Prof
Gloucester
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Tue 14th Aug 2018 10:04am
On 5th Jan 2016 3:29pm, bohica said:
As a kid walking to and from school, I usually passed through what I knew as Greyfriars Green park (just in front of a row of estate agents, and by where the toilets were). I seem to remember that there was a weather proof lectern there with a book and that the page was turned every day.
Does anyone else remember this and would the book have been a bible?
I remember it and yes, I think it was a bible and not a war memorial. Anyone confirm this?
On 6th Jan 2016 1:07pm, Midland Red said:
I think this photo I took in 1976 shows the bible in front of Sir Thomas White's statue
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Local History and Heritage -
Warwick Row and Greyfriars Green
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Helen F
Warrington
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Tue 14th Aug 2018 10:58am
Nice photos MR, I really like the lighting at that time of year and the bare trees let you see the spires.
It's really odd seeing the old and the new. The scale of reality almost seems different. Quite a few of the houses have lost their front boundary and that and the road have all become pavement. |
Local History and Heritage -
Warwick Row and Greyfriars Green
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Prof
Gloucester
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63 of 168
Fri 17th Aug 2018 9:07am
Incidentally, as many probably know, the James Starley statue was moved a few yards from Queen's Grove, near the corner of Queen Victoria Rd, when at one time it had railings round it! |
Local History and Heritage -
Warwick Row and Greyfriars Green
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TSP
W.A.
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Sun 19th Aug 2018 2:24am
Warwick Row has certainly changed since I took this photo in the mid 1950's
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Local History and Heritage -
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Prof
Gloucester
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65 of 168
Mon 8th Oct 2018 10:48pm
Sir Thomas White
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Local History and Heritage -
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PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks
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Wed 10th Oct 2018 5:54pm
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Dreamtime
Perth Western Australia
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Thu 11th Oct 2018 3:39am
Philip, it's nice to see Greyfriars Green and surrounds has not lost its appeal. Looks a nice place to sit and watch the world go by.
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Local History and Heritage -
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Prof
Gloucester
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68 of 168
Mon 15th Oct 2018 7:18pm
A leisurely age in Warwick Row
Bob Skrzeczkowski |
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Midland Red
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Mon 29th Oct 2018 4:12pm
Still quite leisurely last week, Prof
Philip and I were in the same class as Brian Holt in 1954 |
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Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
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70 of 168
Thu 1st Nov 2018 11:12am
So let's go back before Thomas White's time, when where his statue stands was Coventry's ducking pool.
Greyfriars Green was once Cheylesmore Green. About 1800 time a goodly sized pit or pool of water, which according to tradition, our city forefathers used for ducking unruly women, and unmanageable ladies of the town in. It was placed, the public ducking stool and apparatus, which consisted of a plank of board turning on a pivot, attached to a large sized wooden stake, the other end driven into the bed of the pit. At one end of this plank was attached a stout rope to turn and guide it, at the other the ducking-chair, into which the unfortunate delinquent was forced to enter with her hands tied and so placed that she could not move. After a few words from the official of the corporation stating her sentence the culprit was ducked entirely under the water the number of times sentence mentioned.
The pit or pool was used by the local innkeepers for watering their horses, it was a clayey water and called the Red Sea.
When the old Greyfriars church crumbled and fell in ruins the spire part became a pig-sty, known as the tallest pig-sty in Europe. Long before Hertford Street had been thought off.
Where the Starley statue stood was the ancient fairground, with booths down each side of the green and in the centre the swings and roundabouts.
The Starley memorial being erected, a lady admiring the work asked who's the lady at the top? Ah, said a man, that's the lady that gave Starley his first order for a tricycle. With a sly grin! |
Local History and Heritage -
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Helen F
Warrington
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71 of 168
Thu 1st Nov 2018 2:03pm
I'd have been regularly ducked as a scold/witch if I'd been around back then. Glad I'm in the 21st century! |
Local History and Heritage -
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Prof
Gloucester
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72 of 168
Sat 1st Dec 2018 11:15pm
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Local History and Heritage -
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Prof
Gloucester
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Thu 13th Dec 2018 9:37am
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Local History and Heritage -
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Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
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Thu 31st Jan 2019 9:49am
During the days of the early fairs, the swings, roundabouts were held on Greyfriars Green, where the Starley memorial was erected - near "the five posts" known as 'Cape Horn' or 'Cape Horn Corner', from the lady who kept the school there. |
Local History and Heritage -
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Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
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Sat 22nd Jun 2019 6:14pm
Around 1340 the Greyfriars that settled in Coventry chose a beautiful southern setting, that flourished with flowers, shrubs and herbs. At the time, Edward III reigned - it was a time of pageantry, art and music, and royal castle gardens made more beautiful. His Queen had a special herber, and they brought over the first rosemary bush from Antwerp, for its medical virtues. So now the friars had rosemary alongside tall frothy angelica, for flavouring and flatulence, candied made sweets, and its seeds, when dried and burnt, to perfume a room, Lavender bushes for bath oils, and a special perfumed 'pink' that the friars spiced drinks with. They also had great jugs with perforated spouts, forbearer of the watering can. |
Local History and Heritage -
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