Aylesbury – Sunday 4th June 2023

Aylesbury is a market town and is the county town of Buckinghamshire.  It’s the location of the first Paralympic Games, known at the time as the World Wheelchair and Amputee Games which took place in 1948 at the nearby Stoke Mandeville hospital.  It’s also famous for the Aylesbury duck, but sadly we didn’t see any on our visit!  We hadn’t visited Aylesbury before, and found it to be a very pretty town with plenty of beautiful old buildings.  The Waterstones is located in a modern shopping centre.

Aylesbury map

David Bowie

David Bowie debuted his character Ziggy Stardust in Friars – a music venue in the town – in 1972.   This statue, Earthly Messenger is the work of Andrew Sinclair and was unveiled in 2018 – it shows Bowie as Ziggy and as he was in 2002 as well as other smaller images of him.  Apparently, it plays music hourly, although we didn’t know this or we might have stayed around to listen.

The Kings Head

The Kings Head public house was originally a private house built in 1455.  It became a coaching inn in 1620, and apparently at one stage it even housed a post office!  It has been owned by the National Trust since 1925.  We had lunch here and it was delicious.

I Am

The two sculptures below by Colin Spofforth are inspired by the town’s links to the Paralympics.  There are three in total – these are I Am Free (standing) and I Am Me (crouching).

BelowTop row – Bucks & Oxon Union Bank (founded in 1853 and taken over by Lloyds Bank in 1902).  Bottom row – Church Street, Aylesbury Crown Court, Aylesbury Clock Tower, Market Square, the Clock Tower.

Berkhamsted – Sunday 4th June 2023

Berkhamsted is a market town in Hertfordshire, which sits on the Grand Union Canal – once a busy port and bustling trade route running from London, with its two arms ending in Leicester and the other Birmingham. It is still referred to as Port of Berkhamsted today.  The busy mix of independent and branded shops are mainly contained to one long street.  The Waterstones is in a mid-19th century building in the High Street.

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Berkhamsted map

The John Sayer Almshouses

These Almshouses were gifted to the town of Berkhamsted by John Sayer just before his death in 1682, and were for “6 poor widows, aged over 55 and constant frequenters of the Church of England…” who had to have lived in Berkhamsted for 10 years.  This clause still applies, although it has been amended to “Christians, with a preference for members of the Church of England and who are residents in or have connections with the town of Berkhamsted and its surrounding area.” In recent years.

The Grand Union Canal

Below, clockwise from top left:  Church Lane (2), Berkhamsted Town Hall.

Edit, 20th February 2024I have now discovered through this wonderful blog that the Waterstones here was formerly a branch of Woolworths.   You can read more about it here.   I’m off to read all about Woolies – oh, how I miss that store.

Northampton – Saturday 3rd June 2023

Since we last visited Northampton, the Waterstones has relocated to a new store in the town. This seems to happen reasonably frequently.  We’re not planning to revisit all the stores when this happens, but if we’re in the area then I’ll post pictures of the new site. smile

Original blog here smile

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Northampton map 2

Rushden Lakes – Saturday 3rd June 2023

Rushden Lakes is a shopping and leisure centre which opened in 2017.  It’s located beside Skew Bridge Lake in Northamptonshire and was constructed on the site of gravel pits, a dry ski slope and a country club which had lain derelict for many years.  The complex houses a visitor centre for the Nene Wetlands which is a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) – this area is home to many species of birds and plants. We really liked Rushden Lakes as a complex – there are loads of shops, including Waterstones, as well as restaurants, a cinema and canoeing! 

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Rushden Lakes map

The photo of the visitor centre is used with permission under licence.  The Photo has been resized slightly.  The copyright belongs to © David Dixon (cc-by-sa/2.0)

Milton Keynes – Friday 2nd June 2023

The town of Milton Keynes was founded on 23rd January 1967 as a new town – its purpose was to allow people to move out from London, which was very overcrowded, and its creation absorbed some existing towns and villages from the area.  The main centre is built on in a grid arrangement, with road names including H or V for horizontal and vertical.  There are plenty of green areas too, and the town has a modern feel and a diverse population.  The Waterstones is located in the heart of Milton Keynes centre in an area called Midsummer Place. 

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Milton Keynes map

This bronze bench sculpture is outside Waterstones and is called Sitting on History by British sculptor Bill Woodrow. 

On the first morning of our stay, I got up early for a walk round the nearby Willen Lake to the wonderful Tree Cathedral nearby.  The lake is used for all sorts of watersports, and there is a path around the perimeter of the lake, and a bridge to cross from one side to the other in the middle.  The Tree Cathedral was planted in 1986 and is modelled on Norwich Cathedral. The landscape designer was Neil Higson. As well as being free for anyone to enjoy, it is also used for wedding blessings and woodland burials.  It was so peaceful at the lake and cathedral first thing in the morning. 

