TRAFFIC CONGESTION is nothing
new to the Peak District. By the mid-twenties it was increasingly
obvious that the network of narrow roads largely unchanged from the
19th century urgently needed some major changes if gridlock, pollution
and endless delays were to be avoided.
One congestion hotspot was the bridge over the river at Rowsley -
a busy location because of the large railway sidings and goods
yards along the A6. Although the road itself just about coped with traffic flow the single-width bridge was a major, frustrating, bottleneck.
Work started on bridge-widening in the late
twenties to the relief of most local people but amid concerns
from some conservationists who feared that the historic structure
would not be sympathetically widened (it was and 70 years later
is still in good shape). You can see how narrow the
original bridge was as a North Western bus (much smaller than
a modern bus) makes its way from Bakewell to Matlock watched
by an RAC patrolman.
The second view, taken a few months later, shows how carefully
the widened bridge has followed the original design.[Image
2]
Taken 75 years ago, a view of Artists' Corner
between Matlock and Matlock Bath reminds us that the hillside
and the buildings on it survive almost unchanged. But the road
has been widened and the area to the right is now a car park.[Image 3] The bus is a North Western. The Stockport-based North
Western Road Car Company operated the majority of buses in the
Peak District in pre-war years until the 1960s when the bus
industry was re-organised and opened to more competition. The
car which is causing trouble is, incidentally, an Austin Seven.
Between Matlock Bath and Cromford this once-familiar
building was demolished some years before a much more ambitious
road-widening project between the two areas. The smaller part
of the building was the Glenorchy Chapel and that nearest to
the camera was a private house. [Images 4 & 5]
[Note from the webmistress:
Gill took this similar view of the A6 trunk road, shown above,
after both Glenorchy and the Independent Chapel were demolished.
Glenorchy was the Pastor's house]
Read
about Glenorchy (Congregational) Independent Chapel
You could attract a good crowd in Matlock back
in the 1950s even for the opening of a modest bus station -
little more than just three rows of corrugated sheeting shelters,
long since demolished. The official opening was performed by
Alderman Charles White, the then-chairman of Derbyshire County
Council
and a Matlock man.[Image 6] The two buses on hand at
the opening were provided by North Western and the Darley Dale-based
Silver Service - two or the main operators. From this station,
you could also catch an East Midland to Chesterfield, a Midland
General Alfreton or a Hulley's to Baslow. |