mercurydancer

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Posts posted by mercurydancer

  1. As usual, a sensationalist story on the media about snow. Snow in winter. Worst snowfall in 5 whole years! 

    In Co Durham we had a snowstorm this afternoon. It took about 38 seconds and is gone now. Its cool but not bitterly cold. 

    Trains cancelled even before the snow falls! Trains cancelled because of no snow! 

     

    I was in Moscow recently and they had a heavy snowfall, one meter in a few hours. Now that is a snowstorm. Nothing much stopped, apart from the flights. Pubs still open in downtown Moscow. 
    What was the last sensationalist story? Weather bomb? Nowt much happened. 

     

    Without scaring anyone, everyone stay safe

     

     

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  2. 11 hours ago, AfferGorritt said:

    Just reading about 3 Ypres. Words fail you ...

    I do battlefield tours, and Ypres is one of my localities. I specialise in locating graves and taking the relatives to specific graves. In Ypres, often all I can do is take the relatives to the Menin Gate and show them the name on the arch. It means that a body has not been recovered. I have often seen relatives find some kind of peace with a grave, but not so often with just a name on a wall. 

  3. On 12/02/2018 at 0:50 AM, IAN123. said:

    This was an absolute favourite and by Dave Brookes . Secured on CD for my Mothers funeral.

    Other themes:

    Crown Court 

    Black Beauty.

    Flambards.

    Changes.

    Tomorrow People.

    Baretta.

    Colditz.

    Hill St.Blues.

    Sam.

    Shabby Tiger.

    Moody & Pegg.

    Rhubarb.

    Van Der Valk.

    Camberwick Green

    and Music Box.

    Ian

     

    Crown Court! Every weekday at lunchtime. Never saw it unless I was ill and at home. Often it was interesting drama. 

     

    Van der Valk for the opening music. 

     

    Black Beauty theme made me cry each time. In fact it still does.

     

    Do you remember the badly dubbed Robinson Crusoe programme? 

     

  4. On 4/27/2017 at 9:18 AM, Ian1885 said:

    Not sure if I've jumped in at the right place. I was at Berridge 1965 to 1971 when I then went to High Pavement. I think this pic was about 1968? I'm back row, third from the left.

     

     

    IMG_4790.JPG

    I have a strong suspicion that I am on the front rank, last one on the right with the lovely jumper on. 

  5. Gravity is a odd thing. Its a wave apparently. These waves have been discovered. Not that gravity on earth varies much. Einstein defined what it could be on a huge scale, but we tend to live our lives in the gravity explained by Newton. 

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  6. Nottingham is a sizeable city and could cope with the loss of trade by inhibiting motorists. Despite the howls from some of this site's members about the tram, Nottingham does have a decent public transport system which you can actually work out! 

     

    I look at places like Darlington and Stockton on Tees, where the car parking charges are completely stupid. One street has parking for 2 hours at a pound. The next street has it for 20 minutes for a pound! The town centres therefore start to die. 

  7. The storm is heading north! Its not swinging round to cross NE England, the borders. It was originally tracked to go right over Edinburgh. 

     

    Here in Teesside, its very quiet indeed. Almost no wind at all. The sky earlier was something out of an apocalyptic movie but is just light cloud now. 

  8. On 9/29/2017 at 9:33 PM, Jill Sparrow said:

    medium-2.jpg

     

    This is my great uncle, John Samuel Ward, known as Jack. He lived at 24 Suez Street, Basford. I think it was NBL who posted some time ago that he thought he remembered my great aunt, Minnie Cordelia Ward from his childhood. Minnie was Jack's auntie and also lived at 24 Suez Street until 1962.

     

    Jack was a Sherwood Forester, killed in 1918, aged 23. He looks so much older. His name is on the war memorial at St Leodigarius.

    He was 22. Son of Samuel and Elizabeth Ward, 24 Suez Street. He lies at Queant Street, a small cemetery I do not know, but it is right in the middle of the Somme area. By the location of the cemetery it looks like his final resting place was moved from where he was originally interred. 3rd Division went through that area like a dose of salts on 2 September 2018 and was one of he elements which finished the war. 

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  9. I'm just being curious but puzzled too, and cannot find anything like a decent meaning on this woodhouse thing on this site or on the steam search engines.

     

    There are lots of Woodhouses in Nottinghamshire, but not a lot elsewhere to my knowledge. I dont think I need to give a list, but Annesley is the closest to where my parents lived. I never knew that there was a Wollaton Woodhouse *  

     

    Why are these places called Woodhouse? Could the word Wood have more meaning? Wodehouses where everyone was painted blue? 

     

    If anyone knows, you lot do. 

     

     

    * I love explaining to American tourists that it is WOOLaton not WALaton. 

  10. letsvagoo

     

    Thank you for a very informative post. I cannot make the talk you mentioned, and I will be in London for the Remembrance weekend. 

     

    Your history is very personal, and therefore intense and fascinating. All the good that you have the letters. I admire that you have done some positive work with a performance and talks. Well done indeed. 

     

    I have letters from my uncle, who died at the hands of the Japanese. I suspect that at some point you and me are going to have a good chat about these things. 

  11. 25 years old. Not a time to die. 

     

    His burial site is different to where he was originally interred. It was a war grave issue, and I am sure he was treated with the utmost respect into his final resting place. I do not know that cemetery but I know that area in some considerable depth. 

     

    The cemetery and his date of death are intriguing. December 1915 on that line of the Somme was quiet, and had been since the trenches were dug. That he was buried in a church yard indicates that he died before the mass casualty facilities were developed. It is highly likely that on that time there would have been a medical unit close to the church. There are no other casualties for that area on that day. He did not die in a trench attack, because that would have been obvious in the records.  Possibly sniper fire but that is speculation at best. 

  12. The "new" Berridge was where my mother, sadly now gone, was head cook for many years. I will try and dig out some more when I am next in Nottingham. 

     

    Steve Tunnicliffe is nearing 60, (I am too, at 56) Last saw him and his delightful wife* at my Mum's funeral. Steve is shorter than me but I could consider him to be stocky. It would fit. That said I am built like a racing snake. 

     

    I cannot remember a Gordon Tunnicliffe. Certainly not my branch of the family. My grandfather was originally from Burton on Trent, and before his death, my Dad talked very much about the family there. He was very interested in his family history and kept many valuable documents. I have yet to get to the bottom of his quest.

     

    The bottom playground at Berridge! Yes there were the remnants of air raid shelters when I was there. 

     

    Mr Baugh to my recollection, was a lovely man who stunk of cigar smoke. I cannot ever recall him doing anything pervy at all. Now if you mention Mr Eric Anderson, and pervy, then certainly yes. Oh yes. A pity because he was a very good teacher. Tried to touch me in the beer garden of the Wheatsheaf pub one time. I ran to my uncle Tom (ex marine) who was nearest. I understand it was sorted out. Me and my dad were ushered out of the pub so we did not see anything. 

     

    *She has helped me in some times of trouble and I owe her a lot.