30th. Year, MMXVI Founde d Pe nrith, 1st. Dec. 1986. Issue No. 805 Brougham HallHall NewsNews B.H.C.T. PATRON - The Rt. Hon. LORD September 2016 BROUGHAM AND VAUX, C.B.E.. 1986 Thirty Years 2016 OF BROUGHAM HALL N E W S

CHRISTOPHER TERRY was given a Set To Guide and very fitting send-off on Monday, 22nd. Watch Over Us August, with a fu- —————————— ———— neral service at St. Christopher Terry Now at Andrew’s Church in Rest at Brougham Hall Penrith, attended by a great many family and friends, which was followed then by his interment at Brougham Hall. Here, he looks set to guide and watch over all that is done in the future at his beloved Brougham Hall. … … ... CHRISTOPHER TERRY: Pictorial Commemoration Continues … … - Pages 378 to 385 Obituary: Page 387

Deep In Thought: A visitor to the Craft &. Gift Fair on Bank Holiday Monday (29th August) reads the Hall Trust ’s informa- tion board - stood alongside Christopher Terry’s resting place, and close to his tower office. Inset: Mr. Terry is seen busy out- doors in sunshine in a Main Courtyard scene from June 1992.

Brougham Hall News Sept’r. 2016 Also in This Edition ...... Issue 805 Page 377 Craft & Gift Fair ;; Car Shows ;; Canal Group ;; Blencathra CHRISTOPHER TERRY — 1938-2016

In Unit 11 , 11 August ‘96. Christopher T., with Rachel and Annie A Meeting of Mawson after their epic ‘Brougham Hall [Like] Minds…?! in Time’ concert, 26th. August, 2001 — With Syd Walker and, Below, he gives the Mawsons high Near Main Door praise that day, alongside the Clarsach . 18th. Oct’r, ’97.

In Unit Ten , 31st. October, 2001, … and busy with Shawn Williamson and Shaun Cullen, 31st Working at Recreating the Brougham Oct’r, 2001. Hall Brewery , 13th. April, 2002.

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 378 - [email protected] A PICTORIAL COMMEMORATION Christopher Terry seen mixing some cement for the work on Unit 11 during Summer 1998.

Up for The Trip ! - Jono Terry and his Hall News 453 , of 9th. September, parents Alison and Christopher at the 2002, had its own motoring section! ‘Roman Road’ dig of November 1992.

Now Cleaning the Windows of a new Office for Hall Trust secretary Julia Churchill on 12th. December, 2003.

Mr. Terry busy on ‘Stables’ Roof Lead Drain Work, on 28th. June, 2004.

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 379 - [email protected] CHRISTOPHER TERRY — 1938-2016

Driving Seat: In an Alvis car at the Hall’s first show by Cumbria Clas- sic Car Club , 12 September 2004.

Driveway Work with Kevin Tanner, 18th. February, 2005. RABY TREK

‘Lighting-Up Time’ in the “Guard House”: C.T. with Chris Ford of CycleActive on 3rd. March, 2005.

Christopher Terry is shown to the right in this group at Raby Castle, County Durham, on 3rd. September, 2006. Christopher Terry with Lord Others in this group include Lord [Michael] 5th. Brougham &. Vaux, [Michael] Brougham (back to camera) C.B.E., on 3 September, 2006, the and, in all his regalia, the then High day of the Raby Castle Motorcade. Sheriff of Cumbria, Robin Burgess.

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 380 - [email protected] A PICTORIAL COMMEMORATION

Catching Up on News in the Café , at With David Tanner, Re-Positioning the 20th. Dec’r., ’07, Christmas Party stones near the Courtyard Well on 12 that launched the Claytons’ tenancy. March 2008 ( Cycle Hub Launch Day)

Working at the Carriage House, with Jim Lockhart, 20th. April, 2008. Then Christopher Terry greets visitors that day, with the Carriage House beyond.

Piers Picking the Merry’s Bones From Greek the Old Sphinx, Smokehouse or the following its “Lad y unexpected Lion- closure after esses”, 22 years ; arrive ; 5 Oct’r, 11th. August 2008. 2009.

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 381 - [email protected] CHRISTOPHER TERRY — 1938-2016

“Hitchin’ a Ride”, “‘Cloisters’ Chill” 16th. May, 2004. 21st. Jan., 2011.

Christopher Terry and Jim Lock- hart make a start on the “Atrium” on the west side of the Lord Chan- Admiring Bentley at Cumbria Classic cellor’s Den; 23rd. January, 2013. Car C lub show, 2nd. September, 2012.

Not One — But Two ! Having only recently acquired one Brougham Carriage , Christopher Terry studies another — a model, during Meeting Up with Friends from the 24 July 2003 NA DFAS crafts group at Globe Royal Hall Visit. Theatre event; 6 September 2014.

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 382 - [email protected] A PICTORIAL COMMEMORATION

Tending to the Hall’s Golden Jubilee Library ( Unit 12 ) Duties; May 2000. Barbecue; 3rd. June, 2002.

“Meeting Old “We’ll All Miss Him!” Friends!” With Annie Mawson and Michael Lawson-Johnson of Sunbeams Music Trust on Easter Poignant: Christopher’s “Eggstravaganza” favourite corner in the Sunday, 5th. BettyAnn’s Tea Parlour ; April, 2015. Monday 29 August 2016. THE TERRY BOYS — Jonathan, 14, and Jimmy, 11, are seen where this wall alongside the B.6262. road is repaired following the removal of a tree-stump in Sept’r., 2004.

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 383 - [email protected] CHRISTOPHER TERRY — 1938-2016 Lawrence Takes a Bow ! At Brougham Hall’s Hall Debut, 28 July ’15. ‘Wartime Weekend’, May 2016.

Lawrence Photo.: BHCT / CT Thanksgiving Service Guide

©* Copyright: Fred Cameron Wilson and thethe Cumberland & Westmorland Herald .. Above: C.T. with his prized Anti—Aircraft Shell , presented to Major Charles Terry R.A., TD., after being one of the first fired at With Diane Butcher, Turkey, 27 Nov ’13. ‘D-Day’, 6th June 1944, and also Hall News’

“Review” image of the Normandy Invasion, Taking to at which Major Terry, C.T.’s father, was The Hills : responsible for offshore bombardment plans.

— CT goes Hillwalking on the Isle of Harris, in Outer Hebrides, North-West , in August 2013. * Other Photos Pages 384 & 385: B.H.C.T. Images.

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 384 - [email protected] A PICTORIAL COMMEMORATION

Resplendent in White Jacket, and with Jonathan ‘Jono’ Terry, in May 2008.

Enjoying a Seaside Walk in the Ayton Castle (Berwick-upon- Tweed) area in March 2016.

“At Home.” — Gathering at High Head Castle, Ivegill, Carlisle, with Jono, Piers Merry and Anna [Nowak], C.T. [and pal], and Jim Terry, in July 2012.

Beach Walk:

On the Sands near Lossie- mouth (and Gordonstoun School ) in July 2009.

