Showing posts with label Bideford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bideford. Show all posts

Tuesday 26 October 2021

Burton at Bideford Exhibition: An English Eye: the photographs of James Ravilious 6th October - 30th December

A collection of iconic photographs by renowned local artist-photographer, James Ravilious are on display at The Burton at Bideford. The collection of black and white photographs provides one of the most important visual records of rural life in North Devon between 1972 and 1997, while also representing the best of James Ravilious’ work as a whole.

On public display for the first time since the gallery purchased the collection in 2020, this retrospective of James’ work takes us on a trip down memory lane. Highlights include the image of fondly-remembered Olive Bennett smiling somewhat nervously in the doorway of an outbuilding in the company of her herd of Red Devon cows. Also featured are images of Archie Parkhouse reminiscing in a wood, and of the weathered and life-worn traveller reclining on the grass surrounded by his belongings. As well as familiar and characterful locals, there are also nostalgic depictions of agricultural life, traditional practices and landscapes, as well as intimate domestic scenes.

The son of artists Eric Ravilious and Tirzah Garwood, James Ravilious worked as an art teacher in London before moving to North Devon in 1972. It was here that he took up photography professionally and was commissioned by the region’s Beaford Archive to document and capture for posterity the fast disappearing traditional landscapes and practices of rural life in Devon. During the lifetime of the project, James Ravilious took more than 80,000 black and white photographs. The collection now on display at The Burton brings together approximately 103 of those works.

Working primarily in black and white, James Ravilious had a natural ability to perfectly capture the inner narrative of his subjects. He mostly studied his characters from ground level, and from the vantage point he gives us, we feel part a scene, as if we are shadowing the characters as they go about their daily business. The protagonists of the photographs are people who were clearly known to James - they were his neighbours. Named in the titles and captions that accompany the images, we feel a deeper sense of intimacy with them.

All bar a few of the largest images on display were developed by hand in James’ own darkroom. Even those few that were too large to be printed by hand, were printed commercially under the artist’s close supervision. When taking photographs, James developed a distinctive technique using older, uncoated lenses on his Leica rangefinder camera. A compensatory development process gave his photographs a subtle and ‘silvery’ quality.

Director of The Burton, Ian Danby says,
“It is fantastic to be able to show ‘An English Eye: the photographs of James Ravilious’ as part of our 70th anniversary celebrations, and we are delighted to be custodians of the works for the people of North and Devon and beyond, documenting – as they do – a period of great change in the area.”

In writing about the collection in the Matrix, Olive Cook comments,
"I know of no other presentation of a particular place and people which is a broad and as captivating as James Ravilious's photographs of North Devon. They are the fruit of a quite exceptional acuity and patience of witness and of a quite unusual humility and warmth of spirit. This great body of work establishes its author as a master of the art of photography whilst at the same time it makes an unparalleled pictorial contribution to social history."

The purchase of An English Eye: photographs by James Ravilious was made possible with the generous support of The Bridge Trust and the Friends of The Burton Art Gallery and Museum.

The exhibition was partially installed in July for Their Royal Highnesses The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall who visited The Burton as part of the gallery’s on-going 70th birthday celebrations
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Olive Bennett with her Red Devon cows. near Beaford, Devon, 1979. Photograph by James Ravilious copyright Beaford Arts digitally scanned from a Beaford Archive negative (All Rights Reserved)
Olive Bennett with her Red Devon cows. near Beaford, Devon, 1979. Photograph by James Ravilious copyright Beaford Arts digitally scanned from a Beaford Archive negative (All Rights Reserved)

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Exhibition: An English Eye: the photographs of James Ravilious runs until 30th December
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The Burton at Bideford Art Gallery and Museum,
Kingsley Road, Bideford, Devon EX39 2QQ

 >Website 

Tel No: 01237 471455 

Tuesday 20 April 2021

Maritime Heritage Links. The Kathleen and May, The Maritime Trust and HRH Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh

A look back at the Kathleen and May, “one of the UK’s last working wooden hulled three-masted topsail schooner”. 

In 1969 the HRH Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, who had been instrumental in the rescue and restoration of Cutty Sark, started the Maritime Trust as a means of preserving other significant British ships, with Kathleen and May, an early object of the Trust’s attention, as a national icon.  She was officially classified by the Arts Council as a National Treasure and at the HRH Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh’s behest, took part in the 2012 River Pageant to celebrate the Queen’s Jubilee.

