| Pic Tor, the Cycle Track and Matlock Green |
| Matlock, Twentieth Century Photographs, Postcards, Engravings & Etchings |
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Photographed from above the Holt Quarry on Dale Road, this view of
Matlock is a slightly unusual one. In the bottom right corner is the
railway line, which at the time the photograph was taken ran from
Manchester Central Station to London St. Pancras. At this point the
railway crosses over the A6 on a large arched bridge before disappearing
into the tunnel.
The River Derwent, in the centre of the picture, is flowing towards
the steep sided gorge of Matlock Dale, with the public footpath hugging
the far side of the riverbank on a narrow strip of land below Pic
Tor and St. Giles' Church.
In the bottom left of the shot are a couple of properties on Dale
Road, or at least the top of them. Just behind these properties is
a piece of land with what looks like paths or tracks on it. In the
early nineteenth century this land had been part of a Rifle Range.
Matlock Cycle Club members used it as a cycle track in the latter
part of the nineteenth century and the "paths" are actually
part of the oval of the cycle track. At least one of the houses in
Derwent Avenue are believed to have the remnants of the track in the
garden. The line that looks like a straight path is actually three
tennis nets and, if you look very closely, you can see the tram lines
marked out on the courts.
The Old English Hotel Co clearly intended to put a bridge across the
river at the corner of their land to make a way to Matlock Green and
Town. The Articles of the Old English Hotel Co, which
was incorporated in 188, included a copy of a plan from the deeds
showing the path heading to the river and "suggested bridge".*
The buildings in the centre of the photo are the Almshouses at the
end of Causeway Lane, Knowleston Place and Matlock Green. Causeway
Lane is just about visible. The road to Tansley and Alfreton (the
A613) disappears off over the hill.
* From the research notes of Colin Goodwyn,
with grateful thanks
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This postcard is No.626 in "The Peak Series" published
by R. Sneath, Change Alley, Sheffield
Postcard in the collection of, provided by and © Ann
Andrews Intended for personal use only
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