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    <p>This confirms a clock at Vernon Post Office was provided in 1912
      /1913 by Smiths.</p>
    <p><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.readersdigest.ca/travel/canada/vernon-b-c-post-office-clock/">https://www.readersdigest.ca/travel/canada/vernon-b-c-post-office-clock/</a></p>
    <p>Ken</p>
    <p><br>
    </p>
    <div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 28/02/2026 09:39, Chris Pickford
      wrote:<br>
    </div>
    <blockquote type="cite"
cite="mid:LOAP265MB9173766F650F262E57294C05F670A@LOAP265MB9173.GBRP265.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM">
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        As soon as I can grab 15 minutes at home to look at this
        properly (and read the article rather than just glance at it)
        I'm sure I'll be able to make sense of this. I only had time to
        check the index and cut and paste the text before leaving this
        morning </div>
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        C</div>
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        <span
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          from
          <a href="https://aka.ms/AAb9ysg" moz-do-not-send="true">Outlook
            for Android</a></span></div>
      <hr style="display:inline-block;width:98%" tabindex="-1">
      <div id="divRplyFwdMsg" dir="ltr"><font face="Calibri, sans-serif"
          style="font-size:11pt" color="#000000"><b>From:</b> Ken Webb
          <a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" href="mailto:ken44webb@gmail.com"><ken44webb@gmail.com></a><br>
          <b>Sent:</b> Saturday, February 28, 2026 7:35:51 AM<br>
          <b>To:</b> Bell Historians
          <a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" href="mailto:bell-historians@lists.ringingworld.co.uk"><bell-historians@lists.ringingworld.co.uk></a><br>
          <b>Cc:</b> Chris Pickford <a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" href="mailto:pickford5040@gmail.com"><pickford5040@gmail.com></a><br>
          <b>Subject:</b> Re: [Bell Historians] A Taylor bell in western
          Canada</font>
        <div> </div>
      </div>
      <div>
        <div dir="auto">
          <div>The article mentions Vernon as the original location.
            <div dir="auto"><br>
            </div>
            <div dir="auto">Ken</div>
            <br>
            <br>
            <div class="x_gmail_quote x_gmail_quote_container">
              <div dir="ltr" class="x_gmail_attr">On Sat, 28 Feb 2026,
                07:12 Chris Pickford via Bell-historians, <<a
                  href="mailto:bell-historians@lists.ringingworld.co.uk"
                  moz-do-not-send="true" class="moz-txt-link-freetext">bell-historians@lists.ringingworld.co.uk</a>>
                wrote:<br>
              </div>
              <blockquote class="x_gmail_quote"
style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex; border-left:1px #ccc solid; padding-left:1ex">
                <div lang="EN-GB" style="word-wrap:break-word">
                  <div class="x_m_3934291613165200499WordSection1">
                    <p class="x_MsoNormal"><span>Here’s the text (i.e.
                        without the copyright photos)</span></p>
                    <p class="x_MsoNormal"><span
style="font-size:11.0pt; font-family:"Calibri",sans-serif"> </span></p>
                    <p style="margin:0in"><span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">Headline:
                        Old church bell will peal back time </span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal; min-height:14px">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif"> </span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">By
                        Ron Seymour</span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">The
                        Kelowna Courier </span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal; min-height:14px">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif"> </span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">An
                        old church bell now hanging in a downtown
                        Kelowna garage will resound in a new South
                        Pandosy urban plaza. </span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">The
                        850 lb. brass bell, cast in England in 1912, has
                        been in the care of 75-year-old twin brothers
                        Clinton and Orison Wood since St. Paul’s United
                        Church on Lakeshore Road was demolished more
                        than a decade ago. </span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">“It's
                        connected to our front door by an electric
                        clapper, and we've been using it as a doorbell
                        all these years,” Clinton said with a laugh
                        during a Thursday interview. “Even though it's
                        in the garage, the bell is very loud, so anyone
                        who rings our front door gets quite a shaking
                        up.”</span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">The
                        Wood brothers are glad the bell is destined to
                        return to the property where St. Paul’s stood
                        for 55 years before being demolished in 2015.
                        Local developer Shane Worman plans to erect the
                        bell in the middle of an urban public square in
                        a commercial redevelopment approved for the
                        property this week by city council. </span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">“That
                        bell means a lot to our family,” Orison Wood
                        said. “I always think of our father when it
                        rings. But it sounds like a good idea to get it
                        back where a lot of people can enjoy it again.”</span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">Trustees
                        of Central Okanagan United Church, which owns
                        the bell, have approved its transfer to Worman.
                        “We’re delighted that Shane wants to do this.
