| Museum Parade & The Pitchings, Matlock Bath, 1909 |
| Matlock Bath, Twentieth Century Photographs, Postcards, Engravings & Etchings |
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This beautifully clear black and white photograph was taken by Phil
Williamson's grandfather, who was studying at Royal College of Music
in London for about 18 months between 1909/10 . The young Australian
was a keen, but amateur, photographer at that stage of his life. He
did not carry on with it in quite the same way after he returned home,
and only took the usual family snaps, etc. It is believed he used
glass negatives, which gave the exceptional clarity and detail, but
unfortunately these no longer exist. He travelled widely within the
U.K., but he was probably interested in Derbyshire as his own grandmother
(Sarah Webster) was born in Little Eaton in about 1824.
On the original photograph you can almost read the number plate of
the charabanc! This was clearly the very early days of motor vehicles
in the village as sign at the bottom of the very big window reads
"GARAGE". In 1908 (Kelly's Directory) the garage was advertised
as "E Williams, motor engineers & garage". A solitary
charabanc has been replaced by motor cycles in the modern Matlock
Bath.
The buildings on the left, originally part of Matlock Bath's famous
Great Hotel, are almost the same today. The buildings on the right
disappeared when the road was widened.
Look carefully at the wedge-shaped building at the bottom of Waterloo
Road (The Pitchings). This photograph shows it was four storeys high.
Today there are only three storeys; it appears to have been completely
rebuilt, probably about 1923, by Williams Deacon's Bank who bought
the premises in March 1918.
Compare
the photograph with a modern drawing of The Pitchings
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Photograph kindly provided by and © Phil
Williamson.
Information provided by Ann Andrews with additions by Colin Goodwyn
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You may like to view
Photographs
of Matlock Bath Today
Matlock
Bath's Glove Factory
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