Arriving from the Northern Line at Kings Cross with St Pancras in the background.
On Saturday 1st
September at 9.30am, I emerged from the Northern Line into the concourse
between Kings Cross and St Pancras stations. The sun was shining and it was warm. I had the tickets for Alan Parry and myself to Wakefield Kirkgate printed off
from my laptop, in my pocket.Alan was
coming up from Byfleet and should arrive at Kings Cross just after 10am. We were travelling to Pontefract to stay with Alan and Cath Mace for the night. Alan had invited us up to give us a guided tour of Pontefract and visit some of its pubs.
Half of a supermarket trolley sticking out of a brick wall?????
I had a wander around Kings Cross Station concourse
looking for a coffee shop. Next to platform 9 is the Harry
Potter supermarket trolley, suitcases and bird cage, apparently disappearing
into a brick wall onto ,"Platform 9 and three quarters," from where the, Hogwarts
Express, in the novels, travelled north. There was a crowd of Harry Potter enthusiasts
gathering near this spot. Many were dressed as characters from the stories.
There were
film cameras and photographers hanging around. Some of the fans dressed as
Potter characters were being interviewed. There were a number of security guards. I asked one
what was going on. September 1st is the day the pupils of Hogwarts returned
to school in
Rowling's novels. The fans were celebrating the event.
Rowling's novels. The fans were celebrating the event.
Potter fans gathering at Kings Cross.
Alan arrived and we both stood in the crowd who were
obviously waiting for something to happen. Alan asked another security guard
about the event. He told us that some of the stars from the latest Potter film, The Crimes of Grindwald, were going to make an appearance. Jude Law and Eddie Redmain appeared at the entrance of the Harry Potter shop. They posed with the trolley and had pictures taken with some of
the fans and smiled for the cameras.
Fans filming Eddie Redmain and Jude Law at ,"platform 9 and three quarters."
Witnessing an
event like that makes you wonder how people get so involved and become so
passionate about a fantasy like Harry Potter. Some people need that sort of thing to get through life I suppose.
It was time for Alan and myself to board our train north from platform 5 going to Doncaster and Wakefield.We boarded the,” Shakespeare Express."
It was time for Alan and myself to board our train north from platform 5 going to Doncaster and Wakefield.We boarded the,” Shakespeare Express."
Alan getting ready to board The Shakespeare Express.
We pulled
out of Kings Cross and began our journey north. We passed the The Emirates stadium on our right.
The train sped along smoothly at 125 miles per hour.It felt like gliding over a
sheet of ice. The sun shone. The buffet carriage was next to our carriage
so we got coffee and tea during the journey. Two ladies sitting opposite us offered us biscuits. We arrived in Wakefield Kirkgate at
1.38pm. Nobody was about. Wakefield seemed empty.
Wakefield Kirkgate.
We asked a man
sweeping the platform when the train from Wakefield to Pontefract was expected.
He thought the train to ,”Ponty,” might be cancelled because of the unofficial
strikes that were going on. We decided to get a taxi to Alan Maces house. It was a journey of about
eight miles. The taxi driver was a sociable sort, "F," ing and ,"blinding," amiably as
he drove us along telling us about his great invention for keeping the sun off
his SATNAV screen. It appeared to be a piece of card cut out of a Wheetabix box,
but it obviously worked for him.
Alan and Cath's house in Pontefract.
Alan and Cath
live in a detached house on a new estate on the edge of Pontefract, in Cavendish
Avenue. Very ,”Surrey.” Alan, after showing us our rooms, placed a bottle of Black Sheep Ale on his coffee table, in front of us, to get the afternoon off to a liquid start.
From Alan's house
we walked into Pontefract centre. Along the way we passed through an area of cultural diversity. We walked past Tokies pizza restaurant and the
Pearl Dragon Chinese takeaway.
A large open piece of land that was covered in grass had all sorts of ridges and rectangular raised bits pushing up from underneath the surface.
A large open piece of land that was covered in grass had all sorts of ridges and rectangular raised bits pushing up from underneath the surface.
The site of St Johns Priory, Pontefract.
An information board explained how this
was the site of an old priory dating from between 1090 and 1536. It had been
called St Johns.
