Thomas
Blackah, born and bred at Hardcastle, near Greenhow Hill, was a sweet singer,
at best when he wrote in his homely dialect, though some of his poems in
English are very graceful. The reason is riot far to seek, because he wrote
out of a full heart expressing with genuine feeling his love for the beauties
of nature and especially his home on the Hill, which only they can fully
appreciate, who have lived, there, close to the moors with ling and bent,
the distant views rich in colour and with ever changing light and shadows,
the plaintive, moor birds and the whispering wind - in short, the Hill
in all its moods - which he so vividly describes. Then he was freedom loving,
with a high opinion of his station and calling, and of his fellow working
men.
He was "A Working Miner," as he used to
describe himself, hailing from an old mining family, which had been domiciled
for several generations in the district embracing the three mining villages
of Kell House's, Greenhow Hill and Hardcastle, the first being a very old
hamlet referred to as far back as in William the Conqueror's time and very
likely even before that, as it was an important lead mining centre where
we know, that the Romans mined the precious metal and that they had a summer
camp on the Hill itself. Thomas Blackah loved what was fine and good, and
detested what was 'hollow and deceitful, a trait which the frailer of his
fellow men in that small community resented, when be took them to task
and allowed his sense of fairness and justice , have free play, expressing
his sentiments in scathing sayings and epigrams, often with a humorous
point, which caused merriment and made the thrust the more telling. As
for instance when Thomas was asked at the "Miners' Arms'' what his neighbour
"Bonny Barker" was doing, Bonny having, much to the disgust of his fellow
villagers, accepted the appointment as the local constable) the only man
who up till then and since to hold an official position Thomas said "Ah
seed Bonny in t’back yard wey t’batoun, he war practisin' stroakes, killin’
moock flees.” The joke was too much and Bonny gave up his baton and appointment.
Again he spared nobody if he thought they
deserved reprobation. An uncle of his was a notorious slacker, suspected
of stealing sheep off the moor and having set fire to his barn, which had
been substantially insured. The suspected arson made Thomas' restraint
give way and he wrote an epitaph, which in biting sarcasm is not easy to
match, as follows
"He is dead is Georgie Frank,
The greatest slink that ever slank,
For burning Houses and stealing Sheep,
He fairly makes for to weep."
It was his habit to jot down anything-
which came into his mind on a slate, which he had hanging in his kitchen
Thus he would write down n a short poem or an epigram while he was cooking
his breakfast, and retail his happy thoughts to his work mates at snack,
or he would elaborate them later at his leisure.
He was tender in his feelings for his fellow
men, and especially was he a great lover of children and animals. Not only
did he write poems on both of these subjects, hut they are constantly referred
to in many of his writings an infallible index to a writer's real nature.
He was very poor all his life. In a measure
this was due to his restlessness - which his wife shared with him. He could
not settle down n anywhere here and was constantly changing his quarters
in less than in seventeen years he lived in seventeen different houses.
He emigrated to the States, but found that he had been deceived by the
emigration agent and soon returned with his tail between his legs. To justify
himself apparently he wrote
and circulated a description of his experiences still extant, which is
a terrible indictment of which was allowed on board the passenger sailing
vessels in the year 1857. For a short while he worked as miner in the Durham
Coal Field, but he missed his old home on the Hill and came buck, when
he built himself a cottage enjoying one of the most charming views of moor
and dale one can find on the Hill, but he was obliged to dispose of it,
as his financial position became strained.
He was keen on his work as a miner, but
a somewhat speculative one In those days the mining companies used to let
off portions of the mine workings to private parties, and there was keen
competition at times for likely ''spots,'' which were thought to have good
prospects of repaying the labour expended in producing the cleaned ore.
Such places or, as they were called, “bargains”, because different parties
competing bargained with the Mine Agent for the privilege to work the places,
varied considerably. The party which made the lowest bid per "bing" of
dressed ore would have the right to work the bargain for a month. Thomas
Blackah was always optimistic, so he seldom benefited proportionally to
the work required.
He must have been a cool-headed man, where
his work was concerned, as an experience he once had shows. One Sunday
morning without saying anything to anybody he took a bunch of candles,
hung them by their wicks on his collar button and went off to explore an
old abandoned mine, about which the usual legend was told, that it was
really rich, but that the company which had sunk the shaft and driven the
levels had missed the mark. Thomas climbed down the old rotten ladders,
which were still there, but in stepping on to the top rung a twig of a
bush growing on the shaft edge, unseen by him, lifted the bunch of candles
off his collar button. Fortunately for Thomas, they remained suspended
on the twig.
Arriving at the bottom of the. shaft, Thomas
Blackah, as old miners usually did to save their precious candles, set
off from the shaft foot without bothering to light a candle. After walking
for some distance - the echo told him that he had arrived at a place where
there where other workings - he discovered when he tried to light a candle
that they were gone, as well as his matches. Believing that they had dropped
down where he stood, he began seeking about the floor, but found nothing.
In seeking he had lost his bearings and realizing the seriousness of his
position, as he was as likely to move away from the shaft foot and might
walk into open or running ground, as be was to retrace his steps, he selected
as dry a spot as he could find by feeling, sat down and patiently waited
until he would be discovered by his mates, which he was the next day. Search
parties had been combing the moors looking for him fortunately, somebody
spotted the bunch of candles, which gave the clue to his whereabouts, and
he was rescued from his unenviable position.
