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Thread: Liverpool Lives

  1. #1
    Liverpool New Yorker! Ronijayne's Avatar
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    Default Liverpool Lives

    This may be old news but I have only just been given this link and I love it. The Grandfather stories and the pics of the camping are so cool



    http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http...com%2F&h=2bf06
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    Senior Member az_gila's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ronijayne View Post
    This may be old news but I have only just been given this link and I love it. The Grandfather stories and the pics of the camping are so cool

    http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http...com%2F&h=2bf06
    Well the location question is easy....

    It's Jubilee Tower on Moel Famau - somewhere I went often, both in groups (scouts and church) and with my family.

    Thay are neat pics - any idea of the decade? I'm guessing 30's or 40's (or earlier) based on the swimsuits.

    I don't think it's a school trip based on the tents - unless Colemendy was tent based when it first started.

    I think Scouts, but don't see any trace of uniforms...

  3. #3
    Liverpool New Yorker! Ronijayne's Avatar
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    Wasn't easy for me, I did not have a clue.

    Did you look at the stories? The Grandad telling the kid he was John Wayne is hilarious

    ---------- Post added at 11:50 AM ---------- Previous post was at 11:47 AM ----------

    Says if you did not go to Colemendy you are not a real Scouser!! I did not. My mother would not allow it. We went away most weekends. I feel bad now, I always wanted to go.
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    Senior Member lindylou's Avatar
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    I never went to Colomendy either

    Good little web-site. ta Ronijayne.

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    Liverpool New Yorker! Ronijayne's Avatar
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    My pleasure. I like it a lot. The person who sent it to me is a Brummie but also is George Harrison's cousin!
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    Senior Member Samsette's Avatar
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    What a fine, healthy looking group of boys and young men. I agree with Az_Gila as to period, and I wonder how many of them went off to war, and never got back. Sorry to sound so morbid, but I was watching the Remembrance Day ceremonies at our local cenotaph.

  7. #7
    Liverpool New Yorker! Ronijayne's Avatar
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    I see on the forum under the photos three people think the childen in the colemendy pics are from Liverpool 8

    ---------- Post added at 11:57 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:42 PM ----------

    Did anyone read any of the stoies? I love this one.
    When I was 10 years old, living in genteel poverty in Liverpool, I had no doubt who was the most powerful person in the world: It was my Paternal Grandmother. She was the archetypal matriarch. She-Who-Must-Be-Obeyed-Without-Question! Even by her grownup children, one of whom, my father, who was, of course, the second most powerful person in the world.



    Together, these two people ruled my universe. Even the poor have rituals I discovered and one ritual for my family was a visit to Grandmother's house every Sunday afternoon for tea.




    Her house was on Latimer Terrace, off Scotland Road, the poorest part of the city but it was separated from those around it by a gleaming brass knocker and a sparkling doorstep, whitened faithfully every Saturday night by my youngest aunt. It was taken for granted that the daughter would take as much pride in the task as would bless Michael himself in painting the Sistine Chapel ceiling. After all, we were respectable people and doorsteps were emblematic of that respectability.



    My grandmother had no soft, cuddly corners where you could snuggle on her lap while she caressed you with endearments. She had no honeyed phrases that could comfort you out of a toothache. What she did have was an indomitable will. A sense of pride in who and what we were that left us in no doubt that we were all persons of not.



    Her own children adored her. Her grandchildren were in awe of her authority which was handed down by our parents unquestioningly.



    What she said about hair - 'It's a woman's crowning glory' - dictated the length and style of every female in the family.




    Mine was long enough to sit on. What she said about films - Bambi was the only one that received unadulterated permission as suitable for respectable children, such as we were - meant, that we had a very limited access to that art form. Books she naturally censored with as much criticism as she hurled at "those women" whose doorsteps never measured up to her platonic ideal of whiteness.



    The censorship of books did not effect me greatly at that time. We owned only two books in our house, both on my grandmother's "Yes-list" but unread by any of us though we would all agree they were "good" ones. They were 'The Queen's Quair' and 'Ivanhoe'. No one quite knew how we had acquired them but we felt that our natural superiority over the neighbors was enhanced by their mere presence.



    I didn't notice the censorship until one Sunday afternoon at my grandmother's house.



    Waiting for the customary teatime treat of salmon sandwiches and Victoria Sponge cake, bored by the gossip of the adults (as you know, children were supposed to be seen and not heard}, I discovered a book from America. Politely interrupting the conversation, I asked my grandmother if I could read it. “No," she said firmly.



    There the matter would have ended and the slow-moving time of a child imprisoned in a well-polished parlour where the loudest sound was always the quarter hour interruptions of subdued adult conversation by the Westminster Chimes of the clock on the sideboard would have wound its way inexorably through the tedium of a dull Sunday. But that day, for some inexplicable reason, my father demurred. "Oh let her read it," he said, "you know she's a very good reader." This was said with just enough pride to make his point, but not enough for me to think that I was in any way extraordinary for the amount and kind of reading that I was doing at that young age.



