Saturday, 30 May 2009

Matthew Boulton Exhibition

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Whatever else you do, do pay a visit to the Matthew Boulton bicentenary exhibition in Birmingham Museum’s Water Hall. It is absolutely magnificent, with paintings, coins, clocks, commemorative medals, ormolu ware, jewellery, swords and much more.
The exhibits are superbly displayed and the greatest credit is due to the museum staff and the experts and volunteers who planned and delivered the exhibition. There is a superb catalogue and guides giving background to the exhibits.
If you’re lucky you will see people in period costume to explain things to you. Boulton was the foremost manufacturer and entrepreneur who laid the foundations of the City’s industrial greatness.
Despite being at the preview evening, I could not resist a second visit the following day and I was lucky enough to get a close ip view of a superb steam traction engine outside the museum.
At the preview evening, in a stunning revelation, Professor Mervyn King, the Governor of the Bank of England who opened the exhibition, on the preview evening revealed that the new £50 note (which is due out late next year) will feature Matthew Boulton and James Watt and Birmingham’s Soho House where Matthew Boulton lived.
This will be a great tribute to Birmingham, and the City is most appreciative of the Governor’s magnificent gesture which gave rise to a roar of appreciation amongst the 300 people who were at the preview. Thank you Prof King - and do come back to Birmingham soon!

Thursday, 28 May 2009

Parlours and Robes

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In the first Lord Mayor’s blog posting I mentioned possible ‘weighty matters’. I had in mind not important issues for the city that weigh on the mind, but the weight of the mayoral regalia on the shoulders! Most of the time the Lord Mayor wears pinstripes, black jacket, waistcoat, white shirt, black shoes, a subdued tie and of course the chain of office.
For wear around the Lord Mayor’s Parlour a ‘day badge’ pendant can be worn instead and the full chain. This last can be a blessing for an hour or so as the solid gold chain is very heavy (Imagine a large bag of sugar on each shoulder). For full ceremonial occasions the Lord Mayor is fully robed. In addition to the chain of office, the robes include a good deal of metal (gold) and are also pretty heavy. Moreover they are most efficient at keeping in the heat! This is fine in winter, but if you catch a glimpse of me sneaking a drink of water on my walkabouts you’ll know why!
There are two sets of robes to accommodate the varying heights of Lord Mayors. There is also the distinctive three cornered (tricorn) hat. There are three sizes. I just about manage with the largest one - even with my new, much shorter hairstyle (Press please note!)
I mentioned the Lord Mayor’s ‘parlour’. This has a nice old-fashioned ring to it. It is a suite of offices including the Lord Mayor’s room and a room shared by the Deputy Lord Mayor (the previous year’s Lord Mayor) and the lady Mayoress. There is also a ‘retiring room’ which includes a shower (remember the heat of the robes). The Lord Mayor’s room itself is steeped in history and the desk at which I work comes down to us from Neville Chamberlain.
But what makes things really special is the staff of the parlour. Eight really dedicated, professional and hard working people who ensure things work smoothly and that the Civic dimension of the City’s work is outstanding. And on major occasions the full time staff are joined by volunteers who give, largely unsung, unstintingly of their time and to whom I am already immensely grateful. You can find out more about the Lord Mayor’s Parlour and what we do by visiting the Lord Mayor's Parlour pages on the Council’s website.
In my next posting I’ll say a bit more about the interesting and varied events of the first week or two of my year.

Wednesday, 27 May 2009

My Acceptance Speech

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A number of people have asked what I said in my acceptance speech. While it’s rather wordy for a normal blog item, for my second entry here is the substantive part of the speech (with preamble, personal thanks, asides etc. omitted).

