Blyth: Difference between revisions

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'''Whitley Bay''' was [[Professor]] [[Nicholas Bridgeman]]'s childhood home, and the place where his father and mother died. Bridgeman returned to the tiny village bi-annually, commemorating their lives, and the time where he spread their ashes into the ocean from a cliff.
{{wikipediainfo|Blyth, Northumberland}}
'''Blyth''' was a [[Northumberland|Northumbrian]] [[village]] that was [[Professor]] [[Nicholas Bridgeman]]'s childhood home, and the place where his father and mother died. [[Alexander K. Bridgeman|His father]] had settled in the village after ten years in the [[Royal Air Force]], due to the proximity to the [[shipyard]]s in [[Newcastle]] and other parts of [[Tyne]], which regularly employed veterans.


The couple were not buried in the town because the local [[Catholic Church|Catholic]] [[priest]] refused so to do. Nicholas' mother had [[euthanasia|euthanised]] [[Alexander K. Bridgeman|her vegetative husband]] with [[sleeping pill]]s, and then overdosed on them herself.  
The couple were not buried in the town because the local [[Catholic Church|Catholic]] [[priest]] refused so to do. Nicholas' mother had [[euthanasia|euthanised]] her vegetative husband with [[sleeping pill]]s, and then overdosed on them herself. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Invasion of the Cat-People (novel)|Invasion of the Cat-People]]'')


On one of these visits, Nicholas discovered that the closest city to provide [[ambulance]] service to the town was [[Carlisle]].  ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Invasion of the Cat-People (novel)|Invasion of the Cat-People]]'')
[[Category:Northumbrian towns and villages]]
{{wikipediainfo}}
[[Category:Towns and villages from the real world]]
[[Category:English towns and villages]]

Latest revision as of 04:00, 3 September 2020

Blyth

Blyth was a Northumbrian village that was Professor Nicholas Bridgeman's childhood home, and the place where his father and mother died. His father had settled in the village after ten years in the Royal Air Force, due to the proximity to the shipyards in Newcastle and other parts of Tyne, which regularly employed veterans.

The couple were not buried in the town because the local Catholic priest refused so to do. Nicholas' mother had euthanised her vegetative husband with sleeping pills, and then overdosed on them herself. (PROSE: Invasion of the Cat-People)