For nerds of a certain age Ashby de la Zouch is a Mecca of computer gaming history. It was the home of 'Ultimate Play the Game', producers of some of the finest titles for the ZX Spectrum between 1983 and 1987. Younger Nintendo and Xbox gamers may know the company in its later incarnation, 'Rare'. 🤓🕹️
They developed one of the greatest games ever. Goldeneye on the N64 Edit. It turns out the make Sea Of Thieves as well which is an absolutely brilliant game.
I still have a boxed 48K Spectrum under my bed. Not opened it for 22 years after I found it in a car boot sale. My ones from the 80’s are long gone after usually suffering from my early experiments with electronics (blowing things up). Got me a career though
They started out above the newsagent owned by their parents. I used to call into the shop on the way to school and would occasionally see them loading boxes of cassettes into a van. We had a BBC computer though 😂
Yep. I'd love to see this series for my germany. "The book suggests to make a stop at the loveable village generic hausen which got relocated in 1977 for coal mining"
It's great you mentioned Ultima cars, but, but, but, but, you were yards from the Great Central Railway & no mention of it? The new A60 bridge you were stood under next to Brush Transformers, will be used for the Reunification. The bridge was demolished & severed the link to the national rail network, which the Nottinghamshire side of the Great Central Railway uses. On the new bridge, ballast has been laid on one deck (this is the side which will carry the new ‘link line' between the two halves of the Great Central. The other bridge deck is now being prepared for track, so that trains from the national rail network can resume running again on the GCR (Nottingham) line north of Loughborough.
Also missed the Leicester and Swannington railway (which he was practically on top of) - one of the oldest in the UK and still running. If you mention Ultimate, then perhaps a mention of Noble in Leicester would make sense too. As he was passing through the area, the Caterpillar works at Peckleton used to be an airfield and a site for Reid and Sigrist - who set up a training school that existed through the 1939-1945 minor disagreement and even tried to sell an aircraft of their own design.
@@Technaudio Sorry - meant to say the Burton line. Parts of the Swannington still exist in that it was absorbed into the Burton line (notably by Desford etc).
Not to mention the D0280 Falcon prototype, the ubiquitous and long lived class 30/31 (same locos, different engine & ancillaries as it turned out the Mirrlees JVS12T power unit was a bit crap and was replaced by an EE 12SVT lump) and the mighty, but ultimately unsuccessful HS4000 Kestrel.
Ashby-de-la-Zouch that little known place that churned out some very famous names - JetPac, Pssst, Cookie, Lunar Jetman, Tranz Am, Atic Atac, Sabre Wulf and many others :)
Maybe John, as scrap dealers on Ebay advertise their services with the lowest cost piece available (usually a wheel nut), Ultima could send you a wheel nut and say "for all your hard work promoting us, have a part you can add to your car when you've got it!"? I was given a voucher once for money off my first Ferrari when I eventually bought it......... It was a 10 pence promissory note in a birthday card!
Hinckley, home to Triumph Motorcycles. Rover cars also had something to do with Frank Whittle/Rolls Royce and jet engines. And since when did Leicester stop being a city? 😉
In Coalville there used to be the Palitoy factory, which made, amongst many things, Star Wars action figures, and Action Man. The factory has long gone, but on the site is a housing estate, where you will find an 'Action Man Road', and a 'Pippa Avenue' - Pippa being a British simalcrum of 'Barbie', if I remember correctly. I bet that Action Man Road sign gets 'borrowed' regularly. Joking aside, I'd love that as an address.
Pippa was a smaller figure than Barbie. Tressy ("her hair grows") was the Palitoy's Barbie equivalent. As a bloke I shouldn't know this, but long hours gawping at a telly can do that to you. Which is why I haven't watched it since the millennium.
@@janskeet1382 Action Man was GI Joe made under license. I became aware of GI Joe from American superhero comics, along with submarines you could sit in and glasses that saw through clothing. Incredible. The first turned out to be cardboard if I recall correctly, and the second had feathers in the lenses. I didn't even get Action Man, but Tommy Gunn, a Pedigree Toys version who looked like he'd been in a fire. Tommy Gunn went on to become the Captain Scarlet figure.