    Strange indeed is the hand of fate! At that precise moment, my doorstep cleaning aunt came in carrying the tea things and overheard the conversation. "Oh, Mam," she said, "Let her read it. It's about a young American girl something like herself."



    Amazingly, my grandmother agreed. "Alright," she said. "But," she added, turning to me, "don't read it all at once!"



    The oddness of that remark did not register with me. I was immediately ensconced in the nearest wing chair with my feet dangling at least six inches off the Axminster carpet. I didn't even hear the clock chimes. I didn't know that adults were exchanging slightly malicious gossip at both my elbows. I knew only that I was spellbound. I had been transported across the Atlantic Ocean to a strange new place in New York City where a young girl was learning about a life so different from, yet so like my own that I was filled with a wonder that only those addicted to the power of the written work can understand.



    My fictional journey was broken by the appearance of the tea trays. That day, I would gladly have sacrificed all the cream cakes and jam tarts in the entire City of Liverpool for a further reading of that book. "Oh, please, may I take it home? PLEASE?" I said in my most adult-cajoling voice, tossing my crowning glory for greater effect. "Indeed you can't," she said. I died. "But," she added, surprisingly, "You may read it next week." I recovered.



    Needless to say the following week crept by as slowly as a Mersey Fog. Sunday finally arrived. I barely greeted my relatives as I rushed for that book.



    It took me quite a number of Sundays to finish that book but it was one of the most unforgettable journeys that I have ever taken and, since that time, I have travelled many a fictional mile.



    I've never known how much psychology my Grandmother ever knew because, of course, it hadn't been invented when she was born. However, I've always known that she inculcated in me that spring an insatiable reading appetite that was whetted by the unbearable suspense of having to wait a whole week before knowing what was going to happen next. Whether she did it deliberately or inadvertently, she made me appreciate both the pleasure and the pain of being so engrossed in a character that real life seemed to cease between episodes of reading.



    I LIVED for those Sunday afternoons. I wept when the book ended. Not because the ending itself was such a sad one but because, in my mind, no other book could ever measure up to the one I had just read. Not one!



    Life taught me differently, as you well know. Many other books have given me just as much pleasure but none were ever read under such unusual circumstances, under the watchful eye of a remarkable grandmother.



    My grandmother died before I could explain to her what psychology was. Nor was I ever able to share with her the wonder of that book.




    I like to think that she somehow understood its importance to me. Perhaps she would smile a little slyly, if she were to be told by those who monitor such things that the book I loved was unsuitable reading, 'not quite respectable' for a ten-year-old who was reared knowing the importance of whitening doorsteps. A ten-year-old who was, thanks to my grandmother, from that time one, far more interested in tree-growing in Brooklyn.



    As it turned out, reading became my passport out of the grinding poverty that both my grandmother and I were born into. I lead a very different life now.




    None of my doorsteps needs whitening and there's no brass knocker on my door. I do have a great library of books, many of which would not meet my grandmother's criteria of suitability.




    Yet my Liverpool grandmother's influence is still present in oddly unexpected places. Lace curtains grace my windows and, whenever company is expected for tea, you can be sure that I have scrubbed the kitchen floor on my hands and knees. Now, that I am CERTAIN, would meet with the approval of my Grandmother.
    Earth is the insane asylum for the universe.

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    Senior Member az_gila's Avatar
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    Not sure why anyone says Colomendy.

    The boys appear to be too old, and Liverpool Education Committee only bought it in 1939, and it appears to have had buildings in it from the beginning.

    The pictures seem to be almost all tent based.

    The week I spent at Colomendy, was one of the few trips to that area near Mold that I did not climb Moel Famau - they kept us too busy locally....

    It looks a lot like a field by a lake (and a farm house nearby) in N. Wales that the Boy Scouts used as a camp site - our troop went there in the early 60's a few few times after that. I can't rember the location though - CRS hits again....

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    Liverpool New Yorker! Ronijayne's Avatar
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    Don't know. Some photos are very young kids, I thought first communion for one of them. They are saying on that site at least one of the children's pics is Colemendy. What doe the word Colemendy MEAN?
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    Puts hand in the air.....

    Can I just say....its Colomendy with two 'o's not an 'e'

    Basically it was a camp for war time evacuee's.

  11. #11
    Senior Member az_gila's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by GeorgePorgie View Post
    Puts hand in the air.....

    Can I just say....its Colomendy with two 'o's not an 'e'

    Basically it was a camp for war time evacuee's.
    ...that became a part of the Liverpool Education District so we city kids could see the countryside and find out what not to step in when cows are around....

    ...one problem I see is that any scousers who did not do hikes in N Wales with their family/boys-girls clubs/scout-guides/church see any countryside and remember the week that most scouse kids (OK, I know several didn't go, but I bet most went) - then they automatically call it Colomendy. The tents do not fit in with Colomendy, and neither does the extended age range of the kids.

