This is a copy of an article published in The Peak Advertiser,
the Peak District's local free newspaper on 1st June 1998,
reproduced by kind permission of its author, Julie Bunting.
One of the quaintest buildings to be found anywhere in the Peak
is a tiny edifice known as the Round House at Curbar. The
building has only two rooms, one above the other, and its four
stone walls support an ingenious tiered conical roof of curved
stone tiles against which rises a sturdy chimney originally built
to serve a fireplace on the ground floor.
The building dates from around 1780 and its history has mainly
been handed down by word of mouth. The fact that it has often
been referred to as Curbar lock-up may indicate that there is
some truth behind the story that it was used long ago as a
temporary jail, perhaps an overnight stop, for law breakers being
conveyed to a more secure prison. Indeed the windows were once
barred and Curbar does lie roughly half-way along a very old
route connecting Tideswell and Chesterfield, each of which
formerly had a proper jailhouse. However, according to other
information handed down the generations, the short-term inmates
were usually lead miners being conveyed to Derby assizes because
their offences could not be dealt with at the Barmote Courts.
Another local tradition asserts that the little building saw use
as a pest house although it could hardly have been connected with
the Plague which struck Curbar in 1632. Only a short distance
from the Round House are the Cundy graves, the burial place of
five members of one stricken family from nearby Grislowfields
Farm.
The Round House has certainly been used as domestic
accommodation. If the tale that it housed a whole family seems
unlikely, we must remember that one-up, one-down cottages were
once commonplace in the Peak, in fact the simplest sort could be
put up in a day.
The late Clarence Daniel, who was born in 1911, recalled that in
his boyhood the building was tenanted by an old sailor named
Francis Pelly, who can be seen on our photograph proudly posing
with a model ship which he had hoisted onto the roof. Two
pennants fluttering from a flagpole behind the chimney must have
been his work too. Apparently there was another vessel inside the
house, which a girl from the village used to go and reposition
every day according to instructions, the reason for which eluded
her. Mr. Pelly also removed a few stones from the blank south
west wall; Clarence Daniel suggested that the holes were the
portholes in his stone ship.
For some time between the wars the Round House was occupied by
the village linesman, a deaf-mute named Ebenezer Barratt, known
as 'Yebby'. He was the last permanent resident and he left behind
his initials E.B carved in stone.
DISCOVERIES
The photograph has most kindly been given to me by a lady
[Ed: for the sake of privacy the lady's name is withheld; but
for the sake of readability we will call her 'Miss H.']
who has her own fond memories of the Round House,
where she stayed regularly for several years from the late 1920s
and which she loved so much that she called it 'her' house. She
paid the 2s.6d weekly rent out of her own pocket, leaving the
only bedroom to her mother while she and a friend camped in an
ex-army hut nearby. Jugs of drinking water were fetched from Mrs
Beeley, who with her husband owned the Round House, but the rest
of their water came from a stream running down the side of the
field. A small stone extension to the cottage housed their
chemical toilet.
The cottage was lit by a single paraffin lamp and there was a
small range with an oven in which, just once, 'Miss H.'
cooked Yorkshire Pudding for three, a feat she remembers as 'a
memorable success'. She wanted very much to live in the Round
House permanently and plans were prepared for extension work but
sadly the building was condemned as unfit for habitation in 1935.
Although 'Miss H.' put her case at an appeal heard at
Bakewell this was turned down and her dreams fell through.
During her stays at the Round House she was often told by
villagers that the building had formerly been a bath house for
Cliff College but this story hardly seemed credible until her two
dogs discovered the delights of a substantial outdoor water
cistern. Built of stone, it was soundly embedded on a gradient
above and to one side of the Round House, close to the adjoining
moorland. With a high rear wall against the rising ground it
measured about 7 feet by 4 feet although there was then not much
more than a foot of water inside.
‘Miss H.’ also made an important discovery of her own.
For some time she had been intrigued by a map reference to a
burial ground, in fact the Cundy graves, but nobody seemed to
know its whereabouts. The five stone slabs had been completely
overgrown for years. It was 'Miss H.' who found them by
gently prodding around the rough ground in the general area shown
on the Ordnance Survey map and she still recalls the thrill of
exposing the first stone, marked O.C. for Olive Cundy. The rest
soon came to light, in turn inscribed with the initials of
Thomas, Ada, Nellie and Thomas CUNDY. 'Miss H.'
continued to keep the graves clear until she moved to her present
home in Grindleford in 1938.
Memories of the Round House are clearly very dear to her heart
and it has been a delight and privilege to share them with her.
Please note that the Round House is privately
owned and there is no public access. It can be seen only from a public
footpath from which walkers are respectfully asked not to divert.
[Ed:] I cannot allow the above interpretation of the Cundy family
names to go unchallenged! I haven't seen the memorials myself but understand
the slabs are carved with just the initials, ‘T.C’, ‘A.C’, ‘O.C’, ‘N.C’.
I would not dispute the most likely interpretation of ‘T’ is
Thomas, but I cannot accept the present interpretation of Ada and Olive as
being feasible for 1632. Ada is surely a late 19th century name; Olive is
perhaps early 19th century, and although ‘Nellie’ is possible, I have not come
across it used as a nickname for ‘Ellen’ before the early 19th century. I suggest
therefore ‘A.C’ was more likely to be ‘Alice Cundy’; and ‘O.C’ and ‘N.C’ would
more likely be ‘Ottiwell’ (Oswald) and ‘Nicholas’ than ‘Olive’ and ‘Nellie’
(assuming a ‘G’ has not become sufficiently eroded to look like an ‘O’ - in
which case a more likely derivation would be ‘George’).
Apparently there is no problem of access to the graves, as a plaque marks
the site by the public footpath along Baslow Edge, so I would be interested
in other views - I have a vested interest, as I have Cundy ancestors myself.
A further ‘take’ on the ‘Round House’ story has been kindly provided by Cecilia Harrison
(née Hulley) who was born locally and says:- “The graves are
there, below the rocks. They were discovered when the horses had grazed and
cleared the ground. The round house I understood was used for overnight
prisoners going from Tideswell to Chesterfield. It was a one-up-one-down and
not near the present day footpath... There is a round house a bit like it at Baslow,
up Whitlands Lane going to Hassop. It is round also with a hole in the top. I was
told when I was a child it was a shepards hut used when lambing, the hole in
the roof for smoke from a fire.”
Porter, Lindsey - The Peak District: Its Secrets and Curiosities (1998)
ISBN 0 86190 240 8
On p.46, Clarrie Daniel is quoted as stating the Round House was built as a Bath
House for Cliff College. This book also mentions the Cundy Graves on p.32, but
refrains from any comment on their forenames!