Country Images Magazine North April 2018 | Page 9

Darley Dale Whitworth Park towards the village mill. In the sixteenth century it became a fl ax-spinning factory powered by three reservoirs further up the narrow valley. Owned by the Dakeyne family, a dynasty of bankers and engineering inventors, it prospered for at least two centuries. In 1793 Daniel Dakeyne patented a machine known as the equilibrium, which he used in the mill as a more effi cient way for preparing and spinning fl ax. Later, his brothers Edward and James, patented a hydraulic engine. An early version of a turbine engine, there is no record of its success, so one must assume that this innovative machine, though ahead of its time, was a failure. When the mill stopped spinning fl ax, it w as taken over by S and E Johnson (East) Ltd for the preparation of animal feedstuff s, but since its closure, parts of the mill have been used by a variety of small industries, such as one making timber furniture. Mile Marker High grade pink gritstone was quarried by the Stancliff e Stone Company in Hall Dale Quarry on the hillside above Two Dales and carried by a narrow- gauge railway into the valley bottom. Most of the stone used to build the grand houses that sprang up along the valley sides and the A6 came from there. CountryImagesMagazine.co.uk | 9