AR - To add further to your posting. I can remember clearly in the 1950's with other club members, accompanying Nellie Kirkham armed with her O.S. maps that had been marked up by John Mort Snr. (the then Barmaster) looking for mines, shafts etc., and trying to locate them with her with the aid of these maps. She was very friendly with John Mort Snr., she often conferred with him on these maps, he gave her access to the records of the Barmote Court when they were lodged in the Whitworth Institute before being deposited at Chatsworth House, and she was regularly out in the King's/Queen's Field with him looking at mines etc. She regularly visited another Officer of the Barmote Court (The Steward) Major Symmonds a solicitor at his offices in Wirksworth. She always stressed that one could only use the lines marked by the Barmaster onto the O.S. maps as a guide to assist one to find a particular mine, it did not give the actual location.
To try to locate an actual mine from old records is a complicated process. One way of doing it, if one is lucky enough as both "historytrog" and myself are to own a copy of Roger Flindall's "Calendar of the Barmaster's Records at Chatsworth", is to check through it to see what Barmaster's books are available for what Mining Liberty one is interested in, go to the Derbyshire Record Office as I did many years ago, get a copy (I sketched a copy map and copied the Tithe Schedule of the area I was interesed in) of the Tithe Map of the area. Tithe Maps date from the 1830's to the 1850's, and are accompanied by a Schedule which shews who owns what field, house, barn etc., whether they are in residence or to whom they rent the house, field, barn etc. out to. Most importantly it gives the field names, use of field and numbers. (DRO are now producing copies of Derbyshire Tithe Maps WITHOUT the Schedule on CD-Rom for £15 plus £1.50 p & p, which is pointless, as the Map depends on the Schedule and visa versa, one without the other is useless). With all the Barmote Court records now being lodged at Chatsworth House, one would have to approach the Archivist there to view them and it is costly. However, through a very kind friend I was able to type up extracts from Barmaster's Books for Matlock Liberty, relating to the Township of Snitterton, within Matlock Mining Liberty which is the area that includes the Noon Nick Vein, Jugholes etc. With a younger caving friend we were proposing to work out the Barmaster's entry for a particular mine, using his measurements (Imperial NOT Metric), compass directions, field names and field boundaries that he mentioned to help locate what we were looking for. Alas as with all good projects, we lapsed and I am now left with all my notes.
As a final note, Mining Liberties boundaries can get complicated, and I would prefer to post about them in more detail on the other topic I started "The Derbyshire Barmote Court - the leadmining court, it's laws and customs". However, because of the interest in the Noon Nick Vein on which the Jugholes cave system is sited I'll try and explain the complexities of the townships, parishes and mining liberties which overlap in this particular area. Normally Mining Liberty boundaries follow Parish boundaries. This area is an exception. The townships of Snitterton and Wensley originally lay within the Parish of Darley Dale, until 1845 when the Parish was split into two, the River Derwent being the dividing boundary. South of the river a new church was built at South Darley and that part of the old Darley Dale parish became the parish of South Darley, the northern part remaining as Darley Dale. There are two Tithe Maps and Schedules (dated in the 1850's) one for the old parish north of the River Derwent which doesn't contain any mines,and the other is the South Darley Tithe Map and Schedule and is the one I looked at and is composed of the Townships of Snitterton and Wensley. As previously stated Mining Liberties usually follow parish boundaries, but the Mining Liberty of Matlock encroaches over the old Darley Dale/new South Darley parish boundary and includes the Township of Snitterton within it's boundaries. Northern Dale is used as the Mining Liberty boundary, so all mines such as Noon Nick, Lea Wood etc., lying to the east of Northern Dale are in Matlock Mining Liberty and mines such as Old Mill Close, Dale, Davies, Tearsall etc., lying to the west of Northern Dale are within the Mining Liberty of Wensley. Gets confusing doesn't it!
Below are a few extracts from Barmaster's Books for Matlock Mining Liberty, which shews typical entries.
Barmaster's Book No. 46
15th August, 1833. Copy. An Agreement between Mr. John GARTON on the one part and Jacob Sheldon & his Partners on the other part Partners at the NOON NICK MINE into which Mr. Garton has had a bull fallen down a shaft in the NOON NICK TITLE. Whereas Jacob Sheldon & his partners delivers up the said NOON NICK TITLE unto Mr. Gratton for the loss of his bull.
As Witness our hands Jacob Sheldon, William Sheldon, Joe Boden, Job Sheldon, Daniel Eaton, John Pearson.
N.B. I know Mr. Garton (a lead smelter) came from Lumsdale, Matlock. The Sheldons came from Bonsall, as I think Boden and Pearson did. Eaton came from Snitterton.
Barmaster's Book No. 47 (1837 - 1871)
October 8th 1848. Then put John Garton in Possession of an old Mine called NOON NICK ranging nearly north & South the Upper Title by nicking a Nether Title by Publication according to Mineral Law and Custom and Consolidated them into one title with all the veins belonging as spesefid (?specified) in the Former Gifts, and fixing his Founder at the Forefield shaft 22 Mears (N.B. in the Low Peak which includes Matlock Liberty 29 yards, 32 yards in the High Peak, private liberties ranging from 28,29 or 30 yards) of Ground Southwardly through the wood up to Nailors Lane (N.B. This is a continuation of Salters Lane and is part of the old salt route) & 25 Mears of Ground Northwardly or to an old tree in Mr. Sibrey's Large Pasture to be the same more or less. In the presence of Job Boden & Mordicai Cardin two of the Grand Jury or Twenty Four Men.
By me MIchael Cardin Deputy Barmaster.
N.B. John Allsop the former owner of the Title had it on a fourteen year lease from John Garton (lead smelter). John Allsop was also a lead smelter from Bonsall, he had his smelt down in the Via Gellia, he went bankrupt in 1848, so presumably John Garton was reclaiming back the title.
October 23rd 1854. I was called upon by John Garton along with Mordecai Cardin & John Stephenson two of the Jury men to set him out a Road to his mine called JUG HOLE according to mineral law. We set him out the said road from the Salters Lane (n.b. a very old west/east salt route from Cheshire) through the uppermost piece of land belonging to Bonsall School in the occupation of Edwin Knowles to a shaft in his Plantation.
Michael Cardin Deputy Barmaster.
Trust that's enough lead mining history of the area for a bit!