There can be few people interested in mining who have not read some of the books by Denys Bradford Barton. As most will know, he owned a publishing house in Truro which was active in the 60s and through the next 25 years or so. He also owned the Francis Street bookshop in Truro, a place which, in addition to new works, often sold out-of-print volumes, and a worthy venue to perusing shelves, not knowing what gem may turn up. Barton wrote some very definitive works, the most notable perhaps being his seminal The Cornish Beam Engine, first published in 1965., and his A history or tin mining and smelting in Cornwall, which was issued two years later. His writing style was - and remains - very readable and the last two volumes were nicely got up, with their fascinating footnotes and easy-on-the-eye
Bembo Old Style typeface. His publishing firm also owned Tor Mark Press, which published "flimsies" and which, I think, is still in operation today, but nothing to do with Barton any more.
I never cross the Tamar without thinking of the man, unlike Hamilton Jenkin for some reason, who was equally erudite in Cornish matters. D.B Barton published my first (immature)
picture book Britain's Old Metal Mines in 1974 and he paid me a hundred quid for it. I suppose I should be thankful for small mercies in that it is alleged that he was not always
as forthcoming to some his authors, such as Nellie Kirkham for example, whose book Derbyshire Lead mining through the Centuries he published in 1968.
I met 'the great man' once, at his publishing firm's offices at Lemon Quay in Truro, (now gone, of course) a meeting I was looking forward to. However, found his attitude very off handed, indifferent and aloof. I was expecting him to raise his eyes to the ceiling all the time I was there!
For some reason I had always assumed Barton to be a Cornishman, or, at least, a West Countryman, but seemingly not so. This week, while looking on a genealogical web site, I came across him. It appears he was born in 1927 at Burnley, Lancs and later married a Rita Margaret Coupland (also from Burnley) at Conwy, North Wales in 1951. Rita wrote a book on Cornish Geology and edited others which dealt with 19th centry press cuttings titled Life in Cornwall at the End of the Nineteenth Century. She also produced a pictorial survey entitled Waterfalls of the World (1974).
As for her husband, well, Peter Challis informed me some time ago that he had found Barton - and his wife - on the '192' web site and were shown living (at least from 2000-4) in Kendal, Cumbria, a long way from his erstwhile homes at Feock and Mawnan Smith, Cornwall. It is a great pity that he never got round to writing his advertised book The Cornish Miner Overseas, which was shown as being in preparation on the rear of the dust cover to his Essays in Cornish Mining History 1971. If his Tin Mining book was anything to go on, the Cornish Miner Overseas would have been a real cracker. But now, in his 88th year -assuming he is still around - that will probably never see the light of day.
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'Photographers deal in things which are continually vanishing and when they have vanished there is no contrivance on earth which can make them come back again' [Henri Cartier Bresson][i]