Alfred Watkins was the chairman of the executive committee responsible for the erection of the county and city War Memorial which selected this Eleanor Cross. In the 1934 guide book for the Old House he wrote of the pigeons which "were turned out of the Old House in 1872, but found shelter in the belfry of St Peter's Church....Once a year the birds gather for a memorable occasion. The appointed hour of the morning of Armistice Day is near, the people are drifting towards the war memorial cross in St. Peter's Square. The sound of prayer and hymn is heard; it is an unusual item in bird-life; and these town pigeons are assembled in ranks of expectation on the tower parapet. There is a hush around the cross, broken by the deep signal boom of the maroon, when the birds rise with startled unison in one swoop of curved formation and loud clapping of wings. In the two minutes' silence they quietly come back for the second signal, and with the dispersing crowd they too depart, not again to gather at this vantage point untill, in a year's time, there comes once more the eleventh day of the eleventh month." |
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