I will mention one more incident illustrating
the character of this generous hearted man. When "Boney" was on the go
and the Luddite risings took place in the West Riding and Lancashire, a
company of soldiers was marched from York across the Hill on a very hot
day, and one of the soldiers fell out 'and died on the roadside. The men
were halted and quartered for the night in the village, so that that necessary
arrangements could be made and the poor soldier lad was buried the next
day with honours of where where he fell. Such was the story related by
the old men in later years. Many did not believe it, though a mound on
the roadside on Coldstones was always referred to 'is ''John Kay’s Greeave”.
On one occasion when the incident was discussed at the ''Miners' Arms,"
doubt was again thrown on the truth of the incident. Thomas Blackah, who
hid heard the story when a boy, also doubted it, but suggested they should
open the mound and see for themselves, for ''we have picks and shovels
'and we can soon we can make sure”, as he said. This suggestion was acted
on, Blackah giving a helping hand. Four or five feet down they came across
some bones, a skull, part of an old flint lock 'and some other pieces of
iron which all testified to the truth of the story. Thomas Blackah was
very upset by what he considered was tantamount to sacrilege and he did
all he could to restore everything as it was and set up two stones to mark
the place. These stones can still be seen standing opposite Coldstones
Pond. He also carved in the roof of Gillfield Level, which happens to pass
directly below the place, a coffin and the name of John Kay to atone for,
what he looked on as a crime against a fellow man. I have these details
from three persons, one a woman, who were present. They all three had noticed
and remembered the change that came over Thomas, from flippant hilarity
to grave solemnity, when they found the remains of the unfortunate soldier
boy, who up till then had rested peacefully in his lonely grave.
He was a constant contributor to the local
papers some of his prize poems he had printed and sold for a few pence.
A collection of his poems was published under the title "Songs and Poems"
in 1867. Some of these were in English, but the majority were in dialect.
He also wrote and published for some years a dialect almanac, ''T' Nidderdill
Olminac," under the pseudonym of "Natty Nydds."
His almanac publications were all written
in a humorous strain, and as they abounded with pointed references to known
persons by name or nickname, they were very much appreciated by the Up
and Down Dalers. I have met some of his contemporaries, who nearly all
could recite, not only his poems, but also long prose pieces, this because
the latter were mostly written round actual happenings. Moreover, he wrote
about the villagers themselves, their wives, sweethearts, bairns and their
humble houses, truthfully but with the sentimental outlook which so greatly
appeals to them and, moreover, in their own homely dialect. As a consequence
he was well known and appreciated amongst the men of the mines and the
mills of the North, the editions of his almanacs reaching into the thousands.
Though at one time so highly prized, his writings are now by no means easy
to come across, this partly because they are now jealously guarded by their
owners, and partly because, being sold at such low prices, they were not
at the time valued by those whose literary taste was influenced by the
shoddy sentimentality and the thrillers of his time and consequently have
been lost or destroyed.
As his dialect works represent probably
the purest version of any Yorkshire dialects published, they are from this
point of view the most valuable of his writings. It is for the purpose
of trying to revive the interest of Yorkshire folk in the writings of one
of the truest and best of their fellow countrymen and of the homely doric
of their forebears, which the writer has learnt to love so well, but now
in dire straits to hold its own against board schools, wireless, pictures
and the closer contact with those who speak the nondescript language of
the towns due to bikes and motors, that this little book sees the day.
It has not been possible for the writer to examine all that he wrote and
published, which as it is, is only a fraction of what he did write. For
lack of means, time and opportunities he was only able to publish random
writings.
One point should be noted in connection
with his writings, which is how the spelling of the same word varies in
his writings. One of the reasons for this is the difficulty he had, being
an untrained phonetician, in determining the exact equivalent sound value
of peculiar pronunciations in terms of the -accepted value of the letters
of the alphabet A difficulty which lie shares with many other writers.
Besides writing poetry in his. spare time,
he also used to knit woollen socks, scarves, gloves and the like, which
he sold, having converted his front room into a kind of shop, where he
also sold other kinds of useful things, such as stationery and the like,
as well as his published writings. He used to sit in his shop knitting,
while his friends and cronies would drop in for a crack. Having travelled
and read so much, he naturally was a source of information; highly appreciated
on the Hill, cut off as it was in those days to an extent which it is difficult
to estimate to-day.
When the price of lead sink to such disastrously
low price as it did in the 'eighties, the Greenhow Mines, like the majority
of lead mines in England, were shut down, causing untold misery and poverty
amongst the poorly paid workers of the lead mining centres of Yorkshire,
who had to seek work wherever they could find it. Many of the Greenhow
and Hardcastle families went to Leeds and Bradford in search of employment
amongst these the Blackah family found their way to Leeds, where many of
them are still to be found, and where many of them have reached safe and
comfortable positions. The Blackah family were all very musical. The members
of the family - there were six brothers - all played different instruments,
and formed a band of considerable merit, much sought after on festive occasions
in the neighbourhood. Thomas played the French horn.
Thomas Blackah was born at Hardcastle,
a small, now deserted village near Greenhow Hill, on April 27th, 1828.
He died in Leeds on March 10th, 1895, and is buried in Woodhouse Cemetery,
Leeds.
The writer wishes to thank all those who
have helped him in the labour of producing this little volume, and especially
the. modern representatives of the Blackah family, who have so kindly supplied
him with personal data about their gifted kinsman, and who have also assisted
financially towards the publication of this book, as their contribution
towards the newly built village Hall on Greenhow Hill, and also to keep
the memory of him green in his village, which may be justly proud of their
long departed fellow villager, who sang so sweetly about themselves and
their homes.
H. J. L. BRUFF.
Kell House,
Greenhow Hill
July, 1937.
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