Notes
from the Curator's Workshop.
The nearest
thing this site
gets
to a Blog...
30th March 2012
We completed our purchase of the extra land today. So much to do now, but at least the base of the K8 kiosk is in position on the new "patch".
7th March 2012
I knew it was too good to be true - the CPanel software has just erased the last four years of blog posts.....
1st
March 2012
Well here we go again, time for a new update with yet a different method of editing the text. This time I'm using Zen CPanel's built in HTML editor. Let's hope it keeps on working!
The really big news is that we now have more land. And that means more space to display the ever growing collection. We were, after 16 years of trying, able to buy the extra piece of land that lies at the bottom of our existing garden. It adds a whopping 118ft to the length, more than doubling it. This will enable the chickens and their coup to move down there away from the house along with the tool shed, composter bins and general gardening paraphernalia currently cluttering what from now on will be known as the Lower Garden. That will allow re-organisation of the Upper Garden and existing shed area to better display the collection.
HISTORIC BLOG NOTES FROM RECOVERY
2010 Update
Don't you
just hate PCs? I do. Why can't they just work? And keep on working? Without
constant mind-numbingly long updates... I should not have to rebuild, defrag or
"clean" my PC just because Micro$oft want to install more of their
crap software on it. They really are the Sirius Cybernetics Corporation -
piling patches on to mistakes to fix errors they should have spotted. Don't
worry; it'll be fixed by Windoze 7....maybe! All I want is to stick nice
pictures of post boxes onto a website and I don't want to learn f*cking HTML to do it! Anyway, end of
rant....
A lot has
happened since the entries below; too much to recount in detail, but here's a
summary:
We were on BBC Essex Radio as part of the promo for
the Royal Mail post box miniature sheet issue on August 18th. Ray Clarke
visited and did a decent 3 minute interview. We are currently plugging our last
Open Day of 2009 - on September 13th - I say "we" as perhaps the most
momentous change is the creation of the Colne
Valley Postal Museum Trust. We need to establish a Trust to keep the
collection together in the event of my untimely death …. Not that I’m planning
to pop off just yet, but my mercenary teenage sons would happily sell the lot
and spend the dosh on more console games…. As if they don’t have enough
already. So we now have a Board of Trustees and for the record these are in no
particular order Messrs Wells, Pittway, Courtier, Knight and Leary. We will be
co-opting as required for specialist skills too.
Having
formed our Trust we are now being advised by the delightful Ashleigh from Essex
County Council Museum Development Service as to how to set about the long and
arduous process of becoming a registered museum. This will enable other Museums
to legally give us material they have no further use for. Already those
wonderful folks at the BPMA have kindly donated four surplus stamp vending
machines (three of which now work) and I’m sure there will be more mutual
co-operation between us. Because we cannot conserve artistic materials or paper
records correctly we donated to BPMA six pieces of original artwork for the
Railway Locomotives series of aerogrammes (1995) that had been in our
collection for some time. In fact I have
generally tidied up the Museum and disposed of a lot of non-core material as well
as focussing on the collection areas which we do best – post boxes, stamp
vending machines and street furniture.
I have
actually initiated another collecting stream, as it appears not to be covered
by the BPMA, and that is POSB Money Boxes. We have already got some very old,
antiquated and interesting designs with more being sought out on Ebay all the
time. My personal favourite is a KGV Jubilee money box from 1935.
Our final
area of collaboration with BPMA is about the 2010 Festival of Stamps. This national
celbration of philately recognizes the 70th anniversary of King
George V accession and includes KGV themed events across the Country throughout
the year. We are doing our bit with an extra Open Day and special KGV material
on display looking at the development of the Postal Service during this long
reign. So expect plenty of PB29/30s, TK31s and Air Mail stuff!
On the post
box front, the big news was the addition of a 1932 Derby Castings Type D Pillar
Box (PB29). That is the large one with built-in stamp vending machine. There
was a lot of posturing and sabre-rattling surrounding our acquisition of the
box which I can’t go into here, but suffice to say it all appears to have been
sorted out. Fitted with a new door and stamp machine and with 70 years of paint
and London
filth (it was on Fulham Palace Rd)
removed, it looks superb. It does have a real Coin Drop notice, but the
horizontal notice plate is currently a photograph of Arthur Reeder’s plate. I’m
sure eventually a real one will turn up.
Not quite so
spectacular, but nonetheless important are the early 1887 Type C wallbox with
high aperture (WB87/1) (From Chester) it’s sister with low aperture (WB87/2) (from
Southwold) and the Edward VII Type
C box with Imperial Crown, which came as a swap from Ross Courtier. On the lamp box front, a chance find by my
Sister-in-Law in France
bought a second LB204 back home to Blighty – God bless you Paula! As we already
had one from Bill Sait’s collection, the new one has become the only duplicated
box in the collection. To remedy this, it is painted in An Post green and
carries a gaelic collection plate, representing the dwindling numbers of these
boxes still to b e found in the Republic. A couple of swaps and some smart
door-changing has brought us at last the Abbot Engineering tin back with
maker’s name on a raised plate. Tescos kindly donated the remains of the Wolverhampton Royal Hospital
internal user box which was first seen on Flickr lying in the wrecked former
hospital. Now fully restored, it looks rather good.
