| Matlock Bath, South Parade, 1903 - with the Great Petrifying Well |
| Matlock Bath : Twentieth Century Photographs, Postcards, Engravings & Etchings |
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Shown here is Matlock Bath's South Parade at the very beginning of the Edwardian era. The buildings on the left are little changed and the large oval sign for Hodgkinson's Hotel is almost right in the middle!
On the far right are buildings that disappeared when the road was widened - the shop called Royal Museum and the Great Petrifying Well. When describing the Buxton family of Matlock Bath[1] my late father wrote that "the first recollection I had of them was when they were living at what they styled as "The Royal Museum". It was a novelty jewellery and ornament vending shop with the emphasis on Blue John, petrified objects and the like. ... The original "Royal Museum was, of course, on the other side of the road. ... When the Buxton family vacated the Spa shop they went to live in a house they had built above Temple Walk[2]".
The Great Petrifying Well was one of several Petrifying Wells that had existed in Matlock Bath over the years. Shelves displaying petrified objects are clearly visible on the external wall[3]. "Few visitors care to journey homewards without a nest, and egg, a stick, or some other object coated in stone, to remind them when the holiday is over of the dales and heights of lovely Matlock[4]". |
Photograph, by G. W Wilson & Co. Ltd., Aberdeen, from Ward Lock & Co's "Guide to Matlock, Dovedale, Etc.", Illustrated Guide Books of England and Wales (Guide Series 1903-4)
In the collection of, provided by and scan © Ann
Andrews Intended for personal use only
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References - coloured links go to on-site transcripts or information:
[1] Herbert Buxton appears in all the Matlock Bath census returns between 1841 and 1901
[2] Reminiscences of the late Mr. Frank Clay,
from his private papers and notes owned by the webmistress
[3] There is more about Petrifying Wells, Petrification and Petrifactioners elsewhere on this website.
See
[4] Ward Lock Guide, p.18
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