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Looking back as Hospital Radio Ipswich celebrates 50 years | East Anglian Daily Times
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Taunton Samaritans honoured with Somerset Medal
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Tributes paid to outstanding and distinguished former Somerset council leader Tim Carroll
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Published:
4:30 PM May 26, 2021
Two Garretts were on display at the Long Shop in Leiston - Empress on the left with its owner John Smith and Charles Baker with Agathis.
- Credit: Sam Baker
A steam convoy has made its way across Suffolk for an emotional return to the factory where it was built nearly a century ago.
Charles Baker and Nigel Taylor drove “Agathis”, a Garrett 4CD traction engine from Cornard Mill near Sudbury to Leiston Long Shop, where it was built in 1924, for the museum s big opening weekend.
Agathis burns wood, not coal, and averages 10 pieces to the mile in the fire. The two-day trip used up about two tons of wood and more than 300 gallons of water. Mr Baker bought Agathis with his sister Harriet in 2005 and from 2011 to 2015 it was fully restored.
May 19, 2021
A group of campaigners and artists have joined together to throw a significant spanner in the works of a venture capital firm’s takeover of a historic London foundry.
Plans to turn the site into a boutique hotel with office space for “creatives” and a café and restaurant has earned the ire of artists, former foundry craftsmen, community organizers, and heritage building conservationists.
No Swan No Fine, CC license
Before the pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock, bells were being forged in Whitechapel.
Opened in 1570, the Whitechapel Bell Foundry in the East End of London, cast bells for 450 years, many of which still ring todayâatop Big Ben, and another one with a famous crack in it sitting in a museum in Philadelphia.