A lot of
smaller items such as signage, date stamps, counter furniture and, of course,
paperwork has continued to come our way. Some is bought on Ebay or at auction,
but a lot of it just gets given to us by someone looking for “a good home” for
their old stuff. Recent highlights are: enamel name sign from Castle Hedingham
Post Office, similar from Ditrchingham, Norfolk,
a pewter ink stand with dip pens marked S.O. and a lovely little red cloth
bound book of Instructions for Cleaning Telephone Kiosks!
Kiosks have
been on our mind of late. For some while we have had a Push Button A coinbox in
the Museum. We got a Model 232 ‘phone for it 18 months ago and now we are the
proud owners of a 1927 Type K6 telephone kiosk. This is a very early example of
the Jubilee kiosk and, I have to say, it was in very poor condition. It has
been owned since 19809 by two different local collectors, neither of whom did
any work to it. So we have had it carefully separated into all it’s constituent
parts so it can be shot blasted. Unfortunately all the cast-iron window frames
need to be removed and that means drilling out 72 screws. So the box is offsite
at the moment where we can continue to work on it over the Autumn/Winter
period. Meanwhile we seek out new or replacement items to complete it. We have
a new Push/Pull glass and new Telephone glass signs are on their way. Coin
trays have been sourced, but we still need the back-board mirror frames and
notice frames and the twin shelves. All of this can be found, but this is a
longer term project. The completed item will be sited at the bottom of the
garden, opposite the Museum building for now.
Well, that’s
about it for now. Hopefully I can try to keep this blog more up to date in
future, but who knows when the next hard disc crash is coming?? OLDER RECOVERED FILES
26/2/08 Today I got the Post No
Bills enamel plate from ebay. A little
stained and rusted, but nevertheless a very nice item. It nesecitated a complete change around of the plates
already on the British Standard Fat pole to accomodate
it. We now have eleven dirrent pole plates
and I have identified a vurther two that I
know exist, but we don't already have.
24/2/08 Been another busy month. I
spent this weekend putting the PB33 Edward VIII pillar together. It was
a bitch! The replacement door is very slightly bowed ouytward in the middle, so my carefully machined
hinge fixings all lined up perfectly but I could not shut the door.
That meant releasing the three cap bolts and taking the lid off. Then I
positioned the door with the bottom hinge pin and shut it with the
lock. That meant I could lean down into the box and fix the hinge in
place with two of the three bolts. It looks great, but it will never
open! I had already spent several evenings grinding about 1/2 inch off
the bottom of the door.
20/2/8 We are going to be filmed
for Anglia TV's Bygones programme - sometime
in early March. Should be interesting.
16/2/08 The Southwold
box is now on display and today it was joined by the WB87/1 from Chester. I had to fit a wooden CP
to this box as it has an incorrect Type F door. In fact I think all
three parts were from different boxes! Now fully painted and next to
the WB87/2 you can easily see the difference. We received more
collection tablets from Ebay today, we now
have enough to cover most box numbers that appear on CPs.
14/12/07 Well
it's been a really long gap this time! I did not have the
necessary FTP client to keep the site uploaded and I'm posting this
using FileZilla as I refuse to pay twenty
quid for BulletproofFTP to get it working
again. Such a lot has happened, I'm not sure
where to start!
We now have our first French post box, which arrived courtesy of Chris Twitcham, this week. It is a 1977 model
wall-mounted and in excellent condition. I wanted a French box because
we also have two nice French enamel signs - "RecetteAuxilliarie" and "Agence Postale" , both by Email of Strasbourg and both
pre-WW2. In the British department, we were gifted an unusual box from Tesco. They took over the old Wolverhampton Royal Hospital building and in the ruins
was an old Private box which had served patients in the Foyer. Tesco generously donated what was left of it,
unfortunately the vandals had give it a good kicking and lost the base.
The box is mostly constructed of plywood with hardwood framing and can
be restored. On the cast-iron front, we have acquired the WB87/2
from Southwold Railway Station and this came
with it's original plate. It is now fully
restored and will be joined this weekend by a damaged WB87/1 from the Chester area. This box needs work on the door and the lower outer
left framing, but can all be repaired. At last I have sourced a spare Carron B pillar carcass to take our PB33 Edward
VIII door and this should be on-site
over Christmas. A much bigger project (and box) is also waiting in the
wings for a Hiab!
The small artifacts
collection has grown considerably over the year, with more items of
uniform, badges and small counter objects such as hacking knife, parcel
scissors and Registered label dispensers. In addition we have two
magnificent posters "Journey of a Letter" and "At the
Airport" which are now framed and on display. A third poster, for
the Post Office Savings Bank , featuring Coddenham, Norfolk also arrived. This superb
print is by noted East Anglian artist Len
Squirrel RA and was admirably re-touched for us by noted Halstead-based
transport artist Malcolm Root. Malcolm is also a long-time admirer of
Squirrel's work and was happy to help restore this rare item of Squirrelania.
On the AA front, we
paid more than we should have done for Reydon,
Norfolk which is in a mess, and got a good price on Great Easton, Essex
(from a Cambridge dealer) and East Langdon, Kent (from Ebay). A deal with Steve Fuller of Chatteris brought four signs to the Museum: Hollesley Suffolk, Cople,
Beds and two from Norfolk- Bircham Newton and
Bergh Apton. This brings us up to 24 signs on
site now.
We are now on
personal terms with Sir William McAlpine
after enjoying his renowned hospitality over the Summer at a Fawley collectors' open day. During the auction, we
persuaded Sir Bill to let us bid for a complete telegraph head with
three cross bars and 18 insulators. For the princely sum of £2, we won
it and one of Sir Bill's men kindly ground off the bolt heads so that
we could get it all into the Passat estate.
