Down Your Way
THE POPULAR BBC RADIO
PROGRAMME CAME TO BOURNE IN 1971
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One of the most popular radio programmes
in the post-war years was Down Your Way, a BBC series which ran from
1946 until 1992, originally on the Home Service and later on BBC Radio 4,
usually being broadcast on Sunday afternoons, always with the now familiar
signature tune Horse Guards, Whitehall by Haydn Wood.
The formula was a simple one with a visit to towns and villages around the
country when the presenter spoke to selected residents and played their
choice of music.
There were several presenters during that 46 years but the best known was
Franklin Engelmann (pictured above) who took over in 1955 and it was he who came to Bourne
with a recording team in October 1971, the year before his death.
He opened the programme with a word portrait of Bourne, a busy market town
of great contrasts, situated on the edge of the fens with good links to
many other towns such as Peterborough, Sleaford, Stamford and Spalding, a thriving agricultural economy and home to the BRM
motor racing company.
There were six guests, all of whom were well known in Bourne, the first
being Dr John (Alistair) Galletly, a family doctor who had been in
practice in the town since 1927 when he took over the North Road surgery
from his father.
Dr Galletly was passionate about local history and he described how Bourne
had developed from a Roman settlement some 2,000 years ago into the
bustling market town we see today, the romantic appeal of Hereward the
Wake, the building of the castle and the life of Robert Manning, the 13th
century monk who was instrumental in putting the ordinary speech of the
English people of his time into a written form that is still recognisable
today.
He had also worked at the Butterfield Hospital which then had the unusual
status of a cottage hospital, and he was deeply concerned that this role
should continue in the future to serve the public as it had since 1910
after the house in North Road had been left to the town by the Butterfield
family.
Sister Grace Bristow, assistant matron at the Butterfield, who had worked
there for eighteen years, spoke of the work and staffing of the hospital
which she said was a valuable public and much-loved amenity, well-equipped and
always open in times of emergency. She also described the medical
facilities, including eleven beds, an operating theatre and a busy
children’s department, a hospital greatly appreciated by the people of
Bourne and although many other cottage hospitals in the country were
closing, it would be a tragedy if the Butterfield were to suffer the same
fate because patients would have to travel long distances to Stamford and
Peterborough for treatment, a portent of things to come because in 1983,
the Butterfield was indeed closed, a victim of drastic cuts within the
National Health Service.
Charitable work in Bourne was discussed by Mrs Dorothy Stanton, a former
chairman and then a trustee of Bourne United Charities which administers
money left to the town in various bequests during past centuries, mainly
the generous legacy from the philanthropist Robert Harrington (1589-1654)
who left Bourne for London as a youth to seek his fortune and became a
successful businessman. Mrs Stanton also described the regular grants made
annually by BUC to various organisations in the town, together with £1 a
week to 200 needy old people.
Tom Barthorpe, who farmed 70 acres of arable land at New Farm off South
Road, was the next guest who talked proudly of Bourne’s farming heritage,
the quality of the fen soil and the crops it produced, cereals, sugar beet
and particularly potatoes in which he specialised for both human
consumption and seed. He also kept a breeding flock of Suffolk cross sheep
and a few landrace and white cross pigs which were fattened for sale.
A visit to the fire brigade in South Street was the next port of call for
an interview with Station Officer Gareth Owen who talked about the work of
the service and in particular, a new bleeper system that had recently been
installed to call out the volunteer part-time firemen whenever there was
an alert, a signalling system which replaced the old style siren and one
of the first of its kind to be used by a county fire brigade in Britain.
Bourne’s motor racing heritage was featured in the final interview with
Raymond Mays at his home adjoining the BRM workshops in Eastgate when he
talked about his early days and his obsession with motor cars from the age
of eight which led to an international career at the wheel.
He reminisced about some of the cars he had produced, the men who had
worked and raced with him and his successful moments on and off the track,
particularly the development of the BRM which in 1962 eventually became
the first all-British car to win the world championship with Graham Hill
at the wheel.
ARCHIVE RECORDING
An hour-long recording of the
broadcast has survived to provide a fascinating glimpse of Bourne from
almost fifty years ago. It was made by Raymond Mays himself and found in a
suitcase at Eastgate House together with some old photographs when he died
in 1980.
The photographs were used for display
purposes by the Civic Society in the memorial room at the Heritage Centre
in South Street and the suitcase then lay forgotten in a storeroom until
committee member Jim Jones opened it in the summer of 2016 and found the
recording. It had been made with the old reel-to-reel equipment but was
still playable and has now been now committed to CD and Jones is now
preparing an audio-visual presentation for showing to visitors later in
the year.
THE RECORDS THEY CHOSE
Dr John Galletly:The Lincolnshire Poacher sung by Peter Pears
accompanied by Benjamin Britten at the piano.
Sister Grace Bristow: The Riff Song from The Desert Song by Sigmund
Romberg sung by Gordon MacRae.
Mrs Dorothy Stanton: Keep right on till the end of the road sung by
Harry Lauder.
Tom Barthorpe: Welcome to my world sung by Jim Reeves.
Gareth Owen: This is my lovely day sung by Lizabeth Webb and George
Guétary.
Raymond Mays: I Love You So from the operetta The Merry Widow by
Franz Lehar. |
WRITTEN SEPTEMBER 2016
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