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 385 - [email protected] The Service of Thanksgiving Order of Service TRIB UTE and Remembrance for the life of

Christopher Antony Patrick Terry READING ENTRANCE M USIC ————————————————————————————-——— Nim rod By Jim T erry

Activities at Penrith and Brougham Hall

READING WELCOME AND INTRODUCT ION By Katy T erry Rev erend Alan M aguire

REFLECT IVE M USIC Mozart’s L audate Dom inum HYM N

Immo rtal, inv isible, God only wise, In ligh t access ible h id from our ey es. READING Most blessèd, most g lorious, th e Ancient o f Days, By Jonathan T erry Alm ighty, victo rious, thy g reat n ame we p raise.

Un res ting, Unhasting, and silent as light, READING No r wanting, thou rulest in might; By Charlie T erry Thy justice like mountains high soaring abov e

Thy clouds which are fountains o f goodn ess an d love. REFLECT IVE M USIC To all life thou g ives t, to both g reat and s mall; Mozart’s Ave Verum Corpus In all life thou giv est, the tru e life of all; We b lossom and flou rish as leav es on th e tree, And with er and p erish; bu t naugh t ch ang es th ee. PR AYERS OF PE NITE NCE Rev erend A. M aguire Great Fath er of g lory , pure Fath er of light, Thine angels ado re thee, all v eiling th eir sight; And laud we wou ld rend er: O h elp us to s ee THE COLLECT ’Tis only the s plend our o f light hid eth th ee. Rev erend A. M aguire

H Y MN HYM N Chris’s family thank you for joining them

The Lord’s my shepherd, I’ll not want, at this Service of He makes me down to lie And did those feet in an cient tim e in pastures green; he leadeth me Walk upon ’s mountains g reen ? Thanksgiving and Remembrance. the quiet waters by. And was the h oly Lamb of God Following the Service, everyone is My soul he doth restore again, On England ’s pleas ant p astu res seen ? and me to walk doth make invited to Brougham Hall, where Chris within the paths of righteousness, And did the countenan ce divin e will be laid to rest. e’en for his own name’s sake. Shine fo rth upon ou r cloud ed hills?

Yea, though I walk in death’s dark vale, And was Jerusalem builded h ere Refreshments will be available. y et will I fear n on e ill. Among those d ark s atan ic mills ? For thou art with me, and thy rod And staff me comfort still. Bring me my bo w of bu rning gold ! My table thou hast furnished in presence of my foes; Bring me my arro ws of des ire! my head thou dost with oil anoint Bring me my spear! O clouds, unfo ld! and my cup overflows. Bring me my ch ariot o f fire!

Goodness and mercy all my life I will no t cease from m ental fight, shall surely follow me. No r shall my swo rd sleep in my h and, And in God’s house for evermore My dwelling place shall be. Till we h ave b uilt J erusalem In England’s green and p leasant land. BIBLE READING By Hugh Terry Revelation 21:1-7 (KJV) COM MENDAT ION If desired, donations in memory of Chris A D D R E S S Rev erend A. M aguire which will be divided between Reverend A. Maguire St. Andrew’s Church and P R A Y E R S Brougham Hall Charitable Trust THE DISM ISSAL may be made at the Service. THE LO RD’S PRAYER

Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed by thy name ; thy Alternatively, donations for Brougham kingdom come; thy will be done; on earth as it is in heaven. EXIT MUSIC Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our tresp asses, The old sign atu re tun e fo r Th e Tes t Match Hall Charitable Trust may be sent as we forgive those who trespass against us. And le a d u s n o t Special an d the cu rrent s ignature tun e for Match c/o. Richardsons Funeral Directors, into temptation; but deliver us from evil. For thin e is th e kingdom, the power, and the glory, for ever and eve r . A m e n . of The Day Victoria Road, Penrith, CA11 8HR

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 386 - [email protected] Brougham Hall Conservation and Rebuilding Projects Kindly Supported by …

Story Courtesy: Cumberland &. Westmorland Herald , stonemasonry, by working on the project. OBITUARY — Saturday, 20th. August. … He married his second wife, Alison, in 1989 and the LAGS Around Brougham Hall have been flying couple had two children, Jonathan and Jim, before they F at half -mast after the death of the man who saved were divorced in 1996. It was also during the late 1980s the Grade II listed building — and 700 years of significant that he acquired his home at High Head Castle, Ivegill, British history associated with it — from the bulldozers. near Carlisle, which was ravaged by fire in December Tributes were paid to 77-year-old Christopher Antony 1956, and had later been threatened with demolition. Patrick Terry, of Ivegill, who died peacefully at Carlisle’s Both High Head and Brougham Hall are now classified Cum berland Infirm ary just 12 months after he was first as Grade II listed buildings. diagnosed with cancer. Originally, Brougham Hall got into the condition in He was born in 1938 in Alverstoke, Hampshire, and which Christopher found it because the fourth Lord was eldest of four boys. After the outbreak of World War Brougham went spectacularly bankrupt in the 1930’s., II, the family moved to Gosport, near Portsmouth, where but it is now the home of fifteen small businesses, which his paternal grandfather was a naval admiral. employ an average of 62 full- and part-time individuals, Christopher did not meet his father until he was six and it attracts between 60,000 and 100,000 visitors a years old, on V.E. Day in May, 1945, because he had year. Christopher was fascinated with history, especially been on active service throughout the war — he later lost the Roman period and, during the early-1990’s, he his father when he was fourteen years old. enlisted the help of the Royal Artillery to restore Par- After the war the family lived in Somerset before set- son’s Lodge gun battery in Gibraltar. As an amateur ar- tling in Witley, Surrey. Christopher attended St. George’s chaeologist, he worked on digs in Turkey and Greece. Catholic School , Weybridge, before going to study archi- In 2014, he achieved one of his lifetime ambitions tecture at University College London in the late-1950s. when he flew with the R.A.F. to Ascension Island, before He was a keen cricketer and was a member of the catching the postal ferry to St. Helena, where he spent Marylebone Cricket Club [ MCC ] for more than 50 years. three weeks studying the ric h history of that island. As a swing-bowler, he captained his beloved Sydenhurst He had wanted to make the journey because, almost Ramblers for many years and toured with the club, both 100 years earlier, his grandfather had visited the place in the and abroad. where Napoleon was famously exiled. In late June this He also worked for Imperial Tobacco Company , was year, in what he described as the “pinnacle” of his ca- chief executive officer of Reliance Security Services and reer, he gave a speech to the Thackeray Society, at Lon- ran M otc om bs champagne and oyster bar in Knights- don’s Reform C lub in Pall Mall, about Henry Brougham, bridge, London, which was the place for celebrities to be who was known as the “great reformer” and was Lord seen during the 1970’s. Christopher married his first Chancellor of England from 1830 to 1835. wife, Janet, in 1968, and the couple had two children, Katy said: “He spoke for an hour without notes. He Katy and Charlie. It was during their honeymoon in the was at one of his weakest points in his health and yet Lake District that they first saw Brougham Hall which, completed his speech verbatim in front of an important even then, was threatened with demolition, and they re- audience. It was remarkable, when I told those around solved to make sure this would not happen. me that he was ill they were amazed because he recited Their time in Cumbria was also memorable because, such an excellent and compelling speech. after forgetting to put on the hand brake of their Ford “Dad really knew the ancestors and history of this Zodiac , when they returned from a walk they had to place, as he did the architecture.” enlist the help of a local farmer to tow their car out of She said that, since his diagnosis and subsequent Ennerdale. During the drive back home there was still treatment, Christopher had fought a “strong and brave water swilling around the inside of the vehicle. fight”. Katy said her father was “stubborn” and “a maver- The couple divorced in 1977 and, in 1985, Christopher ick” but was also a thoughtful, unique person and a acquired Brougham Hall when he bought Beacon B uild- “romantic with rose-tinted glasses. He really adored ers , the company which ow ned the site and had planned those closest to him. He had a very big heart,” she said. to redevelop it as housing. The planned homes were Jim said his father was “definitely the last of a kind”. eventually moved outside the walls. A year later the Diane Butcher, Christopher’s partner of four years, de- Broug ham H all Charitable T rust was formed. It was scribed him as a “quintessential Englishman”. dedicated to restoring the Fourteenth-Century Hall to its As well as his partner and four children, Christopher former glory and has gone on to become one of the larg- leaves five grandchildren — Edward (10), Henry (seven), est country house restoration projects in England. Alice (five), Florence (three) and one-year-old Lawrence. Christopher was also a champion of disadvan- taged youngsters and it is Brougham Hall News 805. B.H.C.T. thought that up to 250 B.H.C.T. young people started their Printed on Friday, 16th. Sept., 2016, M M X VI training, in trades such as by ALISTAIR AYNSCOUGH . M M X VI

