2007 -
40th Anniversary Year
- Historic
Buildings held in Trust for the community
Formed in April 1967, the idea behind the Lamp of
Lothian Collegiate Trust was born from the realisation by a few
people that Parish and community life, in a largely rural area, were
threatened with decline.
The early Trustees – Elizabeth Duchess of Hamilton, The Earl
of Wemyss, Lady Broun-Lindsay, Mrs Greenlees, John Rattray and
Bailie Wood - believed that community life should be revitalised in
an imaginative way; that this way must have a relevance to the area,
its heritage and tradition; that this way must be in tune with the
times.
The Lamp quickly established
its home at the Poldrate Mill buildings on the south side of
Haddington and began restoring the derelict properties to provide
accommodation for the Collegiate Clubs: the Bridge Centre; Poldrate
Arts and Crafts Centre; Haddington Camera Club; Poldrate Quilters.
During its 40 years of life the Trust has raised £1.1 million
for capital projects from over 100 different donors including grant
making Trusts, individuals, Tyne Esk Leader Plus, the Community Fund
and the local authority.
With restoration of all the buildings complete the Lamp now
maintains and insures the properties making them available for the
community’s use.
The Bridge Centre,
Haddington’s Community Centre, is housed in the former Poldrate Mill
Cottages. The centre is
run by a management committee with Lamp involvement and managed on a
day-to-day basis by a Community Development Officer and
administrative support seconded from East Lothian Council.
Some thirty community groups use the Bridge Centre facilities
offering a wide range of activities including keep fit, ballet
classes, U3A classes, a lip-reading group, yoga, salsa jive class, a
war-hammer group, youth café, after school club, playgroup, Sunday
Christian meeting, muay thai kickboxing and kung Fu!
The centre also offers committee room space, ad hoc training
courses, a coffee bar for centre users and photocopying facilities.
Some 800 people a week use the Bridge Centre.
The Poldrate Granary is home to the Poldrate Arts
and Crafts Centre (PACC) and Volunteer Development East Lothian.
The PACC is a charity offering arts and crafts tuition in some 18
different disciplines to its members.
The organisation will hold its annual exhibition on Saturday
21st and Sunday 22nd April – a chance to view
the high standard of work created and an opportunity to sign on for
classes in the summer term. The Lamp Trustees were delighted to be
able to totally refurbish the Granary in 2006 using the Lamp’s own
funds and monies gratefully received through grants from Tyne Esk
Leader Plus, the Edward Cadbury Trust and the Stevenston Trust.
The Mault House is home to
two major projects managed by the Bridge Centre.
The upper floor of the building is used by the Bridge Music
project and provides music tuition space and a recording studio.
On the ground floor can be found the workshops of the Bridge
Motorcycle project. Both
projects provide support, fun and tuition for young people across
the county. In its March
2007 report, the two projects were singled out for high praise by
Her Majesty’s Inspector of Education.
In 2001, after a lengthy and successful Lottery application
process, the Lamp built The Alistair Grant
Building, named after the
Trust’s late chairman who spent his
childhood living in one of the mill cottages.
The building, designed by local architect Alan Smith, is
acoustically controlled and provides the music project’s youth
bands the facilities to make music without disturbing the
neighbourhood!
The Poldrate Mill, originally conceived as a small theatre
space, now provides office accommodation for the Bridge
Motorcycle project staff, a studio for upholstery, spinning and
weaving classes, and a kiln room for potters and glass artists.
The
Lamp has been very involved for 40years with the cultural life of
East Lothian
and in 2007 is once again promoting a summer concert season.
With an emphasis on exciting young musicians of the highest
artistic calibre, the Lamp is offering a wonderful 40th anniversary
concert season. The
opening concert will be held in the St Mary’s
Parish
Church on Wednesday 25th April at 8
p.m. and will feature pupils from the Menuhin School.
The Trustees are delighted to be welcoming young people from
the school back to Haddington as for many years Yehudi Menuhin was
the Lamp’s highly supportive Patron.