Showing posts with label County Durham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label County Durham. Show all posts

Sunday, 24 August 2014

Hartlepool .... biographical post number 150.

(Hartlepool Marina)

Usually on a Saturday I can allocate myself to an event, a walk with friends, gardening :-( or be rostered in for a work shift. Occasionally I have a free Saturday when I can check the weather forecast, jump in the car and chase the .... err  ... sun. However like the parallel biographical story here, the location, weather or plans don't always turn out the way you think and there are benefits of character building when the gloomy unexpected turns out better. Maybe you might have to read the twin parallel post twice with different eyes :-)

I've been with this blog for just over four years now and it may be difficult for the regular readers to believe that this is only post number 150. This is an appropriate opportunity for a brief thanks to all commenters for your time and to say I enjoy your material too. Secondly, anybody else who finds their name on the sidebar of my page are appreciated too for a variety of reasons. I did promise some local material every 50 posts but strangely enough this was not the post I had originally earmarked to depict here.

After the uncertainty of 2012, the middle third of 2013 was a peculiar one for me as I had to come to terms with many changes that occurred in both friends and family life leading up to this day out in October 2013. A potentially influential person that crossed my path early in 2012 decided to move on to other things out of my world in a parallel zone the same weekend that these shots were taken.  A lot of my friends opted to go with him and as a result have effectively lost contact in reality. There was much confusion and hurt from those that were left behind over the disunity and the trail of devastation or questions being felt by some, long into 2014.

(Hartlepool's Maritime experience)

Historically, Hartlepool has had an identity crisis on which county it belongs to as it has links to both County Durham and Teesside. The coastal and shipbuilding town of County Durham was incorporated into a new and short lived County of Cleveland from 1974 - 1986. Although having identity with the new area of Teesside, many locals still prefer to be part of County Durham ...

(news.bbc.co.uk/local/tees/hi/people_and_places)

Hartlepool hasn't been the best of towns for many a year and may seem to be a strange place to go for an afternoon out, however it is fighting back thanks to its maritime heritage. The uninitiated may find difficulty in knowing what to call the multi faceted maritime site as a trip to Hartlepool Marina once incorporated a visit to The Hartlepool Historic Quay, the free Museum of Hartlepool and a nearby outlet shopping centre (now closed) selling branded labels called Jacksons Landing.

(Hartlepool's Maritime Experience Entrance)

The adjacent museums were later incorporated under the title of Hartlepool's Maritime Experience with continuing separate identity and entrances. The HMS Trincomalee resides at the Historic Quay while the PSS Wingfield Castle is overseen by The Museum of Hartlepool. On a side note, Jacksons Landing has been a thorn in the side of the development of the area as it has been vacant for 10 years at the time of writing. The council have purchased the site and are planning the less favourable of the options available of housing.

(Hartlepool Historic Quay Back Gate) 
On the this particular day I arrived to find that The Historic Quay was closed for a wedding and I wasn't welcome ... ! Time to think of a plan B as this was meant to be my main subject for the afternoon.

(Window and cycle rack art ... Hartlepool's Maritime Experience)
First port of call is the Museum of Hartlepool next door which wasn't quite the place I wanted to be with the camera.

(PSS Wingfield Castle)
A Crumb of comfort was The PSS Wingfield Castle which is just outside the back of the museum. The Paddle Steamer was built in Hartlepool, launched in 1934 and used as a passenger ferry in The Humber Estuary until the construction of the road bridge.

(PSS Wingfield Castle)

After retirement and during the early 1980's the ship was due to be used as a floating restaurant in Swansea, South Wales but the final resting place was The Museum of Hartlepool as the paddle steamer was too wide to get through the gates into Swansea marina.
It seems poignant that the ship was welcomed home to a place where it would be loved and accepted amongst it's own.

(PSS Wingfield Castle)
The PSS Wingfield Castle may not have become a restaurant in retirement but a coffee shop for the museum given the circumstances is an acceptable substitute.

(Hartlepool Harbour entrance)
The afternoon was quickly coming to an end and my thoughts turned towards sunsets and silhouettes.  I decided to give the main town of Hartlepool a miss and drive to the Headland in search of new material and the entrance of Victoria Dock.

