One of Paul's reasons for making the Gardens of Stone film was dispel the preconceptions, myths even that these places were the breeding grounds of thugs and were forboding to strangers who didn't accept them into the fold. It's true that certain 'Squares' were competitive against each other but as seen in inter-square football match or bonfire night rivalry, it rarely descended into anything like the recent Crocky/Norris Green tribalism for instance.
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Paul's work colleagues would express disdain and sometimes downright shock horror when he dare confirmed he hailed from Gerard Crescent (at the time containing the longest unbroken run of landings in Europe, if not the world) You see these people were from the leafy suburbs of Crosby and Thornton and the like. Their sole glimpses of Gerard Gardens were from the buses which passed alongside the main arch where they would catch sight of all these ruffians chasing after a ball - the sound of maybe 50 kids echoing all around.
In truth, I knew a few kids that visited our square from other places and they were accepted like anyone else from anywhere else. The residents there were no more angels, but no more scally than anywhere else and now through than film, some people are a little more enlightened. One ex resident when interviewed at the end tells of how his daughter was speaking to someone who remarked that her dad must have been a hard knock to live there. He said to her 'No girl, it wasn't like that at all'. Some of the most genuine people i've ever met still to this day lived in that place.
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