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Archive for November, 2006

Scilly then and now

Monday, November 20th, 2006

Scilly-lovers are invited to take a trip down memory lane with a new website.

A regular visitor has set up a project charting the changing face of the Islands.

The Scilly Little Changes website features photographs of the Islands through the years.

The site is the brainchild of Henry Ellis, a 27-year-old Search Engine Optimiser living in London.

?I came up with the idea after my last visit at Easter this year,? Henry told Scilly News. ?I’ve been holidaying in Scilly since the early 80s, though my parents honeymooned there and a few of my relatives have lived on the islands at various times.?

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?I noticed that I seem to take a lot of similar photos each time I visit, and decided to look back through some of my parent’s shots to see if they had any similar ones.

?It turns out they did, and I began to see that it can be really interesting to compare and contrast how the islands have changed over the years - particularly familiar landmarks and places.?

Visitors to the site are invited to share some of their own photos to add to the collection.

?I love everything about Scilly,? said Henry. ?I’m hoping if the site gets popular it will give me an excuse to go back every year!?

The site is an offshoot of Scillyholiday.co.uk, which contains original photography, commentary and resources about the Islands.

Check out the site at http://www.scillyholiday.co.uk and http://www.scillyholiday.co.uk/changes.

Bishop welcomes new tenants

Friday, November 10th, 2006

The Bishop and Wolf inn on St Mary’s has welcomed yet another change of management.

The struggling pub has been taken on by Porthcressa landlords Rachel Gaulton and Richard Smith.

“We know the potential of the Bishop and we want to turn it around,” Rachel, 36, told ScillyNews.

“We’ll be offering good, old-fashioned home cooking and reasonable prices.”

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Several managers have come and gone at the pub in the last decade, with three couples leaving already this year.

Now owners St Austell Brewery have decided to offer it as a tenancy rather than install managers.

“The Bishop and Wolf has been run into the ground,” said Rachel. “St Austell are our suppliers at the Porthcressa and one day they asked me what I would do with it.

“I said the first thing I would do is get down on my hands and knees and clean it.”

After the talk, the firm’s HR manager asked how the couple would feel about taking over the inn. An agreement was reached and they took the helm this week.

The Porthcressa, which Rachel and Richard, 26, have been running since March, will remain open during the winter. “It won’t be too difficult as it’s just across the road,” said Rachel. “Richard will be there in the evenings and I’ll be in the Bishop.

“We want to turn the Bishop back into a local’s pub and give it the stability it hasn’t had in years.”

New series about Scilly

Friday, November 10th, 2006

A new series about Scilly is to be filmed for BBC2.

Production company Tiger Aspect is to make An Island Parish, about the activities of the parish of the Isles of Scilly.

The Islands also featured in the third series of A Seaside Parish, which followed Bishop Bill, the Lord Bishop of Truro, as he travelled through his diocese.

Islands to get ?17.5m ferry

Thursday, November 9th, 2006

Scilly could get a new ?17.5m combined ferry to replace the Scillonian III and freight vessel Gry Maritha.

Harbours in Penzance and St Mary’s could also see a ?24m revamp, Cornwall County Council has said.

The council made a decision to go ahead with the plans in principle on Wednesday, with a final decision expected in January.

The Authority hopes to raise ?14m from loans and the rest from Objective One funding. It will then lease the boat to the Isles of Scilly Steamship group.

The Department for Transport has also agreed to contribute funds to the project.

It’s all there in black and white

Wednesday, November 8th, 2006

An article in a magazine published on Tresco has provoked a storm of controversy among its readers.

The Tresco Times article extols the virtues of late Tory MP Enoch Powell and former Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith, both regarded as right-wing on issues of race.

A Waffle with the Commodore (alias of editor Richard Barber) tells readers of the magazine, distributed to timeshare owners and visitors, that they should “thank God for giving us people who are anything but ordinary”.

In a tribute to 76-year-old Islander Ken Crawley, the Commodore calls both he and Enoch Powell ?individualists who value truth above popularity and risk above safety?.

He describes Powell, a right-wing Conservative famous for his ?rivers of blood? speech on the dangers of immigration, as “one of the most brilliant and misunderstood minds of his generation”.

Although Powell?s views are finding some retrospective support, they have become - intentional or not - an intellectual justification for racism, stirring up and giving voice to racial tensions. He was sacked by Tory leader Edward Heath the day after giving the speech.

So far so fairly controversial. But Barber strays into increasingly thorny territory in his treatment of Ian Smith, hero of the fascist British National Party (BNP).

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Smith, says the Commodore, “declared unilateral independence from Britain to prevent his beloved and prosperous Rhodesia following the precipitous path of other African nations into corruption and mass starvation.”

It?s an interpretation of history many would dispute. Though Smith is regarded by some as a courageous patriot, his system of white minority rule saw 220,000 white Rhodesians enjoy privileges over nearly four million black Rhodesians (rule by a minority of just 5%).

The declaration (UDI) attracted fierce international condemnation and resulted in the first economic sanctions in the history of the United Nations.

And it doesn?t end there. An editorial has added fuel to an already roaring fire by including the assertion that “Scilly is a mono-culture ? basically white Christian - rather than having the rich diversity of the multi-cultural mainland.

“Perhaps,” it suggests, “like some aboriginal tribe, Scillonians should be protected from the outside world and given grants to preserve their particular culture and lifestyle. We are an insular ethnic minority ? the last piece of England.”

One appalled reader described the articles as “repugnant writing, fuelled by that ‘Daily Mail’ paranoia that there is some liberal conspiracy to ensure every corner of the the UK becomes ‘multi-cultural’. Are barricades included in the new Timeshare sprawl?”.

And an Islander ranted to ScillyNews: ?Rhodesia declared UDI from the UK 41 years ago this week, not in 1970 as the Commodore waffles, so why doesn’t Tresco do the same in tribute to Ian Smith - a real ‘hero’ who was not only a white supremacist but also anti-democratic.

“It’s political incorrectness gone mad. Only somewhere like the Isles of Scilly could you get away with publishing this stuff.?