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Sunday, November 11, 2012

Town solemnly remembers the war dead

llanblogger picture special

 
 
 
* A veteran stands before the Castle Street war memorial.
 
 
* Youth organisations join the parade. 
 
 
 
*Veterans and army cadets march through the town centre after the ceremony. 
 
 
 
* Llangollen Silver Band head up the parade.
 
 
 
* The Rev Andrew Sully leads the service of remembrance at the war memorial.
 
 
 
* The service attracted many young people. 
 
 

* Army cadets parade before the service.

LLANGOLLEN came to a standstill this morning (Sunday) as hundreds of people packed the town centre to remember the war dead.
Roads leading into Castle Street were closed off  by police to allow the traditional parade and ceremony around the war memorial to go ahead.
Llangollen Silver Band began the proceedings by leading a procession of army cadets and veterans’ organisations to the memorial where they assembled, standards proudly fluttering.
The service of remembrance then began, led by the Rev Andrew Sully of  St Collen’s parish church.
After opening prayers, the sounding of The Last Post heralded the observance of the two minutes silence.
Following the exhortation, a large number of local organisations were called to lay poppy wreaths at the base of the memorial and nearby plaque commemorating the fallen of two world wars and other conflicts.
As the wreath-layers came forward the names of the dead were solemnly read out.
Following the singing of the hymn O God Our Help in Ages Past, prayers and the blessing by the Rev Sully, Reveille was sounded by a bugler to conclude the service.
Local organisations then marched in a parade, again led by the silver band, around the town centre to the applause of the large poppy-wearing crowd.
A further service was held shortly afterwards in St Collen’s Church. 

Poignant letters home from WWI soldier go on show


* Royal Welch Fusiliers in World War One.

To coincide with Remembrance Day, Denbighshire Archives has a small exhibition commemorating the sacrifices made in the First World War.

It is a celebration of the life of Private Henry (Harry) Jones 8481, 2nd Battalion Royal Welsh Fusiliers, based on surviving letters held at the archives in Ruthin Gaol.
 



* Royal Welch Fusiliers badge.
Pvt Jones was baptised in the parish of Llanfwrog in 1887, married Elizabeth Williams in 1910, and had three children, the youngest of whom was named ‘Mons’after the battle in which his father was fighting when he was born in December 1914.

His letters home are plain, with some rather unique spelling, but are also very touching - the letters of a simple man, who was obviously missing his family and finding life in the trenches grim.

His letters to Elizabeth talk about how cold and wet it is at night. He mentions receiving a parcel from Mrs Dowell with a scarfe [sic] and tobacco and says how it will be very warm for his neck. In the same letter he tells her that Mons is a very nice name for the baby and that he likes it very much.
In a letter dated 17th December 1914 he writes: “Dear Wife we are getting very bad weather hear raneing [sic] every day and cold. Dear Wife I hope it will be over very soon it is very cold in the trenches this is worser [sic] than carrying the hod with little dan.” 

He asks for cakes and sweets to be sent to him instead of tobacco and cigarettes and says that he is going to sing in the trenches for the Germens [sic].

In his last letter dated 23 February 1915 Harry asks after his father who seems to be in poor health. 


He wants Elizabeth to feed him up well with soup and oxo. 

Part of this letter reads: “Well my Dear pleas rember [sic] me to father and give him my best love and tell him to cheer up and tell him the war will be over very soon now and I will be able to see him again…” 

It is in this letter that he asks Elizabeth to send him a photo of her and the children, even telling her that she can get them “very cheep [sic] on a post card.”

Pvt Jones was killed on 1st March, 1915 - St David’s Day - before the photograph could have reached him.

Opening hours at Denbighshire Archives are: Monday (closed), Tuesday 
                            9.30 - 16.30, Wednesday 9.30 - 16.30, Thursday 9.30 - 16.30, Friday                                 9.30 - 16.30.

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Fawlty Towers is Twenty Club triumph

llanblogger's review of Fawlty Towers by the Twenty Club at Llangollen Town Hall





THEY made only a dozen episodes back in the mid-seventies but Fawlty Towers rapidly grabbed a place in the TV hall of fame as possibly the funniest show ever to come out of Britain.

