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A Suffolk Lane

~ A diary of my life in rural north Suffolk.

A Suffolk Lane

Tag Archives: Ely Cathedral

A Visit to Sheffield

10 Thu Jul 2014

Posted by Clare Pooley in churches, plants, Rural Diary, trees, Uncategorized

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

'The Company', abutilon, architecture, Botanical Gardens, canna, chapels, copper beech, Drama Studio, Ely Cathedral, eringium, George Etherege, HMS Sheffield, Man of Mode, memorial, Mrs Loveit, pavilions, pelargonium, review, Sheffield, Sheffield cathedral, Sheffield Star, Tour de France, water feature, Windy wet weather

We were away from home on holiday from Tuesday 1st July until Wednesday 9th July.  As we neared home on Wednesday the weather deteriorated – the sun disappeared, the wind picked up and the temperature dropped.  While we had been away the weather at home had been quite warm with a little sun but a lot of cloud according to my mother.  I took Mum out shopping yesterday and we were fortunate to be able to do it in the dry.  Shortly after getting home at 2.00pm the heavens opened and it rained for hours with some thunder and lightning.  I went for my monthly blood test this morning and chatted to my friend who is the phlebotomist at the medical centre.  Her daughter and my younger daughter E are the same age and were friends when E was able to go to school.  The Sixth Form Centre that Katrina attends was flooded yesterday and the roof was blown off the maths block so Katrina was enjoying a day off school.  My friend keeps horses and a tree had blown down in her paddock yesterday too.  The weather is quite autumnal at present.

001Wheat field

Wheat field behind our house

The wind and rain has done considerable damage to the fields of crops in the area.  Please note the overwhelming grey sky!

My last post ended with me about to visit my eldest daughter in Sheffield to watch her perform in George Etherege’s play ‘Man of Mode’.  The few times I have visited her I have only stayed for one night so this time I booked two nights in a hotel and hoped I would be less rushed and tired and would be able to see more of my daughter and more of the city as well.

The journey was virtually uneventful and there were no delays.  The air conditioning wasn’t working on the train and I was amused by a young man becoming hot and somewhat bothered trying to force open a locked window.  The conductor eventually wandered through the carriage and asked if we would like the window opened.  We were very pleased to see him open it with a key  – fresh air is a wonderful thing!

1479224Sheffield station approach

The approach to Sheffield station seen from the station  Google image

I have had to supplement my photos with some from the internet as not all of mine came out well.

I decided to walk to my hotel in the city centre as it was a fine afternoon and made myself a refreshing cup of tea.  After a short rest I went out shopping and bought some food for our early evening meal and took a taxi to A’s house. The taxi driver was friendly and told me all about his daughters and what he planned to have for his evening meal.  He was just about to finish work for the day.  I had arranged with A that she would be standing at the end of her driveway as I probably wouldn’t recognise her house.  I pointed her out to the taxi driver who waved at her.  He was surprised that she didn’t wave back but of course I told him she had been brought up well and didn’t wave to strange men in cars.

A made us a cup of tea and then we ate our meal and I enjoyed our chat.  I walked with her to the Drama Studio and while she got changed ready for the performance I waited outside for the doors to open.  I had plenty of time to re-acquaint myself with the view from the top of the steps.

019View from steps

Houses opposite the studios

018View from steps

Shops opposite the studios

I had plenty of time to stare at the door too…..

016Drama studio entrance

The entrance to the drama studios

and at some of the carved detail.

017Detail on entrance

I took a photograph of the studios the next day and looking at the resultant picture I see that either I wasn’t standing up straight or the building is leaning backwards.

051Drama studios

Drama Studios

I think it was me!

The building looks like a former church and from a photograph on display inside, I found that it had been used at one time as a synagogue.

I enjoyed the play immensely and was sorry that there were so few people in the audience.  A played the part of Mrs Loveit, a spurned mistress –  a jealous, bitter woman out for revenge.

unnamed unnamedd

These are photos of A taken by a friend in the dressing room.  They do not quite show how beautiful she is or how good she looked in her costume.

I waited for her afterwards and we walked back to my hotel together and had a drink in the bar before she got the bus back to her house.

The next day we met mid-morning and she took me to see the Cathedral.

sheffield cathedral

Sheffield Cathedral Google images

It was formerly a parish church dedicated to St Peter and St Paul but was made a cathedral one hundred years ago in 1914.  There has been a church on the site for a thousand years but the oldest part of the present building dates from 1430.  Chapels were added over the years – for example in 1520 the 4th Earl of Shrewsbury built the Shrewsbury Chapel where he and his two wives have their tomb and there is a grand monument to the 6th Earl who was guardian to Mary Queen of Scots when she was imprisoned in Sheffield  from 1570-1584.