The vessel was purchased by the late Bideford councillor and businessman, Steve Clarke in 1998. He spent 12 years lovingly restoring the then 100-year-old three-masted vessel, battling to keep her in Bideford where she was berthed at Brunswick Wharf. In 2008, Mr Clarke was awarded an OBE in the New Year Honours List for his services to maritime heritage to the community in Bideford. “The Kathleen and May left Bideford in May 2011, after a 13-month struggle by Mr Clarke to keep her berthed at Brunswick Wharf…”

“The 110-year-old vessel, is one of the famous tall ships listed in the Core Collection on the UK National Historic Ships Register, alongside such vessels as the Cutty Sark and HMS Victory".

RIP HRH Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh 10June 1921-9 April 2021

First and Last: I took the photos below at the Bideford Water Festival in 2010 recording the first appearance of the new Tamar-class Appledore Lifeboat Mollie Hunt and the last for the Kathleen and May.

Kathleen and May at Bideford Water Festival 2010. Photo copyright Pat Adams North Devon Focus (All Rights Reserved) Kathleen and May at Bideford Water Festival 2010. Photo credit Pat Adams North Devon Focus (All Rights Reserved)

Kathleen and May alongside Bideford Quay 2010. Photo copyright Pat Adams North Devon Focus (All Rights Reserved)Kathleen and May alongside Bideford Quay 2010. Photo credit Pat Adams North Devon Focus (All Rights Reserved)

Kathleen and May alongside Bideford Quay 2010. Photo copyright Pat Adams North Devon Focus (All Rights Reserved)Kathleen and May alongside Bideford Quay 2010. Photo credit Pat Adams North Devon Focus (All Rights Reserved)
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**If you have any news updates on the Kathleen and May  do leave a comment.**
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 The above historical information on the Kathleen and May is attributed to various sources including:

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 #maritimeheritage #maritimehistory #ships #kathleenandmay #englishheritage #southwest #england #devon #bideford #uk #brunswickwharf #river #torridge #northdevon #bidefordwaterfestival #blackandwhite #photography #monochrome

Monday 21 December 2020

SEASON'S GREETINGS

Merry Christmas and a Happier New Year to everyone. Thank you all for your support, comments, likes and follows over the past year. Roll on 2021 it can only get better. Cheers Pat 

Thank you to the NHS, keyworkers and all those who have kept on working and keeping us safe in the towns, on the coast and in the countryside through this pandemic.

Little White Sparkly Town December 2020. North Devon Focus - Photo credit B. Adams.
Bideford: Little White Sparkly Town December 2020. Photo credit B. Adams.
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Pat Adams North Devon Focus 

Thursday 7 November 2019

For the Record. "Bideford 'The Little White Town' in North Devon Dubbed as Racist"

What's the story? "Bideford in Devon changes 'Little White Town' signposts after racist claims"
Bideford made local and national news at the beginning of November and the contraversy spilled over into Social Media and TV culminating in a "Little White Town" debate between Bideford councillor Dermot McGeough, Susanna Reid and Piers Morgan on Good Morning Britain. Catch Up here - https://youtu.be/CPhh8FCDRts

Bideford has been known as the ‘Little White Town’ for more than 150 years after author Charles Kingsley coined the phrase in reference to its large number of white buildings. Here is an extract from Charles Kingsley's description of Bideford - "The Little White Town which slopes upward from its broad river tide" (Scroll down for full description from the novel Westward Ho!). Looking from these photos,  I reckon his words are appropriate. ?.

