Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Antiques and Gardens

I have two BIG problems:
 
 #1....  I LOVE antiques...but am mostly drawn to big, hard to ship, antiques.
#2....  I LOVE English gardens....but my home is in the desert.
 
Such trials.
 
Especially since I know about the Ardingly Antiques Fair which is held 5 times a year.
Just hop on a train to Heyward Heath from Victoria Station, catch a bus or taxi to
 Ardingly Showground, and you have acres of antique heaven. 
Of course, it took much of the day to understand what really grabs me, and what types of things I may be interested in looking for in the future.
 
My finds:
 
French Coal Bucket...thinking a plant in it, or just out in the garden.
 
 
Bugle, ricer, and serving tong thingys.
 
 
I know.  Random and unrelated.
 
Was a little nervous bringing home the bugle to a trumpet player.
 
 
Twas much more exciting after doing research on it. 
The lion holding a cross is the Regimental Insignia from the Kumaon Regiment, which is the most decorated regiment of the Indian Army...can barely read "Kumaon" under the lion.
 
 
Looking forward to going back on July 24.
 
Next problem, English gardens.
 
Rick had a meeting in Birmingham, so of course I went. 
The Winterbourne House and Gardens were awesome!
Especially the 7 acres of gardens and having lunch overlooking them.
 
 
 
My favorite....filbert nut trees made into an arbor.
Nuts drop onto the path...much easier than gathering little nuts in the grass like my Mom did.
 
 
So much beauty.
 

There were a bunch of different gardens separated by tall hedges or walls
 with openings to get into the next garden. 
So charming.
 
So why are English gardens a problem?
They don't have to water them to keep them green.
Just not sure we could do this in Utah.
(figure this out for me, Ryan)
 
Then work for Rick and off to the Birmingham Botanical Gardens for me.
 
 
LOVE columbine....
 
 
Fun way to support climbing things....
 
 
Fun times!  Beautiful things!
 
 
 


Thursday, June 20, 2013

Liverpool, Manchester and Halifax

If your husband is driving to places in England for the week,
it's advisable to hop in the car and go with him!
 
Liverpool
 
Having never been this far north, I was surprised to find the sky looking like this at 10:15 p.m...
 
 
...and like this when I woke up at 4:30 a.m. because we'd left our curtains open.
 

Sooooo....what to do in Liverpool.....
 
Cross the Mercy River by ferry and do Family History on the Wirral Peninsula, of course.
 
 
 
After 2 days, several cemeteries, Wirral Archives, churches, walking, etc.,
I found no new info...
all I have is a little better feel for where Harry Hughlings' daughter Ann and her family lived.
 
SO, time to focus on Liverpool!
And what's Liverpool famous for???
 
 
The tour was quite pricey for what you got.
This part was much cooler....
The Cavern....where the Beatles were discovered!
 
 
What do you do there?  Walk down 2 stories, enjoy a drink (don't worry, it was juice for us),
listen to a performer doing a nice job singing Beatles songs,
watch the mostly overweight, balding, graying,  aging clientele re-live a portion of their youth (swaying, dancing, singing),
and wonder how people could stand being stuffed in this small place back then---with cigarette smoke (banned now), alcohol, dancing/swooning/sweaty bodies,
 walls dripping because of lack of ventilation.... 
we were happy to be there but happy to leave before it got REALLY crowded!
 
 
I also went to the Maritime museum....
 
 
which also houses the....
 
Posted specifically for our granddaughter Macee...
you MUST ask Brooke if you don't understand this reference...HYSTERICAL!
 
This is all located at the beautiful Albert Dock on the Mercey River.
 
 
Must do one church in Liverpool....The Anglican Cathedral, took 70 years to build, was finished in 1974, is 4th largest cathedral in the world.
 
 
 
 
View from the top....our hotel was by the space needle thing.
 
 
 
Manchester
 
Manchester was a cleaner city than Liverpool.  Quite liked it.
I enjoyed the John Rylands Library the most.  Beautiful and full of really cool old, old books.
 
 
This is a copy of a papyrus fragment from the Gospel of John.  It was in book form, not a scroll, because it was written on both sides.  This shows both sides....  Yup, saw the actual fragment, and it's translation is nearly the same as the King James Bible...cool.
 
 
 
Halifax
 
This was a nice day...no business meetings, just taking me to do Family History. 
 
First plan:  Find 50 Hopwood Lane,
where Harry Hughlings (brother to Ann) and his family lived...
 
