This interesting statue is located along the main street which runs through Sittingbourne, which was once Watling Street. This sculpture was designed by Jill Tweed and was unveiled in 1996 to commemorate the work of the local bargemen. Not particularly clear in this photo is that the bargeman’s dog is standing by his foot and is helping his master.
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Birmingham – Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery (HP Sign)
One of the HP signs which used to be on the company’s Aston Cross factory in Birmingham. The factory originally opened in 1875 and the iconic HP sauce first went on sale in 1903. This all went marvellously until 2007 when HP was bought out and production was moved to the Netherlands to save money, with the last production line closing on 16 March 2007. The factory was demolished and this sign is one of the few reminders of the site.
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Birmingham – Birmingham Library
Birmingham Library replaced the former Central Library which was on a nearby site and which closed in 2013. I actually quite liked the old library and it’s a shame that it was only in use between 1974 and 2013, but the brutalist architecture never really appealed to many. Inside the library I remember that it was quiet, calm and peaceful, so at the time I had hoped that the new library wouldn’t be built when there were campaigns to save the old one.
The escalators in the new building sweep visitors through the book stacks and it is an impressive sight. However, this library cost nearly £200 million and that seems a huge investment given that the previous building was still functional. I recall the fiasco that Birmingham City Council got into when they realised they didn’t have enough money to open their lovely flagship building, with proposed opening hours slashed nearly in half, although the situation seems to have improved a little since then.
Books neatly shelved, although some of them are deliberately decorative and can’t be reached by visitors or staff.
Another view of the escalator.
The tower area of the building. I’ve visited this library before shortly after it opened and I visited again because I wanted to go on the terraces to get a view over the city centre. Unfortunately I decided that I’d come to the library at a time of inclement weather and so they had closed them off. I’m not actually sure what the inclement weather was since it was neither raining nor windy though….
I’m not sure that I’ve seen so many Haynes manuals in one place before.
Moveable book stacks. Secretly, I’d install these in my flat if I could.
Long and wide aisles which makes browsing books easy, with the whole building feeling spacious and peaceful. The element that I most like though is the quantity of seating and there were numerous quiet areas. Norwich Central Library, which seems to find itself inconvenienced by having to have books (although it keeps flogging them off), has no such quiet areas without veering into the Heritage Centre.
The library design is innovative and functional, something I’ve given up hope for in Norwich. Incidentally, it’s 25 years this month since the old Norwich library burned down, and I still think we’re in a worse place now than we were with that building. But there we go, I’m often displeased by something. But not by this library in Birmingham, it’s rather lovely.
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Birmingham – Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery (Abolition Teapot)
An abolition teapot produced in around the 1770s by Josiah Wedgwood & Sons in Stoke-on-Trent, with the text reading:
“Health to the sick, honour to the brave, success to the lover and freedom to the slave”.
Wedgwood was an abolitionist and spent a fair sum of his own money on supporting the campaign to end slavery. He later produced medallions of a slave in chains, with the message “Am I not a Man and a Brother?” which became an icon of the abolitionist movement.
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Birmingham – Hooch
There are occasions where I don’t look for exquisite craft beers and want a more simple drink. And Hooch, now rebranded for a modern generation (their branding, not mine) is an acceptable drink and I am unanimous in that 🙂
“Hooch is about letting go, having fun, enjoying time with your mates and not taking life too seriously. Let the squares of the world sit and sip their pretentious try-hard concoctions, missing out on life’s simple pleasures and obsessed with image. Good times shouldn’t be complicated.”
The above is from Hooch’s marketing material, and I assume they mean Fosters when they say try-hard concoctions, not delicious craft beer options…
They also say that this is “the beverage of the people”. Sounds like the Greggs of the drinking world. Incidentally, there’s no connection between Hooch and Birmingham, it just happens to be where I had this particular bottle.


















