
Dale Days
May 1, 2024
STAMFORD
May 1, 2024Limestone Pavement
£3.95
In stock
‘Limestone Pavement’ by Tim Thom
First in a new series in conjunction with the Yorkshire Dales National Park. A lavishly illustrated book containing the history of the limestone pavement area within the Dales.
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Dales life is recalled through folks tales and much humour. In 1900, women showed little more than their ankles to the gaze of the opposite sex.
A prudish Dales housewife covered the bare legs of the living room table on Sundays. Ninety-nine years later, members of the Rylstone Womenโs institute felt able to raise money for charity by posing unclad, for a calendar. In Grandmaโs day, chests were rubbed with goose grease and working-class folk were often in โright pickleโ.
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W. R. Mitchell
W.R. โBillโ Mitchell joined the Dalesman magazine in 1949, starting a journalisticย career inspired by owner Harry Scottโs adage โput people before things.โ He took over as editor from Scott in 1968, a position he held for eighteen years. As well as editing Dalesman and its sister publication Cumbria, Bill had a prodigious outputย extending across over two hundred books, innumerable articles and countlessย lectures. His thirst for knowledge and a keen listening ear made him an expert on many topics. He had the skill of putting often-reticent Dales folk at their ease, his interviews reflecting a bygone age and remaining for posterity in theย W.R. Mitchell Archive.
In 1996 Bill was awarded the MBE for his services to journalism in Yorkshire andย Cumbria and received an honorary degree of Doctor of Letters from the universityย of Bradford. In 2007 he was awarded a Golden Eagle Award from the Outdoorย Writersโ and Photographersโ Guild which cited him as one of the founding fathersย of outdoor writing. Two years later he was voted โGreatest Living Iconโ for theย Yorkshire Dales National Park in a poll to mark the 60th anniversary of theย National Parks.
In 2010 he won the Lifetime Achievement Award at the Dalesman Rural Awardย ceremony, receiving the award from another advocate of the countryside,ย John Craven. Billโs work for Dalesman over four decades is arguably theย defining feature of an illustrious career.
Bill died in 2015, aged 87.




