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This lovely Edwardian coloured card is of Matlock's stone bridge
over the River Derwent, shortly after it was widened in 1903/4.
Pictures of the mediaeval bridge before it was widened show that
there were neither any pavements nor any quoins for people to
view the river from, so crossing the bridge would not have been
easy for those on foot when a horse and cart went past. The stonework
looks new; it is interesting to see the low wall curving round
in front of the shop on the far right of the card.
There were then shops on both sides of the road at the far side
of the bridge but those on the right, at the Parkhead, were demolished
during the 1920's. Work commenced in February 1926[1].
Just
beyond the bridge is Crown Square and you can just make out the
shape of one of the trams on this postcard[2].
Immediately to the left of the tram, if you look hard, is the
very edge of a building. I (webmistress) originally thought that
this was part of the tram shelter, which was in the middle of Crown
Square but eventually moved onto the Hall Leys when the trams ceased
to run. However, I now think it shows the covered entrance way
of the Crown Hotel, which projected over the pavement of Bank Road.
The tram shelter is there, though - it almost merges with the heads
of the two people who are standing in the middle of the bridge.
There are trees shown on both sides of the bottom of Bank Road.
In the foreground on the left can be seen the wrought iron gates
of what is now a bank. The gates were replaced and the entrance
way was redesigned when Williams Deacon's Matlock branch acquired
the rather grand portico gateway in 1920[3].
Colin Goodwyn comments that the telegraph pole really is a monster,
for it must go down behind the wall to the garden! |