Raymond Hayes Photo Story by Matthew Cundall, Leeds University.
Voices from the past
Matthew Cundall from the University of Leeds blogs about new resources he’s created for the museum
When Raymond Hayes died in 2000, it closed the book on a chapter of Ryedale life.
For nearly 90 years, Raymond had a front row seat in the life of Hutton-le-Hole. As the local photographer and later as a prominent archaeologist, he saw the village change forever. Before his eyes, generations came and went.
His photographic studio, now an exhibit here, has allowed visitors to see the objects which surrounded his life.
But these objects can’t tell us what he thought about the times in which he lived. What did Raymond’s generation think about the impact of rising house prices, depopulation and increased tourism? How did he react to the closure of the local school and the outbreak of the Second World War? How did they speak?
Eleven years after his death, we can help answer these questions. Thanks to a new partnership between Ryedale Folk Museum and the School of English at the University of Leeds, we’re making public the lost voices of the past.
In 1976, Raymond was asked about a range of topics by a University of Leeds researcher. The recording they made that day is fascinating. It tells you something about our society that no history textbook could. You can listen to excerpts from it below, included in a digistory I’ve made for the museum.
Two years ago, the university asked me to come up with ideas for making one of its research archives accessible to museum visitors. My work was to form part of a pilot study for the ‘Language, History, Place’ project. The digistory forms just part of my work with Ryedale and the Dales Countryside Museum in Hawes.
Over the next few years, the University of Leeds and museums like Ryedale will be creating new exhibits based on the Leeds Archive of Vernacular Culture. A treasure trove of sound recordings, word maps and articles, the archive is kept in the confines of the Special Collections section of the university’s library.
I’m just the first of the many students who will work on this project over the next few years. They, like me, will focus not only on the recordings of Raymond Hayes, but also on other fascinating topics, like local folklore and dialect.
Some of the results of my work can be found in the museum café. There, on display is a selection of the results from a remarkable study into the language of dairy farming. Started forty years ago, it lay unfinished until 2010, when I set to work on compiling and mapping the responses for the museum.
The results show the enormous dialect variation in Ryedale and Yorkshire as a whole. Importantly for the University of Leeds, they add to the university’s extensive knowledge of local dialects.
You can find out more about the archive here, but if you want a taster of what we’ll be making available, watch my digistory below or check out the display board in the museum café.
Matthew Cundall from the University of Leeds blogs about new resources he’s created for the museum
When Raymond Hayes died in 2000, it closed the book on a chapter of Ryedale life.
For nearly 90 years, Raymond had a front row seat in the life of Hutton-le-Hole. As the local photographer and later as a prominent archaeologist, he saw the village change forever. Before his eyes, generations came and went.
His photographic studio, now an exhibit here, has allowed visitors to see the objects which surrounded his life.
But these objects can’t tell us what he thought about the times in which he lived. What did Raymond’s generation think about the impact of rising house prices, depopulation and increased tourism? How did he react to the closure of the local school and the outbreak of the Second World War? How did they speak?
Eleven years after his death, we can help answer these questions. Thanks to a new partnership between Ryedale Folk Museum and the School of English at the University of Leeds, we’re making public the lost voices of the past.
In 1976, Raymond was asked about a range of topics by a University of Leeds researcher. The recording they made that day is fascinating. It tells you something about our society that no history textbook could. You can listen to excerpts from it below, included in a digistory I’ve made for the museum.
Two years ago, the university asked me to come up with ideas for making one of its research archives accessible to museum visitors. My work was to form part of a pilot study for the ‘Language, History, Place’ project. The digistory forms just part of my work with Ryedale and the Dales Countryside Museum in Hawes.
Over the next few years, the University of Leeds and museums like Ryedale will be creating new exhibits based on the Leeds Archive of Vernacular Culture. A treasure trove of sound recordings, word maps and articles, the archive is kept in the confines of the Special Collections section of the university’s library.
I’m just the first of the many students who will work on this project over the next few years. They, like me, will focus not only on the recordings of Raymond Hayes, but also on other fascinating topics, like local folklore and dialect.
Some of the results of my work can be found in the museum café. There, on display is a selection of the results from a remarkable study into the language of dairy farming. Started forty years ago, it lay unfinished until 2010, when I set to work on compiling and mapping the responses for the museum.
The results show the enormous dialect variation in Ryedale and Yorkshire as a whole. Importantly for the University of Leeds, they add to the university’s extensive knowledge of local dialects.
You can find out more about the archive here, but if you want a taster of what we’ll be making available, watch my digistory below or check out the display board in the museum café.
What an interesting blog, introduced by a thought-provoking photo. The unusual wall painting of the dwellings is also a strangely modern interpretation. Something like this hieroglyphic view of a park by Swiss painter Paul Klee, http://EN.WahooArt.com/A55A04/w.nsf/OPRA/BRUE-8LT475.
ReplyDeleteThe image can be seen at wahooart.com who can supply you with a canvas print of it.