Bideford "The Little White Town" - Photo copyright Pat Adams (North Devon Focus)
Bideford Long Bridge - view across the River Torridge to the town from East the Water. Photo credit Pat Adams (North Devon Focus 2010)
Bideford "The Little White Town" - Photo copyright Pat Adams (North Devon Focus)
 Bideford Quay - view across the River Torridge to the town from East the Water. Photo credit Pat Adams (North Devon Focus 2010)
Extract Charles Kingsley's description of  Bideford from the novel "Westward Ho"
All who have travelled through the delicious scenery of North Devon must needs know the little white town of Bideford, which slopes upwards from its broad tide-river paved with yellow sands, and many-arched old bridge where salmon wait for autumn floods, toward the pleasant upland on the west.  Above the town the hills close in, cushioned with deep oak woods, through which juts here and there a crag of fern-fringed slate; below they lower, and open more and more in softly rounded knolls, and fertile squares of red and green, till they sink into the wide expanse of hazy flats, rich salt-marshes, and rolling sand-hills, where Torridge joins her sister Taw, and both together flow quietly toward the broad surges of the bar, and the everlasting thunder of the long Atlantic swell.
Charles Kingsley - http://www.westwardhohistory.co.uk/charles-kingsley/
Kingsley Museum at Clovelly https://www.clovelly.co.uk/things-to-do/seeing-clovelly/kingsley-museum/

Facebook Post 1st November -

Tuesday 8 October 2019

October Highlights. A Charity Choral Concert featuring The Barnstaple Ladies & Barnstaple Male Voice Choirs

A Charity Choral Concert featuring The Barnstaple Ladies & Barnstaple Male Voice Choirs will be taking place in aid of The Northam Care Trust on Saturday 19th October 2019. Arrival is from 7.00pm, with the concert commencing at 7.30pm at the Lavington Church, Bridgeland Street, Bideford. This will be a wonderful musical celebration with songs from shows as well as classical and popular music.
The Barnstaple Ladies & Barnstaple Male Voice Choirs
Charity Choral Concert 
featuring The Barnstaple Ladies & Barnstaple Male Voice Choirs 
on Saturday 19th October. 
Arrival is from 7.00pm, with the concert commencing at 7.30pm 
at the Lavington Church, Bridgeland Street, Bideford. Devon EX39 2PZ
  In aid of The Northam Care Trust 
Tickets are priced at £6 each are available in advance from our website www.northamcaretrust.co.uk or on the door on the night. Under 12's are free.
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ABOUT NORTHAM CARE TRUST
The Northam Care Trust is a charity formed as Northam Lodge in 1978 and our mission is to support people with learning and physical disabilities in having choice and control in achieving the best possible quality of life, evidenced by real quality outcomes and supported by our passion for excellence. They are based in Northam and Bideford in North Devon and have developed person centred support for people with profound and multiple learning and other disabilities and complex needs in residential and day activities. Excellent communication, respect, dignity, engagement, support for carers and a set of values and behaviours underpin our work and add value with personalisation at the core. They are the only organisation in North Devon and North Cornwall providing this high care specialist service and are a vital resource for families and carers whose relatives live in our accommodation or use our community support facilities including the range of day activities we offer at Rose Hill. Tap here to find out more about the Northam Care Trust Past and Present
The Northam Care Trust

Friday 21 December 2018

Glad Tidings from Bideford

Season's Greetings from the North Devon Coast & Country Chronicle
Thank you for visiting
Here's hoping for another "Event"ful year in 2019
🎄🎅🤶Merry Christmas🎄🎅🤶
Happy Holidays
Glad  tidings from Bideford. Photo credit B. Adams
Santa Calls at Bideford - Photo credit B. Adams
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Explore the Coast and "Country"side of Bideford Bay with the North Devon Focus Picture Tour
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Wednesday 18 May 2016

Community Event to collect North Devon Glove Maker’s Stories for Short Film Series

The Burton Art Gallery & Museum will be hosting a free event to collect stories about the glove industry in north Devon for a new series of short films. Glove Stories is the latest project from community film makers North Devon Moving Image to collect and preserve valuable first hand accounts of life in north Devon.

Gloving was an important industry for centuries with factories in Appledore, Bideford, Great Torrington and Pilton in Barnstaple as well being a source of income for many home workers. The industry came to an end in 2006 when the last factory closed its doors for the final time.

Terry Priscott a former glove worker who runs the The North Devon Glove Industry History Page on Facebook says
"It was once North Devon's biggest employer. If you are local to the area, particularly Great Torrington, it is highly likely that some of your ancestors worked in the glove industry! Gloving is an important part of north Devon's heritage but there are currently no books or other information available on it."