Properly fascinating video purely because I now live in rugby, and grew up in thringstone, (literally a few seconds walk away from some of the places you were stood! In thringstone woods!). The field to the right of Grace Dieu ruins, has a statue in called the rusty mary. The statue was in remembrance of one of the nuns at the priory and was designed by the winner of a competition at the local primary school. The winner of which was me! My original drawing is still on the wall at the school! My dad also worked at the brush for 32 years too! Lots of story’s from an area I’m very very familiar with!
These videos get better all the time. I was howling at the Wycliff reference and the insertion of the track… I thought to myself “I bet he puts another snippet of it in further along” and you did 🤣 Your sense of humour is like mine. And being a car nut - was not only very pleased to see about the Ultima factory but I didn’t realise the connection between Noble and the McLaren F1! My day is complete now!
I went to skool🙃 at Lutrerworth Grammer(actually a comprehensive) and remember the sound of the jet engines from Bitteswell Aerodrome-now Magna Park.even got a display from the Rex Arrows one day during a lesson which the whole school turned out to watch.
The Wycliffe John gag at the start was brilliant. It made me giggle I found this really interesting especially as my daughter lives in Shepshed and I’m really interested in disused railways
going to the university in Loughborough its nice to actually recognise some of these places on this episode! always thought the abandoned priory looks cool when passing by.
Gloucester dude here... Those aircraft were tested on an airfield a half mile from my home, now a housing estate with easy access to the M5.. A pub carrying the Whittle name was also built on the site, and Dowty (builders or aircraft props and landing gear) has a production facility on the site.
@@chriswalford4161which is now severed by the M5, and was originally a proposed site for a motorway services, hence the 'ghost' slipways still there to this day. Wikipedia says the prototype first flew from Cranwell, after testing at Brockworth (Gloster's own airfield). Gloster Meteors and Javelins were first flown from Moreton Valence though.
The "scaffolding" remark about the car reminded me of something I once read about a car, possibly a Lotus model, that was frequently modified to add frame members that the joke was engineers built a prototype frame, then removed pieces until it collapsed under its own weight and added the last one back.
Hi John, it's been awesome. See you do some road trips in my local area. Yes, the town of Leicester city isn't the nicest place like it used to be many years ago. A lot of people avoid it now. Have a great day and there's nothing like a good pork pie
I was born and grew up in Hinckley and went to school in Lutterworth. You forgot to mention in Hinckley is Triumph motorcycles (and the scandalous rumours surrounding the demise of the old factory and the commissioning of the new one) and that John Wilcox racing engines of Hinckley built and developed the Rover K series engine for Rover.
@@john07973 the K series is a really misunderstood engine. They are well known for head gasket issues, however an uprated gasket along with regular coolant changes will solve that. They make quite a lot of power for their displacement
Jon……. How could you not mention Hinckley’s Triumph motorcycle factory…….🎉 Still churning out many many 100% Blitish motorcycles from its factory(s) in Thailand. 🥳🇬🇧
The War of the Roses has absolutely nothing to do with the counties of Yorkshire or Lancashire but everything to do with the houses of York and Lancaster, two rival families who just happen to have the titles of those two places but very little geographical connection.
My grandad was part of the team who constructed the plane on the roundabout in Lutterworth. He was also involved in the transportation to get it there in the first place.
Wycliffe Peugeot garage was in Lutterworth in the 90's for many years makes more sense now. I live near all this stuff so I've now got something else to go check out thanks Jon 😁
Awesome Jon, I'm a Leicester lad myself, and despite being a bit of a shit hole, we do have some some cracking history, I now live just on the edge of Rutland, our village was a leper hospital a thousand years ago lol
You might want to check your research on the Wars of the Roses - it was actually between supporters of the Dukes of York and Lancaster, not the counties of Yorkshire and Lancashire...
Hi John. Love your channel. Just a random suggestion for a video to make….. the history of the British tarmac road. When it turned from a muddy track byway into an A road. Cheers
YES! My area finally! Was hoping i was driving past in your shots but unfortunately not 😂 A few miles down the A5 was the old Rugby Radio Station, we had huge radio masts that sent signals to submarines, and my village next to it had letters in the war saying we might be bombed! Crazy!
