United Kingdom

Tales of tragedy, triumph abound

6 minute read Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

William Cheesman

THE fate of William Cheesman shows how fast and how hard families fell before there was a social safety net, and how tough was the struggle to bounce back after hitting rock bottom.

William was born in 1878 to a middle-class family in London. He was 11 when his father died at age 57. The family was forced to move to Notting Hill, then a crime-infested slum. His mother died the next year.

His younger siblings were placed in convents and orphanages. William, 12, was left to survive in the streets.

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Independent Scotland — rich or poor?

The Economist 6 minute read Preview

Independent Scotland — rich or poor?

The Economist 6 minute read Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

IN THE debate over whether Scotland should be independent, each side has for years lobbed economic grenades at the other. The pro-independence Scottish National Party (SNP) broke into mainstream politics in the 1970s with the slogan, "It's Scotland's Oil." Alex Salmond, Scotland's first minister and SNP leader, calls it "larceny" that revenues from oil and gas production, most of which comes from Scottish waters, have stuffed London's coffers for 40 years. George Osborne, Britain's chancellor, retorts that Scotland would be the poorer for secession.

 

So would an independent Scotland be an impoverished backwater or a land flowing with oil and money? A precise answer is impossible, since Whitehall does not count all of Britain's revenue and spending streams by geography. But a close reading of the figures suggests an answer, which is less dramatic than either staunch nationalists or unionists might hope.

Scotland's accounts of revenue and expenditure, based on Treasury data, show that it is not a ward of the state, grossly subsidized from Westminster. In fact, it performs better than all regions outside the southeast of England and has done particularly well in the past decade. In 2010-11, Scotland's GDP was $225 billion including a geographical share of North Sea oil and gas, around 10 per cent of Britain's, with 8.4 per cent of the population.

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Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

CP
Ken Taylor / The Associated Press

An oil platform in the North Sea about 180 kilometres east of Aberdeen, Scotland.

CP
Ken Taylor / The Associated Press

An oil platform in the North Sea about 180 kilometres east of Aberdeen, Scotland.

Coming ’round again

By Ann Marie Cullinane 5 minute read Preview

Coming ’round again

By Ann Marie Cullinane 5 minute read Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

I was born and raised in Cork city, Ireland, the third of four daughters. In June 1997, my parents sent me to Barbados with my oldest sister, a gift for my 21st birthday.

This is where I met a 19-year-old Canadian guy from Winnipeg. We spent two days together. Little did I know how much travelling I would do in the coming years.

I visited Winnipeg for two weeks in August, and he visited Cork for two weeks in December. The following March, I moved to Winnipeg.

At the time, it was a huge adventure. I got a job with a local textile company and received my permanent resident status in December 1998.

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Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

ANN MARIE CULLINANE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
The 100-year-old cottage in Ireland after extensive renovations.

ANN MARIE CULLINANE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
The 100-year-old cottage in Ireland after extensive renovations.

Looked lovely on the telly

Suzanne Winterflood 6 minute read Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

In 2004, as parents of two girls aged 12 and 17 living in London, England, my husband and I decided we wanted a brighter future for our family.

Europe was out because there weren't a lot of opportunities for work. Australia was too far away and the United States wasn't a place in which we could see ourselves living. So, Canada it was.

After completing a whole raft of applications, paying out lots and lots of money to consultants and government for fees, and two major research trips to Ontario and then B.C., my husband in 2007 was finally offered a job as a tool and die maker in Kelowna.

Yay. We were on our way... not!

You’ve got to accent-uate the positive

By Ian Scott 5 minute read Preview

You’ve got to accent-uate the positive

By Ian Scott 5 minute read Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

I was having a business conversation with a woman I did not know from Eve recently. We had been talking for a few minutes when she said: "I love the sound of your voice and could listen to you all day."

I like to think it was the content of my conversation of which she was enamoured. But I know from long experience that often it is not what I say that people hear, but rather how I say it.

I immigrated to Canada at age 26 from Scotland in 1986 and have now lived an equal amount of time in both countries. What brought me to Canada was a job offer. I never had to struggle to find the elusive job without English proficiency. I quickly was made aware that I have a Scottish accent and frequently was told to "say that again" or asked "what did you say?"

As time passes, you either realize it is best to slow down your pace of speech or live with puzzled comments and blank looks.

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Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

ANDREW GILLAN / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Ian Scott’s children and their cousins ham it up on the beach in front of the family home at Lamlash, Isle of Arran, Scotland.

ANDREW GILLAN / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Ian Scott’s children and their cousins ham it up on the beach in front of the family home at Lamlash, Isle of Arran, Scotland.

Divided by a common heritage

By Nicholas Hirst 5 minute read Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

A Canadian born in Belgium asked me the other day, as a Briton, who I thought would win the French presidential election, as if there were some inherent connection between us as sometime Europeans.

His first assumption was that, as a Brit, I would at least know there was an election going on in France and would have some interest in it. His second assumption was that I would have a different perspective than he did as a Belgian.