NDMI's Glove Stories project aims to set this right by recording personal reminiscences from those who were associated with north Devon's glove industry and use them to produce a series of short films. The films will be free to watch via NDMI's website and at The Burton Art Gallery & Museum. There will also be a screeening of the series at White Moose Gallery in Barnstaple to complement the Hand to Hand exhibition by local artist Sue on 14 July. 

Amanda McCormack, Creative Director of North Devon Moving Image says 
"We are inviting people to come along to the Burton on Saturday 2 July to share their Glove Stories either by interview on camera or by writing anecdotes on our Glove Stories memory cards. It would be great to see some old photographs and artefacts too." 



History of Glovemaking in North Devon - Images recorded at Great Torrington Museum

History of Glovemaking in North Devon - Images recorded at Great Torrington Museum

 Photos show images recorded at Great Torrington Museum. 

The event runs to coincide with Bideford Heritage Day on Saturday 2 July from 10am to 4pm  at The Burton Art Gallery and Museum Kingsley Road,  Bideford, Devon EX39 2QQ.
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For more information or to offer help volunteering on the day please contact Amanda McCormack on 01271 860610 or email northdevonmovingimage@outlook.com
This community project has been made possible with funding from The Bideford Bridge Trust and Torridge Councillor Peter Christie.  

Monday 17 February 2014

SNAPSHOTS IN AN ALBUM: MEMORIES OF AN EVACUEE IN FAIRY CROSS

I was recently sent this delightful childhood account by Linda Le Merle about her stay in Fairy Cross as an evacuee in 1944, during the Second World War. These are the recollections of  her time in Bideford and in particular, the countryside Parish of Alwington and the hamlet of Ford and Fairy Cross. These are a little girl's "Snapshots in an Album" and we would love to hear from anyone who might be able to fill in the gaps or who recognises the people and places mentioned. If you do then please leave a comment here and a message for Linda.