Looking out over the countryside later from Pontefract Castle, which is on a hill, we saw in the distance the water towers of the old coal fired power station at Ferrybridge. Near it and much smaller, glinted the shining steel chimneys of the new Ferrybridge Renewable Energy, Multi Fuel power station. Those in authority, are thinking of demolishing the old cooling towers. The towers are part of the scenery and have been part of the lives of people in Wakefield and Pontefract for generations. What can be done with disused cooling towers? They look like works of art.
Looking out over the countryside later from Pontefract Castle, which is on a hill, we saw in the distance the water towers of the old coal fired power station at Ferrybridge. Near it and much smaller, glinted the shining steel chimneys of the new Ferrybridge Renewable Energy, Multi Fuel power station. Those in authority, are thinking of demolishing the old cooling towers. The towers are part of the scenery and have been part of the lives of people in Wakefield and Pontefract for generations. What can be done with disused cooling towers? They look like works of art.
Ferrybridge Power Station in the distance.
As we walked
along we came across Alan’s favourite shop, "A.B. J. Wood." They are a DIY
and hardware emporium. There were pieces of architectural salvage at the back of the premises, a red
telephone box, railings, fencing,stone cherubs and old rusty railings. A large polythene bag full of soil pipe parts dangled over the front entrance.
Alan reckoned Mr Wood sold everything. I like shops like that.
A Shell garage across the road had a line of cars at each pump perfectly in line, like the starting grid of a formula 1 race.
A.B.J. WOOD hardware shop, Pontefract.
A Shell garage across the road had a line of cars at each pump perfectly in line, like the starting grid of a formula 1 race.
Ready for the chequered flag.
Pontefract is
old and we came across examples of its ancient past at every turn.
Set in amongst a grove of lofty beech and horse chestnuts stood the ruins of
All Saints church. It dates from the 14th century but it was
destroyed and left a ruin during the siege of the castle further up the hill
during the English Civil War. In 1837 a new church was built inside the ruins
of the old church. It looks strange, a church within an old ruin.
On a
street corner with Victorian terraced houses and a few ramshackle shops surrounding it is a worn grassy area with a rectangle
of stones, no more than ten feet wide and fifteen feet in length . This
was the stone foundations of Kirkebi Anglo Saxon Church built in about 700AD
and mentioned in the Domesday Book. Here King Eadred accepted the allegiance
of the Northumbrians and Archbishop Wolfston of York. The church was no larger
than a cupboard. They were either very small people or they got very friendly
in there.
All Saints Church, Pontefract.
Kirkebi Anglo Saxon Church.
Further up the
hill is Pontefract Castle. It has a dark history. It was one of the great
northern castles and it was thought whoever controlled the castle controlled
the north. It became a magnet for trouble. Built in 1070 by Ilbert
de Lacy it was described in the Domesday Book of 1086. Henry 1st
confiscated it from John de Lacy because he failed to support the King. Roger,
John’s son and heir, later paid Richard 1st 3000 marks for it back
but the King still kept the castle. Later King John, returned the castle to the de Lacys and they lived there until the
early 14th century.In 1311 it was taken over by the House of Lancaster.
The Earl of Lancaster was beheaded there because of treason and became a local
martyr and revered by the population. John of Gaunt
took it over but he was banished by Richard II. Henry Bolingbroke, John of
Gaunts son, who had been banished with his father from the country returned when
Richard was away, probably waging some war or other, took back his estates and
became Henry IV. In 1536 Thomas Darcy gave it over to the Pilgrimage of Grace,
a northern Catholic uprising against Henry VIII. He was beheaded for his
troubles. In 1541 Catherine Howard, Henrys fifth wife, was accused of adultery
with Thomas Culpeper. The act of adultery taking place in the castle.
She was beheaded. Mary Queen of Scots stayed there. It became a
Royalist stronghold during the English Civil War and was besieged three times.
At the end of the Civil War the castle was demolished. The local
population was thankful. They were fed up with all the trouble the castle had brought
them.
Some of the ruins of Pontefract Castle.