I have lived in North America for more than a generation, with the past 15 years in Manitoba as an editor and TV producer, so he might better have asked me my views on the election in Alberta. But, then, he wouldn't be asking me for that view from my ethnic perspective as a "Brit," for what valuable perspective would a Brit have on a battle between the centre and off-centre right in the oil province?

Not that I think of myself particularly as a "Brit." Saying that I am an Englishman would be more accurate and, if I am being really parochial, that I am a "Yorkshireman," which defines my origins to the cold, hilly, moor country of the Brontes in the northeast of the country.

The remaking of an Irishman

Bill Sullivan 3 minute read Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

The family roots started when grandfather arrived as a young lad in Portage la Prairie in the early 1880s. He brought with him memories of hunger in Ireland and vowed that his family would not go hungry.

His family, including my father, was brought up with the "Protestant work ethic." But my father grew up as a Canadian -- hockey, baseball, curling, hunting and golf. He never had any thoughts of visiting Ireland; he was pure Canadian.

And that's the way I was raised, Canadian, with nary a thought of Ireland.

In high school, however, one of the girls told me of the meaning of the lyrics of Galway Bay.

Events mark settlement’s 200th anniversary

2 minute read Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

THIS year marks the bicentenary of the Red River Selkirk Settlement -- 1812 to 2012.

Here are some events to commemorate the momentous occasion.

-- WEDNESDAY, MAY 16, 9 A.M. TO 5 P.M.: The Manitoba Historical Society is holding a symposium, The Selkirk Settlement Revisited: 1812, As Seen From 2012, at the Dalnavert Visitors Centre, 61 Carlton St.

-- SATURDAY, AUG. 18: Seven Oaks Historical Society is organizing a concert in St. John's Park at Main Street and Mountain Avenue.

Bagpipes make it ‘feel like you’re in Scotland’

By Doug Speirs 4 minute read Preview

Bagpipes make it ‘feel like you’re in Scotland’

By Doug Speirs 4 minute read Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

It was easily one of the proudest moments of my life.

It was May 2007, and I was standing on a stage at the convention centre along with my buddy Brad Oswald, the Free Press's television writer.

Brad and I were co-hosting the National Newspaper Awards, which are the Oscars of the newspaper business, and we were pretty pumped up.

But the reason I felt so proud, the thing that overwhelmed my fatherly emotions, was the fact Brad and I had been piped on stage by my then 20-year-old son and one of his buddies from the award-winning St. Andrew's Society of Winnipeg Pipe Band.

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Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

TREVOR HAGAN / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
The St. Andrew's Society of Winnipeg Pipe Band gets Doug Speirs' blood boiling every time.

TREVOR HAGAN / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
The St. Andrew's Society of Winnipeg Pipe Band gets Doug Speirs' blood boiling every time.

War brides overcame harsh, unexpected conditions to build new life

By Matt Preprost 6 minute read Preview

War brides overcame harsh, unexpected conditions to build new life

By Matt Preprost 6 minute read Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

There were times in the early days when Rose Lindsay would lie awake at night and think: why don't you just get up and walk out to the highway and catch a bus and go somewhere?

And yes, there was a time only a few years after the young English war bride settled into her new life in rural Manitoba that her mother would visit and, appalled by the living conditions, try to take her back home.

But those are old memories now, lost in time and a life that has given the 87-year-old a large and successful family -- four children, 11 grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren -- and a chance to see more of the world than she might have otherwise.

"It wasn't easy, but in the long run it worked out pretty well," Lindsay recently recalled. "It's pretty rough around Christmas."

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Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

WAYNE GLOWACKI / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Rose with her future husband Arnold Lindsay in England in 1944.

WAYNE GLOWACKI / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS 
Rose with her future husband Arnold Lindsay in England in 1944.

His Irish eyes are smiling

By Rob Williams 4 minute read Preview

His Irish eyes are smiling

By Rob Williams 4 minute read Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

"Never get one of those cheap tin whistles. It leads to much harder drugs like pipes and flutes."

-- Unknown

David Strang is glad he never took the advice from that famous anonymous quote, although it's partly true in his case.

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Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

TREVOR HAGAN / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
David Strang (from left), Kyle Borley, Cathy Rayner and D'Arcy Stearns of The Barefoot Ceili Band: "It's happy music. It's hard not to tap your foot along."

TREVOR HAGAN / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS 
David Strang (from left), Kyle Borley, Cathy Rayner and D'Arcy Stearns of The Barefoot Ceili Band:

British cars shine

By Paul "Willy" Williamson 3 minute read Preview

British cars shine

By Paul "Willy" Williamson 3 minute read Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

Although Manitoba's classic and special-interest car community is primarily made up of folks with a penchant for vehicles built in North America, there are a growing number of enthusiasts in the local vintage car hobby who absolutely adore British cars.

If you're a regular at the many car shows held each summer throughout the province, you've surely spotted a variety of these imported gems from British manufacturers that include Triumph, Austin Healey, Jaguar, Mini, MG, Austin and even the ultra-luxurious Rolls-Royce brand.

