Review of Jack Doxey's book O'er Back and on the Hillock, 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 17th June 2002, and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
O'ER BACK AND ON THE HILLOCK
Sub-titled 'Reminiscences of The Dale and Greenhill, Wirksworth' this book
has just been re-printed after a lapse of 14 years. It was written by the
late Jack Doxey, who was brought to live in this part of Wirksworth shortly
after his birth in 1903. He saw publication of his reminiscences in 1989.
That first edition became a 'collector's item' and a great many people have
been disappointed at being unable to buy a copy. Naturally it is of immense
interest to the people of Wirksworth, as well as to descendants of others
who lived there before and during the author's lifetime, for he also passed
on stories gleaned from his own elders.
For instance, Jack himself was not old enough to remember many of the
earlier business which had passed into local lore - The Recruiting Sergeant
pub, the blacksmith and farrier, a coffee house, a gingham manufacturer and
his own great-grandfather who was a horseshoe nail maker living in The Dale.
During his own lifetime he saw in one area the disappearance of 11 out of 30
houses and 3 out of 5 shops. He watched lead miners coming home after a hard
day at the mines, women setting out in the early morning for work in the
tape mills, the quarryman's wife regularly lowering his dinner down to him
on a piece of string, and heard the curfew bell ringing every evening at
dusk. He knew of men named Abanathan, Moses and Luther - he was the town
crier and lamplighter, and saw the massive expansion of a quarry which ate
up the land to within a yard of the Methodist chapel.
Ninety years ago the steepest part of Greenhill, with a gradient close to 1
in 3, was used by Rolls Royce for stop and start tests on their cars. Jack
could remember a time when there were 170 houses on Greenhill and in The
Dale; in 1986 there were less than 80 in the whole area. The loss of this
tight-knit and supportive community, with its 'a labyrinth of twitchells
connecting all the small houses', was a source of sorrow to Jack Doxey but
fortunately he lived long enough to see The Dale and Greenhill come back to
life, with the rescue of buildings once thought to be beyond salvation.
'O'er Back and On The Hillock' is republished by Wirksworth & District
Historical Society, price £7.99. On sale locally or to order, quoting
ISBN 0-906753-15-5.