Showing posts with label Black Horse Poets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Black Horse Poets. Show all posts

Thursday, January 9, 2025

Oral history transcription: volunteer blog

Charlotte McDonnell is an oral history transcription volunteer with Wakefield Museums and Castles. She has been volunteering with us for one year and has transcribed 26 oral history interviews so far. 

In this guest blog she shares her experiences, including clips from some of her favourite interviews.

A person typing on a laptop while wearing headphones

My role as an oral history transcription volunteer

As Wakefield Museums and Castles work on the development of a new museum and library for Wakefield, they are collecting a diverse range of oral history interviews. These interviews help to document and preserve Wakefield’s local history through the voices of the people who lived it.

My role in this project is to transcribe the oral history interviews. Transcriptions help museum staff to catalogue, search for and use oral history interviews. They also ensure that any audio that is shared through displays or digital content is accessible.

Listening carefully, I transcribe the audio of each interview exactly as it’s been spoken including keeping any grammatical mistakes and local dialect used. Usually, I’m able to get around four minutes transcribed per day.

After I finish the initial transcription I go over the whole interview again to correct any mistakes. It’s important to do this as there can be times where you think you got it right only to re-listen and realise you made an error!

From this role I’ve been able to learn so much about the people, projects and local organisations in Wakefield. 

Here are a few of my favourites:

A very important cooker

Helen Teagle talks about her mother’s 1953 Cannon Gas Cooker in her interview, which was carried out after she donated the cooker to the museum collections. 

To me the most interesting part of this interview is how much life story can come from one object. For example, Helen talks about how her parents bought the cooker at a showroom in Wakefield shortly after they got married and how they moved it to each new house that they bought.

The stories Helen tells about the many recipes her mother made using the cooker also give great insight into domestic life in the 1950s and onwards, which is an often underexplored area of history. 

In this clip, Helen talks about learning how to cook from watching her mother.


BaBi steps

I really enjoyed transcribing the interviews recorded as part of the BaBi Wakefield project. BaBi Wakefield is a research project that aims to reduce health inequalities in babies born in Wakefield through collecting maternity and child data. 

The project is run by Dawn Wright and through her interview we can see the incredible amount of work that goes into running BaBi Wakefield. 

Dawn smiling at the camera, sat next to a sign for BaBi Wakefield and the orange and white striped BaBi bear
Dawn Wright

Here Dawn speaks about her role in the project and why it is important:


One part of Dawn’s interview that really caught my eye was when she spoke about one of the positive changes a sister project, Born in Bradford, made to child asthma rates by changing the old bus routes. 

It really highlighted to me the important impact these projects are able to create.


Getting wordy about Wakefield

Finally, the interviews of Philip Dawson Hammond, and Micheal Yates and Roger Manns from the Black Horse Poets provide a fascinating look into Wakefield’s literary organisations.

6 members of the Wakefield Word Group, and Councillor Jack Hemmingway in the middle, smiling at the camera. Councillor Hemmingway is holding a trophy of a horse.
Members of the Black Horse Poets and Wakefield Word Group with their new patron, Councillor Jack Hemingway, in January 2024.

Philip in his interview spoke about the many stories he has from his time working for the Wakefield Express. 

My favourite one was about a new press that had been built to produce the newspapers that had been designed by Rockwell International - who designed a space toilet!


Micheal Yates and Roger Manns in their joint interview spoke about the strong community dynamic that their poetry group fosters. 

I really enjoyed listening to the ways people come together to share their passion for poetry and help others grow by providing thoughtful feedback.



Get involved!

If you would like to volunteer as an Oral History Transcription Volunteer, please get in touch by emailing muscasvolunteering@wakefield.gov.uk 

We'd love to hear from you!

Thursday, February 1, 2024

How Wakefield’s Black Horse learned to gallop

Members of the Wakefield Word with Black Horse Poets writers' groups have kindly written this guest blog about their history. 

Read on to discover 'how Wakefield's Black Horse learned to gallop'!

