South Yorkshire 10th Anniversary
Celebrations
18th February 2007
(by Geoff Norcliffe)
Andrew and Hilary Murfin organised a splendid
day of celebrations to mark the 10th anniversary of the current
South Yorkshire Natter on Sunday 18th February, but before I tell
you about that, pour a drink and let me bore you with a potted history of
the Natter so far.
How it all started
The beginnings came about when
Brian Lewis, Chairman of the then North East Centre, (later changed to the
Yorkshire Centre), set himself a target to re establish a Natter group in
the South of our area and had published in Safety Fast! a letter asking for
people to come forward and get the ball rolling. I thought about this for a
little while, on the one hand I wanted to have a local natter, but on the
other hand I was well aware of the hard work and time commitment necessary
to establish a new group.
If you want something good to come out you
have to make a contribution, so off went a letter to Brian volunteering to
help start a new Natter. After searching around for a suitable venue we
decided on a start date of the fourth Wednesday in February at the Mason’s
Arms in Thorpe Hesley. The inaugural meeting took us by surprise when forty
seven members turned up and queued outside the door of the small TV lounge.
Clearly there was a need for a new natter!
Brian welcomed everyone in and I agreed to
become the Natter Leader. Over the next few months with numbers fluctuating,
we received invaluable help and support from Brian and Val Lewis, Bob and
Lynne Douglas, Tony and Margaret Whitworth and the MG world’s universal
friend, Alan Dakeyne, all experienced Centre organisers.
The Natter Leaders
For the first three years I took
on this job myself, but we all agreed for various reasons to have a change
of Natter Leader every two years – no job for life!
For the next two years Pete Long
handled the job and put in a lot of hard work keeping everyone informed of
what was going on and organising our part in Centre events.
Pete handed over to Keith Pinder, who
organised our meetings really well and used his sense of humour to great
effect in the public speaking part of the role.
Mike Breedon came next, fitting the
task in expertly between his working commitments that took him overseas
quite often and at short notice. Mike always made sure the Natter was sorted
before disappearing on another trip.
Our current Natter Leader is Andrew Murfin
who has taken to the role with great enthusiasm and created a 10th
Anniversary event to be remembered. Andrew’s organisation and polished
public speaking have become features of his first year in office.
The Venues
We started out at the Mason’s Arms in Thorpe Hesley and this venue
served us well for quite some time. The Landlord and Landlady provided good
food and good beer and iced the cake by displaying hand drawn sketches of
various MG models around the room we used. The natter was soon growing too
big for this venue and after the Landlord retired we moved on to the roomier
facilities at the Wortley Arms in Wortley. Our own room upstairs
offered us scope to have talks; slideshows etc and invite visitors to our
Natter nights. Alas, at short notice the pub went the way of many and was
closed for a few months for refurbishment and restaurant conversion,
obliging us to find new premises quickly.
Our current home at the Spencer Arms
in Cawthorne came to the rescue and again provided us with an upstairs room,
good food and a warm welcome.
The Highs
In ten years of thriving and
growing there have been many highs and to mention them all would be a
marathon, but here are a few of the basics:
Runs have always been popular and our first
run took us from Thrybergh Country Park one evening around the local area
and finished at the Black Lion in Firbeck.
Since then there have been countless runs
local and overseas including Le Mans, European Events of the Year and the
extra special European Tour in 2004 organised by Keith and Eileen Pinder,
covering on average 2,500 miles in two weeks.
New Year’s Day has become firmly fixed in the
calendar for a social run usually starting with breakfast at Langsett.
Just after the natter came into being the
Compass Run was initiated by Stuart Mumby of East Yorkshire bringing
together all four natters from their start area to finish together at a
chosen venue and South Yorkshire has supported this joint event every year.
These runs helped to forge South Yorkshire’s
reputation as ”Motoring Gannets” when almost all
started with or finished with, (and often both) a meal.
The South Yorkshire Fun weekend evolved as a
camping event and provided us with an opportunity to have social events on
the Saturday and car events on the Sunday. The weekends have often had a
theme and have included diverse subjects from the Alternative Olympics, the
Battle of Trafalgar and to the Year of the Dog. The social events part has
included a touring party bus, a canal cruise and an evening’s greyhound
racing. The car events have given us treasure hunts, pride of ownership and
naviscats.
Quizzes are prominent in natter nights and
many have been held over the years where a trophy has been won together with
the “honour” of setting the next quiz. The natter went on to donate
the Patrick Heap memorial trophy to the Yorkshire Centre to be presented to
the winning team in the Inter Natter Quiz.
There have been many inter natter and a few
inter club challenges. Ten Pin bowling was popular for a while and SY
usually won the inter natter nights. Indoor karting was another area
for success for the SY team. Racing in endurance events SY proved victorious
on each occasion between natters. Inter Club karting events, Indoor and
Outdoor, organised by the Alfa Romeo Owners Club also provided us with an
outright win, keeping the MG flag to the fore against other clubs.
Natter members, under the guidance of team
manager and South Yorkshire member Mike Breedon helped in the pit lane when
Ecurie Safety Fast! became the outright winners of the Birkett 6 Hour Relay
race in 2003.
There have been visits to various places of
interest including an MG factory tour at Longbridge, Classic Car Show at the
NEC and later this year there will be a weekend visit to Stratford Upon
Avon.
South Yorkshire’s Christmas celebrations have
always had a “different” take on the meal, ignoring the traditional turkey
stuff the natter has set about alternative Christmas fare and visited
Indian, Chinese, Vietnamese, Spanish and even English themed restaurants for
our festivities.
The
Lows
Mercifully there have been few.
Over the ten years we have faced the passing of two members. The first was
Peter Carrigan who had joined the Club after purchasing a convertible
Magnette which he was putting some finishing touches to. Peter only managed
a few visits to the natter and had not quite finished the car when he passed
away suddenly. In a twist of fate this unique car did turn up a couple of
years later with “new to MG” owners John & Shirley Gibson who joined our
natter.
The second was Patrick Heap, who with the
rest of his family was a staunch and popular supporter of the natter.
Patrick was a quiz fan and on first joining us he helped SY win the Inter
Natter Quiz. After his passing the natter provided a trophy for the Quiz in
his memory.
The Features
The natter has provided a broad
spectrum of interest for members with people active at various times in
racing, rallying, sprinting, hillclimbing, autotests, marshalling, show
cars, touring, social events and universally, eating.
The natter has regalia with the Yorkshire
Centre logo and customised South Yorkshire add ons worn proudly at all
events.
There has always been tremendous help and
support between members old and new with advice, shared experiences and
practical assistance. By far the most appreciated feature of this
natter has been the comradeship, friendliness and overall willingness of
everyone to “muck in” and make our events the pleasure they are.
The Anniversary Celebrations
Still with me? Good, here is the report of the Anniversary event I promised
you.
The celebrations day was the 18th
February 2007 and we all gathered at our current natter venue, the Spencer
Arms at Cawthorne in the morning. There to greet us was ample supplies of
coffee, tea and mince pies, yes; they have got to know us well by now.