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Your Places or Mine

Clive Aslet & John Goodall
Your Places or Mine
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  • Great British Builders: Lutyens, Wren and The City of London (LIVE at The Ned)
    Send us a textFor the first time in the history of this podcast, Your Places or Mine has gone on location.  John and Clive have been invited to The Ned, the amazing complex of hospitality venues, including restaurants, hotel and private members’ club, which occupies the former head office of the Midland Bank in the City of London.  This provides the podcast with an opportunity to examine Britain’s commercial centre as it evolved between the Wars.  Nearly every major financial institution was being rebuilt in the 1920s, not least the Bank of England itself.  Structures such as the Midland Bank head office were begun in a spirit of optimism, as Britain found its feet again and needed finance to recover from the effects of war.  They were often completed in a different era, when the Depression had set in and rooms that were intended to entertain the captains of industry were instead used to put together rescue packages to stop them from going broke.Clive and John also discuss Lutyens’s relationship with the Midland’s Chairman, Reginald McKenna, who had married Gertrude Jekyll’s niece Pamela, and their shared admiration for Sir Christopher Wren.  At the end of the show, they parry questions from the audience who has joined them on one of the hottest days of the year.
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  • Sovereignty in Stone: The Kings of Windsor Castle
    Send us a text Windsor Castle has been imbued with symbolism since William the Conqueror founded it after the invasion of 1066. He took the name of Windsor from an existing Anglo-Saxon palace which stood on a different spot.  On a bluff overlooking the Thames, Windsor Castle continues to play a central role in Britain’s national identity, being a great inheritance from the Middle Ages, which no one generation could have the resources or imagination to build.   It has always been there, was always important, it seems to transcend time.  Both a formidable stronghold and a sumptuous palace, it is a universe in itself. No one could be better placed to describe Windsor Castle’s evolution and meaning than John Goodall, author of a mighty work of scholarship on The English Castle.  In this episode of ypompod– the first of a projected two on Windsor Castle – he examines its evolution from early years until the Civil War in the mid 17th century.  A key figure is Edward III, who founded the Order of the Garter in the mid 14th century as an expression of chivalric romance. He identified Windsor with King Arthur’s Camelot and gave it a round table.  Tournaments or mock battles were fought in splendid costumes, displaying the luxury that was possible after the English victories over France at Crecy and Poitiers.  After the Civil War, Parliament ordered that Windsor Castle should be demolished.  This did not happen. Instead Charles I’s body was taken there for burial after his execution, which only strengthened its association with monarchy.
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  • 12 Crosses That Remember a Queen (with History Alice)
    Send us a textThis week YPOMPOD is joined by Alice Loxton — History Alice to her many followers — to discuss the extraordinary series of crosses that King Edward I built in memory of his queen, Eleanor of Castile in the 1290s. Eleanor died in Lincolnshire. Her body was then carried back to London for burial, and at every place that the cortège stopped a beautiful cross was erected. The work of the royal masons, these crosses are of astonishing quality even though some stand in what are now modest situations. The best-preserved is at Geddington in Northamptonshire, which Alice visits with Clive and John.  It provides a fascinating window through which to view the Middle Ages.   Alice describes her walk along the route of the crosses, the subject of her new book Eleanor, to John, a medievalist, and Clive, who used to have a cottage within the shadow of the Geddington cross.
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  • THE DOLLAR PRINCESSES WHO REVOLUTIONISED THE BRITISH COUNTRY HOUSE
    Send us a textThe American girl was a phenomenon, charming, sporty, better educated than her European counterpart. talk on a wide range of subjects.  Around sixty American girls became peeresses at the turn of the 20th century.  ‘We are the dollar princesses,’ ran a popular song.Crossing the Atlantic was no longer as perilous as it had been in earlier days.  Huge fortunate had been made during the expansion of the United States after the Civil War.  From the 1870s, aristocrats began to experience a decline in the income from their landed estates, due to a prolonged agricultural recession.  Heiresses offered an alternative income stream.  Thus, in the late 1870s, Sir Thomas George Fermor-Hesketh sailed into San Francisco Bay on his yacht The Lancashire Witch, fishing for pretty girls with ‘heaps of the needful’ to maintain his two country houses in England.  He landed Florence Emily Sharon, the daughter of the enormously rich, if notorious Senator Sharon, and they were married in 1880.  That marriage was not happy – nor was Consuelo Vanderbilt’s to the ither Duke of Marlborough.  But May Goelet had a delightful time with the Duke of Roxburghe, whose nickname was Bumble.  She liked shopping, he liked polo; their letters show that they were touchingly fond of each other.  Her fortune allowed Floors Castle in Roxburgheshire to be borught up to date with electricity, central heating and décor in the style of the Ritz.
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  • RAMSGATE: THE MARSEILLE OF THE SOUTH EAST
    Send us a textIn this summer episode of ypompod, we got to the seaside – to Ramsgate, beloved of Queen Victoria and now home to the biggest Wetherspoon’s (in an elegant neo-Greek building called the Royal Pavilion of 1913) on the face of the planet.   Five miles to the east of Ramsgate, connected by a continuous yellow carpet of sand, lies Margate, which developed as one of Britain’s first seaside resorts in the mid eighteenth century.  Ramsgate did not get into its stride until after the Napoleonic Wars, which ended in 1815 (a street is called The Plains of Waterloo).  By then, the Prince Regent had given royal approval to the seaside by building his Marine Pavilion at Brighton.  In 1821, as George IV, he took a ship from Ramsgate to visit Hanover (he was cross with Dover for supporting his wife, Queen Caroline, in the couple’s tragi-comic divorce battle); an obelisk commemorates the event, as does the name of the Royal Harbour.  A guidebook of 1846 pronounced that ‘of the three watering places in the Isle of Thanet, Ramsgate is considered as the most fashionable.’ Telescopes, donkey rides, German bands – Ramsgate had everything to delight the Victorian visitor.  At nightfall Mr Fuller’s ‘famed marine library’, came into its own – not only a repository of books but a musical hall, a bazaar and a very mild kind of casino, where a shilling stake might win you a cake of soap, a bottle of hair oil or a wooden spade.  Lumbering wooden bathing machines with a deep canvas hood at one end and a horse at the other would be trundled into the water and turned around, while drivers and horses splashed back to the beach; bathers then issued from beneath the canvas hood, which reached down to the sea.   The English seaside is now back in fashion – at least Clive thinks so. He and his family have a house in Ramsgate.  He’s happy to share the secrets of the town with John and anyone else who’s listening!
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About Your Places or Mine

A podcast about places and buildings, with tales about history and people. From author and publisher Clive Aslet and the architectural editor of Country Life, & John Goodall
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