One arm each has gone to our two outstations; in Saffron Walden and Colchester. The remaining arm is now
resplendent here on the pole which also sports a selection of recently
acquired pole signs: Cast E7R Do Not Throw Stones, Cast E7R Post no
Bills, Enamel SE Post No Bills, enamel P7T Do not throw stones (Both
bi-lingual), GR cast Do Not Throw stones and finally, from a C pillar
box, Please Post in Correct Aperture. Other pole furniture has been
donated by Duncan Parks of North Wales and includes
a connection ring for the top of a pole and the finial weather shield.
We already had a finial insulator bracket from Sir Bill, so we can now
complete the 11" diameter pole
.Local donations
& acquisitions have seen us gain the enalel
sign from the ex-Castle Hedingham Post Office and
documentation on the recent strike.
PS: You would not
believe how hard it is to update this stuff now- I've got 6 programs
open and I still can't get it to pick the images properly!
22/9/07 A very enjoyable day out at
the BPMA Store in Debden for hands on with GPO street furniture. Shame only 6
people showed up for a well-researched & presented session.
19/9/07 What a nightmare! The Shortal servers were due to be switched off in
September with the forced migration of this site to Zen hosting. Less
than ideal as it co-incided with two weeks
internet-free holiday. And now I have to try to uypload
this to a different FTP site. In addition, the cloned copy was taken in
May which means lots of changes to the text are now missing presumed
lost. It will take some time to get to grips with the enormous backlog
of updates. In addition, Mozilla Composer
seems unable to upload images correctly. To cap it all, in the
transition every HTML link from the Home button on the tool bar has becomne self-referential and will need to be
sorted.
12/06/07 Still have not really got to grips with Mozilla, so I have been putting off doing any more
edits. Stuff is still rolling in for the site, but it is all picture
based and I can't figure out how to upload the pictures to where I want
them. We lost out on Maiden Newton AA sign on Ebay
last week, but did win a coupke of small GPO
items for the small artefacts section - a
hacking knife for cutting bundles tied with string and whistle. A deal
with UK Architectural Antiques has brought us box No. 90, a VR C wall
box by Eagle Range & Foundry Co. (WB 83/5),
it even had a plate on it. We also one a nice cast Aluminium
plaque from a telephone exchange or PO building featuring the EiiR cipher and year 1971. It is being restored
now.
15/5/07 Nearly a month without
web access - aargh! Still we are back with Peripanetic ISP and trying to use Mozilla Composer to edit the pages. So much more
difficult than the old Shortal method. Still
you have to learn new things. There are a number of transcription errors,
especially in the picture files that will take time to correct, please
bear with us on this. Lots of stuff happened this month. We got a
superb Irish You may telephone from here sign and followed it up with
an Irish Don Not Throw Stones signs, both bi-lingual. The Forge
completed the fixing bracket for the SVM to go on the E7R pillar
and lots of other stuff too numerous to mention, including the
acquisition of a dodgy B wall box of Ebay
which contained our very first enamel CP from Cambridge - Box 426 Wulfstan Way
20/4/07 A long gap due to work committments that took me to Canada and beyond. Also some bad
news, the Shortal servers are closing at the
end of this month and the whole site will be transferred elsewhere.
However, it won't have the easy editing facilities provided by Shortal, so updating the site is going to be much
more difficult. On a brighter note, I got home today to find that our
collection plates from Bonhams had arrived
together with two more Post Office "above
the door" signs by Chromo of Wolverhampton.Pics this weekend.
1/4/07 A bright sunny day and a good excuse to
remove the fat telegraph pole from the blue plastic wrapper it came in
and get it erected. Peter helped me fit the
three GPO footboards and then we fitted the cast GR Do Not Throw Stones
plate that came from Bonhams last year. I
also transferred the enamel version from the smaller pole (where it did
not fit) to the fatter one (where it does fit). Six GPO lead cable
grips finished it off for now. If a set of hoops of the right size
turns up, a box could be fitted too. Picture on Street Jewelry page.
30/1/07 The stamps arrived and I
spent a couple of hourse making up adaptors
to take our existing dies and to fit the assembly to a standard GPO
cancel handle. It works!
29/1/07 When in Cambridge I always visit Cambridge
Rubber Stamps. My aim this time was to get a couple of rubber cancels
made up; one for the TPO (at the Colne Valley
Railway) and onme for use in the Museum.
26/3/07 Alexandra Palace model railway exhibition -
a debauched weekend with the Editorial Team from BRM, noted here as I
picked up a nice LT enamel sign for Additional Parking Spaces. Very
useful for Open Days!
21/3/07 I have spent a couple of
evenings designing and writing a Wikipedia
page for Pillar Boxes. Whilst there was one there it was pretty basic.
Working with a US-based Irish contributor we have a pretty good page
ready to go up. I'll let you know when it goes live. I also took the
Type R SVM housing and the adaptor bracket for the B
box to the forge today. The modern bracket does not fit the 1936
pattern housing so it will need a 1/8th" steel interleave sheet so
that the two parts can be bolted together. In fact we are collectively
going to need three of these as Alan Mattin
and Greg Leary have the same problem to cope with.
19/3/07 Telephone Kiosk section
goes live with fully revised pics and
comprehensive notes on the different types.
