendances diminished by
illnesses and other priorities: scarlet fever, measles, ringworm, haymaking,
bilberry picking, a ploughing match and even a wedding.
More recent memories include earth closets, with untreated raw sewage
collected by the night soil men and spread in some surprising places. Some
Tansley families relied on the nearest brook for washdays and bathdays,
water being one thing the village has in abundance. Hence its mills,
bleachworks, laundry, hydro, and dams variously used for swimming, skating
and ice hockey.
By combining personal recollections with sources such as military history
and war diaries, Keith Taylor has produced a valuable record relevant to a
wide variety of interests, not least family history.
With over 400 pages and generously illustrated with almost as many
photographs, Tansley Remembered is published by
Ashridge Press/Country Books
and on sale in local outlets, price £10. (ISBN 1-901214-43-5) Signed
copies will be available at the book launch in Tansley Village Hall on
Saturday 8 October 2005, 10am-4 pm.