BYGONE INDUSTRIES OF THE PEAK: PEAT CUTTING
This is one of a series of articles published in
The Peak Advertiser, the Peak District's local free newspaper, on 28th September 1998 (p(unknown)), and
reproduced by kind permission of its author, Julie Bunting.
The series is now available as a fully-illustrated paperback, published in 2006
by
Wildtrack Publishing of Sheffield (ISBN 1-904098-01-0) See also this
Review by Alan Jacques.
BYGONE INDUSTRIES OF THE PEAK: PEAT CUTTING
Mention peat in the Peak District and thoughts turn to the bleak
northern moors where peat literally lays the foundations of the
landscape. Denuded of trees now, these same uplands were once
thickly wooded with oak, elm and lime until about 3000 BC when
prehistoric farmers began a long, slow process of land clearance.
Without trees the ground became boggy and provided ideal
conditions for the formation of peat from decomposing vegetable
matter. In places it can be found up to fifteen feet thick.
Fortunately, peat extraction has never been a large-scale
industry in the Peak but it was a useful fuel for localised lead
smelting and lime burning. Demand dropped off from the early
17th century as coal became affordable with the construction of
new roads and, later, canals. However, peat continued to be cut
for use as a domestic fuel, mostly by individual users. Cut into
oblong bricks and stacked to dry in the sun and air, it loses its
soft, spongy texture and shrinks to become brittle and
inflammable.
Peat pits have been worked at Crookstone Moor, below Ringing
Roger and on Grindlow, all on Kinderscout. A 70ft-wide trench
known as Back Dike on Ridge Nether Moor at Bleaklow possibly
marks the large pits referred to in the early 19th century by
Farey. Another large area of perhaps thirty acres used to be
worked near Lockerbrook Farm above Derwent and seventy years ago
was still talked of by older people as Rowlee Peat Pits. They
provided fuel for several generations of the occupants of five
farms - Hagg, Bell Hagg, Rowlee, Fairholmes and Lockerbrook Farm.
About a dozen people used to work together in pairs, some digging
the sods, some stacking and wheeling them away, and others
heaping them up to dry. Peat was still being burned as many
households changed to coal - Willis Bridge of Lockerbrook was
still fetching peat around 1910.
A first-hand experience of communal peat digging at Edale in 1851
is one of the local stories published by Tom Tomlinson of
Hathersage in recent years. One of the participants was ten
year-old Nicholas Tym whose family had farmed at Barber Booth for
generations.
The boy understood from his father that for many years the
Champion family of Grindslow House, owners of most of the land
and farms in Edale, had allowed the inhabitants to dig peat from
Peat Moor for fuel. This right to cut and burn peat was called
"turbary" and Nicholas was told that on the big estate map at
Grindslow House this word was written around Peat Moor. There was
said to be a clause relating to turbary on the estate deeds,
indicating a well-established usage.
Nicholas Tym would later recall how at the end of April 1851, as
soon as lambing was over, all the farmers and cottagers gathered
one Monday morning to walk up Peat Lane, carrying their peat
spades, cutters and prickers, onto Peat Moor. Peat Lane was
sometimes called the Sled Road because horse-drawn sledges often
brought the peat down this way.
All the children had a week off school to help and the boys were
kept hard at work beside their fathers, first cutting away any
overlying loose peat then using the strength of their arms to
push the cutter into the deeper layer, ten feet deep in places
and often wet. But it 'cut like butter' and was dug out in
blocks about 12" x 6" although the exact size was determined by
the worker's spade. The blocks were simply called 'peats' . As
they were cut out they were taken away by the womenfolk and
propped one against the other to dry, lined up in neat rows known
as 'footings'. Work finished for the day when it was time to walk
back for milking.
Over the next few days there was an early start each morning
after milking but on the Friday afternoon Nicholas spotted old
Bardsley, the schoolmaster, coming across the moor. The boy kept
on digging with his head down as old Bardsley stopped to talk to
other children before he finally stopped in front of the Tyms,
watched for a while and remarked with a laugh that Nicholas got
on better with peat digging than with his school work. The
teacher and the farmers knew which was more important for these
few days and it was arranged to let old Bardsley have a supply of
peats when they were taken down to the village.
On the last day the footings had to be stacked into well
ventilated piles called 'pikes'. All the peats were laid flat,
pointing downwards and inwards, forming a huge pike which grew
narrower towards the top until it was finished off with a single
peat. Gaps were left for the wind to blow through and the pikes
were left to dry until after haymaking or about the end of
August.
Then, when all the hay and corn was in, the farmers took the
wheels off their big haycarts and replaced them with sledge
runners.The cottagers had smaller sledges and everyone made their
way up the narrow Sled Road to Peat Moor. Practically every house
in Edale had a peat house where the new supply was piled to
capacity, kept separate from the previous year's dry and raggy
stock which would be burnt under the oven on baking days and
under the copper on washdays. The Tyms brought ten loads down and
that just about filled their peat house. Some of the larger
farmers had fifty loads and at least one household got through a
load a week.
Edale farmers always made sure that any person too old or too
infirm to cut their own had a share of peat; nobody went without
a fire in the winter-time. This example of community support
continued even when the railway brought coal supplies into the
Hope Valley at the end of the 19th century. Instead of spending a
week cutting peat up on the moor, farmers just took their carts
to Edale station yard and filled them up with coal as needed.
Once people no longer exercised their turbary rights, a wall was
built to stop them going onto Peat Moor and an old tradition came
to an end.
PEAT BATHS
One of the most recent descriptions of peat cutting appears in
Walks with George (Hollinsclough Methodist Publications, 1998).
It relates to one fine day in June 1938 when Mr. Tunnicliffe of
Black Bank near Quarnford was 'busy cutting peat out of the
ground with a hay knife. He was cutting round a big square piece
of peaty pasture ground; he kept cutting round in thin slices
about a foot square and setting them up on edge in fours to dry
while the weather was at its best; and when dry, he carted them
across to the house to back the fire up at night all through the
winter months.'
Other specialist uses for peat include use in the garden, though
alternatives are now available, and peat baths for relief from
gout, rheumatism, lumbago and sciatica - still a popular therapy
in continental spas.
Nowadays peat erosion is a matter of grave concern. Some blame
has been laid at a number of activities, from moorland manoeuvres
by military vehicles in World War I to the long-standing
practice of controlled heather burning on the grouse moors; a
report of the early 1960s concluded that following burning on
Houndkirk Moor, 4-5 feet of peat had been stripped, in places
down to the bedrock. But the continuing problem in the Peak
District is erosion caused by walkers and this threatens a far
more significant area than all the old peat diggings put
together.
© Julie Bunting
From "The Peak Advertiser", 28th September 1998.
© Copyright Julie Bunting, GENUKI and Contributors 1995-2008, &c.
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[Created 8 May 2003. Last updated 10 Mar 2009 - 10:37 by Rosemary Lockie]