9:38 who else was definitely listing to Jon sign off, and not distracted by the plant / weed on the right (creeping us out and stealing the lime light). 😂
Very near Market Bosworth there is a place called Nailstone where in 1981 a Dan Air HS-748 airliner crashed into a field with the loss of all 3 on board.
Re: 25% of the population having no qualifications. Remember that before 1965 most children at Secondary Moderns (so most children) did not do any exams before leaving school at 15 - they just got jobs, often from local employers who visited the schools to hire them. In 1965 the CSE exam was invented, after which more children did get formal qualifications, but even so it was probably not "normal" until the school leaving age was raised in 1972. This means that most people born before c1955 left school without formal qualifications. That on its own is about 10-15% of the population. If you then add in population that is under 16 - ie. not old enough to have any formal qualifications - 25% is, if anything, quite low.
Yep, my mum went to a secondary modern and left at 15 with no opportunity to get qualifications. So the age profile of the county cf the country also has to be factored in, and perhaps poverty levels.
Met some Australians on a narrowboat holiday at Trent Lock years ago, they asked us how long it would take them to get to "Looobabaroooga". Took us a while to figure out what they meant.
Maybe because I've had a few drinks before watching this episode, but that sign really made me chuckle. Great episode. I hope you get your Ultima one day.
Frank Whittle's jet was not the first to fly - that honour belongs to the Heinkel 178 flown by Erich Warsitz. You also failed to mention the most interesting thing about the castle in Ashby de la Zouch - it has an underground tunnel that runs from the castle to the nearby manor house that could be used for escape in a time of seige, it used to be open to the public, not sure if it still is..?
The right third of the railway map you presented showed the railway through Cleveleys to Fleetwood (where the river Wyre meets the sea) ... that's a long way from Leicestershire!
Fully on our stomping ground for this episode and learnt a few things about our neck of the woods! excellent as always! You also missed the town of Measham off... well done! haha
I was thinking Wyclef Jean as I saw the sign, but it is fairly obvious. Smiled at the navigational self-own. Laughed out loud at the rebuttal of ghosts! Thanks for making Sunday special, Jon. 🙂
Good to see the village where I live here - Moira. The other famous thing about Ashby is that it was home to the 80s software company, Ultimate Play The Game which later became Rare.
Getting closer to my last home in the UK - Nottingham! Looking forward to that and discussion about former GCR assets you’ll stumble across when also discussing former canals now filled in - oh, and maybe some roads (Fosse way?)
OOO..... On home turf now sort of. When they put that plane on the island it did cause a few issues. Mainly at night when you came down the hill past the golf course you would be confronted by silver plane in your headlamps which did create a bit of a scare. A number of "sheds" on the A5 going the other way are owned by the CofE and provide a lot of income for the church. My only connection with Ashby was when as a child I got stuck up castle tower with fear and had to rescued by the fire brigade as my dad was terrified of heights too. Afterwards I promptly went into the castle "tunnel" and screamed the place down as I don't light enclosed spaces and it was full of poo. Some of us remember the coal mines being open, the one in Coalville springs to mind. Also Loughborough was home to the coach makers who made Panorama Elite coaches that I went to school on. That part of Leicestershire does have some of the best scenery with Bradgate Park that is a local beauty spot and huge park. Leicester and the shire is much maligned but it has some of the best unspoilt countryside in the UK
Great vid but some notable omissions! Many mentions about Triumph, Great Central railway, Ashby nerd industries, etc, but you drive right past Mallory Park and don't even mention it. Wicked (in it's original meaning)!!
I live a 5 minute walk through the woods away from Grace Dieu Priory! In fact I have a couple of videos on my channel that were filmed there (partly). EDIT: Good job avoiding the n-word graffiti on the bridge at around 7:57
That "I really, really want one, please" was said with such heart-felt yearning!
