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Alan Edgar (Eggy1948)

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Everything posted by Alan Edgar (Eggy1948)

  1. Initiative test to London YMCA and back organised by the Bedlington YMCA Youth Leader John Bygate - c1965.
  2. Postcard and opening programme - Oct 11th 1919 - posted by Edith Barrett on the Bygone Bedlington group.
  3. Posted on the Bygone Bedlington group by Edith Barrett - official opening ceremony Wednesday July 26th 1961.
  4. Valerie Adamson 29 is lynn johnston. Lynn Tilmouth
  5. 1. Who was the original lead singer with heavy rock band Deep Purple? Answer = Rod Evans Deep Purple are a British hard rock band originally from Hertford. Formed in March 1968, the group originally included vocalist Rod Evans, guitarist Ritchie Blackmore, bassist Nick Simper, keyboardist Jon Lord and drummer Ian Paice. 2. Who was Liza Minelli’s famous mother? Answer = Judy Garland Ps It’s Liza with a ‘nn’ not Lisa with a ‘n’ 3. Which football league club used to play at Goldstone Ground? Answer = Brighton & Hove Albion 4. Roy Jenkins was the founder of which political party? Answer = Liberal Democrats 5. What type of creature is a ‘flying phalanger’? Answer = marsupial = squirrel Glider, also called Flying Phalanger, orFlying Possum, any of about six small phalangers—marsupial mammals of Australasia—that volplane from tree to tree like flying squirrels. 6. What is the capital of Honduras? Answer = H Tegucigalpa, city and capital of the Republic of Honduras. It is located on hilly terrain hemmed in by mountains, at an elevation of 3,200 feet (975 metres) above sea level. 7. What name is commonly given to the area around Stoke-on-Trent? Answer = The Potteries – Ovalteeny lived there J 8. Who invented the bouncing bomb (and no, it wasn’t Bobby Ball)? Are you sure? Answer = Barnes Wallis 9. Over what distance is the Classic horse race ‘The Oaks’ run? Answer – 2,646 yards = 2,419.502 meters The Oaks race day originated in England in 1779 and is the female equivalent of the Derby restricted to three year old fillies. It was named after the Surrey residence of the Earl of Derby. 10. Who coined the phrase “a land fit for heroes to live in”? Answer = David Lloyd George At the end of World War One, David Lloyd George, who was then prime minister, promised to create a land fit for heroes to live in . In 1919, a new Housing Act announced plans for councils to build 500,000 new homes within three years. 11. Which reactive metal is represented by the symbol Ba? Answer = Barium Now try this – A Barium meal may cause constipation or impacted stool after the procedure if it isn't completely cleared from your body. You may be told to drink plenty of fluids and eat foods high in fiber to help the rest of the barium leave your body. You may also be given a laxative to help with this. 12. If Monday’s child is fair of face what is Wednesday’s child? Answer = Full of Woe So will probably require a Barium meal I’ll bet you didn’t know …. Queen Elizabeth I was the first English queen to see herself in a mirror. She banned them from court as she aged. Answer = I didn’t
  6. Valerie HarrisonI think number 31 is my niece Ann Lewis
  7. Think it was c1964 when the new building was opened. @Pete tells us the first YMCA leader in this new building was Derrick Ruddy and Derick was followed by John Bygate. On the Bedlington remembered group site Les Lynn commented :- Les Lynn Spent nearly every day in there in the Mid - Fifties . Run by Jim Harding then Cyril Meakins . The only time I can remember going to the old building (the building before the one in the photo) was late 50's early 60's when my mam's aunty Elsie dragged me and my two brothers there to fund raising events for the new building - Beetle Drive with Pea & Pie supper.
  8. 1930's ? Postcard with Moscardidni and Bacci in the same street.
  9. @Jammy- see the compilation photo I posted above. It shows the Wallaw, 1939, and the smaller image you posted above.🙂
  10. Remember it from the BBC news a couple of months ago :- Homes to be heated by warm water from flooded mines By Roger HarrabinBBC environment analyst 9 June 2020 A new garden village in County Durham will soon be getting its heat from a surprising source: it will be warmed by water from a disused mine. Share this with Facebook Share this with Messenger Share this with Twitter Share this with Email Share https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-52963645#:~:text=A new garden village in,district using a single system. I would have thought most of the disused mines, like the Bedlington 'A' pit, would have housing estates built on them by now. Must be warm in the Bower grange houses🤬 - @John Fox (foxy) mustn't have a heating bill🙂
  11. Photo and names from Cambois Facebook group members Lillian Hewitt (No 2 in the photo); Brenda Boland & Ellen Easton.
  12. Photo from 'Jp Brewis' who gave the year it was taken as 1977. This Google aerial shot, 2020, shows that the old stone building that the YMCA used as a gym - weightlifting room -etc. is now used as garages for the house' that replaced the main building. .The stone building next to the garages is not part of the YMCA and in the 1960's it used to be a Post Officer. Google street view 2009:-
  13. If you were in the huff and pulling a miserable face me mam would say :- "If the wind changes your face will stick like that":
  14. Can't remember any catching any toads from the pond but do remember we spent hours catching fish, sticklebacks I think, from the pond with a long piece of grass plus a worm threaded through the end of the grass. Like you Jammy my memory says we never took them home we put them all back when the day was over. Another memory is of the pile of wooden pit props close to the pond and my two brothers and me used a few in an attempt to build a raft. Can't remember what we used to try and tie the props together just that it only worked for less than a minute and I ended up in the pond, surrounded by props, and wor Dek & Den having to get a pole to reach out for me to grab and they pulled me back to the edge. And yes I was in the dog house when we all got home - me still dripping wet, and probably stinking
  15. @Jammy - there is a web site cinematreasures.org that gives info on all the cinemas in Britain. I remember finding the site, a few years ago, and learned that the name WALLAW was from the original owner's name - WALter LAWson. They don't have any photos of the Bedlington WALLAW but they do have this info :- ' Located in Bedlington, Northumberland. The Palace Theatre was opened as a variety theatre in 1896. It had a full stage and 5 dressing rooms. At the turn of the century it began screening films as part of the variety programme. It suffered damage from a fire in 1927. The Palace Theatre was restored in 1928, and in 1929 it was equipped with Western Electric(WE) sound system. It was taken over by Wallaw Picture Ltd. in 1930 and in the 1930’s it was rebuilt in an Art Deco style. It was re-named Wallaw Cinema around 1939. The Wallaw Cinema was closed in the middle of August 1966. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- In the first half of the 1960's we used to bunk off school to go to the WALLAW on a Tuesday afternoon for the Matinee. It was 6d to get in. Can't prove this but I think I was told that the matinee, at the Bedlington cinemas, was introduced for the shift workers = miners
  16. Entrance to the 'A' pit from Station Road. The kids from Waverley Avenue; Waverley Drive; Bolam Place and the Oval area that went to Barrington County Primary school would cross the Station Road, from outside the Pioneer Boot factory and walk through the pit area up to Shop Row where they would turn right and to the railway crossing at Bedlington North signal box and cross the lines onto the Barrington Road and turn left to head for the school.
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