First of all, Vivienne and I would like to thank the Council for the very great honour that you’ve bestowed upon us in making us the First Citizens of the City of Birmingham. We both now fully understand the meaning of the word: ‘honoured’.
The Lady Mayoress and I have common interests in the history and heritage of our great city - right back to the time of Beorma as, I imagine, do most of us in this chamber. And we also have active interests in the local heritage and works of world-renowned author and long-time Birmingham resident J.R.R. Tolkien. In this connection, the Lady Mayoress has played a pivotal role in organising Birmingham’s annual Middle-earth Weekend centred on Sarehole Mill - a visit to which we hope will still be on the Mayoral agenda for next year. Despite the weather, this unique, volunteer-led event just a couple of days ago attracted thousands more visitors from near and far, all enjoying themselves in an old-fashioned atmosphere and finding out more about Middle-earth in Birmingham. And we are both looking forward to finding out a great deal more about the complex, inspiring and intriguing City of Birmingham as the year progresses.
Speaking of history, as you may now know, the Lady Mayoress’ family has lived in Birmingham for centuries. For myself, although I’ve lived in Birmingham for over forty years and indeed went to school and university and was married here, my origins are in the Black Country. So I was very pleased to note that in 1877 the City Council made clear that it knows, and I quote: "No distinction between her citizens by birth or adoption" which is still a very valuable message for today. With hand on heart I can honestly say that I’ve always believed that Black Country people and Brummies should enjoy reciprocal citizenship!
To follow in the footsteps of previous Mayors and Lord Mayors of our energetic, innovative and diverse City is a huge responsibility, not lightly undertaken. Inspired by this tradition,I will do all in my power to work for and promote Birmingham, its industry, history and culture - and its narratives. For Birmingham has many big stories, from being at the heart of the industrial revolution right through to the International City of today, the regeneration of which is due, in no small part, to the work of this Council in which a wide range of members have played a role. But in my view, the biggest story of all is the total of a million smaller stories - the stories of the individual people of Birmingham whom we all seek to serve.
In our activities as Lord Mayor and Lady Mayoress, we will be greatly assisted by the dedicated staff of the Lord Mayor’s Parlour. We could not come near to doing the job without them, and I’d like to pay advance tribute to their commitment, and efficiency - and their thrift - right at the outset. As to business, following on from my predecessors, I will endeavour to assist the Council in ensuring the efficient and democratic conduct of our meetings, continuing further to promote mutual regard and good order.
During the year, I will do all that I can to enhance the recognition of Birmingham as an outstanding place in which to live, work and invest, and I will give visible support to all of our manufacturing industries -- those which are new, those which are green and those which have withstood the test of time and the slings and arrows of outrageous finance. I for one believe that a thriving manufacturing sector is vital to our sustained prosperity, and in my view there is no such thing as a post-industrial economy.
My service on the Council’s Trusts and Charities Sub-Committee has given me some insight into the very wide range of charitable and voluntary operations that our citizens undertake right across Birmingham, and I look forward to offering Mayoral support to as many as I can, whenever I can. There’s so much good work being done and so many deserving causes - some formal, some informal, some established, some yet to be - that identifying just a few of them for special attention is an agonising process - as all former Lord Mayors already understand. For the Lord Mayor’s Charity Appeal for the coming year, I have identified four elements.
Firstly, St. Basil’s - the inestimable work of this charity with young people providing them with support services, advice, mediation and guidance and tackling and preventing homelessness and its consequences has helped to transform very many young lives here in Birmingham. However, in today’s society there is no let-up in the need for the very wide range of services so ably provided by St. Basil’s, and we will be making a big effort during the year to support this most worthy cause.
For my second charity I nominate WAITS - Women Acting In Today’s Society. This is a very important charity in a diverse city such as Birmingham, and WAITS is doing outstanding work enabling women to address issues and overcome barriers, combating isolation and providing help to increase the involvement of women in the public life and business of communities throughout the city - from which all of us will benefit. Here again, we know that there is a continuing need for the extensive range of activities carried out by WAITS, and that there are many who are yet to benefit, and a great deal more work still to be done.
Thirdly, I propose to establish a fund to support the study and practice of Engineering in Birmingham - at various levels and in a range of forms - but I do mean the kind of Engineering that makes things! As a Council we all recognise the unmatched contribution that engineering has made to the City, and I am sure we would all agree that it is vital that Birmingham remains prominent in this important field in the future. So, alongside other initiatives, I will play my part in encouraging and enabling young people from Birmingham to take up Engineering both as a course of study and as a fulfilling future career. And encouragement will also be offered to progress developments in vital newer areas such as Clinical Engineering.
Finally, I intend to establish a new charity to be called: The Birmingham Fund for Pancreatic Cancer Research, which I will do all in my power to ensure outlasts my Mayoralty - and indeed runs until that dread affliction is mastered. While there’s been steady progress with several forms of cancer, for pancreatic cancer the five-year survival rate following diagnosis forty years ago stood at just 3%. Today that rate is - well, just 3%. Yet the disease is treatable on those occasions where the cancer is detected early enough, and the primary focus of the fund will be on research, conducted in Birmingham, into improved diagnostic methods.
The position of Lord Mayor of Birmingham is an office with a most auspicious tradition and a demanding tempo. Within an extensive programme of visits already in the diary - and to which we look forward immensely - I also intend to get out to see more of our manufacturing firms old and new - and also the commemorations of "what was lost". Along with the higher level duties of the Lord Mayoralty, we intend to see as much as possible of the lives and activities of the citizens of Birmingham in all our communities and in all walks of life, and to communicate with people using both traditional and modern methods.
This great City is much more than the sum of its present parts. For we are like a broad oak, the roots of which reach deep into our historical origins, and the branches of which spread widely across our many cultures. For we are many people - yet one City; many cultures - yet one City; many trades (yes, still so) - one City; many persuasions (be they religious or political) - one City. In other words, to adapt a motto used on a Great Seal elsewhere: "out of many, one" - ‘E Pluribus Birmingham’ as it were - and so, as one city, Forward!
Both Vivienne and I look forward with the keenest anticipation to our year as Birmingham’s Lord Mayor and Lady Mayoress. I thank colleagues throughout this wonderful and historic Council for your support and encouragement - and for your patience! We look forward to serving the City of Birmingham and its Council with our full commitment and to the very best of our abilities.