18/03/07 Guest editor Marcus: I
helped the Curator reposition the A and D size wall boxes inbetween hail showers and bright sun this
afternoon. It is a heavy job but allowed all four boxes to be brought
together for the first time.
17/3/07Letter Box
Study Group meeting in Wakefield. This was a very pleasant
day out seeing a lot of familiar faces and putting names to new ones.
Thanks must go to Thomas Manning from Dublin for the superb Irish black
and yellow time plates. Also to Arthur Reeder of IoWPHM
for the SVM bracket. Incidentally when I got home I
offered it up to the 1936 pattern SVM housing and guess
what...... it doesn't fit! So another trip to the forge is called for
to fabricate a making-up peice. We also
picked up two cans of finest Williamsons paint - BS538 Post Office Red
and BS539 Post Haste. I am reliably informed that the later is the
current colour used by RM and that BS538 is
the older traditional colour. We shall see!
11/3/7 New Ludlows
posted from Howard & Liam: Minchampton, Lullington, Chathill, Ratby, Longhaughton and Belsay. Today being another sunny one saw the GviR E box, the GR D and the GR Allen B box all
receiving final coats of paint.. The Allen B
wall box has now been fitted withthe Pentre Dhu plate which we
got from Ebay recently. Obviously the E and D
wall boxes don't have plates, so the newly arrived Kesgrave
Hall plate from the Inkpen Museum will go on the high cipher
GR B wall box once it returns from blasting. This one is caked in paint
with very little detail visible and certainly needs bead blasting
whereas the others were not too bad and I was able to strip them with
wire brush, belt sander and hot air gun, although this is slow and
tiresome. A quick visit to our "outstation" in Saffron Walden
revealed no less than 17 boxes on site and the GviR
pillar newly planted in John's front garden, where it looks rather good
I have to say. I also found today that the "spare" E2R box is
actually a 10" aperture W T Allen B wall box. We only have 8"
apertures by Allen, so it's not spare after all and is in fact, our
90th box....
10/03/07 Another week travelling in Europe was followed by a clear
sunny day Saturday. Time to get the paint brush out. I gave the GR
Allen B wall box a first coat this morning and whilst waiting for it to
dry, set about the GviR E wallbox.
It opened easily to reveal little of note save a 2p peice!
I stripped away a lot of the old paint with belt sander,
wire brush and heat gun so it could take a coat of primer tomorrow. I
also rubbed down the door of the GR E wall box where I had filled in
the non-authentic CPH holes. So that can get painted too. Its a
good job Greg Leary has made a recent mercy dash to T & R
Williamsons of Ripon, else we would be running out of paint. Whilst the
brush was wet I shot over to Steeple Bumpstead
and made good the PB27 from whence the SVM plate had been removed as
promised to my contact at RM. And in Saffron Walden I picked up our 9th
LT 'E' plate to complete the "9 boat" LT flag in the garden.
Picture in Street Jewelry section. What a day!
25/2/07 Today I collected the new
struts for the Type R SVM housing. They were a tight
fit at first, but they do seem to work; stopping the machine front from
falling free during loading. I also had a go at re-assembling the
Supermarket box (PB58/3) which was in several bits when recovered from
the RM Store. This proved more difficult than it looks and took most of
the afternoon. You can see the finished box on the 3rd EiiR page. I also found time to put a plate in the Handyside WB103/1 GR B wall box. This one is from Birkenhead (Soereton Rd), but now carries Norris
Hill, Southampton and has been added to the
GR pages.
22/2/07 Another undercover
operation saw me rendez-vous with Paul
Jeffries of RM Cambridge at a secret location near Steeple Bumpstead early on a wet Thursday morning. Our
mission? To retreive a valuable bit of
ephemera for the collection. The said item is an enamel notice plate in
a brass frame fixed to a GR pillar box. The notice was a standard
warning to "Wait Delivery of Stamp Before Inserting a Second
Coin" and indicates that at one time the box (CB9 34) had a stamp
machine attached. When Paul opened it , we
could see where the fixing holes had been carefully filled it with bits
of brazing rod. I quickly set about removing the two fixing screws. The
top most shifted with a screwdriver, having been in situ since 1936,
but the lower screw, which protruded into the box, was very
recalcitrant and I had to resort to drilling off the head and levering
the brass plate holder away from the box to free it. A bemused
pedestrian with two letters to post was our only other visitor and the
whole operation took less than 20 minutes, although part of the deal is
that I have to make good the box in due course. You can see the plate
in it's original location on our SVM pages, here is the
cleaned-up plate.
16/2/07 The Retreival
& Restorations team from the Museum descended once more upon the RM
Store in deepest Essex at the invitation of the Planning Manager.
This final visit was to recover some large items which could not be
handled in the short daylight hours back in December when we last
visited. Not much had changed and we quickly set about moving the
stored wall boxes to free up the PB38/1 pillar at the rear of the
store. This was due to go to the Oxford Bus Museum, but was switched at the
last minute to our outstation in Saffron Walden. It is in good
condition save for a missing hinge pin. With the aid of our special
post box trolley we got it out and on to a tail-lift van specially
hired for the day. A Lion Foundry A wall box proved to be extremely
heavy, lying on its back until we realised
that it was full of water! With the box upended, orange rusty water
flooded out all around the locked door, somewhere around 150 litres, or 150Kg of water. It was much easier to
move after that. Several important boxes were recovered for the Herts & Essex collection, which grows apace and
for an important privatecollection near Colchester. In addition we gained the
following boxes for the main CVPHM collection: WB112 GviR Type E wallbox,
WB103/1 A Handyside GR B Wallbox,
WB97 Allen B wallbox, but not sure exactly
which variant yet and finally a PB58/3 Broadwater Supermarket box. This
last was in several peices and the fibreglass is deeply gouged in places and will
require specialist restoration. At least this time we all got out
without any serious injuries or muscle strains. Following the December
visit two volunteers were badly lacerated by a trolley kicking-back as
the load came off and another one had to sleep on the floor for 4 weeks
after straining his back!
