Mary Webb Trail |
This trail takes you to Pontesbury, where Mary and Henry Webb lived from 1914 to 1916, and to the Stiperstones, a dramatic quartzite ridge in Shropshire’s hill country, an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, the setting of several of Mary Webb’s novels.
Approaching Pontesbury, the twin humps of Earl’s Hill and Pontesford Hill are on the left. Pontesford Hill was the site of an old Palm Sunday custom of ‘seeking the golden arrow’, which Mary Webb refers to in her first novel The Golden Arrow (1916). She wrote of Pontesford Hill: ‘This is the hill, ringed by
the misty shire MINSTERLEY SNAILBACH
Lead has been mined at Snailbeach since Roman times and in the nineteenth century a flourishing lead and barytes mining industry employed over 500. Barytes was still being mined in Mary Webb’s time and she used details of this local industry in her first two novels. The mine buildings have been preserved and an interpretation panel in the car park shows a heritage trail through the site, which is reached by walking up the lane opposite, signed to Lordshill. Return to the car and drive up the lane past the mines site to Lordshill, ‘God’s Little Mountain’ in Mary Webb’s second novel Gone to Earth (1917). Park at the top of the hill on the left by a conifer wood. Look back for a fine view to Bromlow Callow with its circlet of trees, ‘a spinney of silver birches and larches that topped a round hill’ – ‘The Callow’ in Mary Webb’s novel, where Hazel Woodus lives with father Abel. Continue a short distance on foot to Lordshill Baptist Chapel and adjoining cottage in a dip with Lordshill rising above. The Chapel and cottage are Mary Webb’s exact location in the novel, where the young minister Edward Marston lives and marries Hazel: ‘The chapel and minister’s house at God’s
Little Mountain were all in one – surrounded by the
graveyard, where stones, flat, erect, and askew, took the
place of a flower garden. Away to the left, just over a rise,
the hill was gashed by the grey steeps of the quarries. In
front rose another curve covered with thick woods…Behind
the house God’s Little Mountain sloped softly up and
away apparently to its possessor.’ This authentic setting was used in the 1950 Powell and Pressburger film of the novel starring Jennifer Jones as Hazel Woodus. There are lovely walks from this fascinating Mary Webb location. For the energetic : About 45 minutes This is the heart of Mary Webb Country and you will be walking where Mary Webb walked many times. There are fine views of the Long Mynd to the east - ‘Wilderhope’ in The Golden Arrow. The walk takes you past The Hollies, remains of an ancient holly wood, and through a conifer windbreak to a stile on the boundary of the Stiperstones National Nature Reserve. Here there is an information panel and lovely views of Bromlow Callow and the hills of the Welsh Borderland. For an extended walk : (1 – 2 hours
total) This walk takes you along part of an old Roman road.
After the next stile follow the track, bearing right, across
heather clad moors where wimberries grow – a local name
for bilberries: After a short distance you will see the Devil’s Chair, an enormous quartzite outcrop which ‘in gigantic aloofness’ dominates the landscape, an important setting in Mary Webb’s novels. Her descriptions are vividly evocative and she uses local legends brilliantly. There is a local superstition that when the Devil’s Chair is concealed from sight by low grey mists the Devil is on his throne. ‘For miles around, in the plains, the valleys,
the mountain dwellings it was feared. It drew the thunder,
people said. Storms broke round it suddenly out of a clear
sky; it seemed almost as if it created storm…. It had
the look of a chair from which the occupant has just risen,
to which he will shortly return.’ From the Devil’s Chair on a clear day you will see ‘counties and blue ranges’ – an immense panorama of the Shropshire Hills and the Welsh Borderlands. A shorter walk :
All the foxglove belfries stand…. - ‘Foxgloves’ For a longer drive:
|