020Sheffield cathedral chancel

Chancel ceiling with golden angels

021Ceiling

Another ceiling

 

But by the 19th century it had also become very dilapidated.  A diarist of the time said that the church was ‘one of the most gloomy places of worship in the kingdom.’  This is no surprise as Sheffield is also known as ‘Steel City’ and in the 19th century the place was full of steel and iron foundries with furnaces blazing all day and night.  The dirt, soot and smoke must have been terrible.   The nave had to be demolished and rebuilt, the church was enlarged and the interior was modernised.

022Banners

Ancient banners hanging in one of the chapels

024Statue

Memorial

 

This lovely statue is a memorial to commemorate the special relationship between the city of Sheffield and ships of the Royal Navy bearing the city’s name.  It was placed in the cathedral on 17th April 2000 by His Royal Highness the Duke of York CVO ADC.  It is a tribute to all those who gave their lives in the service of their country.  British people remember that HMS Sheffield, a 4,100 tonne destroyer with a crew of 300 on board was hit by an Argentinian Exocet missile on 4th May 1982.  Twenty died and twenty-six suffered blast and burn injuries.  It was the first ship to be lost in enemy action since the Second World War.  Prince Andrew took part in the Falklands War.

027Chapel

A Chapel

031Chapel

A Chapel

The church was made a cathedral when the new diocese of Sheffield was formed.  Yet more plans were made to enlarge the cathedral but only some of the building works were carried out.  In the early 1960s more extensions were made including the narthex entrance and the west end was extended with a lantern tower.  The latter was repaired and new glass put in in 1998-1999.  Work is continuing to this day.

034The lantern

The Lantern

After admiring the Cathedral we walked up through the city to the Botanical Gardens  This was originally laid out in 1836 in the ‘Gardenesque’ style which featured winding paths and scattered plantings among tree-planted mounds.  The Gardens are listed by English Heritage as a Grade II site of special historic and architectural interest.  A major restoration programme was completed in 2005.

images Sheffield Botanical Gardens

Sheffield Botanical Gardens Google images

We wandered about the grounds admiring the plants and sat for a while on a bench.  I didn’t manage to take many photos unfortunately as both A and I were bothered by sore feet!

036Copper beech leaves (2)

Copper Beech leaves

039Eringium

Eringium

037Eringium

Eringium

040Glass house clock

A modern clock on the glass pavilion

The pavilions contain plants from the temperate regions of the world.  They are 90 metres long and contain thousands of panes of hand-blown glass.

045New plants on old

046Arbutus

Abutilon

047Canna

Canna

050Pelargonium

Pelargonium

043Unknown

048Unknown

Abutilon

We had lunch – a cream tea (scone, jam, clotted cream, cup of tea) in the restaurant and then went our separate ways – A back to her house to do some more writing and me to traipse all the way back to my hotel for another rest and then more shopping for food.

I decided to walk back to A’s house instead of taking the bus or going by taxi but half way there I almost regretted my decision as it was all uphill, quite warm and my shopping was heavy.  However, I managed it and felt very pleased with myself once I had got my breath back.  We ate together as we had done the day before and again I walked to the Studio with her and waited outside  for the doors to open.  There was a larger audience this evening and I enjoyed the performance as much as I had done the evening before.  I met A after the performance and said good-bye to her there as she was seeing friends after the show.  I walked back to my hotel quite exhausted having walked some miles in the past couple of days.  It had rained while we had been in the theatre but stayed dry for my walk back to the city centre.

053Steep hill down to station

Steep hill down to the station

The following morning I returned to the railway station.  Sheffield was getting itself ready for the Tour de France with banners and posters everywhere.

052Welcome to Sheffield

The water feature outside the station didn’t look so attractive on a cloudy day.

055Water feature

056Water feature

The train journey home went quite quickly and I enjoyed it more as I had a window seat this time.  We passed through lots of showers of rain and I managed to take a photo of Ely Cathedral as we pulled out of the station.

063Ely cathedral

066Ely cathedral

It is easier to see in the winter when the trees are bare!

A told me her play had been reviewed in the Sheffield Star so I looked it up on the internet.  A was described as ‘the excellent A S’ – but I could have told them that!

