The Edinburgh Reporter April 2023

(EdinReporter) #1

19


CULTURE • LITERATURE • ART • EVENTS • MUSIC • MUSEUMS...


Jumbo engine rolls in


Massive engine now on


display at the National


Museum of Flight


By STAFF REPORTER

THE NATIONAL Museum of Flight has just
acquired a Boeing 747 engine which will be on
display in time for the extended opening hours
at the National Museum of Flight beginning.
The museum will open seven days a week
from 1 April for the summer months.
Weighing around 6.5 tonnes, the Rolls Royce
RB211-524H turbofan engine will help the
Museum tell the story of the Boeing 747 aircraft,
which first took to the skies in 1969 and
revolutionised long-haul air travel. As the first
wide-bodied commercial passenger jet, it could
transport increased passenger numbers,
allowing ticket prices to be much lower and
making air travel affordable for many more
people. In 2020, British Airways decided to
withdraw its 747-fleet due to the impact of
Covid-19 on air travel.
The 747-engine will be displayed next to
Scotland’s only Concorde aircraft and beside the
Museum’s Red Arrows Hawk.
Steve McLean, General Manager at the
National Museum of Flight, said: “The National
Museum of Flight contains some incredible
aircraft and objects, each with a fascinating story
to tell so we’re delighted to be able to add to our
collection with this newly-acquired 747-engine.
Its development enabled cities and countries to

be connected in a way that wasn’t previously
possible and opened up huge travel and business
opportunities. The new arrival helps to cement
our position as one of Europe’s major aviation
museums and, together with our events
programme, provides another great reason to
visit this year.”
The National Museum of Flight is currently

open at weekends from 10am until 4pm and will
be open seven days a week from 10am until 5pm
from 1 April 2023. Book in advance to save.

Adult tickets from £13,
National Museums Scotland Members free.
15% off when you book as a family.
nms.ac.uk/flight

OPINION
By Neil Christison of VisitScotland

Positive outlook for


tourism in the region


It is fair to say that the last three years
have been incredibly challenging for our
tourism and events industry. Since the
first Covid-19 national lockdown and
subsequent months of restrictions,
we are still navigating our way through
the additional pressures being faced
through the cost of doing business and
staffing shortages.
As we approach the start of the
traditional tourism season in Scotland
with the Easter holidays I am buoyed by
the positivity and passion on display
throughout the industry.
We hosted the Scottish Thistle Awards
National Final in February for the first time
in three years. I congratulate all the
regional finalists representing Edinburgh
and the Lothians on the night, in
particular Edinburgh International
Festival and A Toast to Gaia that went on
to be crowned national winners.
At a strategic level, it is really
encouraging to see the prominence of the
visitor economy within Edinburgh &
South East Scotland’s new Regional
Prosperity Framework Delivery Plan. This,
coupled with Edinburgh’s new visitor
economy action plan offer us a real
opportunity to work together to help
grow, develop and add value to the
capital and wider region’s visitor economy
in a responsible way.

COMMITTED CAMPAIGNS
We are committed at VisitScotland to
ensuring that Scotland remains top of
mind for visitors. Through campaigns,
such as Scotland’s UNESCO Trail and the
development of our website we aim to
showcase the vast range of experiences
on offer to people from around the world.
Early signs suggest encouraging
interest in Scotland for this summer,
including from international visitors. The
news that there will be a twice daily
service between Edinburgh and New York
during the peak summer season is a major
boost for the city and the country.
And at a local level, we are working with
regional tourism organisations to support
their own marketing campaigns and
business and product development as we
prepare for the season ahead.
Yes, there are still challenges, there
always will be, but there is good reason
for optimism too. There remains
significant investment in quality tourism
in the region – the Scotch Whisky
Experience, the opening of the W hotel
and other hotel investment in the capital
city, Scotland’s first inland wave
destination, Wavegarden, at Ratho and
Penicuik Estate’s 50-year vision, to name
just a few.

4TH
In 1508, the first printed book in
Scotland with a definite date – a
vernacular poem by John Lydgate
‘The Complaint of the Black
Knight’ – was produced; the press
was set up in Edinburgh by Walter
Chepman, an Edinburgh
merchant, and his business
partner Androw Myllar, a
bookseller, near what is now the
Cowgate. And in 1617, John
Napier, inventor of logarithms,
died in Edinburgh.

10TH
In 1866, construction of
Waverley Station began,
consolidating the former North
Bridge and Canal Street Stations.

11TH
In 1890, a fire destroyed the
large paper-making and
stationery establishment of
Messrs Tullis & Company, 7

George Street, Edinburgh, and did
very great damage to the
adjoining property of Messrs
Whytock & Reid, furniture
supplier. And in 1895, the first
electric lights were installed in the
city.

17TH
In 1341, Edinburgh Castle was
retaken by a ruse perpetrated by 4
men; one disguised himself as an
English merchant purveying wine
and beer and agreed with the
Governor to deliver it the
following morning; once the gate
was opened to him, he and his
armed followers overturned the
carriage where the goods were
purported to be, sounded a horn
to call Douglas and his band who
rushed in and recovered the
fortress.
And in 1766, James Craig’s
winning entry for development
of Edinburgh’s New Town

was approved.
Also in 1800, Catherine Sinclair
was born in Edinburgh; she wrote
many bestselling books in a
variety of genres but was most
celebrated for her wide-ranging
charitable work and as one of the
most prominent philanthropists
of 19th century Edinburgh; she
introduced public bench seats to
the city (a feature which remains
popular to this day), founded and
financed the Volunteer Brigade for
the boys of Leith, opened a school
where girls from working class
homes were taught domestic
work, provided shelters where
cabmen could relax while waiting
for ‘fares’, and opened special
cooking centres which provided
low cost meals for the poor.

Compiled by Jerry Ozaniec,
Membership Secretary of the
Old Edinburgh Club. membership
@oldedinburghclub.org.uk

This month in history...


Catherine Sinclair Monument
Free download pdf