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Home > Derbyshire > Ashford In The Water > Miners Arms

Miners Arms

Picture source: Stewart Marsh


The Miners Arms was situated on Greaves Lane. This pub was present by 1831 when the publican was John Bonsall. It is now in residential use.
 

 
From The Miners Daughters By Charles Dickens, 1850
David Dunster was one of those remarkably tall fellows that you see about these hills, who seem of all things the very worst made men to creep into the little mole holes on the hill sides that they call lead-mines. But David did manage to burrow under and through the hard limestone rocks as well as any of them. He was a hard-working man, though he liked a sup of beer, as most Derbyshire men do, and sometimes came home none of the soberest. He was naturally of a very hasty temper, and would fly into great rages; and if he were put out by anything in the working of the mines, or the conduct of his fellow-workmen, he would stay away from home for days, drinking at Tideswell, or the Bull’s Head at the top of Monsal Dale, or down at the Miners’ Arms at Ashford-in-the-Water.
 

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Other Photos
Date of picture: 1905

Picture source: Gareth Saunders