"Hull has its own sudden elegancies. People are slow to leave it, quick to return. And there are others who come, as they think, for a year or two, and stay a lifetime, sensing that they have found a city that is in the world yet sufficiently on the edge of it to have a different resonance."
A beginner's guide to culture in Hull...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-25014228
Sadly as someone noted today on the 'lercal' radio, Hull / the people never recovered from*
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hull_Blitz ** a sentiment I agree with
(... Hull was the most severely damaged British city or town apart from London during the Second World War, with 86,715 buildings damaged and 95 per cent of houses damaged or destroyed ...) : (the house I was raised in for the first 3 years of my life was 'slum cleared' so many years ago ....)
- this with useless (no vision for education, infrastructure, transport, culture, economic regeneration, etc. ) local city council over the years,
- a housing / slum** clearance that caused as many problems as it solved
- the decline of it's traditional seafaring industry with very little to fill the financial / employment void
- years of general under achievement on far too many levels
I still love the place, even though I live on the 'outskirts' nowadays, I still work there, support my 'lercal team' (football) regardless of division or 'owner' , & defend it from those whose prejudice clouds their judgement, whilst acknowledging it's failings - Sorry Maz
I feel immensely proud of the successful bid & hope it turns around an undeserved reputation & helps the healing process of
'70 years of hurt'**