20 January 2026

Solidity

To all those out there in the blogosphere who thought that my "Alvin the Avenger" story was true, I have a confession to make. It was all pure, unadulterated fiction! The tyrannic reign of King Blabbermouth is not over. In fact, he has just invaded Switzerland. Sorry.

This afternoon I needed some self-therapy after all that fictionalising. With the afternoon brightening, I drove over to Stanage and parked close to the little car park  at Dennis Knoll.
At this time of year, summer swathes of vigorous green bracken have been replaced by dead and fallen vegetation that is rusty brown in colour. One advantage of this scene of death that is simply waiting for springtime is that you are better able to locate abandoned millstones.

The millstone industry probably began at Stanage Edge in the fourteenth century before peaking in the seventeenth century. The millstones were all laboriously hand-carved and were mainly used in flour production though some were used for grinding metal. They were exported far and wide.

The industry petered out at the beginning of the twentieth century when many perfectly fine millstones were simply abandoned. It was no longer cost-effective to hand carve them. They could be created with machinery instead and besides the millstone grit of Stanage Edge had been overtaken by the finer grained French "chert" which did not leave tiny grains of silica in the now fashionable pure white flour.

The result of all of this is that dozens of never-used but timeless grindstones can be found in the undergrowth below Stanage Edge. To me they are almost as evocative of times past as the famous moai statues on faraway Easter Island.

35 comments:

  1. Wow, you sent me off on a googledive with those millstones.

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    Replies
    1. "Googledive" is a new term to me but I like it.

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  2. You're fined 17, 000 dollars for touching one of the sacred Moai on Easter Island.
    But the millstones of Stanage Edge stand unnoticed.
    Where are the Gods when you really need them ? I'd settle for a wee UFO.

    Let's have some English music on your next post.
    *Charlotte Church, H Parry - Jerusalem.* YouTube.























































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    1. Why the long empty space Lord Haggerty? For a moment, I thought you had committed Haggercide. In 2009, I touched a hundred "moai" and never paid a peso.

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    2. I flatlined. Shurely Shome Mishtake, like they say in Private Eye ?
      Last night I was on Scott Bradfield's vlog regarding John Updike.
      Maybe I was a tad too Hyper.

      Scott is an American novelist who lives in London and surveys books
      on his From the Bathtub channel.
      He has a sense of humour like your own. He must have Yorkshire blood.

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  3. I think all those abandoned millstones are beautiful. They add something to the countryside. I don't believe for even one second that Trump has invaded Switzerland! The Swiss wouldn't allow it, and they have no oils or minerals that he wants. Also they could yodel him to death.

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    1. Ha-ha! Being yodelled to death... what a great notion Elsie.

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  4. You've gone on walks to Stanidge edge before. It's interesting about the mill stones. We probably have some places where millstones are abandoned here.

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    1. It has to be the right kind of stone but you are probably right Keith.

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  5. It makes for a mix of feelings, looking at these stones. They are beautiful man-made works of art, blending in perfectly with the natural beauty around them, but it is puzzling to think that so much work went into each and every one of them and yet they were just left there abandoned. Did the companies or people who ordered them simply not honour their orders, or were they not made to order but to always have some ready for when and if they would be needed? What did the craftsmen think on their last day there, putting down their tools forever, one last glance at the millstone they had so painstakingly hewn?

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    1. Your wistful thoughts seem to echo mine. There are things we will never fully know. Sometimes we can only imagine.

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  6. Tell us more about the millstones. For instance did they roll them down the hill to transport below?

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    1. It is said that the stones were indeed rolled down the slope before being loaded on to carts pulled by horses. Some of those stones weigh two or three tons and just getting them on the carts would have been a huge effort. I ought to know more about the industry but the kind of men who did that work were probably illiterate.

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  7. It's rather sad that they have been abandoned, surplus to requirement.

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    1. I agree. It is melancholic and that's how I felt when I first came across some of them in the spring of 1979. Until then, I never knew they existed.

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  8. I'm sure they would fetch a pretty penny as garden orname if you could carry one home each time you walk there??

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  9. History unintentionally preserved. That's good

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    1. They are just there - a lasting monument to the stone masons. No blue plaques. No flowers. Nothing. Just there.

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  10. Without knowledge of the history it would be a mysterious sight indeed if one just happened to come across it!

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  11. I love these local informative post, it's great to learn about local history, sadly I don't think I will ever get to see them.

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  12. Looks like a pretty walk.

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  13. It feels so sad that they were just left in place, the men just walked away. The photos are lovely.

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  14. Those stones are so interesting to see. I'm amazed they are just laying around for all to see. When would these have been carved?

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    1. Mostly in the nineteenth century I believe.

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  15. A sad story of human progress. Next is AI, apparently.

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    1. There is a silent sadness about those millstones.

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  16. They are somewhat Easter Island-ish. Imagine how much stone dust people used to eat in their food. It probably boosted their mineral intake! I still hope to visit this area myself one of these days. It looks like a fascinating place.

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    1. If you come come up here by train, you can either stay in our little house or if you want your own space I could drive you up to "The Norfolk Arms" at Ringinglow. Then - weather-permitting I will take you up to Stanage Edge for a walk. This invitation is also open to Dave.

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  17. What a beautiful, peaceful, fascinating place. Will the millstones be part of your poem?

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