When I awoke yesterday morning, it was after one of those nights in which one has rather jumbled dreams. In this case, I seemed to have two dreams that merged into each other and they both involved being in a meeting somewhere on the continent with lots of negotiations over this and that and one of the involved lots of discussion that seemed to take place in an airport somewhere. When I was fully awake, though, I scanned the sky to see what kind of weather lay in store for the day ahead for our U3A trip to Bakewell in Derbyshire. I turned to the BBC weather app which informed me that it will be breezy with variable cloud and a few further, generally light, showers. So one could have wished for better weather but it looks as though we may avoid the showers if there is a modicum of luck. Some of the news being reported this morning is that the UK is lifting sanctions on Russia’s oil products to attempt to ease the pressure on petrol prices at the pumps. There seems to be a particular irony in all of this in that American activities in the Iranian conflict has the indirect effect of assisting the Russian economy. Right at the start of the war, the Americans acting on out-of-date intelligence bombed a school killing scores of schoolchildren, most of them girls. The Americans are supposedly conducting an in-depth investigation into this atrocity but now, all of this time later, are really dragging their feet over releasing parts of a report that would pin the blame squarely upon the Americans. Immediately after the event at the start of the war, Donald Trump blamed the Iranians themselves for blowing up their own school with precision-guided missiles thus indicating that he had no idea what was really going on. Meanwhile, we have our own home-grown scandal. A high-speed train line between London and Birmingham will be more expensive, take longer to make and go slower than previously announced. The HS2 project will cost between £87.7bn and £102.7bn (in 2025 prices), with the first train services not starting until at least May 2036 and possibly not until October 2039, Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander told the Commons on Tuesday. The project was said to be the most expensive high-speed rail line in the world, according to researchers at the Transit Costs Project. Part of the problem at least seems to have been the desire to make the high speed the fastest in the world. HS2 trains will run slower than originally planned, in an effort to keep down rising construction costs. The Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander told MPs on Tuesday that the new maximum speed of HS2 services will be 320km/h, down from the intended 360km/h (224mph).
The news that broke yesterday and reported by Sky News was that police will confirm who is being charged over the Grenfell Tower fire by the 10th anniversary of the disaster The inferno was the UK’s deadliest residential fire since the Second World War. Seventy-two people were killed when the blaze ravaged the north Kensington building on 14 June 2017. At Scotland Yard today, the Metropolitan Police said up to 57 individuals and 20 organisations are so far suspected of criminal offences. One person was arrested and released under investigation, and others have been questioned under caution but not arrested. Potential charges include corporate manslaughter, gross negligence manslaughter, fraud, serious health and safety offences and misconduct in public office. The final charging decisions will be revealed by 14 June 2027 – exactly a decade on from the fire. It may be an urban myth but it is reported that the day after the fire, the shredders in the offices of several organisations (planning departments, architects, building supply companies) were working overtime as several key individuals realised what was going to hit then further down the line and all kinds of potentially incriminating evidence was destroyed. It is always hard to prove liabilities after a gap of ten years when memories fade, personnel may have retied and so on. Some of the convictions involving 2o organisations may be for Corporate Manslaughter and securing a conviction for Corporate Manslaughter is generally considered very difficult. While the Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007 made it easier to prosecute large organisations, establishing the offence to a criminal standard involves overcoming several demanding evidential hurdles.
Yesterday was the long anticipated visit to Derbyshire. U3A members are always absolutely on time and, in practice, we were all aboard and set off at two minutes before the appointed time. I had an interesting travelling companion because we had met in the parish hall attached to our church last Sunday and had quickly established that we were both U3A members and going on the mid-week trip to Derbyshire. I had not fully appreciated what a truly beautiful county Derbyshire happens to be and the weather appeared to be fairly benign to us today. When we arrived at Bakewell, the coach soon dispersed in search of coffee shops and particularly those that had a copious supply of Bakewell tarts and Bakewell puddings (there is a slight but subtle difference) I enjoyed a coffee and a sausage roll and bought a Bakewell pudding to be enjoyed later by myself and family members.
Then suitably refreshed we made our way onto Kedleston Hall which was about an hour and a half’s drive away. We arrived there at midday and then had the whole of the afternoon until the Hall itself closed at 4.0pm. Kedleston is all about the power of art and design – and the art of power. Built in the 1760s to designs by the celebrated architect Robert Adam for Nathaniel Curzon, 1st Baron Scarsdale, the house was intended to evoke the grandeur of ancient Rome. In 1916 the house and estate were inherited by George Nathaniel Curzon, Marquess Curzon of Kedleston and Viceroy of India. Lord Curzon refurbished the ground floor and planned a museum with more than 1,000 objects from across Asia. Many of us went to the tea rooms to refresh ourselves before the visit and in practice I contented myself with a simple ice-cream. We then set off to explore the Hall which was relatively easy to do on one’s own. I availed myself of an informative 3 minute video and then set off on a voyage of exploration. This was quite easy to do because you could follow a circular route through the house, stopping as long as one wanted to explore the features of any of the rooms. Each room was supplied with information guides which explained the features of that particular room and there were two or three ‘human’ guides strategically placed in the various rooms who would answer any questions that you might have. In a music room, I was intrigued by what appeared to be double manual harpsichord whilst in the library, my attention was directed to a printed copy of the ‘Domesday book’ although I did not ascertain when a printed copy was made. The house as a whole displayed 18th century opulence and is probably one of the finest tributes to the architect, Robert Adam. After I had taken several pictures of the interior, I made my way to the tea room where I had a cup of tea before we started off on our homeward bound trip at 4.00pm, arriving back in Bromsgrove just before 6.00pm. My son, although not feeling very well, came along and gave me a lift home, which I truly appreciated and once inside the house I was able to bestow him a gift which had bought for him (a bottle of beer labelled ‘Grumpy Old Sod’ which I think he will enjoy in the fullness of time)