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CONGRATULATIONS TO MORTURN PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE YEAR

Astoness

TRUE BRUMMIE MODERATOR
Staff member
hi folks i am sure you will also want to congratulate mort on recieving the

Local Historic Photographer of the Year – Sandfields Pumping Station award

below is morts narrative and winning photograph along with the narrative...mort i know this is a subject close to your heart so very well done

lyn

Local Historic Photographer of the Year – Sandfields Pumping Station




The grade II* listed Sandfields Pumping Station is a forgotten hidden historic gem. Like most industrial heritage building, it’s familiarity in the landscape has eroded away the curiosity of the casual passer-by. Yet this Romanesque styled masterpiece is a cathedral to the industrial revolution, for years unloved, for years abandoned.



Its Romanesque style took the language from the past and built the way to the future. Celebrating new technology and progress, it bought life giving clean water to the beleaguered communities of the industrial Black Country, bringing health and wellbeing to all.



This building and its historic contents showcased the provision of clean water that seeded the developments that enabled Britain to become a modern industrial country. Britain lead the world in technical and scientific developments that have improved the quality of people’s lives worldwide and are a testament the vision of the Victorian engineers and their philanthropic endeavours.



Let us look at this building and remind ourselves of the tens of thousands of people who died in the cholera epidemics of the mid nineteenth century. Most of these unfortunate people were buried in mass graves or cholera pits, with no identity, dignity or recognition of their lives.



This building is a monument to their life, giving them back a voice that allows them to tell their remarkable story.



The heritage of the modern water industry is almost entirely absent, despite its unarguable relevance to human development.
 

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It's a great photo, and even better for you because the award is of a photo of something you have worked so hard for
 
Nice atmospheric picture, like the lighting. After looking at it for a few minutes my mind seemed to see three giant hand pumps that would produce a good pint of real ale.
 
Big thank you to all of you for your kind words, they are much apricated. It is really history that fuelled my passion for photography and then vice versa, I do see photography as an opportunity to engage with the past and also to help record social change, as we see so often one this site.

Here are a few more I took at this particular place.

Sandfields-Ghost-Night-Oct-19_0303.jpg
 

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hi folks i am sure you will also want to congratulate mort on recieving the

Local Historic Photographer of the Year – Sandfields Pumping Station award

below is morts narrative and winning photograph along with the narrative...mort i know this is a subject close to your heart so very well done

lyn

Local Historic Photographer of the Year – Sandfields Pumping Station




The grade II* listed Sandfields Pumping Station is a forgotten hidden historic gem. Like most industrial heritage building, it’s familiarity in the landscape has eroded away the curiosity of the casual passer-by. Yet this Romanesque styled masterpiece is a cathedral to the industrial revolution, for years unloved, for years abandoned.



Its Romanesque style took the language from the past and built the way to the future. Celebrating new technology and progress, it bought life giving clean water to the beleaguered communities of the industrial Black Country, bringing health and wellbeing to all.



This building and its historic contents showcased the provision of clean water that seeded the developments that enabled Britain to become a modern industrial country. Britain lead the world in technical and scientific developments that have improved the quality of people’s lives worldwide and are a testament the vision of the Victorian engineers and their philanthropic endeavours.



Let us look at this building and remind ourselves of the tens of thousands of people who died in the cholera epidemics of the mid nineteenth century. Most of these unfortunate people were buried in mass graves or cholera pits, with no identity, dignity or recognition of their lives.



This building is a monument to their life, giving them back a voice that allows them to tell their remarkable story.



The heritage of the modern water industry is almost entirely absent, despite its unarguable relevance to human development.
great picture and commentary...did not know it existed until I saw this
 
Congratulations to Mort, I missed the earlier notification sorry to say. But you only need to look at his photography to know where it came from! Wonderful photographs, exquisitely taken about a subject so near and dear to him.

Congratulations again!
Thank you Richad, thats is very kind of you to say so. I am of course strictly an amateur and also very rarely enter competitions. It was my passion for industrial heritage that got me into photography as a way of recording buildings and objects that could be lost.
 
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