Here’s hoping they see it and give him one 🤞
For nerds of a certain age Ashby de la Zouch is a Mecca of computer gaming history. It was the home of 'Ultimate Play the Game', producers of some of the finest titles for the ZX Spectrum between 1983 and 1987. Younger Nintendo and Xbox gamers may know the company in its later incarnation, 'Rare'. 🤓🕹️
They developed one of the greatest games ever. Goldeneye on the N64
Edit. It turns out the make Sea Of Thieves as well which is an absolutely brilliant game.
As a nerd of a certain age, and Spectrum Next backer/owner, I appreciate this comment.
I still have a boxed 48K Spectrum under my bed. Not opened it for 22 years after I found it in a car boot sale. My ones from the 80’s are long gone after usually suffering from my early experiments with electronics (blowing things up). Got me a career though
Came here to say this!
They started out above the newsagent owned by their parents. I used to call into the shop on the way to school and would occasionally see them loading boxes of cassettes into a van. We had a BBC computer though 😂
5:56 - "...opened in 1822, this fantastic Neo-Classical building was demolished in 1962, leaving no trace. Bugger!"
Yep. I'd love to see this series for my germany.
"The book suggests to make a stop at the loveable village generic hausen which got relocated in 1977 for coal mining"
It's great you mentioned Ultima cars, but, but, but, but, you were yards from the Great Central Railway & no mention of it? The new A60 bridge you were stood under next to Brush Transformers, will be used for the Reunification. The bridge was demolished & severed the link to the national rail network, which the Nottinghamshire side of the Great Central Railway uses. On the new bridge, ballast has been laid on one deck (this is the side which will carry the new ‘link line' between the two halves of the Great Central. The other bridge deck is now being prepared for track, so that trains from the national rail network can resume running again on the GCR (Nottingham) line north of Loughborough.
Sorry Peerrydebell1352 this channel is (mostly) about roads! But I do agfree it is a shame our rail network is so depleted
Also missed the Leicester and Swannington railway (which he was practically on top of) - one of the oldest in the UK and still running. If you mention Ultimate, then perhaps a mention of Noble in Leicester would make sense too. As he was passing through the area, the Caterpillar works at Peckleton used to be an airfield and a site for Reid and Sigrist - who set up a training school that existed through the 1939-1945 minor disagreement and even tried to sell an aircraft of their own design.
@@curtisbrown3927 Still running? There's none of it left!
@@Technaudio Sorry - meant to say the Burton line. Parts of the Swannington still exist in that it was absorbed into the Burton line (notably by Desford etc).
The Brush works in Loughborough made the Class 47, often regarded as the most successful diesel loco built for British Rail.
But it's not a 37 though is it?
#GrowlersRule
@@garethaethwy Which isn't a Peak, or a Deltic, or a Western, or a Whistler...you get the idea...
Not to mention the D0280 Falcon prototype, the ubiquitous and long lived class 30/31 (same locos, different engine & ancillaries as it turned out the Mirrlees JVS12T power unit was a bit crap and was replaced by an EE 12SVT lump) and the mighty, but ultimately unsuccessful HS4000 Kestrel.
@@GreenJimll ...and of course the real king of the diesels.....the might Valenta-powered HST's...
@@BibTheBoulderTheOriginalOne oh very much so, but think you may think I was saying that without my tongue firmly planted in my cheek at the time...
John Wycliffe - Wyclef Jean.
It all makes sense now 😁
Sadly, he's gone til November
@@Mattheq I heard he's got 50 Bentley's in the West Indies. . .
have you ever seen them both in the same room together?
@@AFCManUk it doesn't matter.
My Grandad bought Frank Whittle's old car. It was a white Rover P6 V8. He got it from his widow. Way back in the day.
I'm surprised you didn't visit Butthole Lane in Shepshed.
I thought that too 😂
Butthole Lane. So many jokes, so little time.
Or Every Street in Leicester - not rude but rather amusing, what, haha.
These episodes get better and better.
Ashby-de-la-Zouch that little known place that churned out some very famous names - JetPac, Pssst, Cookie, Lunar Jetman, Tranz Am, Atic Atac, Sabre Wulf and many others :)
it's also where crisps come from 🤣
It’s still “a stupid name” though….
It's also where the actor Stephen Graham lives.
@@garyfreeman896nope that would be ibstock
@@mrgent112 I'm just going on what his wife Hannah Walters told me when I met her.
