Review of Bridget Ardley & Mary Bartlett's book The Spirit of Youlgreave, 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 November 2003, and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
THE SPIRIT OF YOULGRAVE & ALPORT
The Spirit of Youlgrave & Alport, The 20th Century in
Photographs, is brought to life by authors Bridget Ardley and
Mary Bartlett. They admit to being overwhelmed by the
generosity and interest of the many local people who lent
their precious and often rare photographs, over 400 in all.
This probably has much to do with the strong sense of
community prevailing in Youlgrave and Alport.
Togetherness could almost be the theme of this book, evident
in everything from 'cross-dressers' and maypole dancing to
the famous Youlgrave pantomimes. Groups play croquet and
bowls on one page, long lost shops come back to life on
another, and elsewhere we see the Prince of Wales on his way
to using the Gents in one of the village pubs. Not every
village could give pigeons a section to themselves but here
we see a Youlgrave bird which hitched a lift on the QE2 and
reached New York. Chapters on farming and industry are packed
with nostalgia and illustrated with scenes of haymaking with
horses, a corn mill, cattle strolling through Alport and
pictures telling the tragic story of the Mawstone Mine
disaster. And wherefore Knocking Alley, Pretoria, Wembley or
Valparaiso? All is explained.
Photographs of old buildings and their former residents will
interest anyone who has ever set foot in Youlgrave or Alport
but today's visitors will search in vain for the fisherman's
cottage by the Bradford, or the farmhouse tea garden with its
tufa arches, or even the imposing hotel that once plied for
business in little Alport.
Countless present-day villagers have also entered into the
spirit of being recorded for posterity and authors Bridget
Ardley and Mary Bartlett have done them proud.
The Spirit of Youlgrave & Alport is published in hardback by
Landmark of Ashbourne
and on sale locally priced £19.95
(ISBN 1-84306-083-3).