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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Library Live
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DTSTART:20220101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20230405T080000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20230630T170000
DTSTAMP:20260408T140858
CREATED:20230330T113319Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230330T113627Z
UID:7060-1680681600-1688144400@librarylive.co.uk
SUMMARY:Richard Cobden – Manchester Citizen to ‘International Man’
DESCRIPTION:An exhibition tracing Richard Cobden’s life\, career and legacy \nRichard Cobden (1804-1865) is usually remembered as leader of the Anti-Corn Law League\, which campaigned for free trade in food during the ‘hungry forties’\, but his public career embraced far more. He was a supporter of educational reform\, press freedom\, and extension of the vote. He was a leading figure of the international peace movement\, a critic of British foreign policy\, and an opponent of slavery and imperialism. However\, before he became the ‘international man’\, Sussex-born Cobden was an active Manchester citizen: a contributor to local societies and leading campaigner behind the establishment of Manchester’s first elected municipal council. \nGround Floor\nTurn left after Archives+ entrance:\nCobden and Manchester\nAnti-Corn Law League Manufacturer \nFirst Floor (Displays found throughout primary corridor outside Reading Room): \nMan on the Make to ‘Manchester Manufacturer’\nEducational Reformer\nAnti-Corn Law Leaguer\nApostle of Free Trade\nPeace Campaigner\nChampion of the Press\nTreaty Negotiator\nFriend of America\nFamily Man \nDisplays in Reading Room:\nDeath and Memorialisation\nLegacy and Inheritance \nThe exhibition is part of a project led by Leeds Beckett University and the University of East Anglia and funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council\, which is making thousands of Cobden’s letters available online and using his correspondence to develop teaching materials around the theme of active citizenship. \nFree – just drop in – please consider making a donation to support our cultural programme if you can\, either online or at one of our cash or contactless donation boxes in Central Library
URL:https://librarylive.co.uk/event/richard-cobden-manchester-citizen-to-international-man/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20230415T080000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20230513T170000
DTSTAMP:20260408T140858
CREATED:20230418T111635Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230418T111737Z
UID:7128-1681545600-1683997200@librarylive.co.uk
SUMMARY:British Ugandan Asians at 50 Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Exhibition to mark the 50th Anniversary of the Ugandan Expulsion\, highlighting the experience of British Ugandan Asians and the many volunteers who helped them.\nIn August 1972\, Ugandan President Idi Amin ordered the country’s Indian and Pakistani communities to leave within 90 days. Many of the displaced were British citizens and\, as a result\, around 28\,000 people emigrated to the UK\, where the community has gone to make a disproportionate impact on the economic and social life of Britain. \nTo mark the 50th anniversary\, British Ugandan Asians at 50 (BUA@50) has recorded oral histories to capture the recollections of those who were residents of resettlement camps\, or who volunteered to help with the reception of the expellees during the crucial early months after their arrival. The volunteers formed part of an extraordinary response involving 63 voluntary organisations that\, at its peak\, staffed sixteen reception and resettlement camps across the UK. \nThis touring exhibition retells the story through period photographs\, oral history footage\, press clippings and memorabilia relating to the Expulsion and resettlement. It will include excerpts from the interviews. \nBritish Ugandan Asians at 50 (BUA50.ORG) – is a programme of the India Overseas Trust with the support of The National Lottery Heritage Fund. It honours not only a largely unknown part of the history of British volunteering heritage\, but an extraordinary historical episode that helped shape modern Britain’s diversity. \nFree – drop in- please make a donation to support our Library Live cultural programme at one of our cash or contactless donation boxes in the venue\, or online
URL:https://librarylive.co.uk/event/british-ugandan-asians-at-50-exhibition/
LOCATION:Archives+ Ground Floor
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20230415T080000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20230630T170000
DTSTAMP:20260408T140858
CREATED:20230330T093728Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230518T135052Z
UID:7054-1681545600-1688144400@librarylive.co.uk
SUMMARY:50 Years of Rock Photography
DESCRIPTION:Jill Furmanovsky : Photographing the Invisible \nFor the last 50 years\, Jill Furmanovsky has been photographing music’s greatest icons. Now for the first time\, Jill has created a fascinating retrospective featuring some of her most famous works as well as hidden gems from her extensive archive. \nGuest curated by Noel Gallagher and photo-historian Gail Buckland\, the exhibition which is presented by Rockarchive.com features over 100 images including subjects such as Pink Floyd\, Led Zeppelin\, Miles Davis\, The Police\, Bob Marley\, Chic\, The Rolling Stones\, The Clash\, The Cure\, Amy Winehouse\, Stevie Wonder\, The Pretenders and Beyonce\, to name just a few. \nHighlights include ‘meditations from the pit’ that capture the sheer joy and exuberance of live photography\, intimate on-the-road shoots carried out for the music press of the 70’s\, 80’s and 90’s and fashion-inspired portraiture from The Face era. Through the exhibition\, visitors will be witness to Jill’s unique relationship with her subjects including more reclusive subjects such as Jeff Buckley\, Eric Clapton and Bob Dylan\, as well as open-armed collaborations with Chrissie Hynde\, Madness\, and her greatest muse\, Oasis\, for whom Jill has included a section of previously unseen images. Contemporary content includes photographs taken in her year as Abbey Road’s artist-in-residence in 2017 and shots from the Glastonbury Festival featuring Stormzy and Billie Eilish. \nBringing the stories behind some of the imagery closer\, an audio tour narrated by Jill and some special guests will be available for visitors to access through their own headphones. \nFree – please consider making a donation to support our Library Live programme if you can\, either online\, or at one of our cash or contactless donation boxes in Central Library
URL:https://librarylive.co.uk/event/50-years-of-rock-photography/
LOCATION:First Floor Exhibition Hall
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20230424T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20230424T193000
DTSTAMP:20260408T140858
CREATED:20230126T150654Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230414T153941Z
UID:6887-1682359200-1682364600@librarylive.co.uk
SUMMARY:The Amazing Watkins; Manchester's Forgotten Stars
DESCRIPTION:Join us for this illustrated public lecture\, by Geoff Scargill of The Watkin Society. \nAbsalom and Edward Watkin – father and son – were key figures in the development of Manchester in the 19th century. \nAbsalom helped draw up the petition that brought the horror of the Peterloo Massacre to public attention. Although he was basically a shy person and prone to depression he spent most of his adult life fighting for the rights of the poorest people. A close friend of the great Richard Cobden\, he campaigned for voting reform and for the repeal of the infamous Corn Laws that kept the price of bread so high that in bad harvest years thousands starved to death. \nAbsalom’s son\, Edward\, was one of the best-known and exciting characters of the Victorian Era. He assisted his father in the fight to repeal the Corn Laws and persuaded Manchester businessmen to close their companies at 2pm on Saturdays in what became known as the Saturday Half-day Holiday. (It was 10 years before the rest of the country caught up.) He led the campaign to create the first Parks for the People in the hellholes of industrial Manchester and Salford. Nationally and internationally famous as The Railway King\, he built the last mainline into London\, the Great Central Railway\, from Manchester. A great visionary\, he started a Channel Tunnel and an Eiffel Tower in London and helped create Canada! Knighted in 1869\, he was an MP for 35 years. When he died over 100 obituaries appeared throughout the world. \nFree – booking required – please make a donation to support our Library Live cultural programme at one of our cash or contactless donation boxes in the venue\, or online
URL:https://librarylive.co.uk/event/the-watkin-society-workshops/
LOCATION:Performance Space
CATEGORIES:Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://librarylive.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/AbsalomandEdwardWatkin.jpg
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