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Canny lass
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Everything posted by Canny lass
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Forget Ferndale house and Chester House! They were number 27 and 28. In 1939 number 36 was occupied by the Robinsons, a family of five plus what appears to be a visitor or boarder. The head of the family and one of the sons both worked for London North Eastern Railways - the father as a motor driver and the son a permanent way labourer. The residents of 37 did however have mining connections, the head of the family being a miner (filler underground). These two houses are pretty much mid-way between Bedlington A pit and Barrington Colliery. He could have worked at either. Have you considered using the Land Registry for England? They aren't too expensive if the history is important to you. https://www.landregistrytitledeeds.co.uk
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@Sloopy .Dog Your house is definitely on the 1922 map. Have you any record of it, or your neighbour's house, previously being called Ferndale House or Chester House? These are the two names that show up next door to each other on Ravensworth Street in the 1939 register. That would locate them approximately between the two halves of ravensworth Street. In 1939 they weren't occupied by miners (who generally had a more simple terrace house, my relative lived in Liddle Street at that time)) but by a retired grocer and a retired schoolmaster. That's not to say they weren't owned by the colliery.
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It's not the same chapel. The Colliery Methodist Chapel is just opposite the entrance to Bower Grange. I've marked the Spiritual Chapel with a pink dot.
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There is a Spiritual Church that is first shown on the 1938 New series and there is a close neighbouring building. Could they be the garages?
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Same here, Pete, now, but it was nearer 1-2 this morning at 6am.
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Happy New Year to all members. I was thinking about wishing you all good health and great happiness but beggar that, I just hope you all win the lottery! A bit of advice for this evening's festivities: If you're having wine, open the bottle to let it breathe. If it's not breathing, give it mouth to mouth!
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New Year’s Eve or not, it’s still Friday. Here we are, on the brink of yet another new year and the pandemic is still very much alive and kicking. Who would have thought it possible, 10 April 1920, when I started posting a quiz to break the week up and keep the old grey matter ticking over and pliable. Once again it’s time to recap and take stock of anything we may have learned that might just come in useful one day. Get your thinking caps on! If you get this out of the way now, you’ll still have plenty of time to celebrate the arrival of 2022 - carefully and at a safe distance, of course. 2021 New Year Special: Are polar bears right-handed or left-handed? According to his business card, what was the profession of Al Capone? Golf balls were originally made of leather but what were they stuffed with? What was unusual about the way in which author Raymond Chandler’s wife did the housework? When was the first book on plastic surgery written? How many times an hour can a desert rat have sex? What did Florence Nightingale keep in her pocket during the Crimean War? At how many steps per minute does the Foreign Legion march? Beethoven, Casanova, George V. Which of them was a Freemason? At what age can a male eskimo be taught to smoke a pipe? For what offence was James Watt twice arrested? In which country was a referendum held to decide the placement of a public toilet? Only male canaries can sing . true or false? Maps of which country showed the capital city a few miles from it’s true position in order to confuse guided-missile programmers? Which English poet was once thought to be a French spy? Are scorpions immune to their own poison? Which racing circuit is built on abandoned RAF runways? How many minutes a day does the average newborn baby spend crying? Who introduced the table fork to England? Who played the piano in the Hollies’ hit He aint heavy, he’s my brother? I’ll bet you didn’t know …. Kangaroos cannot jump if their tails are lifted off the ground. Answers on Thursday next week.
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Not wishing to sound like a diva, or anything of that nature but ... about time too! It's completely stolen my moment of glory, my thunder, my accolade! 😡
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@Harvs72 I think you can take that gentleman's claim with a decent pinch of salt. I agree with Eggy. I've lived in both the Hartlands and the West Lea estates and I've been a guest in West Lea and I've never heard of any such thing. @Maggie/915 have you heard anything about this?
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Now that's what I call recycling! Well done, Malcolm.
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Answers to last week's Christmas special: Rocking Around the Christmas Tree Going carol-singing at Christmas (not to be confused with ‘Orchard wassailing’ which has nothing to do with Christmas. A Pagan mid-winter festival celebrated in Norse mythology The Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come A button January 6 16th century Flying Fish Cove A goat Eight maids a milking Clockwise Olympia was a snow-woman Capricorn Santa Baby A cactus Female. Males shed their antlers in November and are without them until Spring False Miss Fanny Bright Theodore Roosevelt 1920s New Year special tomorrow when we can see if, and how much, our learning curve has improved or otherwise.
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Nice to see you're still around! We're a tough lot us Bedlingtonians! Have a really good Christmas, Brian.