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 387 - [email protected] FINE SUCCESS OF HALL’S SECOND CRAFT AND GIFT FAIR Saturday, 27th., to Monday, 29th. August, 2016. ‘We’re Really Looking Forward to Visiting This Beautiful Area of England’ HIS IS a New Venue for the Creative Crafts Association, their own website reports — “… and we are sure that it will Tprove to be a superb Bank Holiday destination . We are really looking forward to visiting this beautiful area of England. ” This was how this popular and well-established arts-and-crafts movement approached their two Craft and Gift Fairs here at Brougham Hall this year. For them, and Brougham Hall itself, the decision to come here has proved a very good and fruitful one. For 2016 the Creative Crafts Association set out a season of no less than fifty-nine events in a wide range of “carefully-chosen” venues including Garden Centres, County Shows and historic buildings. They had already been to Brougham Hall — during the late-Spring Bank Holiday on the last weekend in May — but came back for the last weekend of August, as the photographs in this photo-feature show. This time, their well-attended event was blessed with some very warm and gloriously-sunny weather. The Creative Crafts Association have been organising and running crafts fairs since the late-1980’s., and are now the most- successful organisers of such events in North-Western England. “Our long experience has taught us the value of researching all of our craft venues very carefully, and also the importance of top rate advertising to make a successful event”, the Associa- tion ’s website said; “Each and every craft fair is preceded by mas- sive advertising and we pride ourselves in putting out more road signs, often backed up with [ Automobile Association -type] signs, than any other organisers in our area. We advertise on a large scale in all local news- papers, and this always inc- ludes the Manc hester Evening News and the Metro ’papers when [that’s] appropriate. “Most weekends we run the whole event but at some the Creative Crafts Associ- ation just provide the Crafts &. Gifts section”. Everything else, including visitor prices, are the responsibility of the main organisers... Pg. 390 u

On This and Opposite Page: These next twelve photo- graphs depict the array of crafts stalls that were set up in the main marquee at last month’s Craft and Gift Fair, ranging from jewellers and portraitists; wood-turners to modellers of ‘little people’, and from herbalists to silver- smiths. Photographs all taken on Saturday, 27th. August .

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 388 - [email protected] A MANICALLY BUSY CAFÉ ———————————— Bank Holiday Weekend Craft Fair Scenes at the BettyAnn’s Tea Parlour ANK HOLIDAY Monday in the BettyAnn’s Tea Parlour Bwas definitely a manically busy day for Kim Oxland and her loyal team, as they got on with serving a large crowd on the hot and beautifully- sunny Monday, 29th. August, as the Craft and Gift Fair entered its final and best day of all. It was also one of the busiest days ever at the Unit Nine eatery since it was first opened by Wendy Darlow in the Summer of 2000. Kim and her team was kindly as- sisted by at least one other member that Monday. Julia Churchill, the sec- retary of the B roug ham H all C hari- table Trust became one of them — and her e-Mail to Hall News a day or so afterwards illustrated just how busy things actually became: “Kim was so busy, it was madness. At one point we ran out of plates! The dish- washer was on overdrive, as were the dryer-uppers and puter-awayers !” Below -Left and Right: Seen on Monday, 29 August, there was extra accommo- dation for diners in a large marquee set up at the Tea Parlour .

Your Event at Brougham Hall...?

If you are interested in hosting an event, using the grounds at the Hall, or would like further information on any of the above,

Please visit the Brougham Hall Charitable Trust Website www.broughamhall.co.uk, and click on

“News from Brougham Hall” or “Contact Us” ….. …. … .. .

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 389 - [email protected] Above: A young visitor to the Broug ham Hall Craft and Gift Fair takes to a set of balloon sculptures with glee, while, Below , P.P. The Clow n , produces another — before he presents another show of Punch and Judy .

An Interested Audience: A novel scene as some of the Fair’s attractions are attracted by another! - Llamas from Llam a Karm a Kafé try to make sense of Punch and Judy .

ERE IS The Land Pillar. They had already H of Fantastical broug ht Llamas to the Creatures … and there Hall before, presenting a can be fewer creatures pair of them at Kim Ox- more fantastical than the land’s BettyAnn’s Tea stars of centuries-old pup- Parlour on Mother’s Day, pet show Punch & . Judy ! Sunday, 6th. March.

———— ——— —–—— ——— ——— ——— ——— - However, what must the children also there Creative Crafts Association have thought when they —–- Cont. from Page 388 … Below - ‘On Target’: The folks tending the headed away after the The Creative Crafts archery stall pose for the cam era … after show to find they had Association pride them- taking on the challenge themselves, that is ! been joined by a pair of selves in keeping stall Llam as and their carer? fees and customer admis- That was exactly what sion charges lower than happened on Saturday, other major organisers — 27th. August, the first day despite increases in of the latest Craft and Gift venue charges, advertis- Fair held at Brougham ing, signage and printing Hall by the Creative costs for all our posters, Crafts Association , when leaflets and brochures. two of these South Ameri- Admission for adults at c an camelids w ere Brougham Hall was £2. brought to the Hall by a “Whether you are one of team in a well-kept ‘horse our many visitors or exhibitors box’ from the Llam a please feel free to look round our website and we look for- Karm a Kafé [Zoo and ward to meeting you at one of Hotel] near Broug ham our events in the near future.” Castle and the Countess’ — Creative Crafts Assn. Website. d MORE CRAFTS AND GIFT FAIR IMAGES NEXT TIME IN HALL NEWS 806 … … … Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 390 - [email protected] Hide Photo with Headline or Arrow!!

