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Friday, November 14, 2008
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This is the web site for information about the ringing of Bells at both the Ballarat Town Hall as well as at St Peters Anglican Church................ TIMES St Peters Wednesday Evening 7:30 pm till 8:30 ish Sunday Mornings 9:30 am till 10:00 am Town Hall Every second Sunday of the month 2:00 pm till 4:00pm
This is the web site for information about the ringing of Bells at both the Ballarat Town Hall as well as at St Peters Anglican Church................ TIMES St Peters Wednesday Evening 7:30 pm till 8:30 ish Sunday Mornings 9:30 am till 10:00 am Town Hall Every second Sunday of the month 2:00 pm till 4:00pm
The year was 1891, and around the world great change was afoot. The Dalton Gang were aboard the Southern Pacific conducting the first great train robbery, Britain was being linked to the continent by telephone, and the 1st world weightlifting championship was being held. Across Russia Jews were fleeing their homes as they were expelled by cossacks, and work on the trans-Siberian railway began. Thomas Edison patented both the motion picture camera and the radio, and in Mino-Owari 7,300 japanese died in a massive earthquake.
Meantime in Ballarat the Bell Tower at the Town Hall had turned twenty years old, and the foundation stone for St Peter's Tower was being laid. In Whitechapel, three years after the streets had been haunted by Jack the Ripper, the new bells were being cast at the Mears and Stainbank foundry, each bearing a cast-in inscription. Nothing is without a cost, however, and the expense of the tower and bells was covered by the benefactor Mr James Fry. Construction was completed and dedicated on July 3, 1892.
For the better half of a century only six of the eight originally commissioned bells were rigged for full circle change ringing, with the remainder having been hung dead. In 1960 the third bell was removed for recasting before being dedicated again and ringing continued as before until July 3, 1966 when all the bells were returned to Whitechapel foundry for retuning. A new bell frame of steel was constructed at the same time to enable full circle ringing, and upon return of the bells a full eight bell change rang out for the first time. The event made front page news in the next day's "The Courier", sharing space with such other headlines as "France Explodes Nuclear Bomb - Protests Follow", "U.S. Jet Over N-Bomb Site", and "Digger Killed: Another Dies in Borneo Mishap". It seems even amid the doom and gloom, the bells could sound a peal of hope to the community.
The eminent Ballarat Bellringers can be seen practicing at the Town Hall every second Sunday of each month .At St Peters they practice every Wednesday evening and service ring every Sunday morning In addition they also sound the bells for annual civic events such as Christmas and festivals, as well as prestigious one-off occasions.
Think you might have what it takes to be a bell ringer? Quite possibly you do. You don't require great strength or an understanding of advanced calculus, (although you are still welcome to join in if you do!) you merely need a sense of rhythm, memory and concentration. Coming from all professions, ringers range in age from twelve to ninety.
Why not give it a go from the comfort of your own chair? Have a go at following the score below by clicking on the different bells. Confused? Don't worry, if you want to try it for real, you can always follow someone's lead.
The inscriptions cast on the eight bells in St. Peters Tower