Garden looking fine after trim
There’ll be free children’s activities galore at the York Easter Family Festival!
York’s Chocolate Festival will be returning too for the full four days as part of York’s Easter celebrations with a chocolate market, demonstrations and workshops.
In Parliament Street you’ll find the Little Vikings Easter Activity Tent, with face painting, Easter crafts, drama classes, storytelling, dance classes, forest school classes and computer coding. New inside the tent this year, is a sand art activity, running all day from Friday to Sunday. For two weeks from Friday 7 to 24 April, Parliament Street will come alive with a children’s funfair and Sunday will see the Shambles market transformed with a fun bunny trail, where families can enjoy street food in the new Shambles Food Court.
Families can also follow a new Chocolate Easter Trail, to support the Lord Mayor’s charities. All you need to do is buy a trail card for £3 at the Visit York Information Centre, follow the map to locations across the city and solve puzzles along the way. Each participant will receive a chocolatey treat, generously donated by York Cocoa House and one lucky winner will take home a scrumptious York Cocoa House chocolate egg.
For more information please visit our website.
When Sheffield legend James Montgomery died in 1854 a life-size bronze statue was erected in his honour. He was mourned as a generous philanthropist, prolific hymn-writer, captain of industry and life-long abolitionist. Half a century earlier Montgomery known as editor of Sheffield’s most radical newspaper, in which he published dangerous poems of protest. In 1795 Montgomery was arrested for a crime he didn’t commit, branded a ‘treasonous and seditious libeller’ and condemned to a sentence in York Castle Prison. This lecture will contextualise the poetry he wrote from this cell, shining light on a forgotten moment in the York’s history.
This is an opportunity to become acquainted with one of Britain’s most unfairly forgotten poets: a man who was friends with William Wordsworth and Bob Southey, championed by Lord Byron and regarded by one of his early American biographers as a ‘lost Romantic.’ Not only will the audience meet Montgomery through his works and poetry, but in this lecture they will find him enduring the most difficult trials of his career (literally and figuratively) as he was confined to a cell here in York, simply for questioning the decisions of his so-called social superiors.
For more information or to book a ticket visit www.yortime.org.uk.
Bug Hotel building Saturday 8 April 10am. Everyone welcome and a great event for children. Bring gardening gloves for protection. Meet amongst the trees on the south side of the Hob Stone estate facing Lidl.
The FOHM group have also issues a newsletter which reports,
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