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Walking a Pop-up Museum

I’ve been giving a question some thought: Can a walk (be it themed and purposeful or just ad hoc recreational) not only create a pop-up museum, in consequence, when back at home (individually and/or collectively), but also create a mobile pop-up museum itself whilst in the very act of walking? Sometimes, of course, this happens automatically, serendipitously and solipsistically, when you’re out and about: that Penny Lane feeling: “And though she feels as if she’s in a play, she is anyway”, and that Truman Show illusion you get sometimes when staring at the world. In short, when you’re Feeling Groovy, life seems to be a sort of pop-up museum … “Hello lamp-post, what you knowin’, I’ve come to watch your flowers growin’…” And you can get that flight of individual imagination whilst out...

Football and the General Strike

Football and the General Strike Plymouth Strikers v Police The 1925-26 football season ended on May 1st 1926 with Huddersfield Town, once under the tutelage of the legendary Herbert Chapman, league champions for the third year in a row. Chapman, of course, would...

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Sapperton 1926 and the General Strike

When my father grew old, his grasp for words became slower and his frustration greater. We sometimes took him for a car ride around his Gloucestershire haunts. We would end at a pub, often in Frampton Mansell, and he would sit, making a half pint last forever, with a...

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1926 with Nock and Potts on the GWR

The GWR and the General Strike May 2nd Sir Felix Pole GWR General Manager sent the following message to all GWR stations and departments: ‘The National Union of Railwaymen have intimated that railwaymen have been asked to strike without notice tomorrow night. Each...

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GWR Voices for Performance

The Voice of C.R. Clinker (clerk at Bristol) It would be wrong to give the impression that the General Strike was anything but a very serious calamity. Yet to a young man in his twenties, with only three years’ service, it provided an interlude in daily routine and a...

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The GWR 1926

  The GWR and the General Strike in Gloucestershire   May 2nd Sir Felix Pole GWR General Manager sent the following message to all GWR stations and departments: ‘The National Union of Railwaymen have intimated that railwaymen have been asked to strike...

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