Triumph Classic Car Show ————————————————————————————— … is Soon Followed by Sun-Blessed Return to Hall for the Cumbria Classic Car Club

HIS WAS The First Time in Three Years that Photographs from the two members of the Cumbria Classic Car Club have Simon Whalley recent classic car shows Tbeen to Brougham Hall — and their return, on Sunday, to be staged at Brougham Photographer Hall with, Both Above , the 4th. September, was a very welcome one. There were just three elegant cars and one motorbike, MA Photography Cum bria Classic C ar Club as seen in the Above photographs kindly taken by Simon line-up on Sunday, 4th. www.simonwhalley.org September, and, Below , Whalley of the No. 10. Photography Studio, but this was the group’s tenth show here, since their debut in 2004. the array of Trium phs on It was also preceded by Brougham Hall’s first 07968 095597 Sunday, 21st. August. Trium ph Classic C ar S how . That event was held on Sunday, 21st. August, the weekend before the Craft and Gift Fair, and, like the Creative Craft Associa- tion ’s second time here, it was blessed with some lovely, sunny weather — though that was not quite so for Cumbria Classics . We could find no inter- net details on the Triumph gathering, Right, but the Cumbria Classic Car Club website states that “The Club was formed in 1987 by two enthusiasts who sought to bring together like minded individuals within an organisation, the aim being to enable any- one with an interest in classic cars to share their enjoyment”. www.justgiving.com/ HELPING THE HEROES Steve Taylor’s Links to ‘Just Giving’ Website: Visit ...... Taylor -Made -Solutions

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 392 - [email protected] BackdateBackdate 3030 ExtraExtra FeatureFeature

Above and Right: The performance of William Shakespeare’s ‘As You Like It’ by London’s Globe Theatre in August 2011. Below: The 25th. Anniversary celebrations at the Hall for Eden Menc ap the same month are recalled here in this Back date Extra . … … …

UR TRIBUTES to Founder Hall Trustee Christo- pher Terry last month understandably meant we did not Oinclude this look back at two big events of five years before — the debut at the Hall for the Globe Theatre , and the equally- memorable Eden Mencap anniversary party of August 2011. The Globe Theatre performance of William Shakespeare’s ‘As You Like It’ actually had a ‘photo-embargo’ on it — a problem overcome at Hall News — while Eden Menc ap were less camera- shy as they came with a bright array of costumes, group games … and “highwayman victim”, carriage-driving star George Bowman!

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 393 - [email protected] Backdate Highlights of Hall Trust History Backdate 3030 for This Month inin PreviousPrevious YearsYears ...... SEPTEMBER 1986 SEPTEMBER 1991 30 Years Ago — A Busy and Varied Month 25 Years Ago — Weather a Great Boost as … … …

Drawing Rooms, Big North Wall Terraces &. Cellars Project is On THE FIRST Days of September 1986 — which IN THE Fine ‘Indian Summer’ that begins towards proves to be a busy and varied month — are spent by the end of September 1991, work takes place high up the new ‘Community Programme’ Hall Team still work- on the wall-tops above the ‘Kitchens’. A team including ing on the newly-discovered Main Well in the Cellars. the Terry brothers Christopher and Hugh, as well as They find a curious “Secret Passageway” leading from Stewart Patrick and David Fawcett, are poised some it, in the direction of Brougham Chapel. 50 feet (15 metres) above the B.6262 road. Wall- Wednesday, 10th. September, sees the first sod building here involves the walls’ innards being filled removed in the “Terrace Trench” survey at the north with cement and loose stone, all of which needs to be side of the Pele Tower, and near the West Doorway. hauled up to the scaffolding workzone in buckets on After the work to clear away slabs of stone, ropes and pulleys, along with stone for the main build- chicken-wire, branches and other things from the West ing work itself. The North Wall and the Gallery’s ex- Terrace has been done, the digging is started in ear- posed, west-facing walls in the ‘Kitchens’ area are built nest on the Terrace Trench and eventually a layer of up a bit and sealed, with the Gallery section being cobbles are discovered. They are sketched onto paper given extra work to avert another problem with damp, for archaeological records by Bernard Rowan, Sean as happened early in 1991. Egan and Alistair Aynscough. The “Terrace Trench” is left for extensive survey work at a later date. An Old Hall Relic is Restored

WORK ON The Central “Drawing Room” area of AN OLD Wooden Door which has hung from its Brougham Hall, (“E.1.-gridzone”, later Unit Nine ), also rusted hinges in the west end of the Tudor ‘Bire' Build- begins on Wednesday, 10th. September, 1986, with ing since long before the Brougham Hall Charitable Michael Treece taking charge of his group after the Trust was founded in 1985 is restored by Hugh Terry in Hall Teams’ separation on this day. As Lee Barry’s late-September, 1991. Little more than the outer frame “W-Team” (Woods or Environmental) start their mam- of the door remained, but now it is complete, and with moth clearing-up in the Woodlands — ‘coppicing’ and sixteen panes of glass each around six inches (15cms.) ‘brashing’ — Mike’s Archaeological “A-Team” com- square. Around 40 per-cent. of the door is original, mence two weeks or more at work in the Drawing with extra panelling newly-added by Hugh Terry. Room. The Room’s doorway and boundary walls are Most of the windows of the ‘Bire’ are fitted with traced, while foundations heading back to the Tudor glass, though temporarily for now. The East Window “Bire” Building are looked for but without success. The will have to be structurally altered first, though the centre of the Room is dug out, but not much is found work will likely have to wait until 1992. except for rusted, battered chimney-cowls (anti-bird guards) and a metal curtain pelmet. However, a layer of slate remnants are discovered. Rubble from this work has to be taken for dumping among other piles of rubble outside the South Wall - a tiring job consid- ering we’re still getting used to this work !

HAVING Bought a Rain-Gauge at one of the stalls at this year’s Lowther Horse Trials and Country Fair , in August, and set it up at home in Scotland Road, Penrith, in time for September, new Hall teamster Alistair Ayn- scough records a remarkably-low 30 millimetres (1.18 inches) of rain this month … this is one of the driest Septembers for several years, it is later revealed.

THE STEPS to The Cellars are cleared of rubble on Monday, 22nd. September, as work is done to clear out the Cellars below. However, work on the Cellars themselves cannot be completed at this stage because of large slabs of stone that are too heavy to move. Above - Restored Door: Hall News 166, of 7th. Oct, ’91.

