Illuminated Sheep: Some Men and Their Dogs

The Illuminated Sheep Project is taking the opportunity to produce a series of Podcasts from the oral history archive created by Sheep Tales in 2011 and 2013. https://www.sheeptales.org.

This is the first podcast, Some Men and their Dogs, Northumbrian Shepherds talk about their Border Collies.

Northumberland Archives and Libraries have planned a series of events from September to December 2022 as part of the Illuminated Sheep Programme, inspired by the return of the Lindisfarne Gospels to the North East in 2022.

https://laingartgallery.org.uk/lindisfarne-gospels-2022

Funded by North of Tyne Combined Authority.

Tales From the Minute Books

Northumberland Archives is a heritage partner to a National Lottery Funded project, the ‘Northumberland Village Halls Heritage Project’. The project aims to celebrate the history of some of Northumberland’s Village Halls and ensure that records and memories are preserved for future generations. The project was developed by and is managed by Community Action Northumberland (CAN) whose mission is to benefit and help sustain rural communities in Northumberland. 

Alison Cowen of Jubilee Hall, Newton on the Moor, has kindly written the following article after going through the old minute books before she deposited them at Northumberland Archives.  

The first recorded minutes of the Trustees of the hall are dated 16 March 1961 when a new committee was formed by local residents. They make very interesting reading and give snapshot into village life and how much has altered, although the hall itself remains a constant feature. 
 
In October 1961 as the world listened to Aker Bilks ‘Stranger on the shore’ there was a charge of one and six to view flower arrangements and to buy from a cake stall.  Coffee and biscuits were included.   In today’s money that would be £1.59p. 
 
As the world mourned the death of JFK in November 1963 in Newton on the Moor you could have won some spectacular raffle prizes to cheer you up. How about a knitted baby jacket, a cuddly toy, chocolates or maybe 50 cigarettes? March 1964 saw the hall redecorated by Aln Painters. Perhaps they were listening to the new Radio Caroline. The ceiling was painted a fetching shade of blue at the cost of £48. After much debate Zephyr pink was chosen for the walls with the wood work being flake grey. The total bill for the work came in at £122 eight shillings and tuppence. This would be just short of £3,000 today. 
 
To celebrate the end of the Harvest in October 1965 a Kirn Supper was held. A ten shilling ticket gave you a meal of ham, lettuce, egg and tomato, a bread bun with butter all washed down with a nice cup of tea. The sweet was a fruit mousse with the very new Birds Dream Topping, which had only come onto the market the previous year. A feast for only 50p. 
 
Christmas was a very popular time in the village. In 1966 as the grown-ups sang along to Tom Jones and the ‘Green Green Grass of Home’, and Action Man made his debut in the toy shops local babies received a squeaky toy. If you were between two and five years old you were lucky enough to be given a large ball. Older children were given a named diary and pen. Everyone received an apple, orange and a bar of chocolate.  
 
By 1979 a decision had been made that only children up to the age of seven would receive a present, although what that was to be isn’t recorded. The older children were to be given an apple and orange together with a 50p piece and a mixed bag of sweets. Perhaps they could have bought the latest Christmas single, ‘Another Brick in the Wall’! 
 
I’m not sure what our local youngsters would make of such delights these days! 
Of course in the next fifty years I’m sure our current monthly coffee mornings, regular Wine Tasting and Pipers events will raise a few eyebrows as the committee continues to look after the hall for many generations to come.

Melton Park Memories

I can still remember my first day working at the Melton Park Record Office in Gosforth. It was exciting to think that I would be working in a building that was once an Anti-Aircraft Plotting Station – I guess that not everybody can say that! I was given a plan of the building and was told that it would probably take some time before I got used to the layout underground & became familiar with where different classes of records were stored. All I could think was “I am working in a bunker!”

[Click on images to enlarge]

It felt like a bit of a rabbit warren the first time I was left alone underground, but I enjoyed the peace & quiet of it as it was a sharp contrast to the busy room of researchers above. It felt like another world down there and I loved the smell of the archive boxes & old ledgers. Out of all the storage rooms, number six was my favourite as the words Wireless Room were still clearly visible on the door. 

Some people found it creepy being underground and didn’t like being alone as there were lots of small rooms & dark corners. I was told that books had flown off shelves and that an airman had been spotted walking around both inside and outside the building. There was also a haunted helmet! I am certainly not a fan of ‘spooky’ things, but I never once felt afraid being on my own. 

Within minutes of being in the building I was told to be careful on the stairs. I was in for a bit of a surprise as they were very steep and not very welcoming. I sensed that it was going to be quite difficult carrying heavy boxes and large maps up and down. My mind flashed back to the part of the Job Description that said ‘ability to work with large & unwieldy records…’ 

It was always a challenge carrying heavy items up the stairs, but I quickly got used to it and my fitness certainly improved. I only worked with the public at Melton Park for a short time before it closed but I was there for the whole of the closure period when we prepared all the records ready for relocation to the new site. By the time we opened at Woodhorn in 2006, I was probably the fittest I had ever been in my life. 

The Melton Park building may have been run down and falling apart in places but that added to its charm. I feel very lucky that I got the chance to work there. What was also nice was that we had a lovely little garden area at the back of the office which backed onto the Gosforth racecourse. The tv cameras were often there & we would watch the racing during our breaks. Who knows, maybe each time the horses flew by, a lone airman may have been quietly enjoying the race.