'Paramedics called to help figure covered in snow' - Brampton Park, Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire, UK.
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Poole/Freeman
N 53° 00.986 W 002° 13.225
30U E 552297 N 5874382
The 'Lady in the Park' a life-sized steel sculpture that depicts a woman sitting on a bench reading a letter, is located in Brampton Park, on Brampton Road in Newcastle-under-Lyme.
Waymark Code: WM106EC
Location: West Midlands, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 03/07/2019
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Alfouine
Views: 0

The 'Lady in the Park' is located in the grounds of Brampton Park. The sculpture created in steel was designed by Andy Edwards and made by PM Training and Realise.

The report by Tom Burnett for the Stoke-on-Trent Sentinel online was published on 11th December 2017 and reads as follows;

"A member of the public saw a figure covered in snow and not moving on a bench.
Paramedics were called to a North Staffordshire park this morning after being contacted about a person who wasn't moving and was covered in snow.
A concerned member of the public saw the figure sitting on a park bench in Brampton Park in Newcastle and immediately alerted the authorities.

Ambulance crews rushed to the scene - and quickly located the person covered in snow.
Fortunately the figure was not concerned about being immersed in the cold - because it turned out to be a sculpture of Newcastle-born author Vera Brittain.
Katie Tudor, a Stoke-on-Trent Paramedic Mentor for West Midlands Ambulance Service took to Twitter to express her surprise.
She said: "Call from a member of the public who was concerned that there was someone sat on a bench, not moving and covered in snow! Luckily, on our arrival, it turned out to be a statue."

Lady in the Park.
"This life-sized sculpture in Brampton Park, Newcastle-under-Lyme, depicts a woman reading a letter informing her that a family member has been killed in action. The inspiration for the woman was Vera Brittain (1893–1970), who was born in Newcastle-under-Lyme and worked as a Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD) nurse for much of the First World War. Brittain’s best-selling memoir Testament of Youth (1933), described her experiences during and after the First World War, which saw the loss of her brother, fiancé and some of her closest friends.
A plaque beside the sculpture has a quote from Brittain’s Testament of Youth:
‘I sat in a tree-shadowed walk called the Brampton and meditated on the War. It was one of those shimmering autumn days when every leaf and flower seemed to scintillate with light, and I found it very hard to believe that not far away men were being slain ruthlessly. It is impossible, I concluded, to find any satisfaction in the thought of the destruction of men whether they be English, French, German or anything else, seems a crime to the whole march of civilisation.’

Unveiled in November 2014, Lady in the Park was installed to commemorate the centenary of the start of the First World War. Commissioned by Newcastle-under-Lyme Borough Council and made by PM Training and the Realise charity, the sculpture was fabricated from 200 sheets of steel formed into lifelike features and drapery, then treated to resemble bronze. The statue was designed by local sculptor Andy Edwards." SOURCE: (visit link)
"A statue has been unveiled in Brampton Park to mark the 100th anniversary of the outbreak of the First World War.
Mayor of Newcastle-under-Lyme Linda Hailstones attended a special event on Armistice Day and said the town should be full of pride of the £20,000 statue.
The life-sized sculpture depicts a woman reading a letter sent from the Armed Forces informing her that family members had died in battle.
The Realise Foundation and Travis Perkins each contributed £10k towards the project.
Councillor Hailstones said: “It shows a real sense of pride in Newcastle-under-Lyme and we want to carry it into the future.
“It was an honour for me to unveil the statue.
“Remembrance Sunday and the event has been full of children, full of people of all ages and all dominations have joined together to remember what happened 100 years ago and what we need to take forward to the future.”
Art apprentice Callum Marchese, 16, from Mow Cop, worked alongside sculptor Andy Edwards to create the statue, which is made from a mixture of recycled and new metal.
Callum said: “I’m very proud of myself and the Artworks team.
“I can proudly say that not many 16-year-olds have sculptured a woman out of metal so I’m delighted.” As the statue was unveiled, there was a reading from the poem Testament of Youth by Vera Brittain, a Newcastle-under-Lyme-born writer, who lost her fiancé Roland Leighton and her brother Edward Brittain in the First World War.
The Realise Foundation is a regeneration charity, which helps people and communities in North Staffordshire to reach their full potential, was heavily involved in the project.
Will Nixon, chief executive of the Realise Foundation,said: “It gives a fantastic environmental improvement to an already great park.
“The connection with Vera Brittain, someone that was local to this area with the museum containing a number of her writings, was a really good idea.
“The whole combination of young people being involved in making something like this, connecting all the way back 100 years, I hope in another 100 years people are still enjoying what we’ve created here.”
SOURCE: (visit link)

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Type of publication: Internet Only

When was the article reported?: 12/11/2017

Publication: The Sentinel

Article Url: [Web Link]

Is Registration Required?: no

How widespread was the article reported?: local

News Category: Health/Medicine

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