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 394 - [email protected] Backdate Highlights of Hall Trust History Backdate 3030 for This Month inin PreviousPrevious YearsYears ...... SEPTEMBER 1996 SEPTEMBER 2001 20 Years Ago - ‘If Only all our Video-Shoots were as Good’ 15 Years Ago — Latest Progress on “Unit Ten” THE A.V.C. Creative Film Company , who produced UNIT TEN - whose construction has been thwarted the promotional video for clothes company Coates- by no less than three dire summers, in 1998, 2000 and Viyella on 13th. June, 1996, write to Christopher and now 2001 - is finally nearing completion. Alison Terry in early-September 1996. Since the visit of The walls, doors, windows and the Fireplace of Unit the film crew and their model subjects, 20,000 video Ten [now Simon Whalley’s No. 10. Photographic Stu- copies of the film they produced – complete with com- dio ] are now all but ready to go under the cover of a mentary by former television newscaster Angela Rippon new ceiling, and the whole place has been cleared of - have been distributed rubble. Fully visible now to potential customers by is the small flight of steps Coates-Viyella , and originally revealed by 200,000 brochures pro- the Hall Team back in duced from ‘stills’ photo- graphs from the day June 1987 ... weeks be- have been sent out. The fore they found the letter states: ‘Our time at Great Armoury Hall Fire- Brougham Hall was our place and turned atten- best day ever - if only all tion to another newly- our video-shoots were as revived workzone — the great as this!’ Pele Tower. On the

Smokehouse “Almost weekend of Saturday, Smoked”. - A second fire 23rd., and Sunday, 24th. breaks out at the Old September, the elegant Smokehouse on Monday, stone lintels of two inner 9th. September, and is doorways of Unit Ten attended by fire-fighters. are also set in place. 10 Years AgoAgo — 5 Years Ago — Bold “Den” Plans RABY TREK HIGHLY—Detailed Plans for rebuilding and restoring SUNDAY, 3 September, the Lord Chancellor’s Den 2006 , is the day of the are submitted to Eden Dis- great “Raby Trek”, or trict Council planning offi- Brougham to Raby Castle cers by Christopher Terry Centenary Motorcade. It on Monday, 5th. Septem- recreates King Edward ber, 2011. Mr. Terry states VII’s. journey of October that he and the Brougham 1905, which was the first Hall Charitable Trust will motorised Royal caval- be “fundraising through the winter” to raise money for cade in the North of Eng- the huge project. This news land. Almost fifty classic comes just weeks before cars, many of them Rolls- the 25th. anniversary of the Royces or Bentleys , con- Raby Trek : Images from Hall News — Ten Years Ago. start of clearance and ar- verge on Brougham Hall chaeological work on what on a wet and dreary morning, to be met by the present was at the time seen as either a “private chapel” for Lord Brougham and Vaux, C.B.E., the High Sheriff of Brougham Hall, or a “Billiards Room”. Cumbria, and Graham Moore, the North-West England HAZEL LEAVES. — An era ended at the Hall on Thursday, representative of the Rolls-Royce and Bentley Owners’ 29th. September, 20 11, when Hazel Walker’s Country Fur- Club , for the official “send-off”, to begin a journey of nishings unit closed. Hazel, who had been a familiar face at around 65 miles (106 kilometres) one-way. Brougham Hall since July 1989, and her assistant Marion The cars were all lined up to make for a marvelous Hudson, have moved their business to a new site a few miles towards Temple Sowerby [in the hamlet of Brougham], display at Raby Castle, for the benefit of the visitors having just beaten the previous long-service record here — there on a lovely afternoon, before the journey back. that of the Old Smokehouse — by a matter of days. SEPTEMBER 2006 SEPTEMBER 2011

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 395 - [email protected] RECENT HISTORY -RELATED STORIES. … … … … … HALL NEWSNEWS bringsbrings youyou somesome historical,historical, archaeological,archaeological, oror sisimilarly --themedthemed storiesstories fromfrom recentrecent daysdays andand weeks.weeks. Canal Group Leader Hal Bagot Stands Down ———————————————— “Invaluable” Service by Levens Hall Owner - But Local Campaigner Makes Own Plans ... Story : Westmorland Gazette , Thursdays, 18 and 25 August : MR. HAL BAGOT, owner of, and resident at, Levens Hall, around five miles (8 kms.) south of Kendal, has stood down as chairman of the Lancaster Canal Resto- ration Partnership after eighteen years in that role, and has been greatly praised for his work and leadership. Mr. Bagot’s immediate successor has praised his Above: The west end of Hincaster Tunnel on 9th. April, “invaluable contribution” to the project since 1998. His 2003. Below: The Canal’s entry into Kendal is marked by has been the ambition to reconnect the hugely-popular, one of its old Bridges, and the ‘Kendal Cycleway’ we men- southern Lake District town to the British canal network tioned last month in our story of the trainee Hall Teams’ for the first time since at least 1957. 30th. Anniversary, and other schemes featured in a Cum- The Partners hip has striven to restore about 14 miles bria County Council news-sheet; Photo.: 14th. August,’09. (23kms.) of the “Northern Reaches” of the Lancaster Canal, and has so far managed full restoration of many However, thieves had taken one No. 180 plaque within bridges and partial works to stop further deterioration of a week or so, leaving Mr. Ogden to bemoan the culprits — bridges and locks; restoration of a vital “first furlong” of and not ruling out blaming members of the Lancaster the canal at Stainton, around 2 miles (3 kms.) east of Mr. Canal Restoration P artners hip itself. He had fastened Bagot’s historic, elegant home, and regenerated the ter- his plaques to the historic, Grade-II listed Larkrigg Hall minus area in Kendal itself, and the two or three miles Bridge, at Natland, and believes one of them was removed (3.2 to 4.8 kms.) of canal within the town. by metal thieves who, he suggested, had not realised it That includes the section made into the “Kendal was made of wood. Mr. Ogden has already taken it upon Cycleway” thirty years ago — featured at the time in the himself to paint the arch of Larkrigg Hall Bridge, after get- Community Programme Newsheet produced by Cum- ting the permission of the landowner, Graham Wilson, and bria C ounty C ouncil in Kendal. That ground-breaking ‘point’ the stonework — that is, to fill in the gaps with new development, which we recalled last month, would ironi- cement and generally tidy-up the walling. cally need to be re-routed if the Canal comes back. Larkrigg Hall Bridge was originally No. 180. on the ca- Nowadays, the plans of the Lancaster Canal nal; the last one at the current terminus at Tewitfield, near Carnforth, is No. 138, and the very last bridge, traversing Restoration Partners hip include what the Westmorland the “Kendal Cycleway” in Kendal, is No. 186. Gazette calls “an accessible and interpreted Kendal-to- Lancaster Towpath Trail”, which Mr. Bagot has long de- Mr. Ogden has already raised his profile and his deter- termined to make a start on. mination to restore part of the canal with two “publicity Inland Waterways Association officer (and L.C.R.- stunts”. He firstly dressed as ‘Captain Jack Sparrow’, Partners hip ‘interim chairperson’) Audrey Smith told the Johnny Depp’s “Pirates of The Caribbean” film character, Westmorland Gazette: “The Partnership would person- and towed a boat all by himself along the canal and right ally like to thank Hal Bagot for his invaluable contribution into Kendal, in June. Four months earlier, he actually over the years. So much has been achieved in the time sailed a dinghy through Hincaster Tunnel, near Levens Hal has been with us.” Hall. This was the first boat to go through the 345-metre Helen Moriarty, only recently appointed as the canal tunnel for around seventy years — but boats are not al- group’s project manager, added: “We are now tasked lowed to use it, say its custodians, the Canals and Rivers with finding a well-driven and experienced individual who Trust . Mr. Ogden is certainly a can lead the Partnership in achieving this exciting pro- controversial character. ject, and fulfil the role as L.C.R.P. ’s new chairman.” He will, anyway, attempt a One potential but rather unlikely candidate — so start on “his” part of the canal unlikely that the Partnership already appear not to want this month, when, assisted by anything to do with him — is Burnley man Colin Ogden, up to seventy volunteers, he who has embarked on his personal bid to restore around intends to clear the canal bed 600 metres (around a third of a mile) of the canal bed of invasive plants, unwanted near Natland, just south of Kendal. earth and rubbish, and then Planning to spend £3,000 on his plan, this 62-year- lay down a lining of butyl rub- old heating engineer stated he was “frustrated by years ber. “If we can raise enough of slow progress” on the canal. He soon raised around funding”, he said; “we would 20% of his funding target — £600 — and made his first like to re-water this section, moves, clearing the canal route and placing new, wooden with permission of course bridge number plates on one of the bridges that can be from landowner Graham Wil- seen from the road between Natland and Kendal. son. - [Mr. Bagot not mentioned].

