This film is part of Free

Video Player is loading.
Current Time 0:00
Duration 0:00
Loaded: 0%
Stream Type LIVE
Remaining Time 0:00
 
1x

Eli Simpson Collection Reel 1

Come to the landscape of glaciokarst, of Harry Potter and Tolkien’s Helm's Deep, of grykes and clints, of Green Spleenwort, the magical Janet’s Foss and John Piper.

Documentary 1953 21 mins Silent

From the collection of:

Logo for Yorkshire Film Archive

Overview

It’s 10th May 1953, and influential and controversial British speleologist recorder Eli Simpson embarks upon an ambitious, but uncompleted, project to make a film, Birth of a Yorkshire River. This clip shows our intrepid couple searching for the source of Malham Beck, exploring openings at Fox Holes and Ingleborough Cave, and descending a rope ladder at Hull Pot, with views over the spectacular landscape around Malham in the Yorkshire Dales.

This is one of many reels of rushes that were made under the direction of Eli Simpson, founding member and Recorder of the British Speleological Association. The idea was to make a film titled “Birth of a Yorkshire River” or “The Waters of Mawn” (a puzzling title). Simpson, in control of a fracturing British Speleological Association, got the help of his Settle neighbour Eddy Perry as technician and camera operator, and BSA member John Tobin, a photographer from Keighley, also behind the camera. The filming, poorly resourced over two years, eventually petered out. The whole enterprise has been meticulously recorded in a film made by fellow caveman filmmaker Sid Perou, who has also made a film about Simpson.

Subjects