    If the pictures really are all pre-WWII (based on the bathing cozzies) then the participants have mostly passed away.

    Colomendy is only the name of the camp - the village nearby is "Loggerheads" - and still is according to Google maps.

  12. #12
    Liverpool New Yorker! Ronijayne's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by GeorgePorgie View Post
    Puts hand in the air.....

    Can I just say....its Colomendy with two 'o's not an 'e'

    Basically it was a camp for war time evacuee's.
    I know what is is, I asked the meaning of the word. Is it short for something the way Liverpudlians tend to shorten a word and add a y?

    Yes, you can say it, very rude and I care less. I always wonder about people who like to point out typos or spelling errors.

    You CAN say anything you like.

    ---------- Post added at 02:42 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:30 PM ----------

    Quote Originally Posted by az_gila View Post
    ...that became a part of the Liverpool Education District so we city kids could see the countryside and find out what not to step in when cows are around....

    ...one problem I see is that any scousers who did not do hikes in N Wales with their family/boys-girls clubs/scout-guides/church see any countryside and remember the week that most scouse kids (OK, I know several didn't go, but I bet most went) - then they automatically call it Colomendy. The tents do not fit in with Colomendy, and neither does the extended age range of the kids.

    If the pictures really are all pre-WWII (based on the bathing cozzies) then the participants have mostly passed away.

    Colomendy is only the name of the camp - the village nearby is "Loggerheads" - and still is according to Google maps.
    We went to Wales most weekends in the summer. We rented (I believe) a cottage in Talacre for two weeks and many weekends each year and we went all over Wales on day trips from there. Castles, Waterfall etc. and some years to the Eistaddfod. My Grandparents owned a little place in North Wales too so we also went there and my other Grandmother took me to a farm somewhere in Wales. Most of my childhood photos are taken in Wales.

    I think the people who said it was the camp at Loggerheads were only talking about one or two photos, one person recognises some of the people. Some of the photos are of young adults. I went through the whole site and looked at all the pics including the ones from the Liverpool documentary.
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    Senior Member ChrisGeorge's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ronijayne View Post
    I know what is is, I asked the meaning of the word. Is it short for something the way Liverpudlians tend to shorten a word and add a y?


    Jayne, I have always taken "Colomendy" to be a Welsh name rather than a Liverpool nickname for the camp.

    Chris
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  14. #14
    Liverpool New Yorker! Ronijayne's Avatar
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    The site says...

    These photos were recently handed over to us at Hurricane Films. They were found in the loft of a house on Linnet Lane. We are looking for information on the people in these incredible images as we have no idea when, where and of whom these images were taken

    ---------- Post added at 02:52 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:50 PM ----------

    http://www.campbeaumont.com/resident...-colomendy.asp

    ---------- Post added at 03:03 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:52 PM ----------

    Just read some stories, some loved it, some hated it and apparently 150 boys rioted once because they did not like the food. I remember some kids in my class used to go and I always wanted to but I suppose as we went to Wales most weekends it would have been redundant. I always thought it sounded like fun.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/liverpool/capit...memories.shtml

    Anyway, we are getting off track. I wonder if Ged saw the pics of Gerrard Gardens in the site.

    ---------- Post added at 03:09 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:03 PM ----------

    Quote Originally Posted by ChrisGeorge View Post
    Jayne, I have always taken "Colomendy" to be a Welsh name rather than a Liverpool nickname for the camp.

    Chris
    We used to always shorten the Welsh names. Apart from Rhyl!!!!!!

    Talacre was alway Tally!
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    Senior Member az_gila's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ronijayne View Post
    The site says...

    These photos were recently handed over to us at Hurricane Films. They were found in the loft of a house on Linnet Lane. We are looking for information on the people in these incredible images as we have no idea when, where and of whom these images were taken

    ---------- Post added at 02:52 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:50 PM ----------

    http://www.campbeaumont.com/resident...-colomendy.asp[COLOR="Silver"]

    ---------- Post added at 03:03 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:52 PM ----------
    ....
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/liverpool/capit...memories.shtml

    Anyway, we are getting off track. I wonder if Ged saw the pics of Gerrard Gardens in the site.
    When did Liverpool Schools sell the camp? Your link is to the same place but seems to be now privately owned, at nearly 500 UK pounds a pop....

    ...and back on track... the original link pictures all show heavy duty camping with big tents - which does not seem to be associated with Colomendy - it looks much more like the big tents our scout troop used.

    ---------- Post added at 01:15 PM ---------- Previous post was at 01:10 PM ----------

    Quote Originally Posted by ChrisGeorge View Post
    Jayne, I have always taken "Colomendy" to be a Welsh name rather than a Liverpool nickname for the camp.

    Chris
    Apparently it is a welsh name for "dovecote", or a house for doves...

    (similarly in Cornwall: colomen & ty = dove house).

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