Yorkshires Northern Soul

 

Northern Soul
Northern soul is a music and dance movement that emerged from the British mod scene in northern England in the late 1960s. The Twisted Wheel in Manchester and King Mojo Club known as the Mojo in Sheffield operated through the 1960’s

‘Peter Stringfellow and his brothers had been running the Black Cat Club in the city, which proved a success. In 1964, they opened a new venture, the King Mojo Club, in a converted house on Pitsmoor Road to the north of the city centre. The club never received a drinks license, but did have a coffee bar.

The club quickly became a centre of the northern soul scene, with popular American acts such as Wilson Pickett (backed by Reg Dwight’s Bluesology), Stevie Wonder, Ike and Tina Turner, and Geno Washington playing.’ source and references wikipedia

Northern Soul marked the birth of late-night dance culture in Britain. Paul Mason, economics journalist and once a regular at the famous ‘all-nighters’ at Wigan Casino, discovers the origin of this underground music scene and why it continues to inspire such devotion.

Many of the songs that eventually became Northern Soul classics were once rejected or unreleased. Recorded in the 1960s by African-American artists attempting to replicate the successful Motown sound, these discarded tracks would later be rediscovered and revered by white working-class dancers and music fans in the north of England. BBC Culture programme Oct 2013

Play list

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York Railways

By the ntime you see this I will have made another pilgrimage to The Railway Museum – more photos later

york station at dusk

York Station at dusk.

YORK STATION - 3

Busy station with GNER and Trans-penine trains

BUSY RAILWAY - YORK

Split in lines.

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Leeds Bradford ‘Costa Packet’ Airport

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Once upon a time we, the citizens of West Yorkshire, owned our own aerodrome and airport at Yeadon. Held on our behalf, by the local authorities, the airport allowed Yorkshire folk to enjoy trips and packages to the Costa brava, Costa blanca and Costa del sol. We also had the opportunity to see Concord when it visited our airport and watch other flights from the Billings.
Bargains were added by operators like Ryan Air and Jet 2 and we were well served for holidays despite the loss of connecting flights to Heathrow.

Then the wizards of privatisation and the jelly fish running the local authorities sold out for a mess of potage.
The airport was bought in May 2007 by a private equity company Bridgepoint Capital.
Leeds, Bradford, Wakefield, Calderdale and Kirklees councils pocketed £145.5 million on the deal (bonuses all round?).
Then as our money was burning a hole in the profligate authorities pockets, several capital schemes chewed up much of the cash with the odd white elephant to show for our troubles.

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So what has Private Equity done for West Yorkshire

  • Park your car for over an hour and it will cost you £10.
  • You are not allowed to stop to collect or drop off passengers. You must use one of the car parks and that nearest the terminal will cost a minimum of £2. Even visiting taxis must pay this hidden tax and surcharge for daring to visit Yeadon airport.
  • Number plate recognition software is used to track and trace you Big brother Bridgepoint can cause big bother.
  • The corporate taxi mafia seems to run the on site taxi operation. Drivers can accept fare paying passengers you must go to the bolshy hut and prepay.
  • Other taxi companies are treated like2nd class outfits and have to drop or collect you further into the car park than the resident favoured compaany.
  • Do you take luggage on holiday? Well then be prepared for the cost of a trolley. LBA is not a £1 in the slot, returned like supermarket trolleys but a pound spent and lost just for needing help with your luggage. Another money making scam for the airport operator and their backers.

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Alternative Airport Options

Fasten your financial seatbelt or get away from it all at Robin Hood airport instead of using Yeadon.

Robbing the poor to feed the profits of the rich has been what the West Riding have had to suffer and you can expect that to continue unless you vote with your holiday package.

I hesitate to recommend Humberside airport as that is based just in Lincolnshire and is owned by Manchester airport (and that is in Lancashire)!

LBA 051

Read about Yorkshires Air Ambulances

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Good Appetite Buon Apps

Otley

How do you start to wish someone well and enjoyment of their meal. Good appetite or as the French would have us say bon appétit doesn’t cut the mustard (Dijon or other).

I like the plain Yorkshire ‘Tuck in’ but it is seldom heard in posh establishments. ‘Eet up’ and  ‘get in dahn ya’ are for the refined roach coaches on the A1.

The Americans go for ‘Chow Down’ which seems more appropriate for dog food.

Buon appetito is the formal Italian but this canny restaurant in Otley has shortened it to Buon Apps. Just so long as they don’t cut the portions.

Not that I ever eat in places that speak these languages but ‘god appetitt’ Norwegian, ‘masă bună’ Romanian and ‘hyvä ruokahalu’ in Finnish also wish is well.

