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A whirl on the Wurlitzer anyone? |
No reason why we shouldn't go back in time for a bit of nostalgia. In my previous tale of music engines in Treaddur Bay and beyond, I mentioned the famous Wurlitzer company, manufacturer of grand theatre organs. Since I wrote that post I recalled that Stockport Town Hall contains a fine example of the species which we saw a couple of times on our visits to the Stockport Beer Festival in the 1990's. The Paramount organisation had installed Wurlitzers in most of their US theatres and the plan was to do the same in Britain. Only one theatre in the UK was equipped with a Wurlitzer this being the Paramount Theatre (later it became the Odeon) on Oxford Street in Manchester. This particular machine has ended up in Stockport at the Town Hall.
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Stockport Town Hall - on a sunny day! |
And what a fine town hall it is, so many times we've walked past and never really paid much attention to this grand public building. Many posher towns than Stockport would be very happy to possess this fine civic building. And Sir John Betjeman was quoted as saying it's rather magnificent, so there!
Back to the present, August saw us doing a bit of tourism, firstly to Central England again, this time to Stafford and Derby. Neither of these are on the tourist trail but they both have their pluses, Stafford has a pleasant old town centre with a large market place (currently being tarted up a bit) and Derby has several good looking churches including the cathedral which has a pair of resident breeding Peregrine Falcons living in it's tower! A stone's throw away is St Mary's Catholic church which was designed by Augustin Pugin in the nineteenth century - here's Vicky walking across the St Alkmund's Footbridge towards it. This bridge spans the city inner ring road and is the site of St Alkmund's church demolished in the 1960's by the city planners to make way for the traffic. The industrial history of both Derby and Stafford was shaped by the railways and we ran a very straight parkrun on an old reclaimed railway line near the centre of Stafford.
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They turned the tap on today! |
A couple of weeks later we took the short flight to Belfast and ticked off another Northern Ireland parkrun. Waterworks parkrun was the first in the whole of Ireland and goes twice a couple of reservoirs near the centre of the city; this is Belfast's principal water supply and the lower reservoir looked distinctly muddy! The morning was appropriately wet and not long after the start of the run we all got suitably drenched! However the weather miraculously cleared up the following day and we enjoyed a pleasant ramble round Hillsborough Castle gardens with our grandsons, not really a castle more a stately home this is the residence of King Charles when he visits Northern Ireland. Following our potter round several hungry mouths were assuaged with pizza at the Parson's Nose!
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He knows you know! |
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