Treacle mining
Treacle mining is a joke about mining
Origins
One possible origin of the joke is from 1853 when 8,000 British Army soldiers were camped on Chobham Common. The camp included storehouses containing barrels. When the soldiers left for the Crimean War and the site was dismantled, they buried barrels to avoid having to remove them. Some of the barrels contained treacle and Chobham villagers who discovered and removed them were called "treacle miners" as a joke. Local folklore about treacle mining was extended into history back to Roman Britain.[2]
Another explanation is that the word treacle meant "a medicine", derived from the appearance of the Greek derivative
In Devon, on the eastern edge of
Locations
The village of Sabden in Lancashire cultivated a considerable body of folklore about local treacle mining in the 1930s.[4][5] The local newspaper helped foster the myth, publishing numerous stories about the fictitious mines.[6]
The paper mills around Maidstone in Kent were known as "The Tovil Treacle Mines"[7] by locals, after the area where one of the mills owned by Albert E. Reed[8] was situated. The company helped the myth with a float in Maidstone carnival with a "treacle mine" theme.
One suggested source of the story in this area is a rumour that the paper industry was threatened during the
Tudeley and Frittenden in Kent are also said to have had treacle mines. A tank wagon on the Kent and East Sussex Railway was painted in sham "Frittenden Treacle Mines" livery in 2009.[9]
Suggestions of a treacle mine in Buxted were published by the "Friends of Horwich".[10]
Tadley treacle mines had a local hotel named after them and a Tadley Treacle Fair is held. Legend says the name derives from using treacle tins to store money because banks could not be trusted. The tins were buried around the village. Criminals mined for tins.
Hemel Hempstead in Hertfordshire has a legend of having a treacle mine and a local nickname since around World War I was "Treacle Bumstead".[11] Wareside, also in Hertfordshire, has long had its own "treacle mines". When asked "where have you been?", it was often a popular answer in and around Ware, to say "down the treacle mines!"
Treacle mines have also been claimed in the twin villages
Actual places
Several
There is a restaurant/pub named Treacle Mine in Polegate, East Sussex;.[14] The name refers to the Polegate treacle mines, a long-running tale in the area that is very popular, with locals dressing as treacle miners for the 1978 Eastbourne carnival. The origins are believed to be associated with a nearby sweet factory.[15]
The Broomsquire Hotel in Tadley, Hampshire, was previously the Treacle Mine Hotel; and another Treacle Mine pub is in Hereford.
Since April 2009 the town of Wincanton in Somerset, twinned with Ankh-Morpork, has had a Treacle Mine Road.[16]
Cultural references
The Treacle Mine has been a joke played on children and the gullible since at least the nineteenth century.
- Ottershaw School in Surrey (a state boarding school founded in 1948 and closed in 1980) encouraged all new boys, on their first Sunday, to wait outside the Main gate for the coach that would take them on an outing to the Chobham Treacle Mines.
- In Mad Hatter's tea party for disbelieving a story told by the Dormouse about a treacle well, inspired by the holy well at Binsey, Oxfordshire.
- In Uncle and the Treacle Trouble (1967), a children's book by J. P. Martin, the main character (an elephant named "Uncle") discovers the true meaning of a cryptic sign which reads "Treac Levat"; the characters soon discover that it relates to a vast hidden treacle vat.
- Treacle mining features in several novels by Terry Pratchett. On the fictional Discworld treacle is mined from buried deposits of compressed ancient sugarcane. In the city of Ankh-Morpork there is a street named Treacle Mine Road, with the current watch house (analogous to a police station) found in the building formerly housing the entrance to a treacle mine. The books also make references to "deep treacle" deposits beneath the city. As with many features of the Discworld, treacle mines exist because people believe in them, according to the Discworld's Theory of Narrative Causality.
- The Treacle People was a children's TV show from 1996 based around the treacle mines of Sabden in Lancashire.
- All the members of the Seven Champions Molly Dancers[17] from Kent are reputed to be treacle miners.
- Some of Ken Dodd's Diddy Men were said to work in a jam butty mine. This appears to be a similar concept.
See also
- Cow tipping
- Drop bear
- Jackalope
- Snipe hunt
- Spaghetti tree
- Wild haggis
References
- ^ "Molasses". BBC Good Food. Retrieved 1 September 2021.
- ISBN 978-1429091060.
- ISBN 0-7475-1807-6.[page needed]
- ISBN 0852064144.
- ISBN 0852061773.
- ISBN 0141021039.
- ^ Tovil pronounced to rhyme with "Bovril" – not "Toeville")
- Reed Elsevier. Archived from the originalon 12 December 2004. Retrieved 31 January 2011.
- ^ "Nº. 132 – Esso 14 ton Tank Wagon Nº. 2338". Kent & East Sussex Railway. Archived from the original on 18 December 2013. Retrieved 23 January 2012.
- ^ Buxted Treacle Mine Archived 17 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- ISBN 978-1471113574.
- ISBN 0-946651-14-0.
- ^ "Pudsey". All Things Treacle. Retrieved 17 November 2017.
- ^ Table Table. "Treacle Mine Restaurant". Whitbread plc. Archived from the original on 3 October 2011. Retrieved 30 July 2011.
- ^ "Treacle Mine Whitbread Inns Restaurant in Polegate, Eastbourne | Whitbread Inns". www.whitbreadinns.co.uk. Retrieved 1 May 2017.
- ^ "Roads named after Discworld books". BBC News. 5 April 2009. Retrieved 17 August 2011.
- ^ Seven Champions Molly Dancers