"Ponty," is a picturesque town with Georgian, Tudor and Medieval buildings. It has blue plaques everywhere. One plaque remembers Peter and Fred Asquith who founded ASDA supermarkets.It is also home to the Tangerine Confectionary Company. They make
Sherbet Fountains, Black Jacks, Fruit Salad, Liquorice All Sorts and Refreshers. The ancient, "Buttercross," is a Medieval Market.
Pontefract has a covered market off the High Street. It was being closed up for the night when we got there but we were able to have a walk around it. The first shop we came across in the market sold Yorkshire cheeses. Liquorice Cheese, sounded good.
On the other side of town is ,Haribos, who make Pontefract Cakes. Alan and Cath placed three bags of Pontefract Cakes on our respective beds, as welcoming gifts.
The Buttercross.
Pontefract has a covered market off the High Street. It was being closed up for the night when we got there but we were able to have a walk around it. The first shop we came across in the market sold Yorkshire cheeses. Liquorice Cheese, sounded good.
Pontefract indoor market.
On the other side of town is ,Haribos, who make Pontefract Cakes. Alan and Cath placed three bags of Pontefract Cakes on our respective beds, as welcoming gifts.
HARIBOs where they make and sell Pontefract Cakes.
The three of us
spent the evening touring the pubs in Pontefract. For a small country town it
has a lot of pubs and we went into a few of them. We started in the The Broken
Bridge which is the local Wetherspoons. We ate there. I had a good steak and
chips.A few of the other pubs included, Horse Vaults, The Malt Shovel, The
Ponty Tavern, The Red Lion, Liquorice Bush, and the Golden Ball.
In one pub I asked the barman about slag heaps. When I first travelled north , in the 1960s, when I was 13 years old, I remember seeing slag heaps everywhere. I have travelled north often over the years and slag heaps seem to have disappeared. The barman told me to look out of the back of the pub and pointed out a low hill that appeared to fit into the landscape. He told that was a slag heap. Its top had been removed and it was grassed over.
We had a drink in here.
In one pub I asked the barman about slag heaps. When I first travelled north , in the 1960s, when I was 13 years old, I remember seeing slag heaps everywhere. I have travelled north often over the years and slag heaps seem to have disappeared. The barman told me to look out of the back of the pub and pointed out a low hill that appeared to fit into the landscape. He told that was a slag heap. Its top had been removed and it was grassed over.
The remains of a slag heap.
On the Sunday,
the day Alan and I were to return to London, Alan made us breakfast of baked
beans, mushrooms, eggs, sausages and bacon. He did an amazing job. Alan and
Cath’s two dogs, Monty and Rory, two black Labradors, sat patiently and slavered at the sight of the
food. Cath suggested, that as we had time
before our 12.50 train from Wakefield to Kings Cross,we might visit the
National Trust Park at Nostell Priory, an 18th century
country mansion built in 1733 for the Winn family.
The house designed by
James Paine with a wing and stables designed by John Adam is set within 3000
acres of beautiful parkland. The Winn family financed all this, first through
the textile industry, then coal mining and also mining iron ore for the
Industrial Revolution An extensive lake surrounded by trees and paths has large
patches of lily pads and at this time of year is blooming with
yellow flowers. The sun shining on the lake amid the shadows cast by the trees
presented a lovely sight.
Nostell Priory.
A walk in the park with Monty and Rory.
We walked around
the estate while Monty and Rory ran for their yellow ball. We all got lots of
throwing practice. We arrived at the impressive obelisk lodge gate at the far
extremity of the estate. A herd of heifers gathered at the gates to the lodge
house. The expansive grass areas all around were
splattered with thousands of ,”cow pats.” Some of those ,”cow pats,” were big,
very big. The heifers are well fed.
The Obelisk Lodge.
You have got to admire the Winn family who owned the estate. They were nothing if not persistent. One generation ran out of money in building the house. The next generation took on the project. Expenses had to be cut. Eventually they achieved what the family had set out to do at the park.
There was no time
before our train to see inside the house. It has collections of
Chippendale furniture, and Brueghel and Hogarth paintings We had a cup of coffee in the stable
block and then it was time to drive to Wakefield Kirkgate Station. Alan and I
said our goodbyes and thanked Alan and Cath for a fantastic time and then the
two of us were off back to London.