Well-known catering lecturer at Derry college hangs up his apron for the final time
Douglas Walker has helped train hundreds of chefs
Douglas Walker, with his former students Noel Ward, who has been head chef of the White Horse Hotel for 20 years, and Andrew Taylor, junior sous chef at the hotel.
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A well-known lecturer at the North West Regional College has hung up his chef s apron for the last time.
Douglas Walker has worked as a hospitality and catering lecturer at the local college for 30 years.
He spent his final day working for the college being reunited with two of his former students, Noel Ward and Andrew Taylor, based at the White Horse Hotel in Campsie.
The mystery of Moser Street | Bradford Telegraph and Argus thetelegraphandargus.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thetelegraphandargus.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Bradford Civic Society unveiled the plaque to Florence Moser (1856-1921) on International Women s Day yesterday. Alan Hall from the City Society writes: “ We take for granted that all girls must go out into the world as domestic servants, and again and again the truth has to be faced that all girls are not intended by nature to be domestic servants any more than all girls are fitted to be teachers or nurses . These words by Florence Moser, concerning the lack of career opportunities for women at the turn of the 20th century, show clearly that she was an early feminist, though she would not have called herself that. Rather, she saw herself as a philanthropist with a special interest in the plight of working women. She is best remembered for her work with mothers and young children.
Let s hear it for Florence and co on International Women s Day | Bradford Telegraph and Argus thetelegraphandargus.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thetelegraphandargus.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
TODAY it’s a nondescript convenience store in a northern town. But above it is a little room where two sisters mapped out a campaign that was to change the lives of millions of women in the UK. I’ve recently learned about two remarkable Yorkshire women with significant legacies. One was Florence White, who grew up in a Bradford back-to-back, was working in a mill aged 12 - and became the “champion of Britain’s spinsters”. Like many women born in the late 1800s, she lost her fiance in the war that wiped out almost a generation of young men. Instead of accepting her fate as one of the ‘surplus’ unmarried women shunned by society, Florence founded the National Spinsters’ Pension Association. In that room above a shop she plotted a huge campaign, backed by over a million people, that got the state pension age reduced for women. She was, says historian Dr Melissa Dennison who has written about Florence, one of the groundbreaking women of the past 100 years. Her name i