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 396 - [email protected] RECENT HISTORY -RELATED Hall News - Extra STORIES. … … … … … HALL NEWS bringsbrings youyou somesome historical,historical, archaeological,archaeological, oror News Column similarly --themedthemed storiesstories fromfrom recentrecent daysdays andand weeks.weeks...... private property, it is there CAT -SCRATCH ‘FRENZY’ ON To Combat for everybody and the damage is untold.” DOWNING STREET !

Heritage ———————————————— Stolen Scottish Crimes Felines Upstage Feuding MP’s. ———————————————— Bibles Back Story: Helena Horton / Daily Telegraph Website , Partnerships Go -Ahead Story: BBC News Website , Thursday, 28th. July. ... Story: BBC News Website , Sat., 10th. September. : NEITHER The Recent frenzied campaigning for Sat., 10th. September. : TWO Bibles , thought the European Union Refer- to be around 200 years POLICE Forces in Eng- endum — nor the leader- land are teaming-up with old , which had been sto- len from Abercorn Parish ship battles in either the heritage experts to crack Cons ervative or Labour down on gangs who are Church in West Lothian, near , were re- parties — had a “scratch” stealing valuable metal, on this … the feuding by including lead, from turned to their owners after being rediscovered. the resident cats of Down- churches and other his- ing Street and the Foreign The books had been toric buildings. Office down in London! Officers are working taken sometime in mid– to late-July, but were then The Whitehall ‘cat wars’ with Historic England almost dominated the (formerly Englis h Heri- returned to Hopetoun House - close to the vil- news a few weeks ago, as tag e ) to search through resident cats of Downing Soapbox Showdown: A Hall scrap-yards, where thieves lage of Abercorn - on Sat- News cartoon from the time urday, 20th. August. Street laid into one other of the 1992 General Election might be attempting to sell on several occasions. Just lucrative metals such as The bibles were origi- depicts ‘politically—charged’ nally donated to the par- days after the change of kitties fighting over a mouse. lead and copper. Prime Minister from David ———————————————— ish church by the Hope- They say some yard Cameron to Theresa May, toun family, and therefore The territory issue be- owners are neglecting to Larry, the cat who lives at carry out checks when they have “considerable local gan after Palm erston of historic value”. Number Ten, reportedly the F.O. sneaked round are offered metal for sale. struck back after a fight the police guard and It is estimated that Police said they still intend to find and charge with Palmerston of The through the door into the ‘historic’ thefts cost the Foreig n Offic e left him PM’s home. country as muc h as whoever stole the books. Detective Constable nursing an injured paw. He was carried out £770m every year. Palmerston was seen soon A church in the village Debbie Totter said: “While again by officers — but not it is a positive develop- afterwards, sporting a without a “defiant stand- of Beeby, Leicester, was a “bald patch” on his back ment, that the bibles have off” with one of them. recent victim of this kind of as he tucked into a dead Palmerston was made crime, but Cumbrian been returned intact, it is important to remember bird. He is a keen and able ‘Chief Mouser’ at the For- churches such as Arthuret hunter; he has caught Church, between Longtow n that this was still a high- eign Office earlier this year value theft and we are many mice at the Foreign — a delight for staff and and Carlisle, was stripped Office — but taking on the continuing to treat it in foreign ambassadors. of a great deal of roof-lead other cats in the famous Though Larry appears a few years ago, which this manner”. The Bibles are bound street is almost as much of was the more—seriously then res ulted in muc h a challenge as politics it- injured in the fighting so more damage when rain with red leather, and are about 2ft x 1ft (61 x 31 self. Larry, by contrast, far — he underwent veteri- got into the exposed inte- usually prefers a cat nap centimetres) in size, and nary treatment for his paw rior of the building. rather than capture vermin and spent days resting — Talking about the are about 5ins (12 cms.) thick. Each has distinctive — just like the cartoon cat he still has a history of Leic esters hire inc ident, ‘Garfield’. troubled relations with Peter Aires, from the brass protective plating on the corners. The fights began after neighbouring cats. He Churches Conservation Larry encroached on Palm- regularly fought with Freya, Trust , said: “In late-July we erston's ‘turf’ at the For- the cat from N um- found that the north aisle eign Office, and “fur has ber Eleven, who was sent roof had been stolen. It B.H.C.T.B.H.C.T. been flying” around Num- ‘to the country’ — literally. effectively damages over ber Ten in recent weeks as 1,000 years worth of his- the cats fight for territory. Cumbrian Zoo Death Ruling tory that is there. Ever since, like the MP’s., UNLOCKED , or Open, internal “They are so important ga te s in the ti ge r en clo su re at a MMXVIMMXVI they have been battling for zoo at Dalton-in-Furness, Cum- and are buildings that be- that coveted spot on the bria, led to the death of a keeper long to everybody. It is not steps of Number Ten. in 2013, an inquest lately ruled.