6 members of the Wakefield Word Group, and Councillor Jack Hemmingway in the middle, smiling at the camera. Councillor Hemmingway is holding a trophy of a horse.
Members of the Black Horse Poets and Wakefield Word Group with their new patron, Councillor Jack Hemingway, in January 2024.
Left to right: Susan McCartney, William Thirsk-Gaskill, Jasmine King, Cllr Jack Hemingway, Angie de Courcy Bower, Lindsey Marie, Stefan Grieve

Michael Yates had been a newspaper journalist for a number of years, starting with the Wakefield Express series. After which he worked for the Sheffield-based evening paper The Star, commuting by bus every day from his Sandal home.

In 1996, he started teaching a Creative Writing class at Wakefield College and also became a part-time subeditor on the Huddersfield Examiner. One lunchtime he walked into Huddersfield’s Albert pub to see they had a poetry anthology on sale. He discovered it was produced by The Albert Poets, who met there regularly.

Roger Manns, a retired teacher of Modern Languages who taught at Wakefield’s St Thomas à Becket and Outwood Grange, had joined the Creative Writing class; and he shared Michael's interest in establishing a Wakefield poetry group. Roger’s cousin was then manager of Wakefield’s Black Horse pub in Westgate, so Roger and Michael went along to see him and secured a free meeting space in exchange for the promise of extravagant sums of money being spent at the bar. And in 1998 they wrote to all their Wakefield poetry pals begging them to join the newly created Black Horse Poets.

Over the years, there have been changes of venue and changes of officers, but the Black Horse Poets have always managed to hold regular monthly meetings of readings laced with thoughtful and friendly critique. They have also published three full-blown anthologies: 'Full Gallop' (2000), 'Front Runner' (2008) and 'Full Rein' (2013); issued pamphlets of poems every year between 2011 and 2019; produced a magazine called 'The Horse’s Mouth', and even made CDs and videos.

Members have held meetings or given public readings at such Wakefield locations as Drury Lane Library, Henry Boons pub, the Mocca Moocho coffee bar, the Orangery, the Black Rock pub, Wakefield Cathedral’s Treacy Hall, the Destiny Church, the Monkey Bar, Newmillerdam Country Park and Westgate Studios; also at Unity Hall as part of Wakefield ArtWalk.

In 2008, Wakefield MP Mary Creagh became the Poets’ patron and remained so until her election defeat in 2019. And she regularly judged their annual poetry competition.

In 2009, the 20-strong group was honoured with a civic reception. By 2016, the Poets had merged with prose group Wakefield Word, who hold separate meetings for writers of stories and plays.

Over the years, individual members have succeeded in publishing volumes of poetry, short story collections and even novels; and have had plays performed on stage and radio.

The Covid lockdown meant members had to meet by Zoom for two years and numbers fell. But now, in the year of their Silver Anniversary, Black Horse Poets and Wakefield Word meet at the Red Shed in Wakefield’s Vicarage Street with William Thirsk-Gaskill as president and Stefan Grieve as Chairperson, and their numbers have grown again.

Stefan Grieve has been chairperson of Wakefield Word since 2018, where he has led and organised meetings for the groups and been an active member in showcasing popular events and award ceremonies over the years.

Lindsey Marie is the newest member of the committee who covers all things publicity, so if you would like the group to be involved in any future events, performances or workshops, she would be delighted to hear from you, simply direct message the group’s Facebook page.

Even so, the group are always looking for new people. For further details contact group secretary Colin Hollis, cvhollis98@gmail.com or find them on Facebook.

Members of the Black Horse Poets and Wakefield Word Group have written a series of responses to objects in our 100 Years of Collecting Online Exhibition:

'Miss Gostick's Tea Set' by Susan McCartneyin response to the Alice Gostick pottery set 

'East End Town, West Side Face' and 'A Miner's Life for Me' by Jasmine King in response to our mining objects

A poem by Angie de Courcy Bower in response to the tulip vase

'The Snap Tins' by Angie de Courcy Bower in response to our mining objects

'Tale of the Celtic Stone Man' by Stefan Grieve (Chairperson), in response to the Celtic stone head

'The Asylum Whistle', also by Susan McCartney, in response to the West Riding Asylum nurse's whistle

'Liquorice Fields' by L. Marie, in response to the liquorice stamp.

Ken Hanson: A Mining Deputy's Story, also by L.Marie