Hehehe Jon pointed at a Willey XD
*hehehe willey*
Maybe John, as scrap dealers on Ebay advertise their services with the lowest cost piece available (usually a wheel nut), Ultima could send you a wheel nut and say "for all your hard work promoting us, have a part you can add to your car when you've got it!"?
I was given a voucher once for money off my first Ferrari when I eventually bought it.........
It was a 10 pence promissory note in a birthday card!
Nice of the route to very deftly avoid coalville.
not a word on the hinckley rail bridg, the most hit bridge in the UK!
Hinckley, home to Triumph Motorcycles. Rover cars also had something to do with Frank Whittle/Rolls Royce and jet engines. And since when did Leicester stop being a city? 😉
"And since when did Leicester stop being a city"...When it became a Mecca?
@@BibTheBoulderTheOriginalOne one bingo hall does not a city make
@@gurrrn1102 Indeed...but more mosques than you can shake a stick at pretty well tell you what a city is about...
@@BibTheBoulderTheOriginalOne yeah there's lots of muslims, it's still a city
@@BibTheBoulderTheOriginalOne There's significantly more churches than mosques, but, hey, when have facts ever got in the way of stupid comments?
An episode which almost burst at the seams. So much cracking content. Well done Jon. 👏👏👍😀
In Coalville there used to be the Palitoy factory, which made, amongst many things, Star Wars action figures, and Action Man. The factory has long gone, but on the site is a housing estate, where you will find an 'Action Man Road', and a 'Pippa Avenue' - Pippa being a British simalcrum of 'Barbie', if I remember correctly.
I bet that Action Man Road sign gets 'borrowed' regularly.
Joking aside, I'd love that as an address.
Pippa was a smaller figure than Barbie. Tressy ("her hair grows") was the Palitoy's Barbie equivalent. As a bloke I shouldn't know this, but long hours gawping at a telly can do that to you. Which is why I haven't watched it since the millennium.
ua-cam.com/video/6twfC1MG9o0/v-deo.html yes indeed.
My mum worked for Palitoy. Among other things she made the Action man uniforms and parachute and the Gollywogs. (I know, you can’t say it any more)
@@janskeet1382 Action Man was GI Joe made under license. I became aware of GI Joe from American superhero comics, along with submarines you could sit in and glasses that saw through clothing. Incredible. The first turned out to be cardboard if I recall correctly, and the second had feathers in the lenses. I didn't even get Action Man, but Tommy Gunn, a Pedigree Toys version who looked like he'd been in a fire. Tommy Gunn went on to become the Captain Scarlet figure.
I like this video so I pressed the button specifically for that 👉🏻
Me too! 👍✌🖖
Is there?
👍
Sundays are fab with facts, sarcasm and swearing. Love it👍
And don't forget the trains!
"Yea, course it fucking is."
The sheer disdain! Love it.
Nice one, thanks for watching!
I love the witty humour so much fun to watch this channel
I'm so glad we all had a collective Wycliffe Jean thought ❤
Only because he pronounced it incorrectly. I'm sure he does this on purpose now.
Properly fascinating video purely because I now live in rugby, and grew up in thringstone, (literally a few seconds walk away from some of the places you were stood! In thringstone woods!).
The field to the right of Grace Dieu ruins, has a statue in called the rusty mary. The statue was in remembrance of one of the nuns at the priory and was designed by the winner of a competition at the local primary school. The winner of which was me! My original drawing is still on the wall at the school!
My dad also worked at the brush for 32 years too!
Lots of story’s from an area I’m very very familiar with!
These videos get better all the time. I was howling at the Wycliff reference and the insertion of the track… I thought to myself “I bet he puts another snippet of it in further along” and you did 🤣 Your sense of humour is like mine. And being a car nut - was not only very pleased to see about the Ultima factory but I didn’t realise the connection between Noble and the McLaren F1! My day is complete now!
I love roundabouts with interesting stuff on it it makes the Rona out a lot better and fun to drive around ❤
I went to skool🙃 at Lutrerworth Grammer(actually a comprehensive) and remember the sound of the jet engines from Bitteswell Aerodrome-now Magna Park.even got a display from the Rex Arrows one day during a lesson which the whole school turned out to watch.
