Showing posts with label Bad Bruckenau. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bad Bruckenau. Show all posts

Tuesday, 22 September 2015

Kirkham and its twin towns

Kirkham is sometimes thought of as a bit of a backwater, an insular place where people know little and care even less for the world beyond this part of rural Lancashire. Not fair, not true.

Kirkham is the oldest town on the Fylde, long pre-dating Lytham, Blackpool, Poulton, Cleveleys and Fleetwood, and was most certainly a key place of strategic importance in Roman times. The Roman fort on Carr Hill, the highest point on the low-lying Fylde, to the East of the town centre, was an important staging post on a spur of road, a Roman M55 if you like, leading from Ribchester to a port somewhere around Stalmine.

In more recent history, Kirkham was the de facto capital of the area, with its huge Parish covering much of what we now call the Fylde, and the enduring presence of a preeminent Parish church and an ancient grammar school stand as evidence of the town's historic importance. The flax mills gave the town a period of relative prosperity, and agriculture has always flourished thanks to the mild, relatively sunny climate and fertile soils. However, social and economic change has left Kirkham as a more humble and anonymous town, yet one which has strong appeal as a small community within easy reach of centres of employment in Lancashire and beyond.

Kirkham, along with its neighbour Wesham, has much to be proud of: the aforementioned Parish Church and Grammar School; five vibrant primary schools each of distinct character; a much-loved and successful special school; a large, genuinely comprehensive school which serves young people from a wide catchment area; a prison whose inmates do good works in and for the community; a resilient high street with a number of small independent businesses well used by locals; manufacturing industry providing jobs in food, pharmaceuticals and light engineering; a football team rapidly ascending the leagues as it prepares to move to a state-of-the-art stadium; a holiday park attracting visitors from far and wide; a small railway station from which you can catch a direct train to London; a motorway near enough to be convenient but far enough to be hidden; and a variety of residential areas, reflecting a community which is diverse but well-integrated.

And then there's our twin towns. For a community which is reputed to be insular (I once overheard a conversation about a couple from Kirkham who had "moved away" but then came back because they couldn't settle…...the move was to Wesham!), Kirkham boasts a flourishing friendship with two towns in the most beautiful parts of France (Ancenis) and Germany (Bad Brückenau). This three-way reciprocal twinning arrangement is not unique, but certainly unusual, and has given the people of three small towns the opportunity to get to know each other, sharing what unites them and enjoying what makes them different.

Kirkham first twinned with Ancenis back in 1973, thanks to a Lancashire businessman, Gordon Himsworth, who had met and married a young woman from Ancenis when she was studying in Manchester. They still live in Ancenis. Twinning was fashionable in those early days of the European Community, and Ancenis and Kirkham were a good match: similar sized market towns in rural areas, with an economy dependent on agriculture and mixed light industry. The initial twinning was of Rotary Clubs, but that limited relationship led to a full and formal agreement between the two towns, backed by the civic authorities of both towns.

Ancenis subsequently twinned with Bad Brückenau, and in 1995 Kirkham formally twinned with Bad Brückenau, completing a triangular relationship between three towns of similar size and approximately equal geographical separation.

Ancenis is an attractive town on the River Loire, with an iconic bridge which forms a crossing point between the historic provinces of Brittany and Anjou. Ancenis is in Brittany, although does not have the distinctive celtic atmosphere of the ports on the Breton peninsula. 

Ancenis  - the famous bridge
In many ways, it feels like an archetypal French town, and as such it is a perfect place to absorb the culture, gastronomy and way of life which makes our nearest neighbours such an enviable place to visit or live. It is a fast and easy half-day’s drive from the Channel ports of St Malo or Caen.




Bad Brückenau is also a very attractive town, set in gently forested hills of North Bavaria, in the province of Franken, with an economy based on its fame as a spa town, to which Germans have traditionally flocked to take the waters. 

Bad Bruckenau - the main street
It is a neat, clean and well-ordered place, with the influence of Bavarian culture very apparent in, for example, the willingness of even younger people to dress in national costume as a sort of "Sunday best". Like Ancenis, it seems somehow archetypal of its country, meaning that people from Kirkham visiting either town have a real insight into the lives of our European friends.

Both towns have a wonderful musical tradition, with thriving bands of amateur musicians who provide spontaneous and enjoyable musical accompaniment at our get-togethers, which are always convivial and involve much good food and drink.
A typical twinning meal - this one was in France, but the people are from all three towns

Perhaps the best thing about Kirkham's twinning is that on all three sides, it is used by ordinary townsfolk, who in the main have no linguistic expertise, but who just enjoy meeting others in a friendly and welcoming atmosphere. We meet every year in one of the towns, on a three-year cycle.