12/2/07 Retreived
three boxes from blasting and picked up a very nice 1950's Postman's
jacket (with GviR buttons) from a fellow in Ipswich who had seen the EADT
article. In the evening I managed to fit a cabinet lock to the Type R SVM housing which is
progressing nicely. The forge are making new
retaining plates and stays which will be fitted later this week. Also
helped Alan Mattin recover an original Do Not
Throw Stones at the Telegraphs sign from a pole in Great Leighs.
Also today I
secured some more stamp coils for our SVMs,
including a totally untouched Machin multivalue at just a small premium to face value.
2/2/07 After a whilrwind
tour of the States during which I got to see the Golden Gate Bridge, The Sears Tower and the Empire State Building from the air, all in 5
days, it was back to Earth again, literally! The earth in question was
sort-of supporting our ILB7 lamp box which is on the upper part of a
cast iron lamp box pole. However, it was very unstable and so today I
dug it out and filled the hole with Post Mix cement. That should
prevent it toppling. I also fitted the newly acquired Tidings Hill CP
to one of the appropriate lamp boxes, the LB217 I think, and stripped
down the Type R SVM housing which earlier in the day I had retreived from the forge following a small repair.
This will be fully restored pending mating with the special B type
pillar box mounting which is kindly being donated from the Isle of
White Post Box Museum; thank you Arthur! This will save a lot of time
and expense trying to adapt an A size bracket to fit a B size box. Not
content with all that, we also collected 4 more AA village signs today,
bringing our collection up to 15 so far. They were Hollesley,Cople, Bircham
Newton and Bergh Apton. In addition, I found
out this week that we won Duloe at auction.
27/1/07 Well as I jetted off to Palm Springs, CA for a trade show, I got the
news from my irate wife that the EADT peice
has been published. It was in the Saturday magazine and ran to three
pages with pictures. Irate because she was then innundated
with calls from well-wishers wanting to donate long cherished objects
to the Museum! So far, of course, I don't know what these artefacts are, so have no idea if we can accomodate them. No doubt all will be revealed on
my return next week.
26/1/07 Some
last-minute late night negotiation ahead of a local privately-owned box
listing on Ebay secured our one and only
Halstead enamel collection plate. It's for Tidings Hill and also
mentions the long gone SPO at Neal Road. Very nice. Just finished
packing for the States visit in time to go and collect it.
25/1/7 East Anglian
Daily Times photographer came round again today for more odd-ball
shots. Apparently it's going in this weekend. Should be interesting....
21/1/07 The Hillday
Type B52 SVM was successfully mounted on the side of the
Gibbs Type K pillar box this weekend. It was a complex job as the SVM is very heavy and the
bracket requires 8mm holes to be drilled in the side of the pillar box.
It does look fantasatic however. Picture on
the Elizabeth II page.
This became
possible through the good offices of Laurence Rudolph, who sold me the
necessary specially shaped bracket. The way it works is that the Hillday machine comes in a Type U case which has
six holes in three rows on one side. These are 6mm clearance holes. The
bracket is tapped 6mm and these, of course, line up. On the curved side
of the bracket are another six holes, but in different positions. These
are much bigger, around 8mm. You put the bracket up against the side of
your post box and mark where to drill through these holes. Then you
drill through 3/4" of cast iron an 8mm clearance hole - no mean
feat! The difficulty comes in supporting first the bracket, whilst you
mark the holes, and later the SVM itself which weighs about
60Kg, while you try to thread the 6mm bolts through it.
Needless to say I
snapped several drill bits doing this. Then the old drill burnt out (it
was knackered anyway) so I had to go and buy a new more powerful one
((1kW) Good excuse for new toy...) and then I found the bolts were too
short, but the shop was by then, closed. The new drill and Tungsten
tipped bit made short work of the K type casting though. A local
farmer/philatelist friend came over Sunday morning and bought a large
selection of bolts with him, from which I got 6 x 8mm x 40mm which is
what it needed. Then I had to find a way to support the weight of the SVM while I lined it up with
the box and frame. This was the hardest part as I balanced it on two
planks on two bricks on top of a workmate! It was 2mm too low, so
several bits of scarp cardboard had to be added before I could get the
first bolt in place. Once you have one in, it's a lot easier, although
the supporting surface was not perpendicular to the box, so I had to
splay the workmate legs a bit with liberal application of the boot to
drop the rear of the SVM down until I could feel the
thread engage. All this has to be done with the SVM mech
swung out of the case and in your face, as it is nigh impossible to
remove it from the case and get it back in again. Anyway, by 3.30pm I had all six bolts in
place and felt confident enough to "launch" my new vessel by
kicking away the supporting chocks. At this point I had no idea if it
would topple over as the K was on the kink a bit on the patio. As it
happens, it was stable, but for safety I "walked" it round 90
degrees so the SVM is on the "uphill" side of the
slant. I touched in the scuffed yellow transfer for "stamps"
and washed down the K type, which picks up green algae from the roof.
