Sunday, 30 September 2018

Loughborough connections in Cambridgeshire

Continuing with the theme of connections with Loughborough, last weekend I was in Cambridgeshire, where I planned to visit a few things I missed the last time I was there. 

In Cambridge, one of the main things I wanted to do was finish off a visit to Kettle's Yard, an art gallery with a house attached that used to belong to Jim Ede, a former curator of  The Tate Gallery. The house has been left exactly as it was when Jim and his wife Helen left it in 1973 for retirement in Edinburgh, and was crammed full of interesting exhibits, like sculptures by Barbara Hepworth and paintings by Alfred Wallis, amongst others. The house was like a tardis, for from the outside it didn't look particularly big, and indeed the entrance rooms were relatively small, but the extension was soooo spacious and painted in white to show off the artworks to best effect. Somehow, and I'm not quite sure why, this place reminded me of Stoneywell Cottage. Admittedly, the two buildings do not look anything like each other from the outside, and Stoneywell is a good deal smaller than the Kettle's Yard house, but there was something similar about the quirky inside.

Kettle's Yard and House, Cambridge

Stoneywell Cottage

Next door to Kettle's Yard, was the Cambridge Folk Museum. I might have thought this was going to be all about rural and folky things, but actually it turned out to be a lovely museum of local history, and had many things within that chimed with Loughborough.


Cambridge Folk Museum

Seems every town with a university has a "town and gown" relationship!

Women's suffrage display

Women's suffrage display

From a display in Loughborough

Wooden moulds are used to fashion metal rainhoppers and downpipes

An example from Beaumanor Hall

Every town had its brickmakers!

An example of hand pillow lacemaking

Another example of pillow lace

A small brick used by the technical colleges to train apprentices: compare this to the life-sized egg 

An anonymous bell


If you follow my blog, you'll know that I have tried to visit the Stained Glass Museum in Ely Cathedral on a previous occasion but it was unexpectedly closed, so this time I was hopeful, but not overly so!! To my great excitement, the cathedral AND the museum were open! What I was hoping to see in here were a couple of stained glass windows that had been found at Ulverscroft Manor - and there they were!!!!!!

The Principalities from Ulverscroft

The Virtues from Ulverscroft

Other, similar stained glass

What I missed though was the stained glass by William Warrington, a stained glass artist who had worked with William Railton and Augustus Pugin, but when I got home and read the book of the museum, it did say this particular item wasn't on display, so, phew, I didn't actually miss it!

While in the cathedral, I took the opportunity to have a good look around, and later, in the town, I found a wonderful bookshop called Toppings, which reminded me of Loughborough's public library, where Frank Topping was once the librarian: I wonder if they're related?


Victorian radiators very similar to those at Lichfield

Alabaster memorials

A temporary art exhibit


Topping, booksellers


Well, this weekend is rapidly coming to an end, and this blogpost is due to be published, so I'd better stop now!

You are welcome to quote passages from any of my posts, with appropriate credit. The correct citation for this looks as follow:

Dyer, Lynne (2018). Loughborough connections in Cambridgeshire. Available fromhttps://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2018/09/loughborough-connections-in.html [Accessed 30 September 2018]

Take down policy:
I post no pictures that are not my own, unless I have express permission so to do. All text is my own, and not copied from any other information sources, printed or electronic, unless identified and credited as such. If you find I have posted something in contravention of these statements, or if there are photographs of you which you would prefer not to be here, please contact me at the address listed on the About Me page, and I will remove these.
Thank you for reading this blog. 


Lynne


  

Sunday, 23 September 2018

Loughborough connections!

Bit of an apologetic blog this week: the last two weeks have been full-on as they say, and I've hardly had a moment to compose a post.

Friday of the week before last I went to Green's windmill in Nottingham. It's a working tower mill, and it's possible to climb right to the top to see all the workings. Fascinating! I couldn't help wonder if any windmill we might have had in Loughborough would be similar, but I'd always assumed before that we'd have had a Midlands-type post mill, rather than a tower mill, but, who actually knows?








The following Saturday I found myself at Stoneygate Tram Depot in Leicester, from where I took a circular ride on a 1973 single-decker bus!!! Not sure if this had a Brush body or not, but I'm sure someone will be able to tell me! So much to see in the depot, including the Midland Red bus and the underground area - torches provided! After this visit, I popped into the University of Leicester botanic gardens, which was full of interest despite it being the end of summer, nearly autumn. I spotted a Swithland slate roof, but were the granite setts from Mountsorrel?











  

Last Sunday I was out supporting a Loughborough runner at the Rutland Marathon. Not much to report on this, except he completed in a good time of 3 hours 56 minutes - a little over the target but still under 4 hours. Oh, and I suppose this is the closest we get to the sea in our area - except when we have sand in Loughborough Market Place?! 




Monday saw me in Warwick dropping off a student starting at the Med School. From here I went to Kenilworth Castle, another place I can't say why I've never been before. Lots of Loughborough connections here - the Dudley family (Lady Jane Grey being married to the younger brother of Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester, and favourite of Queen Elizabeth 1), the 1st Baron Kenilworth, John Davenport Siddeley (a founder member of Hawker Siddeley, a company which took over the Brush in 1957), and Baron Hastings (Henry Hastings was created Baron Hastings by Simon De Montfort of Kenilworth Castle, in 1264: the Hastings family were Lords of the Manor of Loughborough).