                        It’s such a lovely plan, bringing the bell back
                        to where it belongs,” church trustee Beryl Itani
                        said. </span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">The
                        bell was cast by the John Taylor Bell Foundry in
                        Loughborough, England. The still-in-business
                        company, established in 1839, is described on
                        its website as the last remaining bell foundry
                        in the United Kingdom.</span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">Builders
                        of the Dominion Post Office in Vernon placed an
                        order for the bell and it was on top of that
                        building until its demolition in the mid-‘50s.
                        The Wood brothers’ father, Ernest Orison Wood,
                        arranged through friends in the construction
                        industry to have the bell shipped to Kelowna for
                        St. Paul’s United Church, which opened in 1958. </span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">But
                        when the bell arrived, church leaders didn’t
                        have the money to build a proper bell tower. So
                        the bell sat, half-forgotten on a wooden pallet
                        behind the church for almost 20 years while an
                        electronic bell was used on Sundays to summon
                        parishioners. </span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">Its
                        neglect, unsurprisingly, rankled Ernest Wood.
                        “He didn’t like that the church board just kept
                        tabling the issue, hemming and hawing, but there
                        wasn’t much he could do about it,” Clinton Wood
                        said. </span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">Ernest
                        Orison Wood died in 1976, at age 90, never
                        having seen the bell put into service at the
                        church. After his death, his widow Jessie
                        spearheaded a fundraising campaign to construct
                        a large frame and headstock. In 1980, the bell
                        was finally hoisted to a place of prominence
                        near the church’s front door.</span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">But
                        it was still a silent bell. It wasn't rung for
                        another 19 years. </span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">The
                        original clapper had long since been lost. And
                        it wasn't until a church member, Adriaan Boek,
                        went to Holland and found a suitable clapper
                        that the bell finally gonged for the first time
                        in Kelowna, in 1999.</span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">A
                        headline at the time in The Kelowna Courier
                        said: ‘Bell rings for Jessie’.</span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">From
                        1990 to 2014, the bell rang on the hour
                        throughout the week, heard throughout a large
                        part of the South Pandosy neighborhood. It was
                        not only a community landmark; it served as
                        something of a headstone, as the Wood family
                        buried Ernest’s ashes at its base. </span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">The
                        church was demolished in 2015 to make way for an
                        ill-fated commercial and resdential project
                        planned by the congregation. Before the wrecking
                        ball was summoned, however, the Wood brothers
                        got a jackhammer, cut through the bell tower’s
                        concrete base, and brought their father’s ashes
                        home for safekeeping. </span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">After
                        the church's demolition, the congregation's
                        ambitious redevelopment plan fell apart with
                        soaring costs, and the land was sold for $5.5
                        million. </span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">"We
                        were all sad when we left the building for the
                        last time, we shed some tears," Clinton Wood
                        says. "And then when the whole plan collapsed it
                        was really a devastating thing. A lot of people
                        were really angry and left the church, but we
                        didn't. You don't throw away your church because
                        of an unfortunate circumstance that didn't work
                        out."</span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">Local
                        builder Shane Worman bought the former St.
                        Paul’s site a few years ago and won final
                        approval this week for a project consisting of
                        three buildings arrayed around an urban plaza
                        open to the public. The development has less
                        density than would have been possible on the
                        site, and considerably more trees and
                        landscaping than required - features that
                        prompted Coun. Luke Stack to describe the
                        project as “perfect” during Monday’s council
                        meeting. </span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">The
                        Wood brothers, who both now devoutly attend
                        Central Okanagan United Church in downtown
                        Kelowna, are pleased with the bell's pending
                        relocation back to the South Pandosy
                        neighborhood.</span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">And
                        they think their father will be too.</span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif">“I
                        know this for sure,” Clinton Wood said, “Dad
                        will be watching from the other side.”</span></p>
                    <p
style="margin:0in; font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal; min-height:14px">
                      <span
style="font-size:9.0pt; font-family:"Helvetica",sans-serif"> </span></p>
                    <p class="x_MsoNormal"
style="font-variant-numeric:normal; font-variant-east-asian:normal; font-variant-alternates:normal; font-size-adjust:none; font-kerning:auto; font-feature-settings:normal; font-stretch:normal">
                      <span>I haven’t had time to identify this
                        particular bell in the Taylor records (1912)
                        yet, but around that time Taylors supplied
                        numerous clock bells – mostly about 7 cwt - for
                        public buildings in Canada through clockmakers
                        Smith of Derby who were contracted to supply the
                        clocks. This must be one of them, but it’s not
                        indexed as “Kelowna”.
                      </span></p>
                    <p class="x_MsoNormal"><span> </span></p>
                    <div>
                      <p class="x_MsoNormal"><b><i><span
                              style="color:#1f3864">Chris Pickford</span></i></b><span
                          style="color:#1f3864"></span></p>
                      <p class="x_MsoNormal"><span style="color:#2f5496">Knighton
                          (Powys), UK</span></p>
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