The result is what you see, and I have to say, I'm very pleased with
it!
15/1/07 I dropped in on Alan Mattin and picked up the promised SVM to Pillar bracket.
Unfortunately, both the brackets we have now are for A size pillars.
One of these can be used on our K type pillar which is the same
diameter as an A, but as it is a 1980 design it will have to have a
more modern SVM, probably the U housing with Type H booklet
vend mech. The original 1936 design housing with B4 mech
will need a heavily modified bracket if it is to be fitted to our GR B
pillar. More work for the Forge!
11/1/07 Today we had a visit from
Steven Russell, reporter with the East Anglian
Daily Times. The interview lasted about an hour and was very wide
ranging. After a photographer has been over, the article should appear
in the EADT.
6/1/07 Phew! What a start to the year! It has
rained most of the week and the ground is a quagmire, limiting what we
can do. Thursday night I picked up a B4 1d stamp machine with a Type R housing to fit it to a postbox from a
collector in London. It was sold as "in
working order" but a quick inspection revealed a lot of impact
damage. It had also been stored in a dirty wet place, lots of filth and
corrosion. I was not going to be defeated by this however as I've
wanted a Penny mech for ages. So most of
Friday night was spent stripping it down, liberal application of
magical WD40 and the Birmingham screwdriver! I have now
re-assembled it and repaired as much of it as possible, but it will
never work properly. The main gear and pinion have taken a heavy blow
from something and are way out of true; too corroded on the spindle to
get it off too. So it will have to be cosmetic for now. This means I'll
probably put the B4 1p (decimal) mech in the
housing when it is fitted to the GR PB27 pillar.
As the sun
threatened to come through on Sunday afternoon and the wind had dried
off the ground a little it seemed a good idea to put up our recently
acquired Marsham Post Office title sign. This
meant moving three older signs around on the front of the building to accomodate the new big one. I think it looks
better, more authentically like an SPO and you can see the results
on the new splash screen on the Home page.
31/12/06 Some more visitors to the
Museum this week, including John Wells bearing gifts - pictures on the Railwayana pages soon! We had 2897 visitors to this
site during December - a new record and still climbing. The GR B wall
box has been stripped of fittings ready for blasting this week.
20/12/06 Site optimisation
now underway, site map added.
14/12/06 Finally got around to
posting some more stuff on the second SVM page, including detail
shots of notice plates and in situ mechs. Who
knows, at this rate I might finish the Kiosks essay by Christmas!
12/12/06 Today I finished rebuilding
the LWB172 Ludlow (EiiR with large enamel
plate). This is a composite box made up from spare parts from around
the country, but it does look good. Whilst searching for a new wallbox lock to put on it, I came across a
right-hand wallbox lock. Now all of our boxes
are left-hand locking so I have no idea what this lock was for, other
than, perhaps a Carpenter's box or a box in a Crown Office.
05/12/06 I thought we should add the
English Heritage/Royal Mail policy on postboxes to the Links section.
It's a PDF download so you'll need Acrobat to view it. It's just a
shame that it is being flouted widely.
29/11/06 Today we collected a second
load of (mostly damaged) postboxes from the RM store. This was hard
work but yeilded some interesting boxes which
will addGR Type D and B wall boxes to the
collection and provide several boxes for the Herts
& Essex and IoW collections. Unfortunately. I'm now limping badly
as the trolley took a chunk out of my leg during the operation.
26/11/06 It is quite rare for us to
get a visitor in the "close season" but today was an
exception. In atrocious weather we greeted Scott Thomson, patron of PositivelyPostal,
for his first visit to the Museum. It had been raining hard all day,
but Scott must have the ear of Him Upstairs as the skies cleared and
the sun shone during the time he was wading through the quagmire that
is the garden today. No sooner had he returned to whence he came and
the heavens opened once more! It was great to meet Scott and we had a
good old chat about all things postal!
10/11/06 New page added to the
Features Index showing the closure of Halstead Crown Post Office.
8/11/06 A sad day for Halstead as
our Crown Post Office was closed by Post Office Ltd following a sham
"consultation" in which a fait accompli was presented to the
Townsfolk. A full service ofcommemorative
Last Day Covers was provided by the Museum inside the condemmedPost Office. 105 covers and 30 postcards
were serviced with the Halstead Post Office CDS before the door closed
at 3pm. We then had great fun recovering the two lozenges,
as the bolts were very rusty. One sheared and we had to result to a
hacksaw which made for quite a sight as Terry Macavoy
hacked through the rusty bolt perched on an 8ft step ladder in growing
darkness in the middle of the High Street! With both signs recovered we
returned to the Museum to clean them before presenting one to Alan Mattin for his collection. In exchange we received
a very nice Green Line E plate for our LT Bus Stop.
7/11/06 Three new Ludlows added to the Tour courtesy of Gerry Cork - South Harting, Petersfield
& Lyeminster. We got a call from RM
Halstead to say that we can have one of the lozenges when it closes.
6/11/06 A large
quantity of GPO paperwork was today donated by a retired Halstead Postie and we received the Last Day covers ready
for Wednesday 8th - the Last Day of the Halstead Crown Office.
