|
|
|||
| Photographs of Stoney Middleton, Derbyshire - The Bath House (Renovated) |
|
The Bath House (Renovated), Stoney Middleton
The following legend is displayed on the notice board on the far left of the building, directly above where Young Miss Poppy is having a good sniff in the gutter.
The Roman Baths The spring has a constant temperature of 63°F. In 1734 Dr. Short's treatise on Mineral Waters claimed that the water could be “drunk more freely and safely than at Buxton, as it is cooler”. It was thought to benefit sufferers from rheumatism and other illnesses less readily recognisable today, such as 'too great heat' and 'saltness of blood'. In 1789 a writer called Pilkington suggested that more people would try the waters if the then open bath was covered in. Early the next century Thomas Denman, Lord Chief Justice of England and owner of Stoney Middleton Hall took up the idea. By 1815 there were separate baths for men and women, each with its own window, changing room and fireplace. However, his attempt to establish Stoney Middleton as a spa failed and the buildings gradually fell into disrepair. In 1980 the bath houses were classified as a 'Listed Building'. Between 1985 and 1992 the bath houses and their surroundings were restored by Stoney Middleton Parish Council, with financial support from the Peak National Park Authority. In 1988 work on the buildings won first prize for a building project in the Derbyshire Village Ventures Competition.” A photograph of The Bath House prior to Restoration is also available. (Commentary provided by Rosemary Lockie) |
||
|
|
© Copyright Rosemary Lockie, GENUKI and Contributors 2000-2007, &c.
GENUKI is a registered trade mark of the charitable trust GENUKI, see
About GENUKI as an Organisation
Image contributed by Rosemary Lockie on May 2003.
URL of this page: http://www.wishful-thinking.org.uk/genuki/DBY/StoneyMiddleton/BathHouse2.html