 
 
2nd plan:  Find Holy Trinity Church,
where Ann Hughlings and Solomon Pitchforth were married. 
 And other relatives.
And Samuel Pitchforth (my g-g-grandfather) was christened.
And all of Harry Hughlings children.
And where Ann's mother is buried.
And several of Ann and Solomon's children.
And Ann's brother Harry and wife Mary.
And several of their children.
 
It took asking many, many different people, but we finally found it!
 
 
It is no longer used as a church.  The cemetery is gone, probably just paved over.  Underneath the bin are headstones in the blacktop.  Against a wall by the car park are headstones precariously placed.  At the side, headstones propped against the building.  At the back of the church, one nice section where a few headstones have been placed.
 
 
 
 
May have shed a few tears. 
 
 So much of our family history happened here and is no longer findable.
I tried contacting the vicar (this congregation merged with his) but no response.
 
Kind of heartbroken.
 
At least they left some of the stained glass windows and are fixing the spire....
 
 
 
Sigh.


Sunday, June 2, 2013

Finally!!!!

It has finally happened.....we got the car on Friday!
 
 
It's a dark gray Honda Accord.  Complete with GPS, which is a necessity here.
Only problems....steering wheel is on the wrong side of the car...
...and they drive on the wrong side of the road...
...and my sweetheart almost sat on me after pumping gas because
he forgot which side to get in on.
:)
Rick's a good driver.  Me...still unknown if I'll ever dare drive here.
 
So we got out of town.
 
Friday we went north to Hertford (say it Hartford or Heartford).
John Powell Hughlings (brother to Ann) lived there for 8-10 years where he was a Chemist...
...which is a pharmacist.
While there he had possibly 5 children, only one who survived.  Still couldn't identify 3 of those who died as his....but probably are.
The Hertford Directory for 1837 and 1838 AND
 the 1841 Census place him on Fore Street. 
There is a building that has been a pharmacy since 1804 on Fore Street.
Notice "Chemist" below the window.
 
 
There were two Chemists on Fore Street...
Did they work together?  Is this the place?  Could be.
This building is probably 3-400 years old.  Some claim it's haunted.
 
Think on this.  John Powell Hughlings worked here then moved to London before his sister,
 Ann Hughlings Pitchforth died crossing the plains in 1846.
Utah wasn't even settled yet.
 
Saturday took us south to Beaulieu (say it Bew-lee, think beautiful place)
which is about 2 hours away and is near Portsmouth.
Beautiful drive....fields of yellow flowers.  I'm told the crop is rapeseed, which makes canola oil.
 
 
Love the deer crossing signs....much cuter deer than in Utah.
 
 
 
John Wilkey is from Portsmouth and married Ann Gregory from Beaulieu.
We didn't really go to do family history, just to get a feel for the place.
This is what we found....
 
 
Remains of Beaulieu Abbey...founded in 1205 by Cistercian Monks.
 
 
Beaulieu Parish Church, formerly part of the Abbey, still in use.
This view is from inside the Abbey grounds.
Gregory relatives in Beaulieu most likely attended here.
 
 
 
Inside....
 
 
 
There is also Beaulieu Manor which has been owned by the Montague Family since the 1500s.
It is currently used as a residence, but they allow tours of part of it.
 
 
Looking from the grounds towards Beaulieu is amazing!
 
 
We also went to the National Motor Museum which is part of the ticket, 
and the Lotus 7 rally was going on...
 
 
The hotel, The Montague Arms, where we ate lunch....
 
 
Cool thatched roof...notice the detail at the top.
 
 
Sign outside restroom at a Car Park in town.
 
 
Twas a very enjoyable day.
 
We were home about 10 minutes and got a call...
extra tickets to the London Philharmonic Orchestra playing
songs from Oscar winning movies....
 
brush hair, eat a banana and run out the door.
 
Monday, London Symphony Orchestra.
Saturday, London Philharmonic Orchestra.
Hertford.
Beaulieu.
Pretty awesome!
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


London Symphony Orchestra

What to do on a Monday night for Family Home Evening when your husband's out of town....
 
If it's May 27, 2013,
you hop on the tube,
get off at Charing Cross,
 and walk across the street to
 Trafalgar Square.
 
If you have the National Gallery behind you....
 
 
...and Lord Nelson towering in front of you....
 
 
...and thousands of people there with you...
 
...and Karla from Spain, Chile, and our Brittania YSA Ward...
 
 
...you might be lucky enough to spend the next 1 1/2 hours listening to...
 
The London Symphony Orchestra play
Berlioz's  "Symphonie Fantastique"!
 
 
 
Since I enjoy classical music, but it has been known to lull me to sleep,
standing to listen was actually a very good plan.
 
 
 
Twas fantastique!  Someone pinch me!!