The Wycliffe John gag at the start was brilliant. It made me giggle
I found this really interesting especially as my daughter lives in Shepshed and I’m really interested in disused railways
John's Planes, Trains & Autos with a smattering of British countryside. Thanks for all you do M8. Take care & stay safe.
I want to recommend John for Parliament (wicked sweet awsome party}
going to the university in Loughborough its nice to actually recognise some of these places on this episode! always thought the abandoned priory looks cool when passing by.
Gloucester dude here... Those aircraft were tested on an airfield a half mile from my home, now a housing estate with easy access to the M5.. A pub carrying the Whittle name was also built on the site, and Dowty (builders or aircraft props and landing gear) has a production facility on the site.
Dowty also made hydraulic chocks and props for coal mines too !😏
We had a Whittle pub in Lutterworth on the Leicester Road but they knocked it down for flats about 10 years ago.
Gloster?
The first flight was from Moreton Vallence, I think?
@@chriswalford4161which is now severed by the M5, and was originally a proposed site for a motorway services, hence the 'ghost' slipways still there to this day. Wikipedia says the prototype first flew from Cranwell, after testing at Brockworth (Gloster's own airfield). Gloster Meteors and Javelins were first flown from Moreton Valence though.
The "scaffolding" remark about the car reminded me of something I once read about a car, possibly a Lotus model, that was frequently modified to add frame members that the joke was engineers built a prototype frame, then removed pieces until it collapsed under its own weight and added the last one back.
Coalville (one end of the Charnwood Forest Railway) was where Action Man, among many other products of Palitoy, were made
Hi John, it's been awesome. See you do some road trips in my local area. Yes, the town of Leicester city isn't the nicest place like it used to be many years ago. A lot of people avoid it now. Have a great day and there's nothing like a good pork pie
I was born and grew up in Hinckley and went to school in Lutterworth. You forgot to mention in Hinckley is Triumph motorcycles (and the scandalous rumours surrounding the demise of the old factory and the commissioning of the new one) and that John Wilcox racing engines of Hinckley built and developed the Rover K series engine for Rover.
I had a Rover 200 c 1995 nice car fitted with the K series
@@john07973 the K series is a really misunderstood engine. They are well known for head gasket issues, however an uprated gasket along with regular coolant changes will solve that. They make quite a lot of power for their displacement
@@john07973 Yes my mum also with the not-so-common 8v 1.4…
I've lived in Shepshed for 23 years and knew almost none of that information about Shepshed and Ashby! Fascinating!!
I am certain that the people of Yorkshire were well bitter well before the Battle of Bosworth.
You'd be bitter too if you had to live next door to Lancashire, especially the bit that contains Manchester. 😉
@@Kevin-mx1vi I grew up in Rochdale - this very fact should rev you up!! Love and kisses, xxxx
Yorkshire is famous for its bitter...
Another fantastic and informative video Jon!
Jon……. How could you not mention Hinckley’s Triumph motorcycle factory…….🎉 Still churning out many many 100% Blitish motorcycles from its factory(s) in Thailand. 🥳🇬🇧
Hope you appreciate this Jon, but i forgot to press the like button, so sat and watched it a second time, just to give you the like .👍
🤦♂️
"... and I'm on a bench." Nothing gets past you :)
The War of the Roses has absolutely nothing to do with the counties of Yorkshire or Lancashire but everything to do with the houses of York and Lancaster, two rival families who just happen to have the titles of those two places but very little geographical connection.
My grandad was part of the team who constructed the plane on the roundabout in Lutterworth. He was also involved in the transportation to get it there in the first place.
Well. I was in Hinkley this morning picking up a new to me car!
I liked the part where you told us you were on a bench (whilst sitting on a bench) so I’m going to hit the button that’s specifically for that!!👍
Wycliffe Peugeot garage was in Lutterworth in the 90's for many years makes more sense now.
I live near all this stuff so I've now got something else to go check out thanks Jon 😁
I believe their showroom was dismantled and re-built at Bruntingthorpe where it was used as a hospitality suite for their corporate events..