(Hartlepool Headland)
Hartlepool Headland is essentially the original town on a peninsula of land land borders The North Sea and the Victoria Dock area. The image above is taken slightly to the right of the previous picture depicting the 14th century town walls that once enclosed Old Hartlepool.
The importance of Hartlepool grew as a fishing town and was the scene of skirmishes, wars and threats from The Scottish (Robert The Bruce - The English Civil War) and the French. The Headland started to decline as a fishing port during the early nineteenth century and business men tried to revive it with the coal and railway industry. A"new" Hartlepool (otherwise known as West Hartlepool) was born due to the dock adjacent to the present day museum being more accessible. Shipbuilding became prominent which caused a subsequent bombardment from the German Navy in the first World War. Heavy industry and shipbuilding declined after the second World War but the town doesn't give up despite adversity and the redevelopments of the marina and museum area breathed new life into the old dog !

(Andy Capp, Hartlepool)
Reg Smythe, the creator of the newspaper cartoon Andy Capp lived in Hartlepool, no doubt bringing some influences to his work from the town. Looks like Andy is not enjoying watching the sun go down on Hartlepool.

(Victoria Dock, Hartlepool)
Victoria Dock was rather sparse of industry and closed to the public for safety reasons, however I did manage to catch a scene through a hole in the gate ... before being spotted and stalked by an on site security van. The dark clouds weren't being helpful although the strong wind ensured that the ever-changing cloudscapes kept my interest as I waited for the sun to drop. Circumstances can seem gloomy at the time but there is strength and depth given to overcome them as things are not always defined by history or even what was going to happen the following morning.

(Hartlepool Marina)
The next location on the agenda I was making up as I went around the town was Hartlepool Marina (above and title image)

(Hart, Hartlepool Marina)
Usually I have an idea in mind at the start of any photographic day what one of the shots is going to be in the post, (the final image in this case), however the fun of a new location is to take in new experiences, angles and scenes. Having visited the Museum areas many times before with friends and The Headland on a couple of occasions, the new marina development didn't strike me as one that was going to be a glorious photographic moment. Knowledgable regular readers will realise that from my previous work that surprising material can be achieved from locations that don't seem possible.

It was a mystery to me why this stag was in a prominent position on a plinth at the side of a modern harbour.

"Life in the old ... err ... deer" (Hart, Hartlepool Marina)
Growing up in a neighbouring county, the names of these towns are often taken for granted. I researched it later and foolishly discovered that it was a Hart which is the old English name for a stag or a deer. Additionally, the term Le Pool means beside the sea. It turns out that people came here to hunt deer and decided to stay and build a settlement.

(HMS Trincomalee)
Lastly that leaves me with the the silhouette of the Historic Quay and Britains oldest floating warship in Preservation, HMS Trincomalee built in the post Trafalgar and Napoleonic 1817.
A ship with a long and varied career that has too much history to write about here, except to say that like Hartlepool, it is a survivor ! ... http://www.hms-trincomalee.co.uk/#)

(HMS Trincomalee)
Sorry if this post has been a bit of a jigsaw puzzle and bits of it look the same but life is sometimes like that ... different perspectives on the same view.

As a result of something that happened in July 2014, I'm looking forward to putting these events behind me and that just leaves me to quote one last phrase ....   "Every cloud has a silver lining" ... The sun sets on some of the recent past !

(HMS Trincomalee)


Wednesday, 15 December 2010

Durham (3) Palace Green ... in early December


Durham Cathedral and Castle are at opposite ends of a small area of grass called Palace Green. Other historic University buildings line the other two sides of the square in between.

As I headed along South Bailey street and North Bailey street ( The last two street scenes from the previous post), I took a little customary diversion from the route to do what first time visitors do and that is have a quick look at the Cathedral.

The west end... snow on St Bede's chapel (local saint)
Every place has a back door view
This particular weekend must be the only time when the Cathedral is overshadowed by something else and it seems to be quite popular every year...

