northlincs

Photographs from around North Lincolnshire


Leave a comment

Remembrance Sunday in Scunthorpe 2014

On Sunday 9th November 2014 hundreds of people gathered at the Scunthorpe Wat Memorial, outside the museum on Oswald Road, to remember those who served and lost their lives during conflicts past and present.

The Service of Remembrance followed a march from The Baths Hall, along Doncaster Road and Oswald Road, to the War Memorial where the Mayor of North Lincolnshire lead members of the armed services, civil dignataries and the public in laying wreaths, poppies and crosses.

Below is a selection photographs of the occasion.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA Continue reading


Leave a comment

North Lincolnshire Council branded ‘Killjoys’ over Central Park fountain warning

Generation of people will have fond memories of visiting Scunthorpe’s Central Park on a hot summers day and playing in the paddling pools between the 1960s and the late 1990s, it proved a way popular  of cooling off during the long hot summer holidays.

The pools didn’t escape vandalism though with mindless individuals breaking bottles in them from time to time and the results to unaware paddlers can only be imagined.

The large pool remained empty for many years but each year the smaller pool was filled and maintained, much to the delight of visitors.

The former paddling pools at Central Park

The former paddling pools at Central Park

Redevelopment of Central Park during 2009-2011 has seen new landscaping, paths and trees added. The paddling pools have been removed and a new childrens play area added along with a new cafe and toilets.

The 1960s fountain, with help from Tata Steel, has been given a £60,000+ makeover which has seen the fountains basin smoothed over (it previously had peddled set into the bottom to deter people from venturing barefoot into it) and new filter systems added.

Now the summer months are here North Lincolnshire Council have issued a warning to people not to play in the fountain.

Cllr Nigel Sherwood, cabinet member for Highways and Neighbourhoods at North Lincolnshire Council, said:

We want people to enjoy Central Park. The fountain it is not meant for swimming or playing in – it is simply a feature for all to enjoy. We can appreciate that during the warm weather people are attracted to water, but the fountain was never intended for this purpose and there is a serious health message here.  We are concerned about the possible health and safety implications from people attempting to climb the fountain and from contamination of water from animals, foreign objects, litter and broken glass. They are putting themselves and others at risk.

“Please enjoy Central Park by all means, but be sensible and don’t play or allow your dogs in the water as it may pose a health risk to you and your family.”

Children enjoying paddling in the fountain

Children enjoying paddling in the fountain

This has lead to many people calling the council ‘Killjoys’ and begs the question what has changed from allowing people to paddled in the former open air pools at Central Park to not allowing them to paddled in the fountain pool.

 

 


Leave a comment

From High Street to iStreet

As we see names disappearing from the High Street and more emphasis being placed on internet retailing, what is to become of it?

1394913674914The recent closure of Burtons and Dorothy Perkins in a prominent town centre location has left yet another void to add to that of HMV, TJ Hughes, JJB Sports and InterSports to name but a few. A dark cloud hangs over Internacionale after it went into administration for the second for the second time within a year and even pawnbrokers aren’t immune after it was revealed that HT Pawnbrokers (left) is set to close when its 5 year lease expires.

Will the majority of shops being left empty along the upper High Street be replaced by offices or turned into flats? Are the only shops left going to be bookmakers, hairdressers, nail bars or those selling food and drink?

The former Burton & Dorothy Perkins shop

The former Burton & Dorothy Perkins shop

Continue reading


2 Comments

From Slavery to Scunthorpe – The remarkable story of Salim Wilson

Reading a post on the Scunthorpe Memories Facebook website group page about the commotion cause in the early half of last century when a local woman married a former African slave spurred me to do a bit of research into it.

I’d heard bits of the story, which has been passed on from generation to generation over the years, with the story getting somewhat fudged with time. The more I read into the story the more I was intrigued but more so by the man himself.

He was called Hatashil Masha Kathish and it was his marriage to widowed Eliza Holden which caused quite a stir.

Articles which dates from 1913, report the wedding in a language which would not be deemed appropriate or politically correct today.

It reads;

“The union of two persons of different races, one a negro and the other a thoroughly English ‘white lady’, always causes a great amount of interest to be taken in the event; and this was especially so in Scunthorpe yesterday, when a negro was married to and English lady; the ceremony taking place at the Centenary Church on Frodingham Road, a crowd of about one thousand persons assembling in the street, composed chiefly of women pushing their perambulators.” 

Salim Wilson

Salim Wilson

“The bridegroom was Hatashil Masha Kathish but he is not known by that name among his English acquaintances, who prefer to call him ‘Mr. Wilson’.  He is a typical example of the black race, broad shouldered, somewhat stout and with a fine set of beautiful white teeth.” 

