|
WHATEVER the future holds in store Smedley's Hydro, the name of its
eccentric founder will be remembered far beyond the Matlock district
for generations to come.
Was he a saint and a great healer, or a fantastic quack; sound
business man with a taste for philanthropy, or an egotistical crank;
or was he one of those almost incredible oddities which the English
nation occasionally throws up? Even now, more than 75 years after
his death, it is difficult to assess the character of John Smedley.
Smedley was born at Wirksworth in 1803, the son a hosiery manufacturer.
He was 14 when he left school to join the family business, which
was then on the verge of bankruptcy.
By 1846, when he married Caroline Harward, the second daughter
of the Vicar of Wirksworth, the business was on its feet again,
despite the death of his father and elder brother.
TURNING POINT
Smedley may not have been whole-heartedly devoted to his work,
but he toiled as earnestly as any hard-headed money-spinning capitalist
of the early - Victorian era. Thanks to his efforts Lea Mills survived
the years of depression that followed the Napoleonic Wars, and
though Smedley did not make enough money to satisfy his desire
for an early retirement he at least did well enough to maintain
his wife in some degree of comfort and take her to Switzerland
for their honeymoon.
That marked the turning point in John Smedley's life. While in
Switzerland he became seriously ill and returned to England to
recuperate at the newly-established hydropathic establishment at
Ben Rhydding, in Yorkshire, and later to take the waters at Cheltenham.
The cure was completely successful. From now on, the new science
of hydropathy was the greatest
interest in Smedley's life. Water, he decided, was there for all
ills, but his less kind critics asserted ambiguously that he had
water on the brain.
SUCCESS
When, in 1851, Ralph Davis, of Darley Dale, took over an eleven-roomed
house at Matlock Bank, Smedley became
his medical adviser. It was not long before Smedley bought the
house and within two years he had started to build the great hydro
which still bears his name.
Smedley's Hydro was successful from the start. Before long he was
accommodating 1,600 visitors or patients a year. By 1867, the numbers
had swollen to 2,000, and, with hundreds of prospective visitors
being turned away, the hydro had to be enlarged. The new extensions
involved the purchase of neighbouring property. Smedley had his
own methods of compulsory purchase. He informed the more reluctant
vendors that if they refused to sell their property he would close
the hydro, which would have meant virtual ruin to the people of
:Matlock Bank. In the end John Smedley had his way - as he usually
did throughout his life. If the Derbyshire County Council obtain
a compulsory purchase order for Smedley's Hydro, the wheel will
indeed have turned a full circle.
But the other side of Smedley's character is shown by at the fact
that when his hydro became too expensive for his poorer patients,
he set up several of his bathmen in smaller houses to cater for
those who could not afford the two guineas a week, which
was the cost of treatment at the hydro.
RIGID RULES
If you imagine a monastery run by Mr. Butlin, you get a fair impression
of life in Smedley's Hydro in the early days. Everything and everybody
was highly organised. Visitors rose at 6.30 to undergo cold - water
treatment. They retired to bed at 10 o'clock.
Fines were imposed on those who broke the rigid rules of the establishment.
A penny fine was imposed for late arrivals at meals, and twopence
was exacted from those who picked up a newspaper or attempted to
read during the 20-minute rest period after meals. For the more
heinous crimes of entering a lady's bed sitting-room or the ladies'
bath-room, the penalty was half-a-guinea.
Meals were ample, but simple. Sauces and spices were frowned upon,
and the establishment was strictly teetotal. Card-playing was forbidden,
and the piano could be used only for sacred music. One Continental
guest broke the latter rule and got away with it. "To me all
music is sacred," he said, wistfully, and was allowed to
continue with a Chopin waltz. Life at Smedley's may not sound exciting
to us, but our Victorian ancestors clamoured to return to the hydro
year after year.
SMEDLEYISM
Religion was another of John Smedley's interests.
Here again he was an individualist. As a devout member of the Established
Church he was a strong opponent of Wesley's teaching, until he
suddenly changed over to Methodism. But even there he was not completely
happy, and the religion which he preached from the marquee with
which he toured the district can only be described as Smedleyism.
Crowds flocked to hear him, but probably from respect for the man
rather than from enthusiasm for his turgid sermons. He set up chapels
in the district and held a half-hour service at Lea Mills every
morning.
Seeing himself as a modern St. Paul, Smedley published
a series of pamphlets in which he attacked the clergy as fiercely
as he had previously attacked the medical profession. As a writer
he was no more successful than he was as a preacher. His history
of religion in England reads like a not entirely unsuccessful attempt
at a "1066 and All
That." But he was deadly serious. Humour was not one Smedley's
virtues.
No man with a sense of a humour could have built Riber
Castle. Smedley originally intended to build a 225-ft. high tower
to be given to the nation as an observatory, but on finding the
structure unsuitable for modern astronomical apparatus, he
changed his plans and designed the wildly unsuitable castle which
still dominates the Derwent Valley from its windswept hill-top.
Riber Castle was believed to have cost £60,000 to build.
Smedley was his own architect, as he had been, not too happily,
on the hydro extensions.
GOOD EMPLOYER
John Smedley did not live long to enjoy life
at Riber. He died in 1874, but his devoted wife lived there in
lonely widowhood until her death in 1892. The hydro became a limited
company in 1875, and the castle became a school after Mrs. Smedley's
death.
As an employer, Smedley was perhaps at his best. He did not
pay high wages, but he was ahead of his time in providing generous
welfare facilities for his employees. He paid for Bank Holidays,
provided refreshments and kept a supply of dry stockings for those
of his employees who arrived at work with wet feet.
Intolerant and
over-paternal he may have been, but at least he could proudly boast
that during a time of labour unrest there had never been a strike
at Lea Mills.
Eccentric, obstinate and bigoted though he was, it
can at least be said of John Smedley that he did a great deal of
good and very little harm. Of many men can less can be said.
By ROY CHRISTIAN,
a master at Allenton Secondary
Technical School, and son
of the Rev. F. E. Christian,
who was Vicar of St. John's, Derby,
up to his death in 1958. |
|