No mention of Radical in Peterborough but this episode is WSA! Keeps getting better, keep ‘em coming. 😊
I bet that hotel mysteriously burns down.
Awesome Jon, I'm a Leicester lad myself, and despite being a bit of a shit hole, we do have some some cracking history, I now live just on the edge of Rutland, our village was a leper hospital a thousand years ago lol
My mentality about living in Leicester has always been "it's a bit of a shithole, but it's my shithole"
@KieranJamesHickman I can relate 😂 to be fair, once you leave the city (which took me 37yrs) and get to the countryside villages, it's lovely
You might want to check your research on the Wars of the Roses - it was actually between supporters of the Dukes of York and Lancaster, not the counties of Yorkshire and Lancashire...
Wow 62% have qualifications 😂😂😂😂😂 brilliant video Jon
Thank you 👋
"... and I'm on a bench." Perfect!
I will never probably met you John, but you do add the highlight to my Sundays. Keep up the good work mate
Hi John.
Love your channel.
Just a random suggestion for a video to make….. the history of the British tarmac road. When it turned from a muddy track byway into an A road.
Cheers
I remember Ashby-de-la-Zouch as home of ZX Spectrum game developers "Ultimate Play the Game"
That's true. They were based at Rawdon Terrace, next door to The Royal Hotel. I live a 10 minute walk from there.
Also missed the centre of England near Fenny Drayton, a mile or so west of MIRA on the A5 and just a few miles from Bosworth Battlefield.
YES! My area finally! Was hoping i was driving past in your shots but unfortunately not 😂
A few miles down the A5 was the old Rugby Radio Station, we had huge radio masts that sent signals to submarines, and my village next to it had letters in the war saying we might be bombed! Crazy!
highlight of the weekend. seeing Willey and your incredulity at another "most haunted" place. great video.
9:38 who else was definitely listing to Jon sign off, and not distracted by the plant / weed on the right (creeping us out and stealing the lime light). 😂
My name is Jon and Sundays wouldn’t be Sundays without me stood in a field
Or sat on a bench!
Very near Market Bosworth there is a place called Nailstone where in 1981 a Dan Air HS-748 airliner crashed into a field with the loss of all 3 on board.
Well done jon somehow you avoided the mira test track along with fenny drayton and the United biscuit company on the way too!
that little bridge @7.44 🙂 that's what i waited for, a little bridge , slightly overgrown, magic, sunday eve complete 😊😊
Re: 25% of the population having no qualifications.
Remember that before 1965 most children at Secondary Moderns (so most children) did not do any exams before leaving school at 15 - they just got jobs, often from local employers who visited the schools to hire them. In 1965 the CSE exam was invented, after which more children did get formal qualifications, but even so it was probably not "normal" until the school leaving age was raised in 1972.
This means that most people born before c1955 left school without formal qualifications. That on its own is about 10-15% of the population.
If you then add in population that is under 16 - ie. not old enough to have any formal qualifications - 25% is, if anything, quite low.
Then - one 1970 'O'level & no budgerigar. Now - a retired pilot examiner. 'Never give up!'
I doubt that a statistic like that would include people younger than 16.
So that number is probably only for adults or for 16+
@loddude5706 Ah, but did you get a budgie?
Yep, my mum went to a secondary modern and left at 15 with no opportunity to get qualifications.
So the age profile of the county cf the country also has to be factored in, and perhaps poverty levels.
@@Jehty_ Trouble is we don't know. And U16s are people
Don't forget Loughborough's other claim to fame - the former home of Ladybird Books
Met some Australians on a narrowboat holiday at Trent Lock years ago, they asked us how long it would take them to get to "Looobabaroooga".
Took us a while to figure out what they meant.
Hopefully the hotel won't suffer from a case of 'mysterious spontaneous combustion' .
I'm loving this series. Random places with random bits of history thrown in that you never knew would be interesting. Lovely :)
Maybe because I've had a few drinks before watching this episode, but that sign really made me chuckle. Great episode. I hope you get your Ultima one day.