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Currently reading:  Chocky by John Wyndham

Oxford – Sunday 7th May 2023

Oxford is the county town of Oxfordshire, and is the county’s only city.  It is home to the oldest university in the English-speaking world and has a rich heritage which is reflected in many beautiful buildings.  The rivers Thames and Cherwell pass either side of the city and join to the south of it, and the Oxford canal starts in the city and ends at the Hawkesbury junction of the Coventry canal.  Due to the beauty of Oxford, it is the location of many films and TV shows, including the Harry Potter franchise and the excellent adaption of Colin Dexter’s Inspector Morse series starring the late John Thaw. We were visiting to celebrate our coral wedding anniversary.   The Waterstones is set over five floors and is located in a stunning building called William Baker House, which  was completed in 1915.  Baker was a furniture maker and the company occupied the premises until 1987, when it was taken over by bookshop chain Dillons, becoming Waterstones in 1998.

Oxford map

Carfax Tower

Carfax Tower – or, to give it its proper name, St Martin’s Tower, is all that’s left of the 12th century St Martin’s church.  The church was demolished in 1820, leaving this tower, due to it being unsafe, and the replacement church of the same name was later demolished in 1896 as part of a scheme of road improvements in the area, but again the tower survived.  It is now owned by Oxford City Council.  There are 99 steps to the top of the tower, and the climb is worth it for the views from the top!

Oxford Canal

The photos below of the faun and the lion door at Brasenose College are said to have inspired CS Lewis’s writing of The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe.  There’s even a lamppost nearby!

Below.  Top row – Oxford Castle.  Bottom row – The Bridge of Sighs.

Below.  Top row -The Shedonian Theatre (left), The Radcliffe Camera (right).  Bottom row – The Bodleian Library, including a statue of William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke.

The Headington Shark

No trip to the area would be complete without a visit to the Headington Shark (official name Untitled 1986), just a couple of miles out of the city. It’s a 25-foot fibre glass sculpture which was erected in 1986 without planning permission as a protest against war.   After a six-year fight, the owners were permitted to keep the sculpture.  It’s certainly very striking!

Happy anniversary to us!

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Currently reading:  The Forgetting by Hannah Beckerman

Ipswich Martlesham – Friday 5th May 2023

We’d been in Suffolk for a family event, staying just over the border in a beautiful little town in Norfolk called Loddon.  We stayed a couple of nights and the weather was great so I did a couple of early-morning walks.  When we left, we made a diversion from the direct route home to visit a branch of Waterstones that has opened just outside Ipswich since we were last in the area. This new Waterstones is in a Next store in an out-of-town shopping centre.

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Due to the store being in a shopping centre rather than a town, there was nothing in the area to visit, and we were keen to get home, so I thought I’d share some pictures of Loddon instead!

Currently reading:  The Bullet that Missed by Richard Osman

Lichfield – Friday 14th April 2023

We were heading to Yorkshire for a family birthday celebration, so on the way we stopped in Lichfield, which is a cathedral city in Staffordshire, possibly most famous as being the birthplace of Samuel Johnson who was responsible for creating the first Dictionary of the English Language.  He lived in Breadmarket Street in the city for the first 27 years of his life, and house became the Samuel Johnson Birthplace Museum in 1901. It’s free (donations welcome!), and is well worth a visit.  The Waterstones is located opposite the museum in an attractive grade II listed building, built mid to late 18th century.

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Lichfield map

Samuel Johnson Birthplace Museum

Lichfield Cathedral

Lichfield Cathedral, officially The Cathedral Church of St. Mary and St. Chad, is one of only three cathedrals in the UK to have three spires (the others are St Mary’s Edinburgh and Truro).  It’s beautiful inside and out.

Photos below – Top – Dr Samuel Johnson (he looks like he’s having a snooze!).  Bottom row from left to right – Dame Oliver’s Infant School, and plaque – Johnson attended here in 1714. St Chad, situated outside the cathedral.

Currently reading: Class of ’37 by Hester Barron & Claire Langhamer

Trowbridge – Friday 31st March 2023

Trowbridge is the county town of Wiltshire.  It has long been connected with textiles – as far back as the 14th Century the woollen trade was a prominent cottage industry, and the first mills appeared in the early 1800s.  The last to close was Salter’s Mill which shut its doors in 1982. The building was incorporated into a new shopping centre, The Shires, in which Trowbridge Museum is housed, as is the Waterstones.

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Trowbridge map

Trowbridge Town Hall

The town hall was built to commemorate Queen Victoria’s Golden Jubilee in 1887 and was also the local Magistrates Court, Coroner’s Court and County Court.  I’d visited Trowbridge with a friend, and we popped in to look at the building, and one of the staff members gave us a tour of the cells below the building.  The ballroom upstairs was used for dances, and, in the 1960s, The Who performed there!  Outside the town hall is a plaque to Sir Isaac Pitman, who developed Pitman Shorthand, and who was born in the town.

Wording for the plaque on Trowbridge Town Hall above reads:

Trowbridge

Trowbridge plaque By Phil Williams, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=12582703

Currently reading:  The Reading List by Sara Nisha Adams