Thursday, 21 May 2009

Mayor Making

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Tuesday May 19th is the day when Birmingham City Council holds its AGM. This is the ‘Mayor Making’ meeting, when a new Lord Mayor is installed. Mayor Making is a day of celebration for the incoming Lord Mayor and a day for thanking the outgoing Lord Mayor and Lady Mayoress for their service.
I’m honoured to have been selected as Lord Mayor of Birmingham for 2009/10 and you may have seen reports and pictures in local newspapers. Vivienne and I look forward to our year as Lord Mayor and Lady Mayoress and thank everyone for their support. As first citizens, we will serve the City to the very best of our abilities.
The position of Lord Mayor is a demanding one. It’s not just about robes, chain and tricorn hat, which is an ensemble that isn’t the easiest outfit to carry off in public! Lord Mayors have about 1,000 engagements during the year from meeting Royalty to attending local events which may not grab the headlines but which are just as important to the community groups involved - and to the Lord Mayor and Lady Mayoress. We also do as much as we can to raise money for our selected charities.
In addition to that heavy but enjoyable workload, Lord Mayors also take the Chair at meetings of the City Council and try to ensure good order and the efficient conduct of business - with varying degrees of success! The Lord Mayor also exercises the ultimate sanction in the Council Chamber – the power to turn off the microphones!
In my next posting, I’ll be saying a bit more about how things went as well as one or two other weighty matters!

Legal Statement

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"As Lord Mayor of Birmingham, I cannot take part in any party political matters or make any statements in support for (or against) any party political issue during my term of Office.
Accordingly, any expressions of political opinion on my personal blog prior to me being elected as the Lord Mayor of Birmingham remain my previous comments and should not, in any way, be attributed to me as the comments of the Lord Mayor of Birmingham.
I also propose to continue the use of my personal blog to highlight aspects of my civic role for the City of Birmingham. Clearly, once the Lord Mayor's official blog is up and running on the City Council's website, I will maintain that, and not this personal blog.
I will, however, signpost on this personal blog the Lord Mayor's official blog, with an appropriate hyperlink, as and when it is operational so that you can quickly find it."
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Friday, 15 May 2009