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 397 - [email protected] Hall News - Extra News Columns Donors’ Demand on Blencathra Charity to ‘Return Our Money!’ A CHARITY Set Up to continue with our acquisi- raise £1,750,000, or tion of ‘Saddleback’. more, to buy one of Cum- “Currently, we have bria’s most -iconic moun- not achieved our aim of tains for the people must buying the mountain and, return the cash to the quite clearly in the Press donors, campaigners say. statement, neither have The charity, Friends of we stopped anyone else Blenc athra , was set up from doing so. Above: Blencathra , as seen from a bus travelling west from around two years ago af- “The situation remains Penruddock, on the main A.66. road between Penrith and ter James Lowther. the very much as it was when Keswick, on Saturday, 27th. August. [Bank Holiday weekend]. current Lord Lonsdale, ‘Saddleback’ was initially announced the effects of put up for sale. Great Fire of London inheritance tax on his “In terms of donations, The Not -So -Rare family after his father the original donations Commemorations passed on over ten years were impressed with a A VERY IMPRESSIVE , Giant Pandas ago had made them put trust — there is no possi- 400ft. (130-metre) floating wooden model of Seven- THE Fabled Giant Pandas the twin-peaked mountain bility of monies being teenth-Century London at Edinburgh Zoo may feel between Penrith and Kes- spent for other purposes. was on show for several less pressure now to get wick up for sale. “At the minute, the days on the River Thames together — a report earlier In late -2015, the Low- mountain is still for sale early this month — before this month suggests the thers decided to withdraw to the charity as stated in being ceremoniously breed is less endangered the mountain, also fondly the Managing Agents for burned to a cinder as than has been believed. A called “Saddleback” be- the Lonsdale Estate and thousands looked on. The report by the International cause of its distinctive therefore the Trustees are display was mounted to Union for the Conserva- outline, from sale, after not currently in a position mark 350 years since the tion of Nature , which pub- they were able to settle to consider the option of Great Fire of London , lishes the lists of species their tax bill by selling a refunding donations, a which broke out at a bak- in peril around the world, selection of paintings. position agreed with the ery in Pudding Lane on states that these black- Friends of Blen- legal team. 2nd September 1666, and and-white, bamboo-loving cathra , however, still ap- “Currently our sponsors wholly devastated the then creatures are now merely pear to hold on to their are the major stake- mostly wooden-built city. a “vulnerable” breed. dreams of buying Blen- holders and the combined cathra “for the nation”, total of pledges and dona- and have been accused tions provides a strong of holding on to donors’ base for obtaining cash. Their initial bid to matched funding”. BrouBrougghamham buy the mountain and Matched funding would land for £250,000 was give the Friends a total turned down. A Mr. Mar- reserve of £500,000 or tin Knowles, from Oxford, so — still less than half of Hall News told the Westmorland Blencathra’s quoted value Hall News Gazette he has even es- of £1,750,000 in 2014. tablished a group calling Mr, Wheeler is said to E-Mail Contact ------Please on the Friends to return have stated since that the the cash, saying this Friends will “review their Remember that, if you wish, “highlights the terrible position at the end of Sep- way in which the charity is tember”, while Mr. John you can send stories with or behaving”. He notes that Robson, director of one donor had given Robson &. Little , the without attached photographs £1,000 — and is “now Lonsdale estate’s manag- distraught” that she might ing agents, said: “the of events at Brougham Hall to get her money back. mountain is no longer The Gazette , of Thurs- being marketed. Hall News by this e-Mail : day, 18th. August, stated “Blenc athra is no that the ’most -recent’ longer on the open mar- [email protected] Facebook social media ket, and Harrison and statement by the Friends ’ Hetherington , who were chairperson, Dave the selling agents, have ...... Thanks!Thanks! Wheeler, read: “[We] will been ’dis-instructed’.” Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 398 - [email protected] Hall News - Extra News Columns THE FULL LIST OF THE RIO OLYMPICS G.B. MEDALISTS LAST MONTH’s Summer Olympic Ga mes at Rio Silver (23) de Janeiro, Brazil , which we initially featured in Hall Jazz Carlin — Swimming, Womens’ 400m. freestyle. News 804 , have proved to be an incredible time indeed Jazz Carlin — Swimming, Womens’ 800m. freestyle. for Team G.B. — even after their successes at London Siobhan -Marie O'Connor — Swimming, Womens’ 2012 . At the time of writing - Saturday afternoon, 20th. 200m. individual medley. August - Great B ritain had won 26 Gold Medals, 22 Sil- Duncan Scott , Stephen Milne , Dan Wallace , James Guy ver and 15 Bronze..., or a total of 63. One Gold, one Sil- — Swimming, Mens’ 4x200m. Freestyle. ver and two Bronze were still to come in the last 36 and Vicky Thornley — , hours - culminating in boxer Nicola Adams successfully Womens’ Double Sculls. defending her London title. Team G.B. also finished the David Florence and Richard Hounslow — Canoeing, Sla- Games in second-place overall on the medal table, lom C.2. Double. ahead of China , and with only the United States of Mark Robertson , Ruaridh McConnochie , , Americ a doing any better. This compares well with Lon- , , Tom Mitchell , , don 2012 , when, on home soil, they took 29 Gold, 17 James Davies , Ollie Lindsay -Hague , , Mar- Silver and 19 Bronze — 65 in all — with a final table plac- cus Watson and Mark Bennett — Mens’ Team (with ing of third. Here then, is the full list of medals won by Reserves), Rugby ‘Sevens’ Tournament. Great Britain ( and Northern Ireland ) at Rio 2016 . … … … Carl Hester , Charlotte Dujardin , Fiona Bigwood , Spencer Wilton — Equestrian, Team Dressage. Gold (27) Bryony Page — Womens’ Trampoline. Adam Peaty — Swimming, Mens’ 100-Metre Katie Greves , Melanie Wilson , Frances Houghton , Polly Breaststroke. Swann , Jessica Eddie , Olivia Carnegie -Brown , Karen Joe Clarke — Canoeing, Slalom K.1.. Bennett , Zoe Lee and Zoe De Toledo — Jack Laugher and Chris Mears — Diving, Mens’ Synchro- Rowing, Womens’ . nised 3-Metre [high] Springboard. Becky James — Cycling, Womens’ Keirin. , and — Becky James — Cycling, Womens’ . Cycling, Mens’ Team Sprint. Chris Walker -Hebborn , Adam Peaty , James Guy and and — Rowing, Duncan Scott — Swimming, Mens’ 4x100m. Medley. Womens’ Pairs. Jessica Ennis -Hill — Athletics, Womens’ Heptathlon. , Mohamed Sbihi , George Nick Dempsey — Sailing, RS:X Class. Nash and Constantine Louloudis - Rowing, Mens’ Four. Louis Smith — Gymnastics, Mens’ Pommel-Horse. Bradley Wiggins , Owain Doull , Stephen Burke and Callum Skinner — Cycling, Mens’ Individual Pursuit. Ed Clancy — Cycling, Mens’ Team Pursuit. Mark Cavendish — Cycling, Mens’ Omnium. Scott Durant , Tom Ransley , Andrew Triggs - Jack Laugher — Diving, Mens’ 3m. [high] Springboard. Hodge , Matthew Gotrel , , Paul Bennett , Matt Liam Heath and Jon Schofield — Canoeing, Mens’ Langridge , William Satch and Phelan Hill — 200m. Double Kayak. Rowing, Mens’ Eight. Jonathan Brownlee — Mens’ Triathlon. Joanna Rowsell -Shand , Laura Trott , Elinor Barker and Lutalo Muhammad —- Taekwondo, Mens’ -80kg.. Kate Archibald — Cycling, Womens’ Team Pursuit. Joe Joyce — Boxing, Mens’ Super-Heavyweight. Mo Farah — Athletics, Mens’ 5,000m.. Mo Farah — Athletics, Mens’ 10,000m.. Bronze (17) Max Whitlock — Gymnastics, Mens’ Floor. Chris Froome — Cycling, Mens’ Time-Trial. Max Whitlock — Gymnastics, Mens’ Pommel-Horse. Tom Daley and Daniel Goodfellow — Diving, Mens’ Justin Rose — Golf, Mens’ Individual. 10-Metre Synchronised Dive. Jason Kenny — Cycling, Mens’ Individual Pursuit. Edward Ling — Shooting, Mens’ Trap. Andy Murray — Tennis, Mens’ Singles. Steven Scott — Shooting, Mens’ Double Trap. Charlotte Dujardin — Equestrian, Individual Dressage. Sally Conway — Judo, Womens’ -70kg.. Giles Scott — Sailing, Mens’ Finn . Max Whitlock — Gymnastics, Mens’ All-Around Laura Trott — Cycling, Womens’ Omnium. Individual. Jason Kenny — Cycling, Mens’ Keirin. Greg Rutherford — Athletics, Mens’ Long Jump. Alistair Brownlee — Men’s Triathlon. Sophie Hitchon — Athletics, Womens’ Hammer. Hannah Mills and Saskia Clarke — Sailing, Womens’ Amy Tinkler — Gymnastics, Womens’ Floor. 470 -Class. Nile Wilson — Gymnastics, Mens’ High Bar. Jade Jones — Taekwondo, Womens’ - 57kg.. Katie Marchant — Cycling, Womens’ Sprint. Nick Skelton — Equestrian, Individual Show-Jumping. Marcus Ellis and Chris Langridge — Badminton, Mens’ , , , Hannah Doubles. MacLeod , , Kate Richardson - Asha Philip , Desiree Henry , Dina Asher -Smith and D aryll Walsh , , , , Neita — Athletics, Womens’ 4x100m Relay. , , , Helen Vicky Holland — Womens’ Triathlon. Richardson -Walsh , , Shona McCallin , Lily Josh Buatsi — Boxing, Mens’ Light-Heavyweight. Owsley — Hockey, Womens’ Tournament. Bianca Walkden — Taekwondo, Womens’ +67kg.. Liam Heath — Canoeing, Mens’ 200m. Single Kayak. Eilidh Child , Anyika Onuora , Christine Ohuruogu and Nicola Adams — Boxing, Womens’ Flyweight Division. Emily Diamond — Athletics, Womens’ 4x400m. Relay.

