Dorrie Waugh.

Dorrie Waugh - Kirklands Bridge Club President

Sports and pastimes were an important part of our society, culture and upbringing long before the advent of digital media, computer games and television. Board games like Ludo, Snakes & Ladders and Monopoly were only marginally less popular than family card games such as Snap, Sevens and Beggar-my-neighbor.  Bridge is one popular card game that has evolved into an internationally competitive activity, the pastime of Omar Sharif and Warren Buffet amongst many others. However Bridge is not just for the rich or famous but is played in village halls, clubs and family gatherings all around the country.

One such Rubber Bridge Club is celebrating 35 years of existence in the West Riding village of Menston this autumn. Formed by Dorrie Waugh and several friends, after a notice was pinned up in a local amenity centre, over 20 people turned up on the first night in 1974. With Dorrie as president since inception the club has grown and prospered by sticking firmly to its Rubber Bridge roots and eschewing the duplicate version of the game. Subscriptions are returned in the form of prizes or subsidised parties and free Champagne is promised for the 35th anniversary party.

The rubbers are contested for small stakes and it is a good night if you win 50p and a bad night if you loose anything. Even poor hands may win a cash prize for a Yarborough but a grand slam is worth £2.50 – riches indeed. Long may this and similar clubs thrive and prosper.

Partnership

We had a partnership misunderstanding. I assumed my partner knew what he was doing.

My partner is 20 years behind the times. He still thinks you need high cards to bid.

Your play was much better tonight and so were your excuses.

We play forcing hesitations.

If I did everything right, I wouldn’t be playing with you.

My partner leads the 8 from a 98 doubleton because his teacher told him “eight ever, nine never?”

Know the difference between a serial killer and a bridge partner? Answer: You can reason with the serial killer.

“You know, you may not be the worst player in the world, …. but if that person should die….”

Where is the hand you held during the bidding dummy?

After playing bridge a pair go to the same pub and start going over the hands again.
Finally Jim says: “Bill, don’t we know anything but bridge? Can’t we discuss something else, anything else, movies, politics sports, sex?
“Sex, says Bill, I had sex diamonds to the king-queen..”

Bridge Tall Tales

A notable bridge player in his eighties was asked why he bid every time it was his turn. He replied: “At my age the bidding may not get back around to me again.”

Bridge is a great comfort in old age. It also helps you get there faster.

They were at a concert. Said she, a bridge addict, “What’s that book the conductor keeps looking at?”
“That’s the score,” answered her escort.
“Oh. Who’s vulnerable?”

Helen Sobel was once asked how it felt playing with a great expert (Charles Goren). “Ask him,” she replied.

South had started with four hearts originally and had to guess who had the HQ. He started by leading the HJ from his hand. West went into an Oscar winning performance trying to make South think he had the queen and finally played low. South, taken in by all of this, also played low as did Roth! When Roth’s partner saw that Alvin had the queen and could have defeated 7NT by taking the trick, he asked Roth why he hadn’t taken the trick with the queen. “Because I thought you had it”, said Roth.

 

Navvies Memorial Otley

Otley museum is a Yorkshire treasure that charts the industry and life of folk in Otley though the exhibits and informative volunteers. There are currently good research facilities where you can access the principal Museum Archive or the Urban Development Archive and conduct family or historical research. Current exhibits include details of locally discovered Neolithic bodies 5,000 years old that are thought to have suffered from Spina Bifida type health problems through new Rag Rugs from local children to Victorian coat hangers from gents outfitters and photographs of old farming families.

Local industries provided many of the commercial exhibits with a lot of detail from the heart of the printing machinery industry and the birth of the Wharfedale Printing machine. Notwithstanding the industrial connection the heart of the collection is an accumulation of all things that have gone to make up the life of a great market town in the West Riding.

Currently the museum is open Monday, Tuesday and Friday 10.00-12.30 and staffed exclusively by volunteers. Visit the Museum soon as the Mechanics Institute or Civic Hall where it is located is due for refurbishment. All the exhibits will have to be put into storage and it not certain that the self-funding charity will be able to afford the rent due to the council when the premises are reopened. Local communities need connections to the past and the museum deserves to be given every chance to entertain and educate future generations. Otley also needs all the attractions it can muster to encourage day trippers and visitors to the market and the surrounding countryside.

One special collection is of ‘Concealed Shoes’ which are individuals shoes discovered in old buildings. Since the 13th century buildings have had shoes concealed in the fabric, in walls, chinneys, roofs or under floorboards. Probably placed there to ward of witches and evil spirits they were meant to bring good luck or avoid bad luck. if you find such a shoe it is worth reporting to the museum for deatiled record keeping but leave it in place in case evil spirits do exist.