To finish (this post not a meal) I like a cross between a wish and grace;
‘Over t’teeth over t’gums look out stomach here it comes’.

 

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Stocksbridge Steeltown and Hillclimb Venue


Stocksbridge is a sporting community 12 miles north of Sheffield that last weekend hosted the British National Cycling Hill Climb Championship. The ride up Pea Royd Lane tested all the entrants who were too shattered at the top to take in the splending valley views. The winners received awards from Town and City mayors at The Venue.

It is great walking country and the local town council offer free printable maps on this site.
The workers for Sammy Fox who opened the first Steelworks in the town in 1842 would have had little time to appreciate the hills around. As Steel manufacturing grew to dominate jobs in the town workers traveled miles by bus,foot and rail to work in the plants. During world War ll the town was subject to bombing raids yet continued to produce the quality steel the country needed. More on Sam Fox
Now all I can find is a is Chorus for Corus written by Tom Russel –

 

Other things are happening for the community such as the new development of 443 houses to be built at Station road Deepcar and planning approval has been given for a development of the Outo Kumpo site.
The Switch On of the Christmas Illuminations will take place on Friday, 4th December 2009 at the shopping precinct at 7.00 p.m where Deepcar Brass Band will be playing Christmas carols from 6.30 p.m.
Stocksbridge Park Steels Football Club, Tennis, Golf, Rugby, even photography clubs all seem to thrive. Stocksbridge Brass Band are still entering competitions 110 years after first forming.

For a video of the hill climb see Cycling Info

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Knaresborough Nidd Viaduct

The present Knaresborough Viaduct was completed in October 1851. The first effort collapsed 3 years earlier. It is 338 ft in length and is 90 ft high. The 4 arches span the River Nidd forming a bridge that is still used by local rail services to connect the town with Harrogate/Leeds to the west & south and York to the east.

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By: Robert Smith

Knaresborough Viaduct #2

By: Moon Pie

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Knaresborough Viaduct in snow By: Robert Smith

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Knaresborough Viaduct in snow By: Robert Smith

Knaresborough Viaduct

By moonpie

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Animated Bradford in Media Museum

Do you love the Wombles, Bugs Bunny, Wallace and Grommit or other animation characters then get to see BAF at the National Media Museum in Bradford.
Bradford is getting animated so put a trip on your list of things to do this summer.

 

What is BAF

The British Animation Festival (BAF) takes place each November at the National Media Museum in Bradford. The UK’s longest running such festival features screentalks, retrospectives, workshops and a competition strand which recognises the very best in new animation from around the world.

The 21th Bradford Animation Festival will take place from  17 –  22 November 2014.

Last years winner was

Best Professional Film: Women’s Letters by Augusto Zanovello

An absorbing and poignant film, beautifully conceived and constructed with moments of real tenderness and drama. The jury almost forgot that they were watching a stop motion film.

This year two films festivals will be celebrating 100 years since the birth of a truly legendary director who brought the world some of Bugs Bunny’s, Elmer Fudd’s, Road Runner’s and Daffy Duck’s greatest moments in the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons. Chuck Jones was at the forefront of Warner Brothers’ golden era of animation, and they will be screening eighteen of his cartoons throughout the festival.

What about the Animation Gallery

Bradford’s internationally acclaimed Animation Gallery explores the history of animation and animated images, with an emphasis on animation produced in Britain. See some of your favourite characters, look back at animation through the ages and discover how animators bring drawings and objects to life.

For animation on the Small Screen you will smile again at the Smash Martian puppets, illustrating the importance of commercials to the survival of animation studios.
Continue to the realm of children’s animation to see a set from The Wombles, and artwork and storyboards from Bob the Builder. More fun is on display with the set for The Wrong Trousers, complete with Wallace and the notorious ‘Feathers’ McGraw.

For film buff explore the basic principles of perceiving movement and how animated drawings pre-date the development of moving pictures. Try your hand at optical toys such as the zoetrope, praxinoscope and the wheel of life. On display are major objects from the National Cinematography Collection such as Louis Le Prince’s single lens and 16 lens cameras, an Edison Kinetoscope and a Lumière Cinématographe, together with an interactive display showing how these devices work.

You can take a seat in our viewing booth to watch clips from animated films from 1897 onwards, then learn about range of animation techniques from cut-outs to computer animation, and the ever-popular stop-motion method. This section tells you about the work of Winsor McCay, Walt Disney, Lotte Reiniger, Norman McLaren, John Whitney, John Lasseter, and many other famous animators.

Watch clips of distinctly British animation and see original artwork, puppet models and sets from titles such as Animal Farm, Dangermouse, Morph, Andy Pandy, Jason and the Argonauts and Girls Night Out.

Batman Superman Joker Animation
Batman Superman Joker Animation by Terry Bain CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 Kerpow!

