This picture was taken from the top of High Tor, looking down
at the bottling plant in the Dale.
Snow covers the pavements and clings to the centre of the road.
The photo was probably taken in the 1940s or 1950s and shows the
series of buildings where the Whittaker family carried out their
soft drinks business, with the three-storey house at the end originally
being the family home[1].
To the left of it is a small wooden building - the entrance to
the caves that Mrs. Whittaker used to show to the public - and
to the right of the house was a bottle store[2].
The long building with skylights in the roof was where first the
drays and later the lorries were loaded. There were two sets of
sliding doors so that vehicles could park on the roadside and be
loaded up with "Tordale"[3] pop
or other soft drinks crates. Inside, at the
right hand end, was a wide loading area to cope with four vehicles
at a time. The two bays nearest the road were
in regular use whilst the ones at the rear were mostly used during
the tourist season. The smaller of these rear bays catered solely
for deliveries to the Heights of Abraham; it was impossible for
large vehicles to access the Heights. In line with this, and level
with the outside doors, was a concrete wall where full
crates of lemonade and other drinks were stored prior to loading.
The main bottling and mixing plan was at the far end of the main
building. It was here the ingredients for the lemonade were mixed
together. Washing the bottles, mixing the ingredients, filling
the bottles and injecting the gas was all done in one unit.
Next to the hoardings on the right is the building where the manager
had his office; in the 1950s that role was filled by Mr. Gregory.
The office was upstairs, but below was another, smaller, bottling
plant where both Guinness and Offiler's Ale were decanted from
barrels into bottles. In the gap between the office building and
the main building, under a steel plate, was the spring they used
for water. It was one to two feet below the surface[2,
5].
By the 1970s, when the the works were demolished, the Whittaker
family were no longer involved. The only building
to remain today is the house. Afterwards the area was grassed
over[4]. In the early
1980s an Extraordinary General Meeting of the Tordale Soft Drinks
Company Ltd. was held in London and the Company was finally voluntarily
wound up[6].
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References (coloured links are to more information elsewhere on
this web site):
[1] See both the
1891 census and the 1901
census entries
[2] From conversations with Ken Smith
[32] "Tordale" is
the brand name the Whittakers used. See Mrs.
Mary Whittaker, Aërated Water Manufacturer for more information
[4] See Matlock
Bath Today (4) - second image
[5] Articles by David Palmer Pearson that
were published in "The
High Peak News", dating 5th and 10th October, 1918 also say
that the spring was underneath the bottling plant
[6] Three notices were posted in "The
London Gazette", the first two on 11 May 1981
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