Biblography on Concealed Shoes.
Otley Museum concealed Shoes found around Otley Research File by appointment.
Edwardd J C Swaysland Boot & Shoe Design & Manufacture 1905 Museaum copy
Swann, J.M. web story and , ‘Shoes Concealed in Buildings’, Northampton Museum Journal 6 (December 1969) pp.8-21.
Ralph Merrifield, ‘Folklore in London Archaeology’, The London Archaeologist (Winter 1969) vol.1, no.5.
Ralph Merrifield, The Archaeology of Ritual and Magic (London, Batsford, 1987).
Denise Dixon-Smith, ‘Concealed Shoes’, Archaeological Leather Group Newsletter no.6 (Spring 1990).
Olaf Goubitz, ‘Verborgen Schoeisel’ in Westerheem VIII no.5 (1989) pp.233-39.
Margaret Baker, The Realms of Gold (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson 1975; Penguin 1977) p.357.
J.L. Nevinson, Letter to The Times 5 February 1934, asking for reasons for concealments.
Col. Pen Lloyd, The History of the Mysterious Papillon Hall (Leicester 1977).

The Architecture of Otley is featured in the Otley Museum but there are many places for visitors to discover. The above photograph is a detail from the memorial to the Navvies who built and died during the construction of the Bramhope Railway Tunnel.

 

Bolton Abbey Photos Autumn

bolton-abbey-mist

Bolton Abbey in the mist. A beautiful setting

A view through the autumn trees

A view through the autumn trees

Related

 

Book Cover

This book examines the detail behind each of 13 murders by the Yorkshire Ripper and the resulting police investigations. There is less said about the seven attempted murders but it does highlight the possibility of several other unsolved cases including 2 male deaths that could be attributed to Sutcliffe. Michael Bilton in ‘Beyond Belief’ focuses also on the victims and their lives, rather than glossing over them to focus on the criminal Peter Sutcliffe. Much of the newspaper reporting in 1981 covered Sutcliffe’s time from being a Grave digger at Bingley in the 1960′s until his arrest in Sheffield and sentencing at the Old Bailey in May 1981

Book Cover

‘This book is different as it tells the story in some detail of the effects on the son of the victim, his family neighbours and friends. It really is an eye opener and reminds us all and especially those responsible for investigating crime and those responsible for the future of the villain to consider much more fully the effects the murderer has on those bereaved and their well being. Very well written and though detailed is not ” Heavy”. It is to this sons credit that he came through his trauma eventually and a credit to the author for sensitivity and thorough research.’ with thanks for Amazon review by Rev. J Cooper.

Anna Rogulsky was attacked in Keighley in July 1975 and Wilma McCann and Joan Harrison were murdered later that year. Emilly Jackson, Marcella Claxton, Jayne McDonald, Marilyn Moore, Marguerite Walls, Upadhya Bandara, Jacqueline Hill and Irene Richardson were all found dead in Leeds during the 5 years of horror perpetrated by Sutcliffe. Murders also took place in Halifax, Huddersfield, Bradford and of Vera Millward in Manchester.

On 2 January 1981 Olivia Reivers was getting into a car when the police stopped to talk to the driver. He asked to go relieve himself in some bushes where he stowed a knife and Ball Pein Hammer. Meanwhile police realised the number plates were false and took Sutcliffe, then calling himself Peter Williams, into Hammerton Road police station before transferring him to Dewsbury. Another knife was discovered in the toilets at the police station and eventually Sutcliffe confessed he was ‘The Ripper’.

 

Brass Band HQ

Where there’s muck there’s Brass Bands and where there is a lot of brass there are Silver Bands. ‘The Cloth-Cap’ music of the working class man has strong links in Yorkshire and with Yorkshire businesses.

For up to date news and reports there is a weekly magazine The British Bandsman ‘the leading international Brass Magazine’ with too large a circulation to feature on Private Eye.
The Bandsman has a data base of 108 brass and silver bands in Yorkshire without a single Salvation Army band listed. Exactly half the Yorkshire bands are in West Yorkshire including such names as Gawthorpe Brass, Frickley & South Elmsall Brass Band, Hammonds Saltaire Band, Holme Silver Band (1), Meltham & Meltham Mills Band and Brighouse & Rastrick Band. In South Yorkshire you can hear Rockingham Band, Carlton Main Frickley Colliery Band,Grimethorpe Colliery Band and Stocksbridge Band amongst others. North Yorkshire has many village bands and this is just a selection, Knaresborough Silver Band, Leyburn Brass Band, Muker Silver Band, Summerbridge & Dacre Silver Prize Band, Reeth Brass Band and York Railway Institute Band.  So if you are thinking of joining or rejoining have a look for a band near you (or not so near if the sound of your practicing travels).

Widely accredited as the first amateur band was that of Stalybridge Old Band in 1814 followed by the world famous Black Dyke Mills Band formed in Queensbury Yorkshire in 1816. Below is a photograph of the Keld Village band from a book of old photographs that I can no longer trace.

Keld Village Band

I am indebted to The History of Brass bands for the following musical quotations

‘Brass Bands are all very well in their place –

outdoors and several miles away’

Sir Thomas Beecham

Come if you dare! Our trumpets sound’. Purcell

…the brass band movement has a great future]:

‘It has a great present, if only people would realise it’

Gustav Holst

‘God tells me how the music should sound,

but you stand in the way’

Arturo Toscanini to a trumpet player

‘Never look at the trombones, it only encourages them’

Richard Strauss

‘Military justice is to justice what military

music is to music’

Groucho Marx

 
 
 
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