And Llangollen Twenty Club’s interpretation of this comedy icon is also likely to go down in local history as one of its best ever productions.
Those lucky enough to have seen it at the Town Hall – there wasn’t a ticket to be had for the sell-out Friday and Saturday performances but a few seats were available for the rare Saturday matinee – will testify to just how hilarious it was.
But then they could hardly go wrong when the man taking the lead role of Basil Fawlty was the very personification of the lanky lunatic who runs the county’s most dysfunctional hotel with his bone-idle and domineering wife Sybil.
Despite his tender years,  Ally Goodman has already impressed in a number of Twenty Club productions but Fawlty is surely his finest hour to date.
Not only did he look uncannily like the super-rude and outrageously ham-fisted mine host but he also captured his manic mannerisms and sardonic speech patterns to a tee.
He shone in the first two parts of this three-episode homage to the great show, The Hotel Inspectors and A Touch of Class, but positively – and quite literally - burst into flames in the final act based on that unforgettable episode when a group of Germans come to stay at the Newquay hotel and Basil, still reeling from the concussion he sustained from a runaway extinguisher when a blaze breaks out in the kitchen but determined not to mention the war, unintentionally fires off a salvo of Nazi-related insults as he takes their lunch orders.
Every offensive phrase gets him deeper in the mire, from his “Eva Braun cocktail” to his “hors d’oevres must be obeyed”.
But in the end it’s his unabashed goose-stepping Hitler impersonation which brings the medics dashing into the hotel to cart him back to hospital where he belongs.
If no decent Fawlty Towers interpretation could function without a brilliant Basil then it must also have a marvellous Manuel – the bumbling waiter from Barcelona of whom his vicious boss says it would have been easier to train a monkey.
Here fate  and some great casting provided the Twenty Club with another delicious dead ringer in the shape of  Richard Mascarenhas
From his hangdog look and droopy moustache to his baggy trousers and duck-like walk he was every inch the hapless Spaniard who is tortured almost as much by the vaguries of the English language as the insults and slaps of Fawlty.
Manuel would have dominated every scene he was in if his overbearing nemesis Basil hadn’t been on stage at the same time to give him a real run for his comedic money.
Fawlty’s wife Sybil is such a little baggage that she ought to be able to keep her monstrous husband in check but not even her own insufferability is enough and, in fact, only serves to make him even worse.
Portraying all this with suitable nuance is quite a task but one Twenty Club first-timer Helen Belton was perfectly up to.  She was understated yet still formidable in the role.
The rest of the cast shone too, from Bill Large as the drunken buffoon Major Gowen to Anna Turner as Polly the maid who is possibly the only completely sane member of the hotel’s surreal staff  team.
In all there were about 20 of them on stage at various times and  where they were and what they were supposed to be doing at any given moment in the madhouse that was Fawlty Towers was a herculean logistical task which director Chrissie Ashworth managed as competently as any wartime general.
Sorry, I forgot, don’t mention the war!        

AM calls for more backing for ex-service personnel

North Wales Assembly Member Mark Isherwood (pictured right) has paid tribute to the sacrifice and commitment of those who have served in our Armed Forces and called on the Welsh Government to give consideration to the creation of a residential centre for ex-service personnel.
Leading an Opposition debate in the Assembly, Mr Isherwood, who is Shadow Minister for Communities, called for further support for veterans suffering with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), including the potential for a Welsh residential centre.
He said: “A 2012 Healthcare Inspectorate Wales Report Healthcare and the Armed Forces Community in Wales recommends that the Welsh Government should consider the utility of establishing a form of residential facility within Wales.
“The report states that many members of the Armed Forces community commented on the desirability of having a residential centre for veterans in Wales as something you can see, touch and feel and of real psychological benefit.”
Mr Isherwood, who has long been calling for better treatment for those with PTSD, added: “Amongst combat veterans there is a common pattern of Complex PTSD with attempted symptom suppression by alcohol and/or drug abuse, a downward spiral of employment difficulties, relationship problems, confrontation with the law, and even suicide.
“A report from the Howard League for Penal Reform entitled Leave No Veteran Behind asked why so many veterans find themselves caught in the criminal justice system, stating that it is vital that the complex needs of armed forces personnel are adequately addressed and that we do everything that we can to help those who serve their country to adjust to civilian life.
“Welsh Guardsman Lance Sergeant Dan Collins tragically and unnecessarily took his own life on New Year’s Day. He was desperately seeking help for his post traumatic stress, firstly through the MoD's medical assessment programme and afterwards being referred to an NHS mental health ward, where he spent 4 weeks without being treated with anything other than various medication.”
Mr Isherwood also emphasised the role that the third sector can play in the delivery of coordinated services to ex-service personnel - backed by proven results and delivered in partnership with Health Boards - and spoke of the importance of protecting war memorials as an essential part of Welsh heritage and a focal point for remembrance.

Market Street car park to be partially closed from Monday

Llangollen's main car park is to be partially closed for about five days from next Monday.

The Market Street car park is being resurfaced and re-lined, according to Denbighshire County Council.

Cabinet Lead Member for Public Realm, Councillor David Smith, explained that the council has planned for around half the car park to remain open during the works in order to help minimise disruption.

"We expect this will allow for resurfacing and re-lining of the entire car park within the five days and we would like to thank people for their patience in advance," he said.

