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Trip to Hever Castle and Bletchley Park
Our Weekend Away – 28th to the 30th of June 2024
The weekend away was arranged by Seaham Harbour u3a and we were joined by members of our sister u3a, Seaham and District. A total of 39 members took part, accompanied by our wonderful driver Steve, whose driving skills would come into play as the weekend progressed.
Starting in Oxford
Our journey by coach took us south first to Oxford, the city steeped in history and renowned for its prestigious universities and captivating architecture. Some folk chose to wander the quaint streets and revel in the ambience that inspired the magical world of Harry Potter and was home to Inspector Morse. Some visited universities where grandchildren had studied. Some elected to visit the exquisite Ashmolean Museum, an experience not to be missed. By chance some members even spied the Emperor and Empress of Japan coming out of the Bodleian Library. (Perhaps he was returning some books he had borrowed whilst studying at Merton College in 1983! The Empress studied at Balliol College). Continuing our journey south we arrived at the Hilton Hotel, Reading, for our two nights stay. Some of our more energetic souls went swimming before dinner, others took liquid refreshments.
Hever Castle
Saturday dawned, a beautiful sunny, but not too hot day. We travelled to Hever Castle, experiencing some very heavy traffic, and Steve showed us how he could turn the coach on a ‘sixpence’ as someone had most inappropriately placed their advertising banner of a church fete across the road sign to Hever.
Hever Castle was the childhood home of Anne Boleyn, second wife of Henry VIII, their daughter becoming Queen Elizabeth I. The castle is a moated 13th Century castle, filled with 16th Century furniture and tapestries. Over the centuries the castle fell into disrepair. In 1903 it was acquired and restored by the American millionaire, William Waldorf Astor. His Italian garden is breath taking and displays his collection of statuary. Over 1000 men worked on the garden design and around 800 men took two years to hand dig the 38 acre lake. In 1983 the Astor family sold the castle to the Guthrie family.
Bletchley Park
Sunday saw us heading north from the hotel to Bletchley Park, home to the codebreakers of World War II, and one of the best kept secrets of the war. We were to learn how the achievements of the codebreakers helped shorten the war by two years. The organisation started in 1939 with one hundred and fifty staff but its numbers grew rapidly until nearly ten thousand people worked in the Bletchley Park organisation. A small group of Americans were also involved. Famous codebreakers, included Alan Turing, Gordon Welchman and Bill Tutte. Dilly Knox and Nigel Gray had started their code- breaking careers during the Great War of 1914-1918.
The team worked tirelessly trying to break the German coded messages. They famously devised machinery to help with decryption, which speeded up the process considerably. “Colossus”, was the world’s first electronic computer. Their work in breaking the coded messages sent through the German “Enigma” machine, saved a great many lives.
A fascinating end to an enjoyable weekend.
Gordon A