Showing posts with label Redgates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Redgates. Show all posts

Monday, 21 November 2011

Event - Invitation to all our Retro lovers (Sheffield

The Star has teamed up with the Lord Mayor for a first-of-its-kind event at Sheffield Town Hall - and we want you to come too.

We are launching our new nostalgia book Retro Rewound this Thursday, with the chance for you to pop along and chat about everything to do with old Sheffield.

Our Saturday Retro supplement is extremely popular - but it wouldn’t be the same without all the photos and memories contributed by you, our readers.

Now we hope you’ll seize the chance to share more of your favourite pictures and historical information as well as meeting the Retro team.

It doesn’t matter if it’s an school photo from the 1940s or an image of the city centre in the 1970s - bring it along so we can share it in forthcoming editions of Retro.

Everyone is welcome to drop in to Thursday’s event which takes place from 11am until 2pm.

The 115th Lord Mayor of Sheffield - local history expert Sylvia Dunkley - will be there from around 12noon as well as many regular Retro contributors.

Retro Rewound is a celebration of everything old Sheffield including highlights from the past year’s Retro supplement.

The book contains many old Steel City favourites from Redgates and the Hole in the Road to Gloops, the Grand Hotel and the Dial House Club.

There’s a special section containing our readers’ recollection of the Sheffield Blitz and a photo tour of the city’s working men’s clubs.

Of course, there’s plenty on both the Owls and Blades, as well as some tricky questions to challenge your little grey cells.

We would love to see lots of Retro readers meeting up - and meeting us - for the first time.

We want to hear what you want to see on the pages of Retro in 2012 and, if there’s a historical question you’d love to know the answer to, we’re happy to see if our readers know the answer.

Please make sure all photos and information you take to the event are clearly marked with your name and contact details as well as as much detail about their history as possible.

Copies of Retro Rewound, priced £9.99, are available now from The Star shop on York Street or by calling 0114 276 7676.

Friday, 11 November 2011

A SHEFFIELD Blitz walk is being created with the backing of The Star as a permanent educational resource and memorial to the victims of the Nazi bombing raids.

But we want you to tell us which landmarks should be highlighted with plaques and if you have a blitz story we can record.

Adolf Hitler’s Luftwaffe devastated Sheffield but failed to break the spirit of its people.

The city endured nine hours of intense bombing during Operation Crucible on Sunday, December 12, 1940. The Moor was one of the worst-hit areas with department stores Atkinsons, Redgates and Roberts Brothers all destroyed.

It was followed by further bombing raids three days later and altogether 2,000 people were killed or wounded, with 40,000 left homeless.

A Sheffield Blitz Memorial Fund has now been launched to remember the sacrifices and its first aim is to create the walk, to be called the Sheffield Blitz Memorial Trail.

Future plans include an audio tour, featuring historians and people who lived through the blitz telling their stories.

It is being spearheaded by Neil Anderson, author of Sheffield’s Date With Hitler, along with Mike Wild, founder of Sheffield Wildlife Trust and co-founder of the Five Weirs Walk.

Ten sites have already been proposed for the trail and the first plaque will be on the side of Atkinsons store at The Moor’s Sheffield Blitz event on Sunday, December 11.

Jointly funded by Atkinsons and The Moor Retailers’ Association in partnership with The Star and Brassfounders, the plaque will be unveiled by Horrible Histories series creator Terry Deary, who fronted BBC1’s Sheffield The Forgotten Blitz documentary and wrote Turn Out The Light, a novel set during the Sheffield blitz.

All profits from a King Mojo night with Peter Stringfellow, Frank White, Dave Berry and others, at The Leadmill on Wednesday, November 23, are for the fund.

Neil said: “Plaques will mark war graves and help to educate people about the impact of the blitz, what the city and its people went through.”

Donations can be made to the Sheffield Blitz Memorial Fund via Nat West account no 52118665 and sort code 54-41-47. Cheques made out to the Sheffield Blitz Memorial Fund should be sent c/o ACM Retro, The Grange, Church Street, Dronfield, Sheffield S18 1QB.

Which sites should have a plaque and why? Also let us know if you lived through the blitz and have a story we can record. Email you full name, age and contact details, with Sheffield Blitz Trail in the subject field to staronline@sheffieldnewspapers.co.uk or post to Sheffield Blitz Trail, Digital Editor, The Star, York Street, Sheffield, South Yorkshire S1 1PU