Lewis and Hunter Contracting Ltd will be undertaking the work on behalf of Denbighshire County Council and there are alternative car parks at:

* East Street
* Hall Street
* Mill Street
* Brook Street
* Llangollen Pavilion

Friday, November 9, 2012

County demands "clarity" over health shake-up

Now updated with campaign group statement ...

 
 
 
* Closure-threatened Llangollen Hospital.
 

Denbighshire has called for clarity in how Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board (BCUHB) plans to reorganise healthcare provision across the region.

The controversial plan includes a proposal to close Llangollen Cottage Hospital, which has sparked an angry backlash in the town.

A campaign group formed specifically to oppose the move - Keep Llangollen Health Services (KLHS) - is demanding the hospital is not closed before a range of services currently provided there continue to be available locally until a planned new health is built, possibly on the site of the derelict River Lodge.

Concern has also been voiced that the new facility will not include a minor injuries unit as the hospital now does.

In a lengthy and detailed response to the board, Denbighshire, while supporting the enhanced provision of care closer to home and improved services for people with EMI, has raised concers about a number of proposals..

These include the need for the board to ensure that no services will close until new services are in place and that there must be no "cost-shunting" to adult social care, moving costs currently borne by the health board on to the council.

Also in the response, which has been compiled after in-depth consultation with town, community and county councillors, Denbighshire has expressed a high level of concern about the impact of the proposals on carers and the lack of any funding commitment to additional services to support carers as well as the need for transport services to be costed and provided in the aftermath of the reorganisation.

Cabinet Lead Member for social care and children’s services, Councillor Bobby Feeley, said: “After lengthy and detailed consultation with many stakeholders, it is clear that the devil is in the detail with these proposals and we have made sure we have carefully studied the proposals and then listed our concerns.

“The changes proposed are not fully costed at this stage so the implication on council services is not clear but we are clear that issues such as transport need to be considered fully and there is the risk that, as services are provided more in the community, the additional costs will inevitably fall on the council’s social care teams.

“We would also like to see consideration for a joint hospital hub across Denbigh and Ruthin.”

Denbighshire will now be pressing for a strategic group to be put in place for Denbighshire to enable ongoing discussion about the detailed implementation of the proposals
and will also be looking for specific support for the delivery of a minor injuries service in Llangollen.

A spokesperson for KLHS said: "Denbighshire County Council’s statement completes the unanimity of bodies ranging from AMs, councillors, organisations such as the Royal College of Nurses, the British Medical Association, town councils everywhere, and most importantly the public, in condemning Betsi Cadwaladr’s vision of Change as deeply flawed and unrealistic, especially in delivering quality patient care.
"The Keep Llangollen Special Community Group now calls for all stakeholders to speak with one voice to be champions of local care, which is universally recognised as the highest quality available, and press both health board chairman Mary Burrows and the Health Minister Lesley Griffiths to cease these disastrous cuts, to reverse the planned closure of our cottage hospitals, and invest in our most precious commodity – our nation’s health.
"Balancing columns on a spreadsheet is not leadership. It is a false economy. Only investment can lead to higher quality healthcare with efficiency savings, and reverse the neglect of years of failures to invest."

Call for Cadbury's to clarify Chirk plant's future


Clwyd South Assembly Member Ken Skates as called on the new owners of the Cadbury factory in Chirk to outline its plans for the plant.
Following the recent de-merger of Kraft foods, the Cadbury trademark and products have now become part of a new company - Mondelez International.
This includes the Chirk factory which currently produces cocoa and hot chocolate products for the company and which employs around 150 people, quite a number of whom are from Llangollen.
The AM called on the company to make a ‘long-term commitment’ to the plant.
He said: “The Cadbury factory in Chirk is a vital source of skilled employment for people in the town and must be protected. The original takeover by Kraft in 2010 was the source of inevitable anxiety for everyone who worked at Cadbury and together with even more structural change now, there is again uncertainty about what this might mean for plants such as the one in Chirk.
“Two hundred positions have been cut at Cadbury across the UK in the last year and factory workers are no longer protected by a pledge of no compulsory redundancies which expired in March.
“In addition to this Kraft went back on a pledge not to close the Cadbury plant at Somerdale near Bristol. Therefore I think it is only fair that the new company set out its long-term plans for the brand, including the future of the Chirk factory.
“I want to see the Welsh Government work with Cadbury so that the plant in Chirk is seen as an attractive place to invest. In return I’d like to see a major, long-term commitment by the company to protect and invest further in the site.
“Food manufacturing is a growing industry and the UK market share for Cadbury is also growing. Add in the fact that the European market is a big one for the new Mondelez company, accounting for nearly 40% of sales, and you quickly come to see that there is no reason why the factory in Chirk cannot have a bright and exciting future.”
Kraft went ahead with a surprise demerger in October which saw more than 100 of its snack brands, including Cadbury, Milka, Toblerone and Oreo, put under the new company Mondelez International.