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  • Byron festival finale

    Byron festival finale

    Hucknall Today
    16 July 2004

    HAILED as a symbol of faith and hope, an Armenian stone cross has been
    put up on an outside wall of Hucknall Parish Church tower.


    The cross, known as a khachkar, was dedicated on Sunday as a climax to
    the seventh International Byron Festival.

    It marks a friendship agreement between Hucknall's Holgate
    Comprehensive School and the Lord Byron School in Armenia.

    The ceremony ensured that the ten-day festiival finished on a high
    note after a series of disappointments.

    No fewer than six of the 33 scheduled events proved non-starters for
    various reasons.

    Co-organiser Maureen Crisp said it was a big setback that those
    festival mainstays, actor Ian Frost and playwright Bill Studdiford,
    could not take part this year because Bill suffered a freak accident.

    "But the second weekend of the festival, which involved Armenian
    visitors, was an important feature and I am pleased that it went
    extremely well," said Maureen.

    The khachkar was formerly in the quadrangle at Holgate School but was
    broken into two by vandals.

    The ceremony was in memory of former Hucknall rector Canon Fred Green,
    who wanted the act of damage to be seen as a strengthening of faith.

    Special guests at the service included the Armenian Ambassador to
    Britain, Dr Vahe Gabrielian, and the High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire,
    Henry Machin.

    The khachkar was given to Holgate as a symbol of gratitude for the
    support Britain gave to Armenia after a devastating earthquake in
    1988, particularly the building of the Lord Byron School in Gumryi.

    It was vandalised four years ago - possibly by football hooligans who
    might have mistaken Armenia for Albania at the time of the Euro 2000
    tournament.

    But it has now been replaced at Holgate by another khachkar made by
    the same stonemason in Armenia.

    Holgate deputy head teacher Tina Brace said Armenia had a tragic past
    and, in the last two decades, it had been ravaged by the earthquake,
    war and economic collapse.

    "But these setbacks have not crushed the spirit of the people, who
    remain determined to overcome their difficulties," she added.

    Lillit Hovsepian, who was formerly a schoolteacher in Gumryi and now
    lives in Moscow, also spoke at the service.

    Tears filled her eyes as she recalled the death and devastation
    wrought by the earthquake.

    Before the Lord Byron School was built, pupils were having to be
    taught in a tent with just a stove to keep them warm in freezing
    winter weather.

    The new school is so popular that, although it was built to cater for
    400 pupils, it is teaching 1,400 children in three shifts from 8.30 am
    to 6.30 pm from Mondays to Saturdays.

    it was a "wonderful occasion" when Margaret Thatcher visited Armenia
    to open the new school, said Lillit. She added: "The link with Holgate
    has made us realise we are not alone in the world."

    During the service, which was conducted by rector the Rev Linda
    Church, Shakeh Avanessian danced a Gumryi prayer and Haikuhy
    Harutyunyan, of the Lord Byron School, sang the Lord's Prayer in
    Armenian.

    The Holgate wind ensemble also took part and there were readings from
    Newstead Abbey Byron Society chairman Ken Purslow and society member
    PamelaLewis.

    Wreaths were laid at Byron's tomb by the Armenian Ambassador, the High
    Sheriff, Shakeh, Haikuhy, Notts County Council chairman Coun Nellie
    Smedley(Lab), Ashfield District Council chairman Coun May Barsby
    (Lab),representatives of Holgate and Lord Byron schools, and Maureen
    Crisp on behalf of the International Byron Society. There was also a
    candle-lighting ceremony.


    New name for community centre

    HUCKNALL Community Centre - described as "the heartbeat of the town"
    for nearly a century - has been given a new name.

    A ceremony to rename the Ogle Street building as the Lovelace Centre
    was the final event of the 2004 International Byron Festival.

    The new name commemorates Byron's daughter, Ada Lovelace, who was a
    gifted mathematician and is regarded as 'the mother of computers'.

    The ceremony was to have been performed by former Labour leader and
    ardent Byronist Michael Foot.

    He could not be present because of an eye infection but sent his best
    wishes for the continued success of the centre.

    Deputising for him at the ceremony, Newstead Abbey Byron Society
    chairman Ken Purslow paid a tribute to the foresight and courage of
    those who had built the Godber Memorial Hall, as the centre was
    originally known.

    The hall was constructed by Thomas Fish and Son, of Nottingham, and
    opened on November 16 1907 by the Duke and Duchess of Portland.

    It was the brainchild of Canon John Hankin Godber, who sadly died
    without seeing his dream realised.

    Among rules drawn up by the management committee of the time were that
    there should be no gambling, foul language, drunkenness, shouting or
    noise of any kind on the staircases. The name of any offender was to
    be fixed to a noticeboard.

    A youth who threw stones at the front of the hall during the building
    work received "the punishment he deserved" from his father.

    Mr Purslow said the Byron Festival was a fine example of the key role
    which the centre played in the life of Hucknall.

    He went on: :"Byron and Ada are both powerful marketing names in their
    own right. Hucknall is their spiritual home and it is right that we
    should record and acknowledge their achievements.

    "Every child, adolescent and adult is aware that we live in an age of
    high tech and computers.

    "The name of Ada is synonymous with these and the centre's new name
    has been chosen to reflect the times."
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