Murals complete Rotary centenary project and celebrate area’s rail heritage

Murals complete Rotary centenary project and celebrate area’s rail heritage

Great Central Way, mural, Rugby Rotary
Nicolo Suglich and Laurence Wilbraham at the bridge.

Colourful artwork depicting Rugby’s origins now adorns Hillmorton Road Bridge, marking the completion of an award-winning four-year Rotary project to upgrade a section of The Great Central Way.

The murals, including the Central Station building, the Houlton transmission station, four famous Rugbeians, and the new ecology found there today, have been created by professional graffiti artists Nicolo and Stefano Suglich.

The inventor of the game of rugby, William Webb Ellis; inventor of the turbojet engine; Sir Frank Whittle, poet Rupert Brook and Rugby School headmaster and historian Thomas Arnold, are all depicted.

It is the final stage of Rugby Rotary Club’s four-year-year centenary project to upgrade a 1.2km section of The Great Central Way in collaboration with Rugby Borough Council and Warwickshire Wildlife Trust.

The Way ceased use as a railway in 1965 when Rugby Central Station was also demolished. Without the resources to manage it along its full length, the council handed over the lease to Warwickshire Wildlife Trust which now maintains the section south of Hillmorton Road. But they don’t have the resources to manage the northern section.

Rugby Rotarian and GCW project leader Laurence Wilbraham, said: “The painting of the murals represents the effective completion of the Rotary Club of Rugby’s Centenary project. After four years of work removing self-seeded trees and invasive vegetation to create glades and large ‘bug hotels’, native flowers have multiplied and there is more insect and bird life now on the section of the Great Central Way north of Hillmorton Road.

“Butterflies and moths have colonised the new growth and there are now more bird species and numbers of birds than before work began.

“We have been pleased to have been awarded both a district and a national Rotary environmental award for this project which has taken four years to complete. Walkers and cyclists have been very complimentary regarding the work which the club has carried out and we are very pleased that it has been so well received.

“I would like to thank all our sponsors without whom it would not have been possible to do all this work.”

Great Central Way, mural, Rugby Rotary
Famous Rugbeians are depicted on part of the mural

It took twin brothers Nicolo and Stefano, from Lutterworth, almost two weeks to complete their painting of a 25-metre stretch of bridge this month. (June)

Nicolo – an artists for 20 years from Lutterworth – said: “The reaction from the Rugby community and all the people that were walking past it, has been really positive. Everybody has commented on how bright and colourful, and cheerful the mural is.

“It was an absolute pleasure to get involved in this project and we want to thank again to Laurence Wilbraham and the Rotary Club as well as sponsors, including Cemex and the Rugby Decorator Centre.”

As part of the work along the former railway line between Hillmorton Road and Abbey Street, three new bespoke benches, funded by The Rugby Group Benevolent Fund, were also installed last summer, the design incorporating trains, pedestrians and a cyclist as well as wildlife.

Great Central Way, Rugby Rotary, murals

Laurence added: “To mark our centenary, Rugby Rotary Club members wanted to do something that would raise both the profile of the club and of Rotary, would provide long term benefits for the people of Rugby and involve volunteering and young people as well as doing something environmental.

“This is the largest and longest project we’ve ever been involved in and so far the feedback we’ve been getting from everyone who uses the Way is extremely positive.”

For further information about the Great Central Way project or any of the Rugby Rotary Clubs – Rotary Club of Rugby; Rotary Club of Rugby Dunsmore and Rotary Club of Rugby Saturday, visit here

 

Great Central Railway

 The Great Central Railway was opened in 1899 and ran from Marylebone Station, London to Sheffield via Rugby, Leicester and Nottingham. It was primarily a goods line and was built to the continental loading gauge. The section of the line between Rugby and Aylesbury was closed in 1966 and the section from Rugby to Nottingham was closed in 1969.

In 1970 RBC purchased 4.5 miles of the railway line comprising two sections, one extending from Onley Lane to Abbey Street and the other between the Oxford Canal and Newton.

In 1991 Central Railway Ltd proposed to re-open the railway following completion of the Channel Tunnel rail link although these proposals were rejected twice by Parliament.

Chiltern Railways had a long-term plan to re-open the railway between Aylesbury and Rugby (and later to Leicester) but in 2013 the company abandoned that proposal.

Rotary Club invites applications for humanitarian travel scholarship

Rotary Club invites applications for humanitarian travel scholarship

AS part of its centenary celebrations this year, The Rotary Club of Rugby is offering residents the opportunity to apply for a travel scholarship worth up to £2,500.

The lucky recipient will be given the chance to embark on an international project that will also benefit their career path and in the areas of:

  • Peacebuilding and conflict prevention
  • Disease prevention and treatment
  • Water sanitation and hygiene
  • Maternal and child health
  • Basic education and literacy
  • Community economic development and
  • The Environment

The scholarship will cover all costs involved but the applicant’s employers are encouraged to assist with funding, especially if the project directly benefits their business in any way.

Rugby Club of Rotary, centenary,scholarship
The Rotary Club of Rugby, which this year marks its centenary, has been supporting the Bwengu Projects for six years, funding classroom repairs and school furniture as well many of the charity’s 64 toilet block refurbishment projects since 2006.

Applicants are invited to produce an outline of their plan before the interview and a detailed proposal before departure and are expected to make all arrangements for travel and accommodation etc. But the Rotary Club may be able to assist if there is a local Rotary Club in the area where the person will be engaged on the project.

Rotarian and Centenary Committee member Julian Hall, said: “We’ve only offered this opportunity once before when, for our 75th anniversary, two ladies were given a travel scholarship to Scandinavia to see how they dealt with and looked after children with disabilities. The time spent learning from each other was valuable to all involved and a report from the trip was sent on to Government and other interested bodies. The main beneficiaries were the children, both at home and abroad, who reaped the benefit of the knowledge exchange.

“We would hope that whatever project that was undertaken this time would have a similar lasting beneficial outcome, that would help people not just in the UK but in the country the selected person chose to work in.

“The scholarship would be a wonderful opportunity for someone to gain experience in their chosen field.”

Great Central Way, scholarship, Rotary Club of Rugby
Great Central Way completed

On return, the person will be expected to present the findings for the project to a meeting of the Rotary Club and other interested parties.

To apply this time, applicants must be studying at university, aged between 18 and 30 (on April 1st 2022) and a resident of Rugby – or have their home in Rugby.

A summary of their project, including who will benefit, how it will be carried out and which countries will be visited, should be sent, before the closing date of June 30th, to Julian Hall at: julian.hall@btinternet.com where further information is also available.

To mark their special anniversary, last month (April) Rugby Rotarians also celebrated the completion of their Great Central Way Centenary project.

The Club has been working in conjunction with Rugby Borough Council and Warwickshire Wildlife Trust to upgrade the 1.2km section of the former railway line between Hillmorton Road and Abbey Street, a three-year project which last year received the Rotary Club of Great Britain and Ireland Environmental Award.

For further information about the Great Central Way project or any of the Rugby Rotary Clubs – Rotary Club of Rugby; Rotary Club of Rugby Dunsmore and Rotary Club of Rugby Saturday, visit here