British Summer Time

It is always an exciting moment for me when I receive delivery of the latest issue of Down Your Way ‘hot off the press’ and the July issue was no exception. This edition has been themed ‘The Freedom of the Countryside’ to coincide with another great event in the Yorkshire calendar -The Great Yorkshire Show. [...]

Punch and Judy

This month we’re telling your holiday tales in Down Your Way, so here our web geek, Phil, recalls his love/hate relationship with one certain bit of beach furniture. A beach isn’t a beach without a red and white striped box, dormant for about ninety percent of its life, but awash with all of human nature [...]

Calling all children of the 60s and 70s!!

Yes. You. You over there with the wardrobe of darted flares, and copies of Top of the Pops annuals sitting next to your box of Top Trumps cards and Twister instructions. We don’t usually come back much further than the 1960′s in our magazine, but we thought that since we’re on the web, and blogging, [...]

The Wild West in West Yorkshire

Brian J Webb of Doncaster shares his memories of the ‘Horse Operas’. To the strains of the William Tell overture the Lone Ranger rode across our new 10-inch black and white television screen and into my seven-year-old life. It was 1954 and from that moment I couldn’t get enough of TV westerns. My appetite was [...]

Victims of a Scarborough warning

It was five-past eight on a murky, dark morning on the 16th December 1914 and Scarborough’s fog-horn on the lighthouse top was booming eerily across the town – ‘F-o-r-g! F-o-r-g!’ My father, Billy Fox, was eleven at the time, and as usual at this time of day he was doing up his boots before doing his morning chore of running across the fields below his home in Trafalgar Road to feed the pigs on his Dad’s allotment on the North Side. Granny Fox clutched her chest and exclaimed – “Thunder!” But then the bang was followed by a rapid round of ‘booms’. The penny dropped – this was not thunder this was gunfire!