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CommunityYou are in: Stoke & Staffordshire > Inside Lives > Community > The end of an era The end of an eraBy contributor Norman Maddox Norman remembered Trentham Gardens so fondly that when he heard it was to be demolished he organised a Last Dance. Norman is 64-years-old and lives in Abbey Hulton, Stoke-on-Trent. He has three sons and one daughter. In his spare time Norman loves gardening and dancing. He is a British Boxing Board of Control Official (Timekeeper) and is now retired (ex-BT technician). Since Trentham Gardens Grand Hall was closed and demolished I've felt I needed to tell the story about people's memories of Trentham Gardens during the 1940s till 1980 because it meant so much to the people of the Potteries.
Audio and Video links on this page require Realplayer I found Inside Lives to be enlightening and inspiring. I met five wonderful people and listened to some wonderful experiences. Transcript:I remember Trentham Gardens in its Hey Day. But by the 1980s there were no more dances. Then I heard that the hall was going to be demolished I was devastated. It meant such a lot to me--30 years of good times. First as a bachelor, then with Barbara, my wife, and then with my family. I decided to try and organise ONE LAST DANCE. We arranged it for August 3rd 2002. 1000 tickets sold out within 16 days with people coming from everywhere. My phone nearly melted. Barbara and I knew how much Trentham Gardens had meant to us, but we hadn't realised just how much it meant to everybody else too. On the night of the dance I was setting up in the hall, which was all decorated in the style of the early 40s, when this guy turned up. He must have been 80. He had a cardigan on and a pair of slippers and he didn't have a ticket. But all he wanted to do was walk on the dance floor one last time because it was where he'd proposed to his late wife. It was quite dark inside so I held his hand to help him to the dance floor. He was chattering away, but he wasn't talking to me. I might as well not have been there. He was talking to his late wife. Before he left he said 'oh, sweetheart, we had some wonderful times down here'. I was choked--how many memories were left in this Grand Hall? When the band struck the first note the dance floor was full. We were all 18 again and never stopped dancing the whole night. It was a fitting end to a magnificent hall and The Last Dance really was the End of an Era. last updated: 10/08/07 SEE ALSOYou are in: Stoke & Staffordshire > Inside Lives > Community > The end of an era |
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