A great majority of our local British car enthusiasts are members of car clubs dedicated to the preservation and enjoyment of these rare and often extremely valuable machines. Local clubs include the Triumph Drivers Club of Manitoba, the Mid-Canada Mini Group, Austin Healey Club of Manitoba and the Jaguar Club of Manitoba.

Thomas Struthers, a member of the Triumph Drivers Club of Manitoba, fondly remembers driving his Triumph TR4 year-round in the mid-1960s, an early start on an extensive collection. Although he got out of the hobby for a few years, he returned with a bang. His collection now includes a number of British imports including a fleet of Austin Healeys as well as MG, Triumph and Jaguar models.

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Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

Paul Williamson / Winnipeg Free Press
Members of the Austin Healey Club of Manitoba and the Triumph Drivers Club of Manitoba surround Roger Morcilla's ultra-rare 1960 Austin Healey 3000 at a local show and shine last summer. This year, both clubs have been instrumental in organizing the 2012 Northern Lights Rendezvous, a gala British car event being held in Kenora this June.

Paul Williamson / Winnipeg Free Press
Members of the Austin Healey Club of Manitoba and the Triumph Drivers Club of Manitoba surround Roger Morcilla's ultra-rare 1960 Austin Healey 3000 at a local show and shine last summer. This year, both clubs have been instrumental in organizing the 2012 Northern Lights Rendezvous, a gala British car event being held in Kenora this June.

Profiles of our United Kingdom community

14 minute read Preview

Profiles of our United Kingdom community

14 minute read Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

Thomas Button

He was born in Wales and is credited with being the first white man to visit Manitoba. He joined the naval service in 1588 and rose to command an expedition to Hudson Bay in search of the Northwest Passage in 1612. He sailed with two ships, the Resolution and the Discovery, and reached a river on Aug. 15, 1612, calling the place Port Nelson, after the Master of the Resolution who died and was buried there. He is credited with staking his country's first claim to the lands bounding the west coast of Hudson Bay. He returned to England, stayed in the naval service, and died in 1634.

 

Thomas Douglas Selkirk, a.k.a. Lord Selkirk

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Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

Alfred Boyd

Alfred Boyd

Chamber-made

By Murray McNeill 6 minute read Preview

Chamber-made

By Murray McNeill 6 minute read Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

He helped bust one of the world's biggest rock stars -- Rolling Stone Mick Jagger -- and spent more than two decades spying on spies and terrorists for the RCMP and CSIS.

Those aren't the kind of entries people might expect to see on the resume of the president of the Manitoba Chambers of Commerce. But then again, Graham Starmer is not your typical business leader.

That's because the 63-year-old native of Oxford, England, spent the first 27 years of his working life as a police officer and spy catcher, first in his homeland, and then in his adopted country, Canada.

It wasn't until 1998, after several years working as an investigator for the Manitoba Ombudsman's Office, that he morphed into a briefcase-toting business leader.

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Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

WAYNE GLOWACKI / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Graham Starmer with his bobby's hat. The Manitoba Chambers of Commerce president spent the first 27 years of his working life as a police officer and spy catcher in England and Canada.

WAYNE GLOWACKI / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS 
Graham Starmer with his  bobby's hat. The Manitoba Chambers of Commerce president spent the first 27 years of his working life as a police officer and spy catcher in England and Canada.

First family of soccer

By Ashley Prest 4 minute read Preview

First family of soccer

By Ashley Prest 4 minute read Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

Christine and Cavan O'Connor were just 22 and 26 years old when they arrived in Winnipeg from Manchester, England, in 1974 with 13 pieces of luggage, their two-year-old son and a dream.

That, and their devotion to the sport of soccer, was all they needed to make Winnipeg their home.

"They made us so welcome in Winnipeg. There were so many programs in Canada at that time to help newcomers," Cavan said.

The O'Connors lived in the Marlborough Hotel for two weeks. But "within six months, we were living in a new house, our mortgage was subsidized for five years (by the Canadian government.) And it was lower than rent."

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Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

Phil Hossack / Winnipeg Free Press
Christine and Cavan O'Connor and their three sons, Dylan (from left), Brad and Adam, in Winnipeg's iconic soccer store, The Sweat Shack. The family has run the store for 32 years.

Phil Hossack / Winnipeg Free Press
Christine and Cavan O'Connor and their three sons, Dylan (from left), Brad and Adam, in Winnipeg's iconic soccer store, The Sweat Shack.  The family has run the store for 32 years.

Attractive to farmers then; still attractive generations later

By Carol Sanders 3 minute read Saturday, Apr. 28, 2012

AFFORDABLE land and things familiar lured settlers from the United Kingdom to Manitoba for generations -- and they still do.

Since 2000, more than 2,400 newcomers from the U.K. have made Manitoba their home. That includes 2,042 from England, 233 from Scotland, 82 from Wales and 62 from Northern Ireland.

Most arrived through the provincial nominee program for business, and nearly three-quarters are connected to agriculture and have settled outside the major cities, Manitoba Labour and Immigration says.

Manitoba has been promoting its business advantages throughout the U.K. at immigration fairs and agricultural trade shows.

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