
Launch of the Guide to Blue Plaques in Ulster - 22 June 2011 |
Some say its about landscape that was here from the beginning, some that it was about buildings - museums, castles and the like, others that it is about the arts/music/culture. It was all about that but he defined it as two themes - one, it was about people, shaping the landscape and being shaped by it; and - two, it was about a sense of place, and if heritage is people and place then the modern day people who spotted this and combined the two is the Ulster History Circle. Because what the Circle does is to give us a sense of people, not in the abstract sense of characters from the past but to commemorate people from the past and give them relevance by pointing out where they lived or worked, about where they were when they invented, or composed or created, how they interacted with those around them in terms of thoughts and inspirations and hopes and dreams. These are living people that the Circle has brought to us: not just in the abstract sense of books on dusty shelves but in the sense of bringing them into our streets, our country roads, our villages and towns and our industrial heartlands. They are no longer located in those dusty books. He said that the Circle actually cheats, very slightly but very cleverly, because it's not just about history, it's also about geography, a sense of place; it's about linking place and people, it marries history and geography in a wonderful way, which gives us the heritage that we are celebrating here today. These people are not 'the great and the good' or those with a high historical profile, they are ordinary people who did extraordinary things. Prof. Murphy said that to bring real people to life you need real people and that the people of the Ulster History Circle to us are absolutely real. He said that the heritage movement in Northern Ireland owes a great debt of gratitude to the Ulster History Circle for what is a major contribution to heritage here. On behalf of the Heritage Lottery Fund he thanked the Circle and wished them well in the future.
She said that while it was great to have information on websites it was nice to have this Guide that you could put in your pocket and take around with you. Coming from Enniskillen it was great to see mention of Oscar Wilde. However, there also was Kathleen Bridle, an inspirational teacher and artist. So it was not just internationally known people that were being honoured but ordinary people as well, who had made a difference. It's about poets and philosophers, geographers and geologists. It's the whole raft of human endeavour and it is important that it continues.
Ms McGinley said, "John Donahue has a lovely phrase 'We all leave an imprint of ourselves on the ether of place' and I think that what you are doing is making this tangible by these blue plaques." She congratulated the Circle and wished it continuing success Copies of the Guide are available, free, in libraries, museums and tourist centres. A PDF version is available HERE |
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