Monday 25 May 2015

A Trip to London

My Friends, Eve and Al went up to London to see Eric Clapton at the Royal Albert Hall celebrating his 70th Birthday.  We also decided to Visit the British Museum as Al had always wanted to see the Atrium Roof, an engineering feat of note.
 Lillie Road, Earls Court.  The Hotel Lilly where we stayed is right on the left of the picture.

Bob under his sign!
 The British Museum
Bob and Al in the Atrium
 Inside the Atrium (or the Queen Elizabeth II Great Court)

Eve and Al admiring the roof
 In the Assyrian section. The Assyrian civilisation was centred around modern Iraq dating back to 1st Millennium BC


 An ancient Greek Portico
 Some Roman tessalated pavements in the museum

 The German Ship Clock from Augsburg dating from around 1585
 Two of the face masks from the Viking Royal Burial excavated at Sutton Hoo in Suffolk dating from the 7th century AD
The Ringlemere Gold Cup dating back to 1700 to 1500BC
 The Royal Albert Hall where we were due to see Eric Clapton in concert
The Albert Memorial in front of the Royal Albert Hall, a memorial to Queen Victoria's husband, Prince Albert
 Andy Fairweather Low and his band was the support act before Eric Clapton came on
 Eric Clapton on stage
 The whole band.

Sunday 24 May 2015

Around Penwith

Whilst we were staying in Helston, we weren't just concentrating on areas with family connections, but we had a lovely day touring the Penwith Peninsula, the bit that juts out to the furthest east you can get in this country.  However, we did not visit Lands End as it has been turned into a bit of a theme park.  However, here is a link to more info to this place:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land%27s_End
 The Penwith Peninsula from Google Earth
Pendeen Lighthouse near St Just on the north coast of the Penwith Peninsula
The National Trust's Levant Tin Mine as seem from the Lighthouse.  An iconic sight on the Cornish coastline, it's tunnels stretched out under the Atlantic Ocean.
Two more views of the Levant Tin Mine engine house.  There was a major disaster here in 1919 when the sea breached one of the underwater shafts killing many of the miners.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levant_Mine_and_Beam_Engine
http://www.nicholasfamilyhistory.com/history/levant/levant_mine_disaster.php
Looking up to the Geevor Tin Mine, one of the two tin mine tourist attractions in Pendeen
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geevor_Tin_Mine
We visited Carn Euny Iron Age Village near the village of Sancreed.  It appears to have been inhabited between 200BC and into the late Roman period.  These large stone huts  were started around first century BC
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carn_Euny
http://www.historic-cornwall.org.uk/a2m/rom_british/courtyard_house/carn_euny/carn_euny.htm
This site also contains a fine example of a fougou.  This is the entrance.
Inside the fougou
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fogou

Viv enjoying her lunch at Carn Euny
 In the lanes near Porthcurno.  The red car had apparently got too close to the hedge and the resulting conference blocked the road for about 45 minutes!
 The telegraph cable station (now Museum) at Porthcurno. This was the British termination of the undersea telegraph cable which was completed in 1870 thus liking Britain telegraphically to the rest of the world including Australia, South Africa and the USA.  It was also a critical communications hub during the second World War with rooms drilled into the cliff behind building to make them bomb proof.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porthcurno
The entry to the bunker
Porthcurno Beach
Looking towards the Minack theatre, a unique open air theatre on the cliffs at Porthcurno
http://www.minack.com/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minack_Theatre

Tuesday 12 May 2015

Following the Family Trail - 3 Wendron/Helston

For me, the Helston area holds many memories from staying with my Grandmother, Helen, at Bodilly Poultry farm near a hamlet called Wendron close to Helston in Cornwall when my parents were living and working in Nigeria in the 1950s.  However, the family connection goes back to the 1930s when Helen became the teacher at Wendron School after the death of her first husband.  It was there that she met Glanville Williams who was to become her second husband.
 These two google map images show Wendron and it's relationship with Wendron and the relationship with Bodilly

 Wendron Parish Church.  My parents were married there in 1946, and both myself and my brother John were christened there.
 A view of the interior of Wendron Church
A religious procession at Wendron Church in the 1930's.  My mother's older brother Alan would be one of the lads - holding the incense.  The vicar of the day would have been Canon GH Doble



 The old school in Wendron where my grandmother Helen was schoolteacher in the 1930s
 The Bungalow at Wheal Dream near Wendron where my grandmother and her children Alan and Vivien lived.  In the 1930s there was a derelict Tin Mine Engine House standing just behind where I took this photo from.  Today, nothing remains of it.
The view across the fields showing remaining Engine Houses still standing looking toward the present Poldark Mine which deals with the history of tin mining in Cornwall
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poldark_Mine
 Wheal Dream in the 1930s.  My mother, Viv with her brother Alan and Phil, whom she married.  My grandmother's house would have been to the right of the Picture
And the Wheal Dream Engine House in the 1930s
The view towards the farm at Bodilly from Wendron
The lane leading to Bodilly
The farmhouse
 Looking across the farmyard.  The barns have all been converted as dwellings.  When I lived there, the farmyard was a lot muddier!
The former Wesleyan Chapel at Crelly just next door to Bodilly.  It has now been converted to a private residence (like the Bodilly Barns!).  I was taken to Sunday school there frequently.  Many of the Williams family are buried in the graveyard
 The Church of St Winwaloe, a 14th Century Church with a separate 13 century tower.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunwalloe
 The church is situated right on the beach at Church cove not far from Helston
It was popular with my family both in the 1930s, 40s and 50s
Across the bay the Poldhu hotel stands
 The Poldhu hotel across the bay from Gunwallow Church.  It was from this spot that Guglielmo Marconi made the first wireless transmission across the Atlantic on 12 December 1901.
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poldhu
http://basementgeographer.com/poldhu-wireless-station-and-the-cornish-peninsula-that-helped-give-us-modern-radio/
A photo taken in the 1930s of the transmission towers.  It is sobering to think that, had ships like the "Queen Margaret" and the "Queen Elizabeth" that I mentioned earlier been equipped with radio the their losses would have been avoided.

On the way down to Helston we stopped off three times, once at St Allen Church, near the village of Zelah, which was where I prepared to be confirmed, and then at Truro Cathedral where I was confirmed. Later we also called in at Kenwyn Church near Truro, which I visited often during my schooldays.
Two views of St Allen Church
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Allen
Kenwyn Church in Truro.  Back in the early 1960s when I was a student at Truro School, we were marched here every Sunday.
 My memories  are of interminable sermons.  Today the Parishes of Kenwyn and St Allen have been joined together.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenwyn
Two views of Truro Cathedral