Matlock Bath residents saw their village change dramatically during 1967 and 1968 when the A6 trunk road that passes through the village was widened in the hope of alleviating the traffic problems that were being experienced. This series of five photographs of work in progress have been provided for this website by Ken Smith and show how the road was re-aligned close to the Jubilee Bridge. It involved pushing back the Derwent and building the road over part of the river's original course.
This major engineering undertaking meant that several old buildings along the length of the river, from the Jubilee Bridge down to the Cromford boundary, were demolished[1]. The Devonshire Cafe (Devonshire Hotel) and the Petrifying Well, which had aroused the curiosity of tourists for many many years, disappeared under the bulldozers.
The main road had been far too narrow for such a major thoroughfare. Probably the worst bottleneck had been where the Devonshire Cafe and some small shops stood. Large lorries had passed within inches of their windows. If you look at the photograph immediately below, these buildings were approximately where the line of piles ends - running from almost opposite Hodgkinson's Hotel to Rose Cottage.
The pretty wooden kiosk and ornate Edwardian turnstile at
the end of the Jubilee Bridge, shown above and in the third
photograph of this group, was another casualty and much of
the Promenade was covered with tarmac. During the tourist season
there had been a charge to cross the bridge and stroll along
the Lovers' Walks and the kiosk and turnstile had been beside
the bridge since shortly before 1910[2].
Julie Bunting's book shows a photograph, dated 1905, of the
kiosk and turnstile at the Promenade's entrance[3]. |