Then, on Friday this week I helped install a sub-warden at Bill Morris, the university hall of residence on Ashby Road opposite the Bastard Gates. I was looking forward to this as I'd imagined I'd get a chance to look around the detached houses that are part of the hall, but alas, a couple of them were already inhabited by folk on the Cricket Academy, so the best I could do was take a couple of photos of the houses from the outside, and some interesting things inside the grounds:







So that was last week, and I haven't even started on this weekend's trips! But, time is moving on and it's getting late ...


You are welcome to quote passages from any of my posts, with appropriate credit. The correct citation for this looks as follow:

Dyer, Lynne (2018). Loughborough connections. Available fromhttps://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2018/09/loughborough-connections.html [Accessed 23 September 2018]

Take down policy:
I post no pictures that are not my own, unless I have express permission so to do. All text is my own, and not copied from any other information sources, printed or electronic, unless identified and credited as such. If you find I have posted something in contravention of these statements, or if there are photographs of you which you would prefer not to be here, please contact me at the address listed on the About Me page, and I will remove these.
Thank you for reading this blog. 

Lynne

Sunday, 9 September 2018

The cemetery chapels

Last weekend I spent an enjoyable afternoon at the local Sutton Bonington Show. Over the years I've been many times, initially because the Hathern Concert Brass band played a turn there, but I still try and go even though the youngest no longer plays with them.

This year, I'd recently been to the Leics. County Show at Market Harborough, and I couldn't help but compare the two events. These were so similar, that I even chatted to some of the same stallholders at both the events, but I somehow felt that the Sutton Bonington Show, considering its size and location (when compared to the Leicestershire Show Ground, and the Leics. show being a county-wide event) the Sutton Bonington show was equally as good, and in some cases better. Last year at SB we saw the Nottingham Knights perform in the ring: they weren't here this year, but they were at the County Show. There were not quite so many animals on show at SB, and the variety of cows were not quite as diverse, so they concentrated on Dexter cows. What I particularly like about the SB show is the handicraft / horticulture / baking tent, where competition entries are put on display alongside the judges comments: this is what makes SB a local event I suppose, unlike the County Show. See photos of the event at the end of this post.

Anyway, this is not the topic of this week's blogpost!! To the cemetery chapels ...

This weekend and next are the Heritage Open Day events, and I have been lucky enough to make a number of visits, and although there were literally hundreds of places to visit,  for some reason or other, my visits have centred around cemetery chapels! 

Perhaps this is because of our very own cemetery chapels, on Leicester Road, and maybe my visits were sparked by reading about these in "Loughborough in 50 Buildings" or in the recent "Loughborough Echo" piece about the buildings being up for rent again, the lift company having moved out. Here's a bit about our cemetery chapels from "Loughborough in 50 Buildings":
"Loughborough Cemetery was created following the passing of the Burial Acts, the chapel being designed by architects Bellamy and Hardy of Lincoln in the popular Gothic Revival style, and built by John Sudbury of Loughborough.

At a ceremony in July 1856, a procession, including members of the Burial Board, which comprised many well-known local men, including Edward Chatterton Middleton, Edward Warner, Beauvoir Brock, and Henry Toone, walked from the Town Hall to the cemetery, where Edward Middleton laid the foundation stone for the chapels." 
And some photos:





As authoritative sources suggest, our chapels are some of the most splendid in the country. So, on the trail of others with which to compare, I went off and had a look around those in Melbourne, South Derbyshire, Melbourne being one of my favourite places. The chapels are somewhat smaller, of slightly different design, ours were opened in 1856, Melbourne's in 1859, and both are Grade II Listed. They do, however, differ in current usage, the Melbourne one being "in need" and the subject of a joint project between the Parish Council and Melbourne Historical Research Group to re-vitalise the buildings, and Loughborough's renovated and leased to a company (recently Cibes Lifts, but currently vacant). Some photos below of the Melbourne cemetery chapels:
   









The cemetery chapel at Rothley is quite different from the ones at Loughborough and Melbourne, being constructed in 1904, hence why it's of red brick construction. Also, being rather close to Swithland, it has a Swithland slate roof. With Rothley being a somewhat smaller town than either Loughborough or Melbourne, the chapel is correspondingly smaller. It does not appear on the register of Listed Buildings, but is of sufficient importance to be locally listed. On the day I visited, the building was hosting an exhibition about the Barrow upon Soar workhouse, which covered about 30 local parishes. This was an excellent exhibition and, as you know, I'm quite interested in workhouses, so I'll come back to this when I have more time. 
In the meantime, please enjoy photos from the Rothley cemetery chapels, followed by the Sutton Bonington Show.











The Sutton Bonington Show:












You are welcome to quote passages from any of my posts, with appropriate credit. The correct citation for this looks as follow:

Dyer, Lynne (2018). Leicestershire County Show. Available fromhttps://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2018/09/the-cemetery-chapels.html [Accessed 9 September 2018]

Take down policy:
I post no pictures that are not my own, unless I have express permission so to do. All text is my own, and not copied from any other information sources, printed or electronic, unless identified and credited as such. If you find I have posted something in contravention of these statements, or if there are photographs of you which you would prefer not to be here, please contact me at the address listed on the About Me page, and I will remove these.
Thank you for reading this blog. 


Lynne