Saturday, 20 December 2025

Public Transport Christmas (2)

 Where Am I?

I had two stations, the above looking very different today!
It is a Tesco Extra innit?

The other station ...

.. was closed but re-opened in 1993.
It had trams and a canal ...
... and a tram depot ...
... which became a bus depot (now closed).
Until privatisation it was served by two very different bus operators ...
... with very different liveries.

It was the setting of a famous TV show ...
... but much more importantly, the first home of Mrs fbb, aged 0 to 2! 

Hew Hill, the Laird, of Gairbraid, had no male heir and so he left his estate to his daughter, Mary Hill (1730–1809). She married Robert Graham of Dawsholm in 1763, but they had no income from trade or commerce and had to make what they could from the estate. They founded coal mines on the estate but they proved to be wet and unprofitable.

Yes. Maryhill, Glasgow.

And So To London
And we are looking at the school above which has growed quite a bit!
There are bus stops nearby ...
There are four daytime bus routes that pass along Beulah Hill in West Norwood. For the record, they are:-

!96

249

468
But by far the most unusual is:-

SL6 ...
Or you could have it in brown!

... which used to be:- 

X68


The X68 and SL6 are unique in that they are "Express" with a long non-stop leg as shown in the current Robert Munster timetable ...
... non-stop between West Norwood and Waterloo.

Last journeys are 0850 from West Croydon and 1850 from Russell Square. It is therefore unique (???) in London Buses being a peak flow service with no running in the opposite direction.
It is also restricted in that passengers may not be set down until the second half of the journey.
The SL6 blind makes it Crystal (Place) clear!

Oh, yes! The School on Beulah Hill is St Josephs.

Mary and Joseph - gettit?

Mary and Joseph
Matthew's Gospel tells us, almost as an aside, that Joe was a carpenter. The Greek word, apparently, means a bit more than just a bit of carp; Joseph was the jobbing builder at Nazareth. in fact, Matthew's passing remark is the very last we hear of Joseph but tradition suggests that he had died before the crucifixion; which is why Mary is left alone to be cared for by John the Disciple.

It is utterly reasonable to speculate the Jesus (Yeshua Ben Yusuf) would have shared the work with 'dad'.

The significant things about Joe, however, was that he was related to King David.
There is no Biblical evidence that Mary was particularly beautiful She was most likely a teenager, as her role in the society of the day was to produce children to carry on the family line. Infant mortality was high so the wife needed to start early.

But NOT before marriage. Pre-marital sex would, usually, mean the woman was expelled from normal societal acceptance and would end up begging for her survival.
Very few pictures show Mary heavily pregnant, as she would have been for the tortuous journey to Bethlehem.

But things were really tough for Joe. 

A long journey to comply with yet another Roman burst of disruptive administration; the shame of having a pregnant wife-o-be and, to cap it all, those angels.

She was scared witless!
And who wouldn't be?

And his decision to stay with his betrothed?

That's another angel story.

 Next Public Transport Christmas blog : Sun 21 Dec 

Friday, 19 December 2025

Public Transport Christmas (1)

 We're Sending You To Coventry ...

... where we shall make partial acquaintance with this man. We shall also explore this bus route ...
... National Express West Midlands route 8. It is operated by very smart and very expensive electric buses which you and fbb have partially p[aid for. Aren't we generous? 

Here is the route map.
It runs cross city but only a chunk of the northern half concerns us this time.

It starts from the mega Tesco ...
... on Cross Point Business Park but there is no stop where the terminus star appears on the route map. fbb thinks it terminates here ...
... where the usual walk route via the huge car part provides an equally usual disadvantageous trek for the humble pedestrian customer plus hefty shopping bags. Other stops are available.

The traditional terminus pre retail expansion is at Potters Green ...
... where once a service 32 ran.
In inquisitive mode, fbb wondered how frequent this rather splendid looking bus service was in 2025. West Midlands PTE did not want to tell him!

There were lots of 8s. but none for Coventry. Maybe the Sky Blues have declared UDI and there is a secret PTE information casket known only to the residents of Coventry? fbb did not bother to look, but went instead to the National Travel bus site.
Here he found a timetable.
Looks like a twenty minute frequency. But fbb also found an 8B and an 8S. He was confused, until he read that the 8S has been renumbered 8B!
... Cardinal Wiseman's School! Mr Roman Catholic Red-hat is the rather scary bloke in the headline picture above. He was something very important in the Church.  He lived from 1802 to 1865 and one of his jobs was to be big cheese of the 'Central" region of The Church, which included the West Midlands.  

Other Cardinal Wiseman schools are available!

There is the main road stop for the school on route 8 ...

... but in a side road, served only by school buses, where be a diddy little turning circle for the 8B formerly 8S. (Thinks : isn't an 'S' suffix more sensible for Schools services?).
The 8B runs from school to City Centre only; whereas the 8 runs cross city to Allesley.
Here are some of the kiddies enjoying (?) a homily from a Church VIP!

 The Wise Men

We met the Magi with letter "N" for Nazarene Nonentity, a controversial title but one which recognised that Jesus ministry lasted for a paltry three years starting at age 30. The Wise Men did not visit the stable/cattle shed/cave but, as Matthew's Gospel explains ...

