Welcome to Holy Austin Rock in Staffordshire, England.
These medieval cave houses carved from sandstone were abandoned by the
last residents in the 1960s, but people were lived happily inside them
for over three centuries before and possibly even earlier.
Today the National Trust has faithfully restored the houses belonging to the last near dozen families that lived in the community, using early photographs, postcards and records to re-create what the houses would have been like in the late Victorian-era.
Kinver Edge Holy Austin Rock, around the 1890s via here
The first official records of the Rock Houses appears in an 18th century book with a very long-winded tite, ‘Letters
on the Beauties of Hagley, Envil and The Leasowes with critical remarks
and Observations on the Modern Taste in Gardening‘ by Joseph
Healey. In the book, Joseph gets caught in a thunderstorm when he finds
the cave homes and asks to take shelter. He describes the homes as
well-furnished, ”curious, warm and commodious and the garden extremely
pretty”. Joseph also notes that the residents had access to water and
were extremely welcoming, and proud of their homes, delighted even to
recount the stories of their ancestors who had built them.
(c) Nick Garrod
With stunning views over the woodland
from the rosy sandstone ridge, these white-washed houses are something
out of a storybook. In fact, the Britain Explorer website believes they might just be part of a very well-known storybook published in 1937, The Hobbit.
Britain Explorer recalls the opening line of Tolkein’s book:
“The door opened on to a tube-shaped
hall like a tunnel: a very comfortable tunnel without smoke, with
panelled walls and floors tiled and carpeted, provided with polished
chairs, and lots and lots of pegs for hats and coats – the hobbit was
fond of visitors.”
(c) El Bingle
The English author “was famously reluctant to name the places that inspired his stories”, notes Britain Explorer, “There are so many similarities between the 18th Century Holy Austin Rock Houses and Tolkien’s description of the Hobbit holes that it becomes an obvious assumption that he must have seen or read about these remarkable dwellings.”
Being the last occupied troglodyte
dwellings in Britain, Holy Austin rock has been an off-beat tourist
attraction since Edwardian times. Residents would welcome visitors and
serve refreshments like an unofficial café, right in their living room
or in their front gardens with views of the English countryside.
Sadly, there are no cave dwellers to
welcome tourists today. A single cafe remained open until 1967, by which
time all other families had moved away and their homes had already
begun to decay. The majority of residents left their homes between 1900
and 1935 to find work in cities following several years of an economic
crises in the area which halted the local ironworks production.
Graffiti taggers and local teenagers
made their mark on the empty caves until 1968, when they were sealed
off, deemed a safety hazard and a seemingly forgotten by England. Over
20 years later, funds were made available by the National Trust to
embark on an ambition restoration project as the caves were declared a
national treasure.
There is one resident however who never left the caves of holy austin rock: the Lesser Horshoe Bat. According to Britain Explorer,
some of the caves have been colonised by the rare species which has
been declining in recent years but found a new home in the sandstone
dwellings. But fear not (unless of course you have a deathly fear of
bats), because their habitat is being carefully protected alongside
continued restoration of the nearby houses.
(c) Andrew Boxall
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