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Merry Xmas everybody! It's all over bar the shouting here. We're bout to take a break from eating and watch Donald Duck so here's the Christmas quiz to keep you busy for a while: In which Christmas song can you find the words “Everyone dancing merrily in the new old-fashioned way”? What is wassailing? Before being connected with Christmas, what was Yule? What is the name of the last ghost that visits Scrooge in A Christmas Carol? What is Frosty the Snowman’s nose made out of? Among Christians who lived in the East when was Christmas originally celebrated? In what century was Christmas first written as Xmas? What is the Capital of Christmas Island? What does Santa ride on in Finland? According to the Christmas song, what did my true love give to me on the eighth day of Christmas? In which direction should you stir the Christmas pudding mix if you want to avoid bad luck, clockwise or anticlockwise? Apart from being the world’s largest, what was unusual about the snowman named Olympia? Under which zodiac sign are you born if your birthday is December 25th? What popular Christmas song did Eartha Kitt record in 1953? The Grinch is as cuddly as a what? Are Santa’s reindeer male or female? In Japan, Santa is said to live on the moon. True or false? In the song Jingle Bells who was seated by my side? Which American president banned Christmas trees from the White House? In what decade did Coca-Cola start using Santa Clause in adverts? I’ll bet you didn’t know …. (and maybe you’d rather not) Caga Tío (the shitting log) is an integral part of a Catalonian Christmas. Starting December 8, children feed a log of wood every evening with morsels of food and cover it with a blanket to keep it warm. On Christmas Eve they leave the log alone and go to another room and pray for a lot of presents. On returning, they sing songs to the log while beating the living daylights out of it with big sticks and telling it to “shit”. The bewildered log obliges with sweets, nuts, small toys and the Catalonian delicacy Turron nougat. Believe me, it’s a sight to behold! Here is one of their songs (translated to English) for you to enjoy and get you into the spirit of Christmas: Shit Tió, Hazlenuts and nougats, Don’t shit herrings, they are too salty, they are too salty. Shit nougat, it tastes better, Shit tió, almonds and nougat, and if you don’t want to shit I’ll hit you with my stick! Shit tió!
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That door I remember!
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There was definitely a door of some kind. I was presuming it led to the stage (for the purpose of entrances and exits). It could equally well have been a large cupboard as Mrs Jobson kept a large box of equipment behind the door.
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Well, the leader's office door opened left to right and the lounge door was on the right of the room and I think there was a door in the corner of the table tennis room giving access to the stage. But that's splitting hairs. Good job, well done!
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Merry Christmas 2021 to all members.
Canny lass replied to Alan Edgar (Eggy1948)'s topic in Chat Central
My mouth is watering! Have you managed to get a turkey? I heard on the news here today that Norfolk turkey farmers can't get any of the native population to slaughter their turkeys. They rely on european, seasonal workers for the job and Brexit has put a stop to that. Heard later in the day that 5 000 emergency work permits are being granted. -
Tell me about Bedlington - looking to maybe move here?
Canny lass replied to Ellie Thorpe's topic in Talk of the Town
Denzel, I think you may be misunderstanding what I’m saying, namely that Bedlington has a ”villagey feel” to it. I am not saying that Bedlington IS a ”village”. Surely, with a population of almost 18 500, a well-defined boundary, its own local government and a wider built-up area than Bamburgh (which is a village), Bedlington, falls clearly into the category of town, rather than village as YOU are now calling it. You mention ”all the shit pubs, barbers, takeaways, tattoo parlours and supermarkets”. Being a woman of mature years and discerning taste I cannot claim to have personally frequented any of the establishments you mention in your resume, so I’ll just have to take the word of your good self, who clearly has. Never the less, it must be said, that I haven’t needed to go without an alcoholic beverage, a cup of coffee, a take-away meal or even a wash & blow dry on my visits and I’ve been able to do so in in places that weren’t at all displeasing – at least to my taste (or indeed those of many European friends who have on occasions accompanied me). Tatoo parlours in Bedlington, I can’t comment on. Never having visited them I am not at all qualified to comment on them. However, I have noticed over the years, the increasing number of tattoo parlours and I have previously commented that increase on this very forum. You classify them as ”shit” and I presume you are speaking from personal experience rather than hearsay. You may well be right but have you noticed that these ”shit” establishments are thriving and surviving so they must be doing something right. Good marketing research and catering well for their clientelle, perhaps? That probably goes for the ”shit” pubs, barbers, take-aways and supermarkets as well but it’s better than seeing them boarded up and disused . That would totally destroy the villagey feel. It seems there’s something for everybody in Bedlington. Perhaps we should have a new town motto ’All tastes and types catered for’. -
Naughty!
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Not a separate entity as far as I remember. The cloakroom and loos were in the same room. basically a row of coat hooks on the wall and a full length mirror. Toiletsin the ladies occupied the same site as the showers in the gents.
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I believe that Mr Ruddy's office was the second door on the left side. There was one door before that which I think was a store room. I've vague recollections of filling the snack bar from there.
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I remember it exactly as Pete describes it and there was one other larger room behind the cafeteria. I don't know what its original purpose was but Mrs Jobson occasionally organised something just for us girls in there.