Our recent meet-ups have been as vibrant and successful as ever, most recently when 85 visitors, a coachload from each of the two towns visited Kirkham in August 2017.

You will see more information and photos on our website at www.kirkhamtwinning.org and we are also on Twitter as @Kirkancenau.


Sunday, 17 May 2015

Speech at 2015 twin towns gathering in Ancenis

This is the text of the speech I gave to  the gathering of people from our three twinned towns on Saturday 16th May 2015. It speaks of the precious thing that is friendship across borders.

"Mr Mayor of Ancenis, Madam Mayor of Bad Brückenau, ladies and gentlemen,

It is with great pleasure and pride that I speak for the first time as President of the Kirkham Twinning Association at a visit to one of our twin towns. I also have the pleasure of bringing greetings from the Mayor of Kirkham and the Town Council: you will be aware that we in Britain are in the midst of our electoral process at both local and national level, and so our council representatives are unable to be present here in Ancenis on this occasion. We are delighted to have with us Mrs Sheila Hardy, whose husband Councillor Peter Hardy has just been elected as Mayor of Fylde Borough, our municipality. It is a great honour for Kirkham that one of our Councillors has been elected to this role, and Peter will be formally installed as Mayor at a civic ceremony on this coming Wednesday. It is particularly pleasing for those gathered here today to know that Peter is a loyal and enthusiastic member of the Kirkham Twinning Association. May I ask the people of our three twin towns to join me in wishing Peter a successful year as Mayor of Fylde Borough Council.

We meet here in Ancenis at a time of poignant anniversaries: a hundred years since the First World War and 70 years since the end of the Second World War. All of us gathered here now are too young to remember those two conflicts between European neighbours, but the legacy and memories of those dark times for our continent are still very much with us, not least as we mark these anniversaries.

Let us therefore rejoice in the fact that we meet every year in one of our towns as friends and partners. I have recently been editing my grandfather’s autobiography, and reading with sadness how almost exactly a hundred years ago, he travelled to France as a young man to fight in that futile conflict. He survived, where thousands of English, French and German young men did not, but he, like so many of his generation, was saddened to find Europe at war again just twenty years later.

How lucky we are, and how precious it is, that in our generation, the peoples of our three towns meet not to fight, but to share fellowship, food, drink and culture. How sad it is that there are those in our three countries who seek to undermine the European project, but we must not let those voices prevail.

So it is with great pride, passion and enthusiasm that I say “Long Live Twinning!”

Tuesday, 12 May 2015

Nothing's gonna stop me #DBlogWeek

Just wanted to add my own quick post for #DBlogWeek. I haven't got much time to write at length or in a considered manner, but I just wanted to add my bit to this week and an obvious title is "Nothing's gonna stop me"

Not a very original title, in fact partly plagiarised from the title of an 80's power ballad classic by Jefferson Starship: Nothing's Gonna Stop us Now. Now there's an uplifting, mood-enhancing song. I defy anyone not to feel a bit better after hearing that!

But why that title now? Well, this time tomorrow (it's now Tuesday 12th May) I will be on board a ferry to St Malo, France, having driven down from Lancashire to Portsmouth. I am headed for Ancenis, the French twin town  of my home town.  As President of the Kirkham Twinning Association, I am leading a delegation from Kirkham attending a meet-up for Ascension Day weekend (a public holiday in France) together with our friends from Bad Bruckenau, the German town which is the third partner in our unusual three-way twinning arrangement.

Twinning is the subject for another blog, but for today, I just think it's a good moment to point out that Type One diabetes hasn't stopped me doing what I want to do in life - like driving to the Loire Valley in France and back as leader of a twin town delegation.

Of course, it's much more hassle travelling with diabetes. Packing and preparation for this or any journey involves planning and checking, since to forget insulin or blood testing equipment would be pretty disastrous.

But beyond that, it's perfectly possible. Over the coming three days, I will be attending events involving food and drink, possibly unpredictable and irregular, as well as helping translate and liaise between the peoples of these three towns. I will even be making a speech which I have had to write in three languages.

Plenty of opportunities there for diabetes to trip me up, but with sensible planning, good supplies of jelly babies and biscuits, as well as all the necessary medical stuff, I should be fine. I will also be accompanied by my faithful travelling companion for such trips, my (adult) daughter Rosie.

In other words, nothing's gonna stop me. Twitter followers will probably see some highlights of the weekend on my Twitter or a new one I've set up for the Kirkham Twinning Association 

So, for now, "Goodbye, Au Revoir, Auf Wiedersehen"

The Way We Were

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