4050

Saying it with flowers: the art of dressing well(s) in Derbyshire

Posted by Jonathan Broom on 16 May 2018

The Peak District National Park, most of which lies to the north of Blore Hall, has a gentle southern area, known as the White Peak, while further north lies the more austere but equally beautiful Dark Peak, all granite and windswept moorland plateaus.

The whole region is a walker’s paradise; but if the weather should prove too inclement for even the hardiest rambler (or you just fancy a change) there are some enchanting towns and villages to choose from. Buy a tart in Bakewell; ride the cable car to Matlock’s Heights of Abraham; or marvel at the diminutive perfection of Buxton – a mini-Bath whose crowning glory has to be the eponymous Opera House: compact and bijou indeed.

But depending on the time of year that you visit these, and other, charming villages and towns, you might come across a curious site: a central, public well, festooned with a dazzling array of flowers, usually artfully arranged in a highly accomplished ‘picture’.

In a custom latterly most commonly associated with the Peak District of Derbyshire and neighbouring Staffordshire, the well has been dressed.

A well dressing in Buxton commemorating the Great War centennial

A summer tradition, well dressing dates back to the 6th, 14th, 18th or 19th Century – depending on who you believe. The Irish and the Scots have a history of worshipping wells that goes back to the Dark Ages; UK-wide, villagers had cause to give thanks to clean water in the 1300s for deliverance from the Black Death; and there have plenty of other cataclysmic events recorded over the centuries that might have left the surviving locals with cause enough to adorn their village wells with flowery garlands to give thanks to God – or gods – for having been spared.

But if this has you thinking that well dressing in Derbyshire has similarly romantic, lost-in-the-mists-of-time origins, prepare to be disappointed: it really only dates from the mid-19th Century and, as was so often the case, the Victorians had a hand in it. Well dressing was introduced in Buxton in 1840, “to commemorate the beneficence of the Duke of Devonshire who, at his own expense, made arrangements for supplying the Upper Town… with a fountain of excellent water within easy reach of all”. The ‘craze’ caught on; by the late 1800s at least 12 Derbyshire villages were at it, and pretty much any public water source, including standpipes, was considered fair game.

A clever well dressing of a well dressing, complete with spectators, in Barlow

Today, over 80 villages and towns proudly display their floral artworks next to wells, fountains and other water features during the spring and summer. They are both beguiling and absolutely beautiful.

It would be easy to be a bit ‘sniffy’ about well dressing in the Peak District – to consider it somehow bogus, an invented tradition with no real claim to great antiquity. But the locals have never suggested otherwise; and as you travel around the area, this summer, next summer or any summer, coming across a well-dressed well is a treat for the eyes.

 

Related property

Blore Hall

Related articles

Around and About

Return to blog archive
5831

Posted by Katy Peck

9 August 2023

Sue Barker is making the most of her free time – and you could too.

Learn more about how Sue Barker, retired broadcaster and Bondholder is making the most of her free time by enjoying holidays with HPB

Read more
2024

Posted by Katy Peck

13 January 2022

Our 6 Top Favourite Views around Kent

Kent has so many extraordinary views, rich with history, it's difficult to decide which ones to see. We've collected our top 6 best views that you must see.

Read more

Please find out more the way that suits you, and enjoy holidays year after year…

Request your brochure

Request your brochure

Browse our portfolio of beautiful holiday homes set in magnificent locations

Browse our portfolio of beautiful holiday homes set in magnificent locations

Request brochure

Speak to an expert

Speak to an expert

Learn how HPB works – and how you can try it with a Money Back Guarantee

Learn how HPB works – and how you can try it with a Money Back Guarantee

Arrange call

Book your tour

Book your tour

See for yourself the wonderful locations, comfort and facilities you could enjoy

See for yourself the wonderful locations, comfort and facilities you could enjoy

Book tour

Read our HPB Feefo Reviews

HPB’s holiday booking service has been rated 4.7 out of 5 based on 14678 customer reviews on Feefo

Feefo logo