28/10/06 After a good meeting with
Dave Cox last week (in a dodgy layby off the
A22!), I received a lot more useful info about
stamp machines. Much of this has now been included in an improved SVM page and a new
supplementary page devoted to a 1960 account of the history of SVMs in Britain. I picked up a GR cast iron
Do Not Throw Stones plate from Bonhams in Knowle. It is for the larger size telegraph pole,
but a useful addition to the collection.
20/10/06 Some you lose - we lost Kessingland AA sign in an Ebay
auction, which with it's Suffolk connections was a shame;
But Some you win - we won the rare Colchester sign instead which is even
more appropriate for our Essex-based museum. Both signs added to the
site together with the cleaned and restored Great Marlow sign we
acquired earlier this month. Langford and Sherborne
St John will be joining the collection soon.
13/10/06 Dave Cox visited us from Southport and bought lots of
interesting goodies, not least of which were a second G2 SVM and a 1p B4 SVM. The G2 is set for 5p coins
which will match with our type U housing, but missing an actuator arm.
We are having one made using the one we currently have as a pattern.
The B4 mech was most welcome and is now in
the cut-down Type K Mk1 case we acquired from Laurence Rudolf at the
Summer LBSG Open Day.
1/10/06 The Railwayana
section has now been uploaded. Today we had a group of visitors from
the Street Jewellry Society.
29/9/06 Newick
E Suusex added to Ludlows
courtesy of Paul Snelling.
24/9/06 Luss,Strathclyde added to Ludlow tour,
courtesy of Alice Moreland via David Hunt.
19/9/06 Just
got in to Shanghai
and with a fast internet connection in the hotel, updated the site with
four more AA signs from the recent Beaulieu autojumble,
courtesy of Tony Philips, and a replica of the first 1906 sign from DG
models. Also added a lot more detail about the various types on show.
13/9/06 Today
I received an answer to my written query to HRH Prince of Wales
office about future Regnal title and style of
cipher. But I'm not allowed to tell you what was said. Sorry.
11/9/06 I spoke to Solihull Philatelic Society and had a good evening
with plenty of questions from around 30 members present.
9/9/06 A
remarkable start to Heritage Open Days was the unexpected arrival of an
LB217 front casting and door. These were in very bad repair having been
involved in a traffic accident. However, enough parts survive to enable
us to fit a back and make up a reasonable box. The aperture upshoot is largely missing, but the box does show
all the important features of its type. No sooner had I squirreled it
away in the workshop for later attention, than another visitor asked if
we were still collecting boxes! When I said "Yes" she
immediately offered to donate an unwanted box. It turned out to be the
wooden NSB335 from the HQ of the British Red cross in Chelmsford.
It is very interesting when compared with our own Cornish hotel box.
They are clearly from the same manufacturer but show many interesting
design differences. Both are now repainted and on display. Work on the
Edward VIII door continues with tablet and CP now fitted and cipher
gilded. 75 people turned up for the Open Days, a good number enhanced
by fine weather. 10 of these were LBSG members.
4/9/06 Well
it's been a busy Summer! We have recently collected three more AA
Village signs from Derbyshire and lost out on one on Ebay (Mary Tavy). A lot
of work on the stamp machines has seen the Type A
coil machine loaded with a genuine 1d blue Wilding coil, in fact it's a
graphite lined coil. Rather nice. Another machine has been brough back into use for 1 booklets and a new Type
K Mk1 housing has arrived and begun restoration. We are slowly gearing
up for HODS this weekend. Press Releases have gone out and we got
mentioned in Best of British and bizarrely, in Air Union's in flight
magazine. Never heard of them? Not surprising really, they are based inVladivostock and the article was in Russian!. The NSB328 from Northampton Hospital was given a
full strip down and repaint this week, not before time, and we added
out 79th box the W T Allen "& Co" B wall box (WB155/1).
We already have the WB115/3 "& Co Ltd" so this makes a
nice comparison. The CP will be Queensway, rather fitting for an E2R
box. Work has also started to bring the raw PB33 E8R door casting into
use. I only broke two drill bits when I fitted the tablet holder and
the plate frame, so next job is the lock holes! This will be on display
as part of our Year of the Three Kings display. for
HODS
15/8/06 Lots of pictures
added to AA signs, Ludlow
tour of Britain
and elsewhere. Also new pics
from my visit to Hong Kong
last week, including SVMs.
It was very wet, windy and dissappointing to
see so few Colonial boxes left. Most have been replaced by 'Singapore
AA' pattern tin boxes. We had the West Bergholt
Historical Society over for an evening visit this week which was very
pleasant.
1/8/06 We
got an excellent review of this website in the British Philatelic
Bulletin.
15/7/06 A
lot of work to get everything sorted out on the site following the Open
Day. We have 75 AA signs on the page now including new photographs of
all those which came to the Open Day. Two new signs showed up this week
- the early Post Office for Money Orders sign, without telegraph or
annuity and a suberb AA garage hanging sign.
The later was an unexpected find at Solopark
near Cambridge.
I spoke to Stisted WI on Thursday and the
Ladies would like a visit next year.
9/7/06 We
had a very successful LBSG Open Day - see the special page here.
24/06/06 On Monday we had the Rotary
Club of Sudbury Talbot in the garden and on Wednesday I spoke to Badingham W I (again - this is almost an annual
event!). We were successful this week in bidding for two more AA
village signs on Ebay. This led to the offer
of two more, thereby bringing the collection up to seven in total. Only
one of the new ones, Gt. Gransden, is on
site. It is being treated for rust and will then go on display. I hope
to have Codnor here in time for the LBSG open
day and the other two before Heritage Open Days.
