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When the spirit moves you - pedalling in my Mother's trail, Tim
Dawson (2011)
First published at thesundaytimes.co.uk 4 Sept 11
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Standing at the entrance of what had been Morton Colliery in Derbyshire,
I struggled to feel much connection with the place. True, this is the
mine where my grandfather worked, I had never been here before and, I
am prone to a whiff of sentimentality about 'coalfield communities'.
But, the pit closed in the year that I was born, and my grandfather
worked his last shift long before that. He died in 1947 having retired
from mining on health grounds even earlier.
Little more than two doors up the village's main street is the school
at which my grandmother subsequently taught. I suspect that part of the
existing building might date back to her day, but so dramatic has been
its redevelopment since then that I doubt she would have recognised the
place.
It was the road that took me there - over the Derbyshire dale's dramatic
peaks and troughs - that held the magic with which I hoped to connect,
however.
My mother, Megan Dawson, who died earlier this year, was an enthusiastic
teenage cyclist. Weekend after weekend in the early 1950s, she set out
from Morton on her bicycle to meet other members of the Chesterfield youth-hostelling
group. She was among the youngest of the gang made up mainly of miners
and steelworkers who pedalled their way around the surrounding counties.
So magical was it to be young and on the roads in the 50s, that her
tales of companionship and discovery, not to mention her enthusiasm for
the bicycle, were easily enough to inspire my two brothers and I of the
joys of life awheel two decades later. Initially she led us, out of the
West Riding of Yorkshire, where we grew up, into the wild Dales, with
their rocky peaks, gritty villages and long-abandoned abbeys.
But soon we were off on our own, enjoying an independence that, as a
parent now, makes me squirm with concern, but at the time was an ecstasy.
We had quickly covered most of the Dales and soon rode much, much further
- up into the Lake District and into North Wales and beyond.
Cycling in Derbyshire last week, I knew that I was on the very same
roads that my mother had come to love. The B6014 which links Morton with
Matlock must surely have been one that she rode almost weekly? It splits
from the A615 a mile or so east of Matlock to climb the charmingly named
Slag Hills. They don't give cyclists much to laugh about, though. This
rocky ridge is part of the southernmost tip of the mighty Pennine chain.
It tops at close to 1,000 feet above sea level and the road itself not
far shy of that. Gradual climbs are interspersed with short brutal walls,
some as steep as 20%.
Its hill-farming country, with remnants of quarrying behind almost every
shoulder of land. Many of the nice stone farmhouses now look trim and
have two or three expensive new cars in their drives. The fields behind,
and the sheep that totter up and down them look as hard-bitten as they
must have done 60 years ago.
Straining to turn my gear on the steepest sections, I wondered how my
mother had fared on these ascents. They certainly inspired her love for
hilly countryside, and those for whom it provided a living - although
I suspect that she was never a climber, in a cyclists' sense of the word.
As I crested the hill riding from Matlock, a huge panorama of eastern
Derbyshire opened itself up to me, and I knew in an instant that she would
have stopped here. She would have admired the undulating countryside and
distant church spires. She would have lapped up the rolling sea of fields
and woods that separated the 'Derbyshire lighthouse' (a tall, hill-top
memorial to the 11,400 Sherwood Foresters who lost their lives in the
Great War) on the peak above Critch to her own bedroom, five miles distant,
into which its light shone.
There is much about the outlook that has changed, almost beyond recognition,
of course. Her home was almost certainly identifiable from the winding
gear and the pit tip, whose spontaneous combustions she had feared were
the work of spies sending messages to German aeroplanes during the second
world war. There were once dozens of mines, as well as coke ovens, blast
furnaces, pumping gear and gas works in this landscape. At one time, 10%
of all the coal arriving in London came from the area over which I was
gazing.
It is a far more rural outlook today. The towns and villages don't quite
exude prosperity - but nor do they appear grindingly poor. The Clay Cross
Company, which owned nearly all the industry in these parts from Victorian
times only ceased to exist in 1998 - although as a shadow of its former
self, post coal nationalisation. But the continued existence of these
communities is almost certainly only possible as commuter dormitories.
But the minor roads connecting the villages and towns are those that
my mother loved. Their rises and falls, switchbacks around barns and curves
beside the grander house's perimeter walls and drops to the side of reservoirs
are, beyond doubt, the ones over which my mother rolled.
But, although in large part that area formed my mother, and provided
a living for her family for some 30 years, they always considered themselves
outsiders - migrants from their native North Wales. The Ceriog valley,
in Denbigshire provided the fixed point in their identity - when they
left Derbyshire, they scarcely ever returned. My brothers and I spent
countless holidays in Wales - but had hardly visited Derbyshire before
last week.
Criss-crossing these roads one sunny morning, I would have loved to
have believed that somehow they took me closer to her. But while I don't
entertain fantasies that her spirit is somehow abroad in the world, I
have no doubt that it lives within me. And for so long as I am able to
pedal among fields, and dry stone walls, to battle uphill and to fly downhill,
I know that it is her who has taken me there. And if occasionally, I need
to retrace her pedal strokes to be reminded of that, it is good a way
to remember her as I can imagine.
TD Sep 11
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