Brougham Hall News 805 - September 2016 - Page 399 - [email protected] Select, Recent Local, National, Hall News - News Page and International Stories . . . . . TEAM G.B. SUMMERSUMMER GAMESGAMES GLORIES...GLORIES... Inspiring Sporting ITV Switch -Off ... I.T.V. - Britain’s original independent broadcaster — S N RIORIO GOLDGOLD RUSHRUSH has earned widespread praise for its initiative after Olym pic 2 012 titles. He an hour’s total shut-dow n IT’S ST. TERESA ended the half-marathon in of all its television channels one hour and four seconds. in a bid to encourage view- OF CALCUTTA Vivian Cheruiyot, from ers to leave their home for MOTHER TERESA of Kenya, won the ladies’ race. a short while to exercise or Calcutta — or Kolkata — the Ultimate star of the take part in group sports in celebrated Roman Catho- show was Claire Lomas, the wake of Team G.B. ’s lic nun who founded the who was paralysed in a rid- great success at the recent Missionaries of Charity and ing accident in 2007, used Rio 2016 . bid to help India’s, and the a Re-W alk “Bionic” suit to Viewers were deprived of world’s poor, was canon- complete 13.1 miles in five a repeat of Coronation ised — or elevated to Saint- Hall News Image. days of pure determination. Street for the week and an hood — by Pope Francis on Above: Cyclist Mark Cavendish, one episode of the 1980’s Sunday, 4th. September. of the stars of R io 2016 - and this Ormside “Big Cat” crime drama M urder She month’s Tou r o f Bri tai n - dons the THE Latest in a series of Wrote among other things, Carlisle United’s Epic “Yellow Jersey” at Dumfries after suggested “Big Cat” sightings but, at the risk of sounding Football ‘Derby’ … … winning the first stage of the Tour of in Cumbria has been claimed almost “matronly” and Britain on 11th. September, 2011. by retired Police Chief Super- deeply unfashionable, I A MEMORABLE Game of intendent Kevin Pitt, who pre- Football was played out at can’t help feeling that get- AFTER LONDON 2012 sented his image of a ting folk “hooked” on soap- Derby County on the evening few people in Great Britain “panther-like” creature to the of Tuesday, 23rd. August, with operas night after night and Northern Ireland could Westmorland Gazette in cannot help when it comes ‘League Two’ side Carlisle imagine that the next Sum- mid-August. The animal had United as the “away” team been prowling on and around to preserving “sporting contesting the ‘ EFL League’ mer Olympic and Paralym- legacies” like those result- pic Games — this Summer the Settle-to-Carlisle Railway second-round match and ulti- and the Wild Rose Caravan ing from London 2012 . mately drawing 1-all, after of Rio 2016 — would offer Park at Ormside, near Ap- Anyway, Britain’s new extra time against a side two such rich pickings once pleby-in-Westmorland, he gymnastic star, and double league divisions higher up. again, after the success of said. That famous railway has Gold medallist Max The match ended in an our “Home” Games. tangled with wildlife before, Whitlock was on-hand at epic penalty shoot-out with Yet that is exactly what with a wolf being killed by a 9.30 a.m. on Saturday almost all the drama of the Team G.B. have done — night express train at Cum- morning, 27th. August, to recent football and hockey following London 2012 whinton, near Carlisle, back in Olympic matches at Rio 2016 . December 1904 — apparently turn off the entire ITV net- with the most-successful work with a large, After a 14-13 defeat at “Away” Games since …, one of two to escape from a penalties, Carlisle United ’s private menagerie nearby, “ceremonial” switch, at team manager Keith Curle well …, London 1908 . which many families did get praised his players’ “bravery” The Rio Olympics , held Stuart Lancaster outdoors for a kickabout at and “valiant display” and took from Friday, 5th., to Sun- Leaves for Leinster football or take part in “great encouragement and day, 21st. August, and the other active sports. pride” from the team’s efforts. Paralympics from Wednes- STUART Lancaster , the former England This was part of the Ironically, it was Cumbrian day, 7th., to Sunday, 18th., broadcaster’s — and ath- goalkeeper Scott Carson — team coach who hails from September, have both seen Culgaith, near Penrith, can at letes’ — I am Team G.B. once trialled by England — a veritable “Gold Rush” for who stood firm for Derby . last hope to put behind him campaign, to get British the British athletes, as well his bad experiences at last families, particularly the Record September Heat as a very welcome wealth year’s World Cup tourney on young ones, and not just GR AVESEND , in Kent, of both Silver and Bronze. home soil. Stuart, aged 46, the stars of Rio 2016 , to which was a true hot-spot in A full list of Medallists has been taken on as a senior get participate in sports the Summer of 2003, again is on the previous page. coach by the top-rated Lein- Others, though, switched felt the heat as glorious sun- Meanwhile, at the Great ster , from Ireland, whose new shine on Tuesday, 13th. Sep- boss, Leo Cullen said of him: to other channels, watched North Run , held between recordings or, apparently, tember, sent the tempera- Newcastle -upon -Tyne and “Stuart has a wealth of experi- tures to 34.4°C., or 93.9°F. — ence and is a highly respected according to one newspa- the hottest September day North Shields, on Sunday, figure. We look forward to per, “met the ’black-out’ since 1911. Manchester, Car- 11th. September, Mo Farah having Stuart join our team with delight and baffle- diff and other principal cities won for a third time in suc- and together helping the play- ment, with some joking that instead endured thunder- cession, so soon after suc- ers maximise their potential it was the ‘best thing’ they storms that Tuesday. cessfully defending both his as a group”. had seen on I.T.V. ”

Brougham Hall Charitable Trust — Registered U.K. Charity Number 517943 BROUGHAM HALL NEWS is Produced by ALISTAIR AYNSCOUGH , Colinsburgh, Fife.

Brougham Hall News 805 — September 2016 — Page 400 B.H.C.T. MMXVI