Ray Harryhausen is a world-renowned master of stop-motion animation famous for bringing mythical creatures to life in films such as Jason and the Argonauts (1963) and Clash of the Titans (1981). The museum recently acquired Ray’s complete personal collection including original models and artwork from his film career.

BAF Game, is the festival’s popular splinter strand dedicated to exploring the overlap between video games, animation and film and features presentations and masterclasses from key industry figures.

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Railway Map of Yorkshire

yorkshire-railway-map

This is a map of Yorkshire railways was issued by British Rail in 1959. It shows a wonderful network of railways, some of which have sadly been lost. In particular, the Beeching cuts of the 1960s, saw a closure of lines and stations such as Otley, Ripon, Market Weighton.

Railway Map of 1900.

west yorks railway mapclick to enlarge

Interesting to see how many more stations there were. Even on existing lines, many stations have been closed down for example, Manningham – near Bradford, Esholt, Kildwick and Cross Hills. This really was the generation when train travel was the main form of transport.
Source: Lost Railways West Yorks – for more fascinating maps of Yorkshire.

The Keighley & Worth Valley RailwayKeighley and Worth Valley Railway by Belkin 59

Some lines have been maintained by enthusiasts. These include the Keighley and Worth Valley Railway, Embsay to Bolton Abbey and parts of the North York Moor railways.

See: Scenic Railway journeys of Yorkshire

North York Moors Railway Map

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Photo: Mat Overton, 2006 CC  BY 2.5

Modern Railway map of Yorkshire

rail-map-west-yorkshire

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Railway Posters of Yorkshire by Frank Newbould

Frank Newbould was born in Bradford on 24 September 1887. Frank was educated at Bradford College of Art and Camberwell School of Art and worked mostly in London specialising in travel posters and war propaganda.

There is a selection of unframed Railway poster prints currently available  from Waterstones. They feature many attractive Yorkshire locations including; Scarborough, Ilkley, Harrogate and the Yorkshire Dales.  Frank never forgot his Yorkshire roots even though the media work was based around that Yorkshire annex, London.

Book Cover
Poster to Poster by Richard Furness

The National Railway Museum in York has a large and varied collection of railway art and artefacts. Thousands of railway posters have been published since the Victorian era and this book feature many representing Yorkshire and the north. The National Railway Museum and specialist poster companies have supplied ‘classic’ images to enhance the books appeal.

Book Cover

Railway Posters 1923-1947 shows over 200 of the best posters dating from the railways’ heyday prior to nationalization. In this period, renowned poster artists of the calibre of Edward McKnight Kauffer, Frank Newbould, Tom Purvis and Cassandre were commissioned by the railway groups to promote not only their lines but also the most beautiful and appealing cities and towns in their areas for tourists to visit.
The railway companies virtually invented the “package tour” and promoted it intensively not only in the UK but also in the USA. The introduction explains the history of the companies during the period covered, and examines their attitudes to poster advertising.
The book is then divided into four sections, one for each of the railway groups: the resulting selection makes an analysis of poster art in the UK in its “golden age” of the Twenties and Thirties. Extended captions explain the context of the works, and information about the artists is provided. Beverley Cole and Richard Durack are on the staff of the National Railway Museum, York.

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Jowett Javelin Bradford or Lea Francis Coventry

Lea Francis

Lea Francis cars and motor bikes date back to 1895 in Coventry.
A total of almost 10,000 Lea-Francis vehicles were made until production ceased after the 1960 Lea-Francis Lynx failed to capture the buying public’s attention.
Barrie Price, an old employee has continued to provide service and spares for the surviving cars, and has also built a number of “modern” Lea-Francis motor cars reviving the model name “Ace of Spades.”

The Lea Francis owners club organise rallies and socila events see LFOC This picture was taken in West Yorkshire the main reason it features on this site.

Jowett Javellin

Jowett Javelin were an award-winning British car that was produced from 1947 to 1953 by Jowett of Bradford. Approximately 23,000 cars were produced of different models with five variants each having a standard and “de luxe” option.
The 1952 International RAC Rally was class-won by a Javelin.

The Jowett Jupiter was a hand built car whose parts started life as sheet steel or sheet brass. ‘The sheets were guillotined to size, nibbled to shape, and then formed by hand over wood or steel formers or jigs. In fact, the Jowett Jupiter Sports Car was built entirely by hand by skilled craftsmen.’ Jowett Jupiter web site

Jowett Cars

Museum piece now in Idle close to the original factory at Bradford’s Industrial Museum.

Chitty

An old van in the livery of the local newspaper.

Lea Francis

The grill of the Lea Francis almost reflecting the photographer/editor in the well polished chrome work.

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