“A native of the Soudan, he was but a child when he was captured and taken as a slave, and during that period he certainly tasted the bitterness of life, but through the instrumentality of General Gordon he was released in the year 1879. Wandering from his native parts he found himself in Uganda, but there he fell into good company, entering the employ of the Church of England missionaries who eventually sent him to England as a missionary and it is now 33 years since he set foot upon this island of ours. Faithful to the convictions instilled into him by the missionaries in Uganda, he commence his work in this country, and in the course of time he came to Scunthorpe, where he took charge of the Bethel Free Mission, but the financial resources of this becoming exhausted, it fell through.”

Other newspapers at the time also have unpolitically correct headlines reading;

Black Mates White’ and ‘Black Prince Marries White Woman

Reports go on to say,

“Police mingled with the crowd, obviously expecting trouble, but there was none. The bride and groom arrived in a taxi, the bride dressed in Quaker grey trimmed with cream lace with matching hat. Her bridesmaids were Miss Florrie Holden, her daughter, and Miss Polly Heald; they wore champagne coloured-dresses and hats trimmed in pale blue. The best man was William Challenger, a missioner from the UnitedMethodistChurch at Hoyland, near Barnsley.”  

“The tremendous interest aroused by this wedding was partly the result of the obvious disparities in the match, Mr Wilson was African, tall and very black; Mrs Holden was English, white and dainty. Even in her extravagant wedding hat she barely reached his shoulders.” 

Further information reveals Hatashil Masha Kathish was baptised on 28th August 1882, taking the name Salim Charles Wilson.

Salim Wilson recorded his own history in a book titled ‘Jehovah-Nissi, The Life Story of Hatashil Masha Kathish of the Dinka Tribe, Soudan. There is also another book called From Slavery to Mission which recounts the life of Salim Wilson.

Salim Wilson

Salim Wilson

He trained as a missionary at CliffCollege, Derbyshire. He left college in June 1886 and then worked at the YMCA in London before going on a mission to Africa.

He returned to England and worked for some time in Wakefield and Barnsley, he began work as an itinerant jeweller and in 1910 moved to Scunthorpe as an evangelist at Miss Gutcher’s Bethel Free Mission on Gilliatt Street. He lodged with widow Eliza Holden of 45 Burke Street and became a member of the Primitive Methodist Church on Frodingham Road, now the Centenary, and became a lay preacher.

He also built houses on Frodingham Road with number 246 being called Kathish Villas. It had a shop underneath and was kept for his own use. Another house was called Gordon Villas after his hero General Gordon who had freed him from slavery. Salim kept an allotment on Normanby Road and kept around 40 pigs. He sold the meat at his shop and also in Scunthorpe market where he had a stall.

Salim Wilson's burial place in Crosby Cemetery

Salim Wilson’s burial place in Crosby Cemetery

He was reputedly the first black man in Scunthorpe, he was said be a warm caring man of keen intelligence and brimming with fun, and in 1933 Salim took part in the Wilberforce Centenary celebrations in Hull.

Salim Wilson died in January 1946, his wife just over 4 years earlier in November 1941 and are both buried in Crosby Cemetery.


Leave a comment

Unmarked Police Vehicles to be maintained by North Lincolnshire Council

North Lincolnshire Council is set to maintain around 30 and provide MOT testing for over 70 police vehicles based in the North Lincolnshire area – strengthening its joint working with local organisations.

A row of unmarked police vehicles in Scunthorpe

A row of unmarked police vehicles in Scunthorpe

Humberside Police are currently developing a single vehicle maintenance facility at Melton that will replace two existing police facilities in Scunthorpe and Hull. As part of this Humberside Police has secured support from the council to maintain unmarked non-operational police vehicles in Scunthorpe. Continue reading


1 Comment

Ashby Ville pond

On Monday 9th December 2013 I had a ride over to the Ashby Ville pond to the south-east of town.

The new wooden walkway

The new wooden walkway

A view along the walkway

A view along the walkway

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The pond is the result of former iron-ore mining for the nearby steelworks, mining ceased there many years ago and the area filled with water creating this pond which has seen all sorts of wildlife attracted to it. There are also fishing pegs from which anglers can try their luck, the pond also sees people taking to the water on jet skis and the area is popular with dog walkers.

The Hamst on the walkway

The Hamst on the walkway

Looking back along the new walkway

Looking back along the new walkway

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The pond has seen a number of tragedies over the years where people have drowned, the more recent case being 12 year old Lebohang Carrington Sibanda in May 2008. A lasting memorial to him has been position close to the entrance of the ponds off Whimbrel Chase.

Memorial to Lebohang Carrington Sibanda

Memorial to Lebohang Carrington Sibanda

Jet skier taken during the summer

Jet skier taken during the summer

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The most recent addition to the pond is the construction of a wooden walkway across the water, to the rear of Morrisons Supermarket, which allows walkers to complete a full circuit of the pond. The wooden walkway is around 40 meters in length and is a great viewing platform to watch the local wildlife from.