2009 event
At the point where the street merges from North Bailey into Saddler street (above), I am greeted at the entrance of the official route up to Palace Green by a fanfare of Christmas carols....

student buskers change their tune in December
.... and then the short walk up into the Palace Green only to discover that it is totally covered by a huge marquee.... for Durham Christmas market.... (Yes, I've finally succumbed to the Christmas theme.)
Hark the herald Angels sing
A sample of three interior photos entitled... " I'll get the hang of this thing yet " !! .....

colourful character... err... which one?!

"Here's one made I made earlier"

The Harry potter stall having a bit of mobile trouble !

The exhibitors seem to be allocated the same spot every year ( I was talking to a Photographer displaying his photographic work in a small tent in the market place and he's been trying to get a display table in the warmth of the Palace green marquee for a while). One exhibitor who has a large array display of garden ornaments, opts to camp out in the cold just outside the marquee entrance...

Meerkats ... and a bit more !


Like all good Christmas markets, Santa usually arrives at some point and after a major re-arrangement of presents on his alternative sleigh, is asked to pose for next years official Christmas market photograph...


Durham Castle as I said in the previous post is home to the University and some of the students do very interesting Castle tours during the summer. Those days seem a long way off today...

castle entrance ... welcome for visitors ... prison for students??? !
Another thing of Palace green interest to both the visitor and student is the unlikely object of the postbox!

This reminds me that it is that time of year when I must write my Christmas cards and for the University students to ......  thank their parents for all the money that they have sent them through the year !!

It is time to leave and head home but not before taking a last look inside the town hall in the market place

17th - 19th century under used coffee shop !
Despite the Town hall being available for hire throughout the year for functions, this building was the original home of the Christmas market before it outgrew itself and is now just an overflow coffee shop for the event.

I could have ended the post with the final photo of the day of the railway station platform....

looking to home ... and warmth !

 ... but instead, I'll take you to just outside the railway station where the visitor gets the first and last view


... and a closer inspection of the wall in front of the seat reveals a resident who can enjoy Durham in all of its glory during certain times of the winter only !! ...

"someone has wiped the smile off my face"

Saturday, 11 December 2010

Durham (2) Winter riverside walk


Following on from the last walk, most of the photographs in the second half of the post were of the Silver Street bridge. The above photo is from on top of the bridge. We are going to take a walk along the right hand side of the river here towards the bridge in the distance. Most visitors see this walk in Summer, so I am going to make you feel special by taking you in winter ... 4th December 2010.


Firstly, we gain access to the riverside by the steps. Notice Bella Italia opposite... reasonably priced for a meal, however it is not quite Venice ... but they do squeeze in a few too many window seats as all the diners want one ! Durham Castle in the background was originally built for the Bishop of Durham but is now home to Durham University and was built in the 11th century after the Norman conquest with additions in the 14th century.


The ancient city of Durham stands on a hill inside a severe river bend of the River Wear which starts in the Pennines and enters the North Sea at Sunderland. This is the most spectacular moment of its journey.





Although there was a church on this site prior to the Cathedral for the chapel of St Cuthbert and The Venerable Bede ( two famous North East of England saint ), Durham Cathedral was constructed essentially within 40 years starting at the end of the 11th century. The towers were added later in the 13th and 15th centuries with on going major repair work going on throughout its history.


The Old Fulling Mill was originally a watermill from its construction in the 17th century and is now home to an archeology museum with the University looking after it. The above view is probably more famous for annual calendar publications and local Christmas cards.

Everyone knows about the Oxford and Cambridge boat race, but not many people know about a lesser tournament between the Universities of Newcastle and Durham... The River Tyne versus The Wear...

The oppositions boat house !!


I scrambled down an icy slope near the river to get the above and below picture... I hope you appreciate the effort .... and danger !!


Just before crossing the bridge, I spotted a wintry scene up a slope that seemed worthy of a picture...


After crossing the bridge, I headed back in the direction of the Cathedral and came past an unusual door...


But I was left wondering as I walked further along this street.......

South Bailey street


spot the difference... later edit update

Where were all the people ? ! .......


To be continued....

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