Barmy Britain - Bizarre and True Stories From Across the Nation. Jack Crossley
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To my son Gary
CONTENTS
Title Page
Dedication
Introduction
1 Signs of the Times
2 Sporting Life
3 Law and Disorder
4 Best of Britishness
5 Media Madness
6 Royal Flush
7 Rude Britannia
8 Politics: Order, Order
9 Animal Magic
10 Nanny State
11 Food for Thought
12 Wedded Bliss
13 What’s Up, Doc
14 Driven to Distraction
15 Not Dead, Just Resting
16 Travel Troubles
17 What’s in a Name
18 Raise Your Glasses
19 School’s Out
20 Plain Eccentric
21 A Touch of Class
22 Council Daze
23 Let Us Pray
24 Mind Your Language
25 Golden Oldies
26 Just the Job
27 Christmas Presence
28 Odds and Sods
About the Author
Copyright
Having spent over half a century working on newspapers, I am still well-placed to plough through chaotic piles of newsprint and magazines, searching for the ridiculous and offbeat and decidedly British. I started as a 14-year-old copy boy on the Yorkshire Evening News in Leeds and then went to the Daily Dispatch in Manchester, followed by a six month holiday relief stint at the Daily Mail’s Manchester office: the perfect training ground to identify and make a note of stories that embrace our traditional role of triumphantly meddling through with affable incompetence.
Some of the items which make up this book take no more than a couple of minutes to note down; others can take half an hour or more – digesting long articles and extracting from them a couple of sentences that throw some light on what it is about the British that make the British British.
I would like to thank the publications listed at the end of this book. But most of all, I would like to thank every eccentric character whose antics have ensured their appearance between these covers. Bravo Barmy Britain!
Drivers advised to ‘Honk if you like our quiet town’…
Spotted on the back of a motorcyclist:
IF YOU CAN READ THIS MY WIFE FELL OFF.
Independent on Sunday
Due to an error in transmission we reported that a lady was found dead with a bottle in her hand. This should have read ‘bible’.
Swindon Evening Advertiser
Simon Heffer tells of the effect of a superstore opening outside his market town. It was summed up by a notice put up by a local fishmonger: ‘Please do not mention Tesco, as a smack in the mouth often offends’.
Daily Telegraph
A shop sign advertised ‘Extra Large Bonsai Trees’.
Independent
W. George Preston of Southampton spotted for sale a ‘Jumbo Mini Fan’.
Daily Telegraph
Johnson and Johnson’s rectal thermometer comes with the guarantee that ‘All Johnson and Johnson’s products are personally tested’.
Kelvin Mackenzie, the Sun
Dave and Anne Osborn of Fettercairn, Laurencekirk, spotted this sign:
BELL NOT WORKING OPEN DOOR AND SHOUT
Daily Mail
Richard Bird, of Blewbury, Oxfordshire, says he has been kept amused for years by a large digital display road sign he once saw. On a support pole at the side of the road there was a sign saying: ‘This sign is not yet in use’.
Independent
Ian Hall, of Burnhill Green, South Staffordshire, writes in The Times about a notice at an entrance to self-catering accommodation he saw in Cork, Ireland:
‘To operate the security lock, press buttons 2 and 4 together then press 3. If you still can’t open the door, the one at the end of the corridor is not locked.’
The Times
K. J. Faulks, of Leicester, spotted this classified ad in the Leicester Mercury:
‘Computer wooden gas operated, good condition £30’.
Leicester Mercury
Robert Price of Penrith, Cumbria, tells of his new power jigsaw with its mains lead, electric motor, sharp blades and a laser. The instructions came in a plastic bag bearing the warning: ‘Plastic bags can be extremely dangerous’.
The Times
Sign in a Portsmouth shopping centre: ‘Illegal parking enforced’.
Independent
Miss M. L. Whittle, of Bournemouth, asks ‘Couldn’t they just clamp them?’ after reading this notice in a café/shop in Kimmeridge, Dorset:
ANY CARS PARKED IN THIS CAR PARK