Newsletter. Number Eight August

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Newsletter Number Eight August 2017 www.rdht.org.uk 1

Welcome to our eighth newsletter. We distribute it, mainly by e-mail, three or four times a year. Remember : the more items members submit, the more we can include in the newsletter. Any member can e-mail items to the editor on pcs10033@gmail.com. Our Next Talk The next talk will be on Wednesday 20 th September when Adrian Farmer will speak on The Strutt Family Album in the usual venue at the usual time. (Marehay Welfare at 7pm) Next Meeting The next committee meeting will take place on 7 th September at 2.15pm in the Council Chamber (if we can book it, or the shed if we can t) in the Town Hall. If you have an item for the agenda, please let Vera know by the end of August. Butterley Walk Our annual Butterley walk (part of the Autumn Footprints Festival) will take place on Sunday September 17 th at 1pm. It s a short (2 miles) walk led by Tim, showing the impact of the Butterley Company on our area. Meet at the Midland Railway Centre car park off Butterley Hill. Somercotes Heritage Day Once again we will be attending this event, in Somercotes Village Hall on September 23 rd, along with other local heritage groups. Ripley s Big Day Out We spent a quiet day in the station building at Swanwick Junction, meeting some interesting people, selling a few of our wares and watching the trains come and go. Alwyn points out that the event itself was well attended, and not quiet! The cover picture is by Simon Waller of the Hammersmith triple bridge 2

W. I. History of Ripley As you may have seen in our article in All Things Local, we recently discovered a history of Ripley written by 5 members of the local Womens Institute in 1931. Handwritten, with a few illustrations like the one above of the old White House, maps and diagrams, it is a remarkable piece of work. The 5 authors, Marion and Mabel Turner, Evelyn Jowitt and Enid and Mavis Langton, set out to prove that Ripley really did have a history. They travelled to the British Museum, translated latin documents and scoured local archives. The result is not just a history but also a portrait of Ripley in the 1930s, with particular emphasis on the role of women. Derbyshire s Local Studies Librarian, Ruth Sharpe, has arranged for the original to be scanned at the Record Office, and, provided we can get the permission of the local W.I., we hope to be able to publish a facsimile copy soon. 3

Tommy Dod and the Internet You may or may not remember that, up to the late 1960s, there was a brand of rock on sale in Ripley called Tommy Dod. It had a picture of one or sometimes two little men running all the way through it. In the late 1990s, Frank Mansey published a little book about Tommy Dod in which he described how it came about that not one but three different families were involved in the production of the sweets. Frank had the advantage of being able to talk to people who remembered the Jackson, Watson and Hawkins families, and probably got more information than an internet search would produce. However, there is one aspect of the story where Google might help. Frank says that the name Tommy Dod came about because the original maker, Tommy Jackson, was only a little over five feet tall and was consequently known as Doddy. It appears, though, that the name Tommy Dodd was current elsewhere. According to Partridge s Dictionary of Slang, it was the winner in a game of tossing coins, a music hall song of 1863 (see the illustration opposite), cockney rhyming slang for God, odd, or homosexual, (sod) or a 4

gun (a rod), a small glass of beer (in Australia) or a warning signal on the railways dating from the 1930s. It was also the name of a popular dance, a quadrille, from the 1850s. How all this fits with a stick of rock is anyone s guess! What s in Your Wallet? One of the more interesting donations recently has been a wallet. A battered brown leather affair, it contains a Ripley Co-op Membership card, ration books for 1953, a motor cycle fuel ration book, Algerian and Moroccan 5 franc notes, a 2 lire Allied Military Currency note, a bill from the Lido Restaurant, Port Said, temporary membership of the Sealandair Club, Port Said, and cinema tickets in French, English and Arabic. It also contains 3 driving licences. Long before photo cards, these were small booklets, about 4 by 2. The earliest, dating from 1960, is a buff colour, whilst the slightly later ones are covered in red cloth, like this one. With them, and the same size and colour as the earliest, is a document labelled Drinking Licence. In pursuance of the Inebriates (Qualification) Acts 1927-1959, it licences the holder, 5

William Brentnall, to drink from all containers of Groups A, B, D, E and F, as shown below. There is no indication as to whether there was a test of some sort, but Mr Brentnall had clearly passed it! It makes me wonder what effect the electronic revolution will have on what we carry around with us. It is already widely expected that coins will disappear soon, and paper money and licences will follow. What would we leave future generations? Imagine the scene, fifty years from now, when some poor archivist gazes with puzzlement at an ancient screen with its odd electronic payment devices, quaint images and jokes on something called Twitter! 6

Butterley DVD Progress Mike has lost count of the hours he has spent on the Butterley DVD, but now at last the final images have been added, the wording of the commentary agreed, and our voice, David Dykes, lined up to record the finished version. The last days of the company are told through the words of those who were there, managers and workers alike, and there is more than a tinge of sadness as they remember that the company had healthy order books when it was taken over by the individuals and companies who oversaw its closure. The finished DVD will last, we think, about an hour, telling the full story of the company from the 1780s to 2009. It should be on sale by the Autumn, priced 5. Mike is taking advance orders now. Butterley Company Railway Memories Bill Nelson s short book uses memories of men who worked on the Butterley Company s 20 miles or so of railways to describe the operation of the lines, with a few anecdotes thrown in. It is available via the website or from the shed, price 1.50. Bill with the book 7

Butterley Ironworks Trust Progress at the Trust continues to be very slow despite monthly meetings trying to move the project forward. The Trust is now registered with the Charities Commission as a CIO (Charitable Incorporated Organisation) which empowers it to open a bank account and apply for grants to enable its objectives to be pursued. Even obtaining CIO status was fraught with problems as the initial application was rejected by the Commission claiming that the Trust s name could be confused as The Butterfly Trust, hence the change to The Butterley Ironworks Trust (BIT). To compound the initial delay confirmation of acceptance was sent to the wrong address. Finally our certificate was received as a two page A4 document, the second page being the certificate in the Welsh language. The site s London based owners, Aquarius Estates, have invited BIT to attend a meeting with them possibly to be held in Nottingham but the date is yet to be fixed. The on-site situation continues to give cause for concern due to ongoing vandalism especially now the school holidays are underway. The owners do have a security company supposedly keeping an eye on the site and work has been undertaken to further secure the buildings following the recent arson attack. However, site access is still very easy and hardly likely to deter anyone intent on getting inside the buildings. Most of the furnace wall (The Great Wall of Butterley) is heavily overgrown making it difficult to establish the degree of deterioration of the stonework supporting the houses on Cromford View above it. The Trust s vision for the site has been further developed in recent months and it is hoped to try to develop a membership primarily based on former employees but also open to anyone else with interest in the project. A simple newsletter is to be produced to keep everyone informed about further developments. Let s hope things begin to move a little faster in forthcoming weeks. 8