[Bell Historians] Burton Holy Trinity
Steven Blakemore
steven_blakemore at SgwHdo7S9rIJUa2xR-zbYwvlCd-BoyJueOaMpOqWEJAlv04czV1H2Wf9RCxydwrIN5RUBmSDCj2Tp-AWBe5al0fCtw.yahoo.invalid
Tue Jul 20 21:27:20 BST 2010
Thankyou for making this clear. :)
________________________________
From: Andrew Bull <a_m_bull at TDPKmgNFpbpquJuaBW9NxBBr0QbLTV6eWkLejFMOD6FFrvTlvZPFEaDvPQTQKKf7IiWjiLoFW_nYN61D.yahoo.invalid>
To: bellhistorians at yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tue, 20 July, 2010 18:17:11
Subject: RE: [Bell Historians] Burton Holy Trinity
This is Fred Sharpe’s notation for gear type. TW=traditional- type wheel, EH=elm
headstock, PG=plate gudgeons, PB=plain bearings, ECA=Ellacombe chiming
apparatus.
Andrew Bull
________________________________
From:bellhistorians@ yahoogroups. com [mailto:bellhistori ans at yahoogroups. com]
On Behalf Of Steven Blakemore
Sent: 20 July 2010 17:19
To: bellhistorians@ yahoogroups. com
Subject: Re: [Bell Historians] Burton Holy Trinity
could you explain what TW/EH/PG/PB/ ECA means?
________________________________
From:Chris Pickford <c.j.pickford. t21 at btinternet. com>
To: bellhistorians@ yahoogroups. com
Sent: Mon, 19 July, 2010 18:14:42
Subject: Re: [Bell Historians] Burton Holy Trinity
I saw this bell in the tower on 31 May 1971. I was travelling from Leicester
with Andrew Wilby to a ringers' get-together at chez David Wilford at Hilton,
near Burton. Driving past the church - which had already been partially
demolished - we found that the site was more or less unprotected and saw that
the tower door was open. No H&S in those days! We climbed up the steps to the
bell chamber, where we found someone else up there already - clearly not working
for the demolition contractor as it was a Sunday afternoon on a Bank Holiday
weekend! He offered to sell us the bell for some ridiculously cheap price
At the time I noted: “At the church of the Holy Trinity, Burton , which was
being demolished, there was a large single bell cast by Taylors in 1887 weighing
40-0-26. It was fitted with TW/EH/PG/PB/ ECA. It had not been swung for many
years, and its sale is now imminent”. I later saw the bell (marked 40-0-5 in
chalk) in Taylors ’ foundry at Loughborough, on 28 June 1972.
The previous Holy Trinity bell (Taylor 1869) later became the tenor as Goole, as
already noted.
There is a contemporary account of the spire and bell: The handsome spire of
this church has now been completed. It cost £1000; and is the gift of a
parishioner. A magnificent bell, weighing 42 cwt, has been placed in the tower.
The entire cost (£300) was collected by a committee of working men, resident in
the town of Burton and neighbourhood (Lichfield Diocesan Church Calendar 1888
“record of the Diocese 1887” p.151)
Another story about this bell concerns Ron Dove, who worked at one of the Burton
breweries in the 1920s. I think it concerns this bell (not completely sure as I
don't know whether Holy Trinity had a clock), but certainly a large bell in
Burton. Being over 2 tons, the Holy Trinity bell was in the Great Bells list in
earlier editions of Dove. I once asked him about it, and he said "I remember
that bell. I was 'nesting' with a redhead in a house nearby, and when the clock
struck 2 I thought I had better leave. I rushed out, and it was only when I got
home I realised I'd left my bicycle behind"
CP
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