I have collected thirteen honorary doctorates, a Medal
from the Royal Academy of Engineering for the Public Promotion of Engineering, and the 1999 Gerald Frewer memorial trophy of the Council
of Engineering Designers. I also received in March 2003 the Sir Henry
Royce Memorial Foundation Medal from the Institution of Incorporated
Engineers.
I like to go every summer, if I can, to a woodwork course in
Clissett Wood, west of the Malvern Hills in Herefordshire (see
www.greenwoodwork.co.uk).
I have so far made two chairs and a bench, two tables, a roof for my
straw-bale urinal, a folding tray for carrying tea to the bedroom
and the garden, a bird table, and a hat stand.
How Joseph Priestley changed my life ...
In the summer of 1990 I
was a producer at Yorkshire Television. On 7 August
I bought a mountain bike and started riding from my home in
Heckmondwike to the office in Leeds. One day I was staggering up the
long hill from Birstall to Drighlington when I spotted a blue
plaque on what turned out to be Field Head Farm, almost overhanging the M62. Having discovered
that this was Joseph Priestley’s
birth place, I then found that he had spent his teenage years with his
Aunt at the Old Hall in Heckmondwicke, which had become my local pub, and had
discovered oxygen as a result of watching the beer brewing in a brewery in Leeds. This was the beginning of Local Heroes; so
Joseph Priestley changed my life.
And a letter published in the Daily Telegraph!

Back Home
Page last updated:
Tuesday, 22 April 2008 09:22
|