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Black Diamonds: The Rise and Fall of an English Dynasty

By: Catherine Bailey
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd
ISBN: 0141019239
ISBN-13: 9780141019239
Released: 06 Mar 2008
RRP: £8.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

A tragic story from a fantastic new author - By: Mrs. J. A. Popley, 30 Jun 2008
I was lent the book by my cousin. What a fantastic story - you could almost imagine that it was fiction. Catherine Bailey has thoroughly researched this magnificent book - bringing real characters back to life. She was impartial to both the aristocrats & miners alike & gave a fascinating insight into life in South Yorkshire at the turn of the 20th century.

A marvellous, evocative read. It made me cry. It also shows how one man's revenge - Manny Shinwell - brought about the destruction of a countryside so precious & loved by so many by envy. The Fitzwilliams were "good gentry" & obviously thought highly of their workers & their responsibility. Let us hope that one day, Wentworth & its story, will be known to alll & that we will be able to enjoy its wonderful house, park, fields, woods & gardens as Billy wanted.
Riveting - By: Ms. A. M. Davidson, 29 May 2008
This was a wonderful book & I thoroughly enjoyed it. The mix of social history with personal stories worked well. The story of the lazy miner & what his wife did to make him work made me smile.
One of the most interesting books I have read in a long while. Please write another Ms Bailey!
Accessible history. - By: Elizabeth Coombe, 15 Apr 2008
Read this as much as a history book as a novel. Couldnt put it down - history lessons were never like this. An absolute eye opener, I learnt so much social history. I agree absolutely with the two previous reviewers.
What the rich really think of working people - By: Mr. Gary Wilson, 03 Apr 2008
Great book tells the real history of Britain with the rich lording over the working classes sipping champagne whilst people they evicted have to live in tents in fields. Read & learn, things reallly haven't changed that much.
You couldn't make this up - By: J Wheeler, 18 Mar 2008
I have to express an interest, having been brought up in one of the villages mentioned, knowing some of the people quoted, & going to a school founded by Lady Mabel Smith. It was a reallly fascinating read which I found hard to put down. It isn't easy to link the generations in a large family, but the author does it very well, the product of a great deal of research into the family, & much wider.

As the son of a miner I was particularly interested in the detail of the lives of the miners & their families, & the varying attitudes of the mine owners. The machinations of Royalty, the Government, & the committees explained so much of their struggle. Again the attention to detail gave credence & real life to the situations without the story dragging. In passing I would contrast the detail given of the Denaby situation with its wholesale evictions & legal threats, surely a milestone in industrial relations & the awful plight of many working people, with the lack of any mention in his book "The Edwardians" by local Labour politician Roy Hattersley. I found this book gave real insight & understanding of some of the important events in British history of the twentieth century, better than many textbooks, as well as a surprise unfolding of an aristocratic dysfunctional family. You are left asking "Are they alll like that?"