Sunday, 25 November 2007

Pre-Dawn

This shot is one I took myself, at about 6.30am on the way to work. The clock has stopped working after the recent fire (see news).

Google Earth



Winter

Old Postcard 5

Old Postcard 4

Old Postcard 3


This 'night' view of the Mount looks suspiciously like the day time photo below.

Old Postcards 2

Old Postcards 1





Photo By ~Idgie~


http://www.flickr.com/people/idgie/

The Mount in the News: Firework Vandals Hit Landmark

COUNCIL bosses and a business are counting the cost after fire ravaged a historic landmark.
The Mount on the seafront suffered a major fire in the early hours yesterday – apparently after a firework was pushed through a window.

Owner Wyre Council is still assessing the extent of the damage – but the flag firm which operates from the 105-year-old listed building is already counting the cost.

Proud to be British has been brought to a standstill with the destruction of around £15,000 of stock and damage to offices.

"It's completely wiped everything out," said Jim Elliot, a director of the company, which sells flags all over the world – largely through the internet.

"The stock we had on the ground floor has been completely destroyed.

"Upstairs in the office we are hoping it's just smoke damage. We hope we can get the hard drives out of the computers and carry on.

"It's quite frustrating because we are an internet-based company and unless we can get something on the website, people will still carry on ordering.

"We have orders coming in we can't fulfil – that's the most pressing problem we have.

"We usually get about 200 orders a week ranging from a single flag to hundreds of pounds worth of stock.

Shutter

"The only crumb of comfort is that this is a quieter time – it isn't the middle of the World Cup.

"But we need to be up and running in time for Christmas."

The company also employs two office staff and fellow director, Adrian Waistle. They are urgently looking for temporary premises they can rent until Wyre Borough can effect repairs.

It is believed the fire was started by a firework after someone forced up a steel shutter and then smashed a window.

Firefighters were driving past the Mount Grounds on The Esplanade on their way to another incident when they noticed smoke coming from the pavilion.

Heavy smoke damage also affected the first-floor clock room.

A spokesman for the council said: "It appears some firework tubes were fastened to a railing and pointed at the clock tower.

"But it seems as though the fire was started after someone forced open a security shutter and broke a window on the town side of the pavilion."

At the nearby Marine Hall, a group of youths had set off fireworks which broke a window near the main entrance.

The pavilion was built in 1902 and replaced an earlier structure which looked like a Chinese pagoda. In 1919, the clock was installed as a memorial to Fleetwood residents lost in the Second World War. It was the gift of businessman Isaac Spencer, who owned a dockland factory.
  • Published Date: 07 November 2007
  • Source: Blackpool Gazette

Photo's By Paul Burke

Photo's By Sam Beckwith


http://www.flickr.com/photos/sambeckwith/

Bold Street From The Mount 1901

Photo's By chongsparks




http://www.eyefetch.com/profile.aspx?user=chongsparks

The Mount and Esplanade 1890's


Views From The Mount in the 1950's


Photo's By Peter Hearn

http://www.flickr.com/photos/peter_hearn/

Entrance Building

In 1841 a classical style,single-storey entrance building was built at the southern entrance to the Mount facing London Street. The architect may have been Decimus Burton.






The Mount 2006


Promoting the 'Starteam' single recorded by England FY7 for the 2006 World Cup.

http://www.englandfy7.com/

The Mount Aerial Views







The Mount 1902








In 1902 the new Mount Pavilion opened and soon became a focal point for local people and visitors alike. It was not unknown to see people rolling hard-boiled eggs down the side of the Mount at Easter. Esau Carter Monk, one of the first town commissioners, dispensed refreshments.

The Mount 1960's
























In 1919 Mr Isaac Spencer presented the Clock to the town in memory of the men who died in the First World War

The Original Mount Pavilion





The Mount is the largest of a range of sandhills that once ran along the coastline at Fleetwood. In those days the whole area was open land with a few farms and no habitation.

Originally called Tup Hill or Starr Hill, it was a traditional meeting place before Fleetwood was built. The original Chinese pavilion on the Mount, also known as Prophet or Temple View, which adorned the summit was designed by Decimus Burton and replaced by the present structure in 1902.