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Hidden history of hills

The forgotten industrial history of Shropshire's Clee Hills is the subject of a new book and exhibition.

The forgotten industrial history of Shropshire's Clee Hills is the subject of a new book and exhibition. Terry Grimley reports...

Driving from Birmingham to Ludlow, you spend about five minutes passing through the incongruously wild terrain of the Clee Hills.

With its panoramic view across the Shropshire landscape and the meandering sheep which make it inadvisable to take your eyes off the road, it may seem the epitome of primeval rural Britain. Yet a century ago this was a scene of intensive industrial activity.

Coal, limestone and basalt were mined and quarried in the area, with an extensive infrastructure of crushing plants, mineral railways and aerial ropeways.

On the twin peaks of Titterstone Clee and Brown Clee extensive reminders of this activity can still be found, and now they are the subject of an exhibition and book by locally-based photographer Simon Denison.

A one-time London newspaper journalist, Denison moved to the lower slopes of Brown Clee in 1996, around the time he founded the magazine British Archaeology.

He already had a parallel career as a photographer with an interest in man-made landscapes (his first book, The Human Landscape, was published in 2002) when, on the first day of the new millennium, he climbed the summit of Brown Clee for the first time and discovered its industrial secret.

?It?s very little known, especially Brown Clee, even by people who live locally,? he says. ?From about 1880 to 1940-50 the top of Brown Clee was an industrial space. There was the sound of the stone-crusher, a railway line ? it was a noisy, dangerous place where people were killed now and then.