Yes! Top quality content! 👊😎👍
Ah Hinckley, my now home town. Slowly being consumed by industrial sites and HGVs. It is also the birth place of the handsome cab.
Frank Whittle's jet was not the first to fly - that honour belongs to the Heinkel 178 flown by Erich Warsitz. You also failed to mention the most interesting thing about the castle in Ashby de la Zouch - it has an underground tunnel that runs from the castle to the nearby manor house that could be used for escape in a time of seige, it used to be open to the public, not sure if it still is..?
The last clip should have been about the bell foundry in Loughborough ( pronounced Loogabarooga )......thus inserting a bell end 😉
Great video John, brilliant as always,and you covered a couple of my favourite subjects, especially frank whittle 😀👌👍
Really good video Jon. Thanks very much your channel goes from strength to strength!!
Big brave John dissing the haunted ruins... In broad daylight. 😀
Ash is good for fertilizing soil so it's not littering 😊
Cheers for another great video
The LS7 is an American Chevrolet LS based big block Chevrolet engine FYI!
American engines and a British chassis are a match made in heaven
Leicestershire is a great county in the East Midlands and is steeped in lots of history. I haven’t been to Leicester and Loughborough before.
The right third of the railway map you presented showed the railway through Cleveleys to Fleetwood (where the river Wyre meets the sea) ... that's a long way from Leicestershire!
Well spotted! One helluva a way away!
You have nailed your editing and comic timing dude, spot on 😂
Fully on our stomping ground for this episode and learnt a few things about our neck of the woods! excellent as always! You also missed the town of Measham off... well done! haha
Thanks John, another great video
Caterham were out on the A47 between Hinckley and Leicester and there's the Shackerstone (Battlefield Line) steam railway.
Great video!! Love the jokes
Ultima RS - I want one!
I was thinking Wyclef Jean as I saw the sign, but it is fairly obvious. Smiled at the navigational self-own. Laughed out loud at the rebuttal of ghosts! Thanks for making Sunday special, Jon. 🙂
Also in Hinckley is the Triumph motorcycle factory
This has to be my favourite episode yet! Wicked sweet awesome 👍
*pffwicked
2:50 nothing like a bit of childishness 😂😂. Very interesting and educational, thanks Jon for another one of your episodes. Safe travels
Ive been watching your videos for a while and tgus is one of the best. Thanks
Good to see the village where I live here - Moira.
The other famous thing about Ashby is that it was home to the 80s software company, Ultimate Play The Game which later became Rare.
Getting closer to my last home in the UK - Nottingham! Looking forward to that and discussion about former GCR assets you’ll stumble across when also discussing former canals now filled in - oh, and maybe some roads (Fosse way?)
As you're a petrolhead, you should have given Retropower a shout when in Hinckley.
Thanks
OOO..... On home turf now sort of. When they put that plane on the island it did cause a few issues. Mainly at night when you came down the hill past the golf course you would be confronted by silver plane in your headlamps which did create a bit of a scare. A number of "sheds" on the A5 going the other way are owned by the CofE and provide a lot of income for the church. My only connection with Ashby was when as a child I got stuck up castle tower with fear and had to rescued by the fire brigade as my dad was terrified of heights too. Afterwards I promptly went into the castle "tunnel" and screamed the place down as I don't light enclosed spaces and it was full of poo. Some of us remember the coal mines being open, the one in Coalville springs to mind. Also Loughborough was home to the coach makers who made Panorama Elite coaches that I went to school on.
That part of Leicestershire does have some of the best scenery with Bradgate Park that is a local beauty spot and huge park. Leicester and the shire is much maligned but it has some of the best unspoilt countryside in the UK
Great vid but some notable omissions! Many mentions about Triumph, Great Central railway, Ashby nerd industries, etc, but you drive right past Mallory Park and don't even mention it. Wicked (in it's original meaning)!!
Good one mate, been into Magna Park and Ashby a time or two! 👍
I live a 5 minute walk through the woods away from Grace Dieu Priory! In fact I have a couple of videos on my channel that were filmed there (partly).
EDIT: Good job avoiding the n-word graffiti on the bridge at around 7:57
🤣🤣 you have done my town 👍👍 wicked, sweet, awesome