 

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Travelling

10 Mon Feb 2014

Posted by Clare Pooley in Rural Diary

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

'The Company', Chesterfield, Ely Cathedral, Grime's Graves, Hundred Foot Washes, Peterborough, Sheffield, swans, The Fens, Thetford, Train journey

I enjoy looking out of the window on train journeys and there is a lot to see on the route to Sheffield from Norwich. The first stop is at Thetford. R and I have only walked once in Thetford Forest and that was years ago before E was born. However, nearby is a favourite place of R’s and mine – Grime’s Graves. This is a really interesting and beautiful place. A wide open grassy area of quite a few acres surrounded by trees. The ground is pock-marked and humped – the remains of neolithic flint mines which had been back-filled after the flint had been abstracted. The first time we went there we went down one of the shafts which is open to the public and saw the extremely narrow tunnels made thousands of years ago. The experts think that children were used to dig the flint out which was very valuable and highly regarded at that time. R and I love walking around above ground too. It is very peaceful and there are so many different wild flowers growing in the short grass. The sound of sky-larks is all around.
The fens begin shortly after Thetford and even though we have had so much rainfall there didn’t seem to be too many places suffering from flooding. The soil is such a rich black colour and the contrast between it and the vivid green shoots of the wheat and barley was quite striking. This is no doubt one of the places where the ‘dirty celery’ comes from that I see for sale at home.
I love seeing Ely Cathedral as we approach it across the flat fens. It is an enormous building but so delicate looking. R and I went to Ely one weekend about twenty years ago and attended the Sunday morning service. I think it was late winter/early spring time and very windy just like now. It wasn’t that many years after the 1986 storm: the wind made me very nervous and I spent a sleepless night cowering under the bedclothes. I was also a little shy about going to the service at the cathedral; I remember feeling very awkward. We haven’t been back since – mainly lack of opportunity and time – but I would love to go again. From the train I saw many boats and houseboats tied up to the quays and boatbuilders working in their yards. Lots of birds too – heron, ducks, geese, mute swans, little egret.
Between Ely and Peterborough are more fens and The Hundred Foot Washes with the New Bedford River or Hundred Foot Drain on the Ely side, the Old Bedford River on the other and inbetween a wide expanse of water. The railway crosses this on a little causeway and with the wind making waves on the water one feels quite vulnerable and glad to get to the other side. I saw large flocks of swans on the fields; I couldn’t see whether they were Bewick’s or Whooper swans as the train was going too fast.
From one side of the train at Peterborough you can see the large mosque with its green dome and minaret and on the other side the rather squat cathedral.
After Peterborough the Fens are left behind and the countryside gets more hilly and wooded. I like to imagine myself walking through these woods and across the fields; wondering what I would see over the hill in the distance. The train goes through Grantham, Nottingham and Alfreton – lots of woody knolls near Alfreton – and then to Chesterfield of the twisted church spire, which can also be seen from the train!
I got to Sheffield in the pouring rain so decided to take a taxi to my hotel instead of walking. The lifts weren’t working and I foolishly said I didn’t need help with my luggage. After struggling up seven flights of stairs to get to my room I regretted this very much! I met A almost immediately and we had a very pleasant couple of hours chatting over a meal in a vegetarian café while it got dark outside and the rain got heavier. A’s dramatic society is called The Company and they were performing Shakespeare’s ‘Julius Caesar’. A had to be at the theatre at 6.30 so we set off at 6.00 to walk there – a fast walk and all uphill so I certainly got plenty of exercise after my sedentary journey. A had her umbrella; my coat has a hood so I carried the bag of things I had brought from home for her – a book, some letters and her walking trainers. We got to our destination just before 6.30 and A went to the dressing room to get ready. The doors didn’t open until after 7.00 so I waited outside – A left me her umbrella but I didn’t need it as I managed to get some shelter under the portico over the doors.
The play was very well performed; A was so good, as always, as Portia and the young man who played Cassius was excellent too. Afterwards, A walked back with me to my hotel to have a drink in the bar then came up to my room to see the enormous bed there. Four people could comfortably have slept in it! I walked with A to her bus-stop and saw her on to it before returning to the hotel. She texted a little later to say she was safely at home and already in bed. I spent the night clinging to the edge of my bed as to a raft in a stormy sea! I am not used to such space.
When I got home the following afternoon I found not only had I missed the septic tank being emptied (what a shame, I don’t think! Glad it’s been done though) but the work to clear the willow from around our pond had started that day and the top of our tall leylandii hedge, which serves as a windbrake on the south side of the house, had been trimmed. The pond and surround looks so different now especially as the JCB had sunk into the ground all round the pond and has left quite a quagmire. Most of the daffodils have gone and all of the cowslips and violets. Nevertheless, the work had to be done and we can always replace the daffodils if we want to and the cowslips and violets will return eventually. The men weren’t able to finish all the work so are coming back on Monday.
A phoned me today to say the rest of the run of the play went very well and they were reviewed in the Sheffield Star. She was mentioned personally!

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I talk about what it's like living in a quiet part of Suffolk. I am a wife, mother and daughter, a practising Christian and love the natural world that surrounds me. I enjoy my life - most of the time!

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