There's something really special I forgot to tell you about!
There was another famous man from Hull. He's actually called the 'city's most famous son' and his name was Philip Larkin. (1922-1985).
He was the librarian at the University of Hull for 30 years. He was famous because he wrote books and poetry.
Two of his poems were about toads (but they really were about working life). So, to celebrate his life, the city did a huge art project and lots of different artists painted these statues of toads.
Can you guess how big they were?
They were one meter high! (you'll have to figure out how big they were in feet because English people measure with metric).
Anyway, there were forty of them making a trail all around the city for 10 weeks last year. After lots of people enjoyed them, they were sold off and the money went to charity.
I was so sad they were gone and I didn't get to see them. But, I was happy because there is one left in the city centre and my hostess said we could go see him before I leave to come back to Alabama. I hope I get to have a ride on him!
Which one do you think it will be? Take a guess and when I see him, I'll send you a picture and see if you were right!
Bye for now,
Flat Stanley
Flat Stanley visits Hull, York and Beverly in the United Kingdom and tells Miss Mason's first grade class in Alabama all about his adventures.
Thursday, 10 March 2011
Monday, 7 March 2011
We visit the Wiberforce House and Museum
Hiya again, Miss Mason and class,
After our visit to the City Centre, we went a short way down the street to see the house where one of England's most famous men was born. I got my picture taken with his statue, which is in the front garden of his boyhood home.
His name is William Wilberforce and he was born in 1759 in the house that you can see in the picture below. It is now a museum which tells the story of the slave trade and its abolition.
Are you wondering by now what William Wilberforce was so famous for? The purpose of the museum, which was his first home, gives us a clue.
If you guessed that he was an MP (member of Parliament) and that he led the fight to abolish the slave trade in England, then you are right!
The law he got passed was called The Slave Trade Act of 1807. It took him 16 years of debating in Parliament before he got it passed.
This law stopped British ships from stealing people away from their homes in Africa and taking them to America to become slaves.
There is a movie about William Wilberforce called 'Amazing Grace' and I think we are going to watch it soon.
Next, my hostess took me on a walk around to the biggest church in Hull. On the way, I got to stop inside a telephone booth. They sure look different from the ones in Alabama! Here I am.
Can you see me?
Here I am in front of Holy Trinity Church. This church is over 700 years old and is the largest parish church in England. William Wilberforce was baptized here.
Across the narrow, cobblestone street, I saw this pretty building, which is a restaurant.
This is St. Mary's church, which is just a short walk from Holy Trinity. The steeple is so tall, I had to take two pictures to get it all in.
No one knows exactly how old this church is, but it is at least as old as Holy Trinity. This tower though, was not built until the 1500s.
I hope you liked these pictures of Hull. There are some more places to see, but they will be for another day.
The next trip we took was to a small city about 10 miles from Hull. We saw some really cool things in the Art Museum in Beverly. I'll write again soon to tell you about them.
Bye for now, or as the British say "Ta"
Flat Stanley
Wednesday, 2 March 2011
The Maritime Museum in Hull
This is the other side of the Maritime Museum. You can see better how very large it is. It must have lots of stories to tell, don't you think?
Hiya again!
I wanted you to see the beautiful Maritime Museum that sits across from the statue of Queen Victoria in the City Centre.
That word - maritime - has to do with the sea and the men who made their living catching fish to bring back to sell.
The fishermen would leave out from the port at Hull and sail way out into the North Sea to catch the fish. It was very dangerous work and sometimes there would be terrible storms at sea.
You had to be a very brave man to be a fisherman in those days.
I wanted you to see the beautiful Maritime Museum that sits across from the statue of Queen Victoria in the City Centre.
That word - maritime - has to do with the sea and the men who made their living catching fish to bring back to sell.
The fishermen would leave out from the port at Hull and sail way out into the North Sea to catch the fish. It was very dangerous work and sometimes there would be terrible storms at sea.
You had to be a very brave man to be a fisherman in those days.
The museum is the place where the stories of these men are kept, along with pictures of those days long ago.
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