Forsidebilde av showet PhotoART History Urban Heritage Stories

PhotoART History Urban Heritage Stories

Podkast av PhotoART History David Lawton

engelsk

Historie & religion

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Les mer PhotoART History Urban Heritage Stories

Welcome to PhotoART History Urban Heritage Stories, by David Lawton. • aviation history • avro • vulcan bomber • lancaster These podcasts are published in Seasons depicting the PhotoART History of exciting areas of cities, such as Manchester Castlefield, Edinburgh Queensferry, and Porto Ribeiria. These series of podcasts are available for each Season, offering easy informative listening, including constructed Ballad's introducing each series podcast. Full season PhotoArt History eBooks are available on Apple Books, including full audio descriptions and accompanying collated images ......

Alle episoder

13 Episoder

episode 1. The Complete Avro Story (1910–2000) | From Lancaster to Vulcan cover

1. The Complete Avro Story (1910–2000) | From Lancaster to Vulcan

From fragile wooden aircraft to the mighty Vulcan bomber, The Complete Avro Story traces the evolution of one of Britain’s most iconic aviation pioneers.   Founded in 1910 by A.V. Roe, Avro helped shape the course of aviation history through innovation, engineering, and resilience. From early experimental aircraft and World War I production, through the economic struggles of the interwar years, to the industrial scale of World War II, Avro became synonymous with some of the most important aircraft ever built. At the heart of this story is the legendary Lancaster bomber, which carried Britain’s war effort deep into enemy territory, and the Vulcan, a Cold War icon that stood at the forefront of the UK’s nuclear deterrent. This journey also explores the transition into the jet age, the development of advanced systems like Blue Steel, and the dramatic Black Buck missions of the Falklands War.   Combining cinematic storytelling with historical insight, this episode brings to life the people, machines, and moments that defined nearly a century of aviation progress. Search PhotoART History on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts for more stories that bring history to life.

29. april 2026 - 23 min
episode Part One – The Formation of The Cheshire Union of Golf Clubs | Cheshire Golf History cover

Part One – The Formation of The Cheshire Union of Golf Clubs | Cheshire Golf History

Part One of this ten-part documentary series explores the formation of The Cheshire Union of Golf Clubs — now known as Cheshire Golf — and its place within the wider development of county golf in England. Across the North West — from Royal Liverpool at Hoylake to the growing inland clubs of Stockport, Wallasey and Wilmslow — golf was rebuilding after the Great War. Inspired by the established county unions of Lancashire, Yorkshire and Surrey, Cheshire clubs united to create structure, governance and a recognised County Championship. This episode examines: • The rise of the English Golf Union • The development of county golf in England • The influence of Royal Liverpool and the Amateur Championship • Post-war Britain and the social growth of amateur sport Through archival research and narrative storytelling, PhotoART History brings to life the origins of Cheshire Golf and the foundations of modern county competition. A story of organisation, identity and ambition — told through the fairways of early 20th-century England. Part One of Ten. The Formation.

26. feb. 2026 - 51 min
episode Crossing the Pennines - Legacy - Part Four and Epilogue, begins at the moment when success becomes vulnerability. cover

Crossing the Pennines - Legacy - Part Four and Epilogue, begins at the moment when success becomes vulnerability.

Part Four of Crossing the Pennines begins at the moment when success becomes vulnerability. The canal is built. The system operates. Boats pass through Standedge and descend toward Manchester and Yorkshire. Water is measured. Tolls are collected. The crossing works. But no infrastructure exists in isolation. As the nineteenth century accelerates, a new force appears along the same valleys and corridors—railways running parallel to canals, offering speed where water offers patience. What follows is not immediate collapse, but comparison. And comparison changes everything. In these chapters we trace the canal through its later life: daily operation under pressure, profits narrowing, maintenance becoming negotiation. We follow redundancy as it creeps in—first commercially, then structurally. We witness closure not as drama, but as administrative decision. A line that once carried an industrial revolution becomes quiet. And yet, the story does not end in silence. Part Four also follows the unexpected return. Volunteers walking the abandoned line. Engineers re-watering pounds. Communities choosing to restore not commerce, but meaning. The canal reopens—not as freight artery, but as heritage landscape, ecological corridor, and living reminder of industrial ingenuity. This final movement is about time layered into terrain. About infrastructure that outlives its original purpose. About landscapes that remember. Because the Huddersfield Narrow Canal did more than cross the Pennines. It survived them.

18. feb. 2026 - 44 min
episode Crossing the Pennines - System - Part Three of Crossing the Pennines asks a different question. The mountain has been pierced. The summit crossed. The water flows from basin to basin. cover

Crossing the Pennines - System - Part Three of Crossing the Pennines asks a different question. The mountain has been pierced. The summit crossed. The water flows from basin to basin.

Part Three of Crossing the Pennines asks a different question. The mountain has been pierced. The summit crossed. The water flows from basin to basin. But now the canal must prove itself—not in ambition, but in operation. In these chapters we move beyond construction into consequence. We follow the canal into Manchester’s basins and into Huddersfield’s hinge position. We look eastward to Leeds and the Calder & Hebble, where the crossing joins an existing industrial network. And we begin to understand that this was never just a canal. It was a system. A system of reservoirs and release. Of locks and levels. Of tolls, maintenance, labour, and constraint. A system that must balance water like currency and time like capital. Here, the drama is quieter but no less intense. Will traffic justify cost? Will water sustain movement? Can the canal operate as reliably as it was imagined? Part Three reveals the canal not as a bold idea, but as a living infrastructure—complex, disciplined, and vulnerable. Because building is only the beginning. The real test is performance.

18. feb. 2026 - 40 min
episode Part Two of Crossing the Pennines leaves the committee room and steps into weather, stone, and risk. cover

Part Two of Crossing the Pennines leaves the committee room and steps into weather, stone, and risk.

Huddersfield Canal - The route has been authorised. The capital raised. The ambition declared. Now the canal must confront the Pennines themselves. This is the section where engineering becomes exposure. We climb the lock flights that lift water against gravity. We stand at the summit pound, where every inch of depth must be rationed. We examine reservoirs cut into moorland, where rainfall becomes infrastructure and drought becomes danger. And then, when locks can rise no further, the canal turns inward. Into shafts sunk through peat and gritstone. Into headings driven in darkness. Into a tunnel that demanded steam engines not as innovation, but as survival—pumping water, hauling spoil, sustaining men underground. Part Two is not about elegant lines on maps. It is about persistence under pressure. About labour measured in inches. About costs escalating as rock resists. Here, the canal stops being a proposal and becomes a wager. Because to cross the Pennines was never simply to build. It was to endure.

18. feb. 2026 - 46 min
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