Originally posted by ardcarp
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostThen there's the Steele Bodgers.
Not to mention the Fetherstonhaughs.
Apparently one-time MP and journalist Horatio Bottomley called upon a certain Mr Fetherstonhaugh and asked the butler if the said gentleman was at home...but pronounced his name phonetically. The butler (with the usual ice-cold hauteur) replied, "I think you mean Mr Fanshaw, sir".
To which HB replied, "Then tell him Mr Bumley is calling".
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostMy father once invited Eric Pickles to our home. "Haven't you got a better chair than this one?" the local Chairman [sic] of the Conservative Association demanded to know.
My introduction to Eric Pickles (who I don't mind actually, sorry) was in being told by Yorkshire friends in York that he was sitting on the adjoing table in Betty's. I hadn't heard of him and think he was then head of Bradford Council. But what you have said brings more directly into mind my meeting with Harold Macmillan. When we got off the boat from Ramsey Island in 1975 and he was sitting with a pal above the otherwise empty Carefai Bay, I can't say he was at all unfriendly when I approached him. But all I had was a crumpled brown Woolworths envelope for his autograph. He turned it this way and that before exclaiming "haven't you got anything better? - what a rotten bit of a paper to sign it on". Well, the boat has limits on what you can carry - sandwiches and an envelope is about it - but it's interesting. That similar phraseology. He was full of irony and kindness with a 12 year old. It was his wit. He signed it across the narrower part either for security reasons or amusement or both. I liked him enormously and I still do, whatever his faults. He had fewer than most today.
He was also, of course, the most centre left Prime Minister in my lifetime other than possibly Wilson and the very overrated Callaghan.Last edited by Lat-Literal; 28-06-17, 16:46.
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Originally posted by Lat-Literal View PostI have to comment.
My introduction to Eric Pickles (who I don't mind actually, sorry) was in being told by Yorkshire friends in York that he was sitting on the adjoing table in Betty's. I hadn't heard of him and think he was then head of Bradford Council. But what you have said brings more directly into mind my meeting with Harold Macmillan. When we got off the boat from Ramsey Island in 1975 and he was sitting with a pal above the otherwise empty Carefai Bay, I can't say he was at all unfriendly when I approached him. But all I had was a crumpled brown Woolworths envelope for his autograph. He turned it this way and that before exclaiming "haven't you got anything better? - what a rotten bit of a paper to sign it on". Well, the boat has limits on what you can carry - sandwiches and an envelope is about it - but it's interesting. That similar phraseology. He was full of irony and kindness with a 12 year old. It was his wit. He signed it across the narrower part either for security reasons or amusement or both. I liked him enormously and I still do, whatever his faults. He had fewer than most today.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostNever seek validation from "the higher orders" is my motto. Caps are less easy to doff these days.
(Of course Mac was pro-European but so then was every single mother and even Nigel Lawson - it was a very different world)
But perhaps we could go back to names? - Eric Pickles does it for me at least in that way.Last edited by Lat-Literal; 28-06-17, 17:19.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by gradus View Post'Bumley', Virginia and Peter of blessed memory - Private Eye passim.
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Originally posted by johncorrigan View PostMrs C went to Art School in Glasgow with two girls, Christine Cant and Lorna Will who shared a flat with each other in the West End. On the name plate one wag wrote BUT between Christine and Lorna's names on the door...true story!
Racey.
Racy but also Racey (ish).
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostI was asked to take Peter [ Bottomley] birdwatching on my patch once, when he was in the Northern Ireland office. Lovely man, tho' not a birder as quickly became apparent, I think it was more an excuse to get out of the office. ....
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostThen there's the Steele Bodgers.
Not to mention the Fetherstonhaughs.
Apparently one-time MP and journalist Horatio Bottomley called upon a certain Mr Fetherstonhaugh and asked the butler if the said gentleman was at home...but pronounced his name phonetically. The butler (with the usual ice-cold hauteur) replied, "I think you mean Mr Fanshaw, sir".
To which HB replied, "Then tell him Mr Bumley is calling".
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But what you have said brings more directly into mind my meeting with Harold Macmillan. When we got off the boat from Ramsey Island in 1975 and he was sitting with a pal above the otherwise empty Carefai Bay, I can't say he was at all unfriendly when I approached him. But all I had was a crumpled brown Woolworths envelope for his autograph. He turned it this way and that before exclaiming "haven't you got anything better? - what a rotten bit of a paper to sign it on". Well, the boat has limits on what you can carry - sandwiches and an envelope is about it - but it's interesting. That similar phraseology. He was full of irony and kindness with a 12 year old. It was his wit. He signed it across the narrower part either for security reasons or amusement or both. I liked him enormously and I still do, whatever his faults. He had fewer than most today.
He was also, of course, the most centre left Prime Minister in my lifetime other than possibly Wilson and the very overrated Callaghan
Incidentally:
Scroll down to find him. My Dad's there too.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI share your view of Macmillan, Lat-L, but not of Callaghan who I think was a thoroughly decent man...probably too decent to survive as PM.
Incidentally:
Scroll down to find him. My Dad's there too.
Originally posted by Pianorak View PostInterviewed on the BBC News Channel this evening: Dr Van Breeding (US medic).Originally posted by oddoneout View PostToday's Choral Evensnog had Thomas Fetherstonehaugh as one of the organists. The person doing the wittering at the end of the programme seemed to do the non Fanshaw version of his name and I couldn't help wondering if that was a mistake - is it likely that the young man in question wouldn't use the Fanshaw version? Does anyone know?
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There's a website specialising in surnames.
It is particularly interesting to look up a name from the 1881 census which tends to show its geographical occurrence in an age when families stayed put.
Sdaly it does not record rare surnames. Hence some friends of ours called Gawkroger do not appear.
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