Book description
The I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue team of Barry Cryer, Graeme
Garden and Tim Brooke-Taylor, in the company of their esteemed
chairman Humphrey Lyttelton, have been recording their BBC radio show
around the UK for longer than any of them can remember ... that's
about a week - or twenty minutes in the case of Barry Cryer. At each
venue Humph would present a short history of the location, written by
Iain Pattinson, to the mutual delight of the audience, the team and
their delightful scorer Samantha (who somehow always found time for a
rewarding poke around the area's backstreets).
We are privileged to present, in gazetteer form, the very best of
Humph's local histories form Radio 4's multi award-winning 'antidote
to panel games'. As accurate as Wikipedia and as comprehensive as
Reader's Digest, this unique guide tells you everything you
never knew you wouldn't ever need to know about the background and
inhabitants of Britain's most prominent towns and cities. The
intelligent reader will waste no time in adding it to their collection.
Bristol
It was from Bristol in 1497 that John Cabot set off to find a new
route to the Spice Islands by sailing north-west. He instead
discovered a strange, hostile world which he named 'Newfoundland',
until the natives explained that they actually called it 'Swansea'.
Nottingham
It's well documented in official records that the city's original
name was 'Snottingham' or 'home of Snotts', but when the Normans came,
they couldn't pronounce the initial letter 'S', so decreed the town be
called 'Nottingham'or the 'home of Notts'. It's easy to understand why
this change was resisted so fiercely by the people of Scunthorpe.
Brighton
A settlement is first recorded in Brighton as long as ago as 3000
BC, when Celtic Druids practised their ancient worship of oaks,
mistletoe and virgins, and indeed, oaks and mistletoe are still
plentiful in Brighton.