Matthew Boulton Anniversary


This year marks the 200th anniversary of the death of the pioneering industrialist Matthew Boulton (September 14th 1728 to August 17th 1809) whose many achievements helped to fuel the Industrial Revolution and who contributed so much to Birmingham, England and the world.
Born in Birmingham, Matthew Boulton is one of the City’s most famous historical figures. His path-breaking factory in Birmingham (Soho - Handsworth not London!) was one of the wonders of the day. The production methods were so revolutionary that the great Soho Manufactory became a tourist attraction with a teahouse for visitors provided in the grounds.
Boulton was also a founder member of the Lunar Society (meetings were held at full moon for a safer journey home) - a group of natural philosophers and inventors who met at Soho House. As well as figures such as Erasmus Darwin (grandfather of Charles), Joseph Priestley and Josiah Wedgwood, Lunar Society members included Boulton’s partners James Watt of engineering fame and gas pioneer William Murdock.
Together with James Watt, Boulton helped to develop the famous Boulton and Watt steam engines that were four times more efficient than those established by Thomas Newcomen and which gave a massive boost to industrial development.
Products from swords to buttons and including decorative silverware and ormolu were made and sold right around the world. Boulton also developed modern coinage and set up the Soho Mint and the Birmingham Assay Office (which today is still the world’s busiest).
Matthew Boulton - Selling What All The World Desires will be the first of several events in Birmingham celebrating the great industrialist during the year and on Saturday May 30th there will be a special launch event in Chamberlain Square and throughout the Museum and Art Gallery.
One wonders what Matthew Boulton would have made of the current financial and economic crisis. Certainly he would not have been defeated by it and I for one am sure that outsourcing, offshoring and globalisation would not have been part of his solution!
Boulton looked after his workforce, setting up one of the earliest forms of social insurance, paying benefits to sick or injured employees. He also found time for beneficial public work helping to set up the General Hospital and a theatre. Maybe, faced with the attitude of Banks to industry, Boulton would have established his own bank as Birmingham did in Edwardian times and which should, in my view, be re-established today.
The Matthew Boulton exhibition will be opened by the Governor of the Bank of England, Mervyn King, who for several years was a member of the Economics Department at The University of Birmingham.

Thursday, 14 May 2009

Middle-earth lives!

Whatever else you may be thinking of doing this weekend, if you are in England don’t forget to look in at Hall Green’s unique Middle-earth Weekend in and around Sarehole Mill in The Shire Country Park here in Birmingham. There really is nothing else like it anywhere in the world.
Of course there are many attractions at the weekend that are to do with world renowned author JRR Tolkien who lived nearby as a child and who took his ideas for the landscape and the people of The Shire from his surroundings in old Sarehole - a surprising amount of which can still be seen today.
But our two-day event attracts all who like the deliberately old-fashioned family atmosphere with lots of activities and medieval crafts, blacksmith, dancing, singing, drama, guided walks and tours and much else besides.
Let’s all make the most of all this while we can!

Saturday, 9 May 2009

The Aral Disaster

A recent item in the Friends of the Earth Birmingham ( http://www.birminghamfoe.org.uk/ ) newsletter on water footprints reflected on the demands placed on water supplies and the environment by the production of everyday items such as foodstuffs.
For example about 12,500 pints of water are used, all told, in the production of one pound of beef. More examples, many of them very telling, can be found at http://www.waterfootprint.org/ (although you might have to contend with Litres and Kilos as the units of measurement).
The article then went on to mention the tragic case of the Aral Sea.
The Aral Sea has always fascinated me. The ‘little sister’ to the inland salt giant the Caspian Sea, the Aral was once the fourth largest body of landlocked water on the planet. The Aral was once the stuff of romantic legends and travellers’ tales as well as the source of sustenance and livelihood for the surrounding lands. Now, what little is left of the once wonderful expanse of water represents what is surely the greatest environmental disaster of modern times.
The first of our images shows the full extent of the Aral Sea around 1967. But since that time no less than 85% of the water has disappeared and the mere 15% that remains has split into two parts – 'Little Aral' and 'Big Aral' only the smaller of which has any chance of being saved.
Our second image shows the dreadful situation in 2007. What was once the bed of the sea is now a desert, with polluted winds blowing remnants of toxic fertiliser into the lungs of remaining inhabitants – I am tempted to say denizens. This catastrophe was caused by the arrogant, ignorant, egotistical stupidity of ‘planners’ and dictators of the Soviet era who diverted waters from the classic feeder rivers to irrigation for cotton production.
If only one could believe that this would serve as a lesson for the distributed ecological disaster that is being wrought in China – whence much of our industry has been sent through globalisation to be conducted in more damaging ways.
The cost of all this is environmental damage is incalculable and further disasters on the scale of the Aral Sea can only be prevented by mankind placing more modest demands on the Earth and having more modesty about our own roles, ambitions and abilities.
Let us also hope that mankind will come to its senses and that the potential for an even greater disaster – in effect what would be a worldwide Aral – that would follow from runaway global warming can yet be averted.