nameplate_e
Mike Turner Action at the harbour (small)

Next Meeting
Please click here for the date of the next meeting

ON SATURDAY 24TH JANUARY 2009 at FOLKESTONE HARBOUR STATION........... SOUTHERN RAILWAY BATTLE OF BRITAIN PACIFIC 34067 'TANGMERE' COMPLETE WITH GOLDEN ARROW FLAGS AND REGALIA

Membership
 To download a copy of the membership application form, please click here

Forum
To join our forum and interact with others on this exciting project, please click here.

POSTERS
To download a poster to display in your window or give to a friend, please click here

This Website is paid for and is managed by Williams Radio and Electrical. Click Here

Chalk on Wood

We wish all our current and future members a very happy and prosperous New Year 2009!

FHS - CHALK ON WOOD – Ruth A. Parkinson

Chalk on Wood, a temporary installation, took place on Sunday November 11th 2007 in the fading shadow of the once-glorious Folkestone Harbour Station.

Driven by intense feelings of compassion for the fate, of those young forgotten lives, in WW1 and the imminent destruction of the station, Ruth was inspired by a “tender letter” written by a Canadian soldier in 1917. She spent four hours painting with chalk from Folkestone’s shoreline, upon her canvas, the wooden planks of the harbour arm. The original planking is in a very precarious state and that, coupled with a rising tide, rendered her very vulnerable. However, not ten minutes after completion of the work, a rainbow appeared in the sky; what an accolade. 

Folkestone 11 Nov

    “Chalk on wood came from my heart: it was a silent tribute to the ten million men and women who passed through Folkestone Harbour Station during the Great War on their way to the Western Front.” 

Symbolically the fragility of the work mirrors the temporary brief lives of the soldiers who passed that way. The exposure of the text, encompassing the dreams and hopes of the young soldier’s life, seemed prematurely and hauntingly washed into the sea by the rain and salt spray.

How very sad that the only memory to the millions, who departed these shores from Folkestone Harbour Station, some bound for certain death, will be obliterated by a concrete erasure.

 

To listen to an interview with Ruth, please click on the picture above.