Jesus was born in the town of Bethlehem in Judea, during the time when Herod was king. Soon afterward, some men who studied the stars came from the East to Jerusalem and asked, “Where is the baby born to be the king of the Jews? We saw his star when it came up in the east, and we have come to worship him.”

There is no mention of how many there were and no mention of camels. In the picture above we see the Magi on horses with a train of camels and their handlers (on foot) carrying their luggage.

And so they left King Herod, and on their way they saw the same star they had seen in the East. When they saw it, how happy they were, what joy was theirs! It went ahead of them until it stopped over the place where the child was. They went into the house ...
... and when they saw the child with his mother Mary, they knelt down and worshiped him. They brought out their gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh, and presented them to him.

There is no mention that the star or planet or comet or supernova was particularly outstanding; only that it was the light which guided the Magi to the toddler.  They were more like astrologers than astronomers and they would use the stars for all sorts of predictions. This astronomical happening fulfilled prophecies in the Old Testament, whatever it was and however it moved.

Remember that everything in the sky "moves" as the earth turns on its axis. 

We (that is carol writers, nativity play producers, illustrators of kiddies stories and proponents of Artificial Inaccuracy)) have made the whole thing so pretty that it becomes unreal.

Does anyone think that these NOT-three NOT-Kings travelled from Persia on NOT-camels to the NOT-stable with gold crowns on their heads?

But the journey was very real!

Poet T S Eliot seemed to understand the reality (extracts from "The Journey of the Magi") ...

 ... it's that Myrrh for a death again!

Tomorrow we go to Glasgow and London.

 Next Public Transport Christmas blog : Sat 20 Dec 

Thursday, 18 December 2025

What's Not In Nottingham (5)

 Happy With Weekday Cross

Just south of the tunnel that led from Nottingham Victoria station is Weekday Cross Junction. Here the Great Northern Railway east to Grantham (etc) forked left via London Road High Level station whilst the Great Central main line ran straight on, across the top of Nottingham Midland station and on via Arkwright Street.

Weekday Cross marked the ancient centre of the town ...
... but it collapsed way back and has recently been replaced with a similar stone pillar, arguably less attractive than the original.
Maybe that is because it needs a few hundred tears of weathering? 

Just across the road from the cross was the brickwork that marked a tunnel portal, the exit from the south end of Victoria station.
But, like fbb, you will find it difficult to identify anything of junction and tunnel today. But it was there once, honest.
In passing, note the footpath on the left.

But, after closure, a lot happened.
The viaduct was demolished and land nearby was shored up with new retaining structures, leaving a gurt big hole. Then there was this tram!

From Midland Station, it began by continuing on the Great Central viaduct northbound.
But the tracks needed to climb up from rail height to make their way at street level into the city centre.  So the tram got a new viaduct initially on the site of its historic progenitor.
It then veers off left to join its street running route on Middle Hill. 

So what do you do with the hole?
You leave the tunnel mouth in place and fill the hole with a building, an Arts Centre to be precise ...
... better viewed from Weekday Cross, showing it supplanting the former brick parapet.
And down the left hand side of the building as pictured above ...
... is a set of steps (Garners Hill) ...
... which directly replaced those in the puzzle picture that provoked this series of blogs.
The actual junction was where the flat bit is in the "now" Picture ...
... from where more steps lead back up to the end of the tram viaduct at he start of its street running.
Down there, on the left, there used to be a railway junction.
You would never know today!
The window above the apex of the signal box roof is the window above the trees in the 'today' view from down below!

 PLEASE NOTE 
From tomorrow we take a break from "normal" blogging (if ever an fbb blog is normal!) and start a short series entitled "Pubic Transport Promotes Christmas". Our alphabetical seasonal series will be concluded from Boxing Day onwards with letters S to Z.

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 R ejection and  R esurrection

Quirky Answer : 36 hours or less! Surprised? Jesus body was parked temporarily in Joseph of Arimathea's tomb at sunset on Friday (1800 in the new money). The tomb was guarded throughout the Sabbath (Saturday). When the women went to the tomb very early on Sunday morning, the guards had fled and the tomb was empty. The Bible tells is that Jesus rose on the third day, not after three days in the tomb.
There was nothing pretty about a crucifixion! 

Most pictures show Jesus as far too healthy, far too clean. He would have been in huge pain, found it difficult to breathe and covered with "stripes" (a polite word to sanitise pictures of the wounds from repeated lashings) and a great deal of dried blood. 

He was there as a result of an illegal trial, inconsistent witnesses, a fake charge and political expediency from the Roman judge (one Pontius Pilate).

But the Magi knew ...
... which is why one of their gifts was embalming fluid (myrrh).

At Jesus' dedication (aged 1 year), Simeon knew ...
... when he thanked God that he had lived to see God's gift of Salvation. He told Mary that her son would pierce her heart.

Bit none of them realised in detail how it would happen, a death and a resurrection to save mankind from the curse of its sin.
There has been a trend to condemn the story of the resurrection, saying that it is 'obviously, impossible'. You author agrees 100% - it is impossible but with one caveat, it is impossible by human standards. But a God who exists outside of our universe, space and time and is not restricted by human science and technology can do anything.

Don't forget - so far, after nearly 2000 years, no one has come up with a better explanation that fits the facts as we have them. Of course, we may have incorrect facts but the opponents of Jesus at the time failed to find an alternative so ...

... why reject the resurrection?

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  Next  Coventry Christmas blog : Fri 19th Dec