Our Sporting Life - Bowes Museum
LOCAL HEROES & SPORTING LEGENDS SHARE PODIUM AT THE BOWES
MUSEUM (Saturday 9 June until Monday 27 August 2012)
Local heroes are to share the podium with sporting legends in an
exhibition taking place at The Bowes Museum, inspired by the 2012
London Olympics.
Our Sporting Life, which opens
at the Barnard Castle treasure house on Saturday 9th
June, will be officially launched by horsewoman Karen Dixon - who
rode for Britain at four Olympic Games, winning a team silver in
Seoul in 1988 - on Sunday 10th June. Our Sporting Life
is part of an initiative created by the Sports Heritage Network
which has seen a nationwide programme of community exhibitions
bring together objects and memories to tell the story of great
British sport.
Karen, who is both sporting legend and
local hero, is loaning her medal from the 1988 games, as well as
photographs and the dressage coat she wore to compete. These will
be shown alongside the gold medal of her father-in-law, Major
Thomas 'Robin' Valerian Dixon. He won the medal at the 1964 Winter
Olympics at Innsbruck, competing with fellow bobsledder, Tony Nash,
after having been granted leave from the army to compete.
Organised with assistance from the
Friends of The Bowes Museum, the exhibition has received funding of
£11,000 from the Heritage Lottery Fund. It will feature key items
of interest loaned by other well known sporting stars, including
Sir Ian Botham who has offered his entire medal collection,
including his MBE and knighthood. Polar explorer Robert Swan, who
will be giving a talk at the Museum on 5th July, has
loaned the sledge which he dragged to both North and South
Poles.
Football fans will be able to see the
replica of the Thomas Lipton Trophy, classed as the first football
World Cup, and learn the story of how the humble West Auckland team
first lifted the trophy against Switzerland in 1909 before beating
mighty Juventus 6-1 in 1911 to retain it.
Commemorative medals were struck to
mark their achievements and one of these very rare medals will also
be on display. But not everyone was impressed by their victories at
the time; while they were away from their jobs at the pit their
wages were stopped by the bosses.
Other local heroes include young
tri-athlete Ross Landon, who hails from nearby Cotherstone. Ross is
loaning the bicycle he rode to win silver at the 2011 World
Duathlon Championships, while swimmer Catherine White, originally
from Startforth, has loaned her silver 1982 Commonwealth Games
medal plus her uniforms from those and the 1984 Olympic Games.
The exhibition will also contain two
Olympic torches - one from the 1948 London Olympics, known as the
austerity games as they were the first to be held following World
War II, and one from Beijing.
Barnard Castle School, which boasts
many sports stars among its alumni, is contributing memorabilia
relating to rugby greats such as Rory and Tony Underwood, Rob
Andrew and Mathew Tait.
Gerald Blake, Chair of the organising
committee, said: "When a small group of us embarked on this project
we had no idea of the breadth and depth of our sporting heritage in
and around Teesdale. It has surprised us all, and I suspect that
many who come to see the exhibition will be similarly surprised and
delighted. I feel sure the exhibition will inform and inspire the
many visitors expected to see it."
The exhibition - which features many
more items of sporting memorabilia - is complemented by an Our
Sporting Life Family Fun Day, which takes place on Sunday
10th June from 10.00am - 4.00pm. A fun packed day of
drop in activities includes making medals and trophies, a blow
football game or finger puppets of sportspersons. If the weather is
fine there will be an opportunity for a taste of outdoor sports
such as bowling and tennis. The activities are free for children
under 16, who must be accompanied by an adult for whom normal
admission applies.