Who are our Friends? Friends promote research, conservation and celebration of the Springs, Spouts, Fountains and Holy Wells of the Malvern Hills and of Great Malvern as a
In the picture fire crews enter the building while grey smoke pours from the roof at the rear.
We wait the aftermath with the knowledge that Malvern will perhaps lose forever a building that was in part responsible for putting the word Great into the town.
G B Shaw Mulberry Tree and Spring update.
The news on the Mulberry Tree saplings, destined we hope for Priory Park, is good. All six appear to have survived the winter and four of the six have small green leaves that we anticipate will develop rapidly once the warmer weather arrives. It has been a particularly hard winter and the saplings were no doubt bewildered by the peculiarity of the seasons, having travelled halfway around the globe last August. Our problem now is how long will it be before they are robust enough to plant in their final location? We are trying to coordinate the production of our new book with the planting of the replacement to George Bernard Shaw's tree near the Mulberry Spring in Priory Park; the plan being to launch both at a combined celebration. Keep an eye on the Mulberry Tree web site to see the latest developments with the project - the site information is at the end of this newsletter.
Dame Laura Knight - Storm over our Town Malvern
This view of Malvern Priory was painted between 1935 and 1951 by artist, author, poet, playwright and designer Dame Laura Knight (1877 - 1970). She wrote: 'This picture took me years to paint, what happens in that fraction of an instant of time when lightning strikes?' Dame Laura and husband Harold Knight became frequent visitors to Malvern after forming a friendship with Sir Barry Jackson, founder of the Malvern Festival, and this storm was taking place one day when she was staying at the Mount Pleasant Hotel.
What has this got to do with Malvern Springs and Wells? Firstly, we can see the springs being replenished. Secondly, in the 1930s Dame Laura sometimes stayed with her friend Professor Alardyce Nicoll at his home, Winds Acres, near British Camp. There she used the upper room of the stable and coach house as a studio, and extended the west window to improve the light and the view. In the grounds of Winds Acre is a well and nearby is a rotary windlass well pump...
In the Friends Newsletter we always try and put some news or comment about Springs and Wells from outside Malvern. The Malvern Hills are not the only place that treasures its natural sources and news on the wider front broadens our perspective. This time it's Epsom and Ewell springs in
The most reliable method of distributing Friends of Malvern Springs and Wells Newsletters is by post. This is time consuming and expensive and we have had to introduce a modest charge as the number have increased over the years. One alternative is email. This is fine and is useful because recipients can then forward the newsletters to their colleagues. We know that our newsletters end up in all sorts of unexpected places as a result and this enables us to solicit support for our springs and wells. Unfortunately email is also problematic because some mail boxes are full, some email addresses are defunct and sometimes they get missed by the recipient. The result is that every now and again we are contacted for back numbers or reinstatement on our distribution list.
As newsletters are now such a useful research tool as well, we have decided to put them on-line. If you do not get the expected one through the normal channels, after about 1 year we will put it on line so that you can catch up with the past news and views. The index page is linked to our web site at www.malvernspa.com or click on the girlie left. It took a while to get back numbers on the site but they are all done and so you can catch up with all that ever was over the years that we have been publishing Friends newsletters.
Newdigate Wells
Our web site is hosted by the British National Parks web site. Enclosed is a free postcard, which you will see includes the Malvern Hills. The site supports the argument that the Malvern Hills are Britain's original National Park in everything but name. More details of this debate are available on the National Parks Data page of the site. If you receive your Newsletters by email you can still obtain some free cards. To receive 6 cards free, send a stamped addressed envelope, normal post card size or thereabouts, to Parks Cards, Tower House, 15 Tower Road, Tadworth, Surrey, UK. KT20 5QY. One envelope per household please.
Since we first published in 1992
It is encouraging to see the ever expanding interest in Malvern's water heritage. Today there are numerous web sites and a wide range of publications and leaflets all promoting this now popular theme. They provide inspiration for others to become actively involved in their own watery activities and research, which we applaud. This raises the question, what is research? Original research involves going back to primary sources in libraries, Record Offices and other repositories, and in some cases much field work. This is a laborious process often resulting in many hours spent which sometimes produce little new knowledge. Research also involves interpretation, rather than merely writing down facts. For some, the temptation is to short cut the process and use recent secondary source material, i.e. rewrite other people's work. The internet provides endless opportunities to 'copy paste' and call it yours, a problem encountered today in academic coursework. This is plagiarism and is much frowned upon by professionals, academics, and the legal profession. Some of the worst culprits, it seems, are untrained, self-styled, 'experts'. We recently had a situation where one such person announced that they had been 'doing some research' and then proceeded to rewrite our books, with the resulting illicit pilfering of our intellectual properties! Such flagrant abuse of the terms of copying set out in the title pages amounts to theft and is enforceable through due legal process.