MEMORIES OF AN EVACUEE IN FAIRY CROSS By Linda Le Merle, née Wolfinden
Strange to say, as I was starting to write a few notes on my experience as an evacuee in Fairy Cross, Devon, I came across another evacuation account written by someone who had been evacuated in 1944 as I was, and who had lived close to me and gone to my Surbiton primary school. Our evacuation began in June, around the time of my eighth birthday when the buzz bombs were droning and dropping over England, and lasted three or four months until it was thought safe to return home. My family had previously been evacuated to Dorset during the “phoney war” in late 1939, and that, too was for a short time only, before we all came back to London while the Blitz was going on – curious! In June 1944 the other evacuee and I must have set off together since all the local schoolchildren were gathered together at an army depot and given their lapel labels before being taken to the railway station, but she went to Cardiff, because, she says, “Later I heard that two trains had somehow got mixed up and in fact we should have gone to Devon.” Mine was the train which did go to Devon and so I came to spend three or four months in the beautiful countryside near Bideford. My father stayed at home in the Home Guard and I set off with my brother Philip and my mother, who was going to be a billeting officer in Bideford.  When young children ask today if we were frightened to be living through the war, I have to say that unless we had actually been bombed out or lost a member of the family, fear was not always a big problem for children – wartime was all we had known.  While our parents were often made ill by fear and stress brought on by the bombing and restrictions, it was change and uncertainty which were the real threats to children’s states of mind as they are in peacetime.  So – the journey started with some excitement, and although my mother was nearby, it was only when I was separated from her and my brother when we arrived in Bideford that I really started to understand that I would be on my own. From that point on my memories of being an evacuee are like snapshots in an album, and I’m sorry not to have any real photos to go with them. The first memory is of walking in a crocodile through the streets of Bideford. Someone – maybe an older worldly-wise child – said cynically that this was so that the good citizens of Bideford could pick out a child they liked. Whatever the truth, most of us spent the night sleeping on the floor of a community hall before being allocated our billets the next day. This was a moment of anxiety – the world would end if I couldn’t be placed with my friend Shirley Bosson.  Somehow it was managed, and somehow all the children were taken to their temporary new homes. At this point the snapshot memory changes from black and white into colour. We found ourselves arriving at the Fairy Cross cottage of Mrs Hockin – or her name might have been Mrs Hocking. There are perfumes and tastes which can transport you straight back to the place where you first experienced them, and to this day the smell of geraniums awakens the memory of when I first came across rows of pots of the scarlet flowers in Mrs Hockin’s cottage living room. From the first moment she seemed to be a kind lady, but she was already 72 years old, which must have accounted for her forgetting that children don’t usually like hot milk with the skin on top – rather a difficult welcome for two homesick girls. I remember the cottage as being cosy, with no running water or bathroom, but I have no recollection of daily routines, food or the layout of the house, apart from the fact that the WC was a privy in the back garden with squares of newspaper hanging on a butcher’s hook behind the door, and that we washed in a pretty china basin in the bedroom, pouring water out of the big matching jug.
School for those few months was in the little church hall which we reached after a short walk through country lanes. We picked sloes from the hedgerows and were free to walk on our own at all times, but this idyllic time was not without one black day. We were all deeply shocked to hear that one girl much younger than ourselves, who sometimes walked with us, had been killed in the lane, crushed between the posts of a fence round the fields and some heavy farm machinery which trundled relentlessly down the lane without seeing her.  At the school there were only two classes for all the children whose ages ranged from five to fourteen. Again, I have no recollection of the routines, except for one vivid memory of how I spent a lot of time there. I was taught to knit, and given a ball of grey string-like thread with which I was to knit a dishcloth. It took most of the time I was at the school, as I remember, because it had constantly to be undone and begun again. Whatever else I learned there, I was left with a skill which proved to be useful for a long time afterwards.
When we were not in school we were free to play in and around the village, but paths to the beach were out of bounds because the beaches themselves were defended against enemy attack. I seem to remember that from somewhere near Portledge House we must have been able to climb on high ground from where we could see the beaches and the sweep of the coast round to Hartland Point, with Lundy Island out to sea. There was a wood behind the cottage where we enjoyed playing, but one day when three of us were running through the trees we managed to kick up a bees’ nest. The first of us escaped lightly, the second – I think it was me – received a few stings, but the third was stung so badly that she had to spend a whole day in bed afterwards.  A happier way of spending our free days was scrumping from trees down the road near the main part of the village. Are there still Stripey Jacks in Fairy Cross – those little apples with red and gold stripes which we ate there in great quantities seventy years ago? Shirley Bosson’s mother came for a visit a few times and I saw my own mother occasionally, but she was kept busy going round the billets checking that the evacuees and their hosts were getting along together as well as could be expected. She herself was comfortably billeted with Mr and Mrs Cock who lived at “Glaisdale”, Abbotsham Road in Bideford, and one day she came to take me by bus to spend a night with her. I remember a genteel elderly couple, and most of all I remember the delicious creamy oatmeal we had for breakfast – very unlike the porridge I was familiar with. Mrs Edith Cock and my mother kept up a correspondence for many years, and on my bookshelves is a little book she sent me “with much love and many kind thoughts” for my 21st birthday. It is called “Character and Conduct”, and the theme for today, February 9th, is knowing how to be ready, a lesson in avoiding procrastination. Perhaps I should have looked at it more often from time to time as Mrs Cock suggested.  At this point my memories, black and white or technicolour, run out. Although we had spent happy times in Devon, I think my mother was quite relieved to take us home when the worst of the buzz-bombs period was over. My own brother, who was billeted in Barnstaple, had got into trouble one day with his friend Derek when they took their catapults out to play. We needed to get home before being accused of being London hooligans! I only once saw Mrs Hockin’s house again when we were driving by after a family holiday in the West Country. I hope it’s still there, and even if it isn’t, it’s still here among my happy memories.  
MEMORIES OF AN EVACUEE IN FAIRY CROSS - By Linda Le Merle, née Wolfinden (All rights reserved)
Explore Alwington and Fairy Cross with the North Devon Focus Picture Tour
Explore Bideford with the North Devon Focus Picture Tour
North Devon History Bytes
Alwington a Millennium Experience published by Alwington Parish Council - Visit Alwington Parish Web Site

Monday 20 January 2014

Appledore and Lundy Granite



Monday 21 May 2012

A Great Bideford Welcome for the Olympic Torch

The crowds turned out in force to welcome the Olympic Torch in Bideford today. Excited children and adults lined the route waving flags and cheering.- Check out some of the pictures which we hope capture this unique occasion.Bideford Torch Bearers - Duncan Withall, Joey Davis and Ross Watts