14/06/06 Several
updated pictures added to the site reflecting the recent sunny weather.
Construction of the Telephone Kiosk essay proceeds apace.
22/5/06 Today
we received a visit from Braintree WI and despite the
rain, all our visitors seemed to enjoy it. In addition the ex-RM ILB 8
lamp box arrived. This is the W T Allen 1940 pattern lamp box with no
cipher or Post Office on it. Although this one was clearly used in the Croydon area for many years (it is dated 1960
inside) it will be restored to An Post livery to represent the more
widespread use of the type in Eire.
12/5/06 More
signs added to the site. The AA village and Triangular warning signs
were both put up on the wall in recent days.
29/4/06 Today we received a
working Hillday Type B52 SVM. It was locked shut,
so Greg Leary and I spent a couple of hours getting it open and
replacing the lock. After a bit of fiddling it seems to work and brings
our SVM
collection right up to date. This one is dated 1994 and was taken out
of service last year.
23/4/06 A
new addition is the AA village sign for Ottery
St Mary. Together with a triangular Cross Roads AA sign these will be
up shortly. To celebrate I posted six more AA
village signs on the page taking us up to to
47 so far... Also added E2R Ludlow at Oddington to the Tour of Britain.
18/4/06 Added
the excellent Perfect State of Flatby "Cinderellas" to the stamp section. Latest AA
sign arrived for restoration ("Crossroads").
11/4/06 Feedback form added
9/4/06 I spent most of
today recovering from our family trip to Brussels on Eurostar yesterday; great stuff! Whistling through Kent
at 186mph and the wine in my glass still like a millpond... Anyway I
thought I'd take it easy today and get the Wivenohe
box back together. The bottom cast beading was heavily corroded, so got
the grinder out to see if I could rescue it. I had to lose a lot of
material, but did free up all three screws and after anti-rust
treatment it is now refitted. The Post Office casting has been broken
for some years, so that had to come off. I replaced it with a copy made
by Rayne Foundry (RIP) some years ago. Some internal woodwork was
missing, but I was able to replace that too. It actually went back
together rather well and has now received a fresh coat of paint. In
deference to it's original location in the Tendring Hundred, it will receive the plate from
Little Clacton S.O. in due course.
Working on the LWB 160/2 reminded me
just how poor our small E2R Ludlow is (LWB173/1). I took it over to the
carpenter this evening and asked him to replace all the rotted wood and
manufacture new beading for the bottom. He's been in a car crash this
week, so it could take some time to see this one again. I also found
time to wash down and then erect the West Moors PO lozenge I collected
from Newbury two weeks ago, It is at
right-angles to our Northaw SPO lozenge on the same
corner of the house and looks rather good!
5/4/06 Lots more SVMs put up on the site following a visit to the
LBSG Spring Meeting in Sherborne and Inkpen Museum.Pics of Gavin Finnie's K Mk1 and Sutton Bridge K Mk2 SVMfrom Trevor
Whitehead. David James' Type ASVM
is superb, photos on the SVM2 page. Just heard that we are going to get the Ludlow ex-Wivenhoe Cross in Essex. This is a long door
E2R (WB160/2) with recessed plate holder. Its
a mess, as usual, but comes with lock and key. Pics on the Ludlows page soon.
23/03/06 Cleobury
Mortimer Ludlow added to Ludlow Tour of Britain courtesy of Val Scott,
LBSG.
18/3/06 Updated variouis photographs to reflect changed collection
plates. Revision of E2R Lamp Box section with additional
pictures.
14/03/06 Our
new POD 1200 arrived today and was quickly fitted to the VR PB15. To
celebrate I've added a feature on PODS to the site. We also got the
superb Edwardian collection plate for Sea Lane NorthHunstanton today and fitted it to the WB90.
11/3/06 A
film crew from German TV station DW-World showed up to film scenes for EuroMaxx. The theme is the EH Icons website, where
you can vote for your favourite icon of
British life. The programme will go out in
English at 20.30 on Thursday 16th March and can be viewed on Sky
Digital or via the web at www.DW-World.de
5/3/6 New
section on Street Jewelltry added to site, AA
School sign put on wall. Also repainted the PB27 today and cleaned up
the POD. Gilded the ILB5.
3/3/06 Our
latest AA road sign just arrived from deepest Welsh Wales. It's a rare
triangular AA & MU School
warning sign. I will post a picture when I finish restoring it.
.2/3/06 Spent
most of today cleaning and refurbishing the POD fitted to the GvR pillar and cleaning the cap of the EviiR Pillar ready to accept the newly restored
"Telephone POD sign". I suppose it ought to be a TDS or Telephone
Direction Sign. Anyway, it looks great after an LBSG member kindly
donated a broken POD base and the local forge made a new bracket to our
specification. I was going to fit it to the GvR
PB27, but the bolt on the POD is seized, so I settled for the EviiR PB20 instead. I rubbed down and repainted the
PB27 cap as it gets covered in birdsh*t under
the tree, which eats away the paint. Must get more cats!
8/2/06 Theanonymoys pilar is
now painted and fitted with a lock and plate - No.7 High St.
It looks great!
6/2/06 LB219/2 fitted with
new back and painted red
1/1/06 Basic site goes
live. Only about half the boxes are on and there are no Features yet.
30/12/05 The
site is under construction.
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