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Albert T Pile 1882 – 1981 drawing the yards of Whitby before they had gone for ever !


This is the daily blog of Alan Davidson who lives in Whitby North Yorkshire. My main hobby is search engine optimisation.  I live in Bradford and also Whitby. My Whitby Holiday Cottage http://www.endeavourcottage.co.uk/ My CCTV and Security Alarm installation companyhttp://www.adalarms.co.uk/ I am Sir Roger Moore's Web manager, his official site http://www.roger-moore.com/ and at Sir Roger's forum you can ask the man himself a question each month http://www.roger-moore.com/cgi-bin/index.cgi Read more from this author


 

I was in the Whitby Museum again on Friday with my ongoing mission to try and find some old pictures of the yard where my cottages in Whitby. Unfortunately once again I wasn’t successful but I did find some books which describe what life was like living in the fishing yards of Whitby during the 18th and 19th century. I will be going into the subject in a further blog but I thought for today I would just mention the very fine work of an artist called Albert T pile, who took great care in the late fifties and early sixtys of drawing some of the unfortunate demolition of the fishing out of Whitby. Obviously not all of them have gone but he took great care in showing future generations what had been. 

Original seascapes art and  box canvas prints

If anybody reads this article and has any old pictures of  Whitby Yards and particularly Haydock’s place my yard which is off Flowergate, I would be very grateful if you would contact me.

 This is a little mini Biography of  Albert T Pile MSM, FRSA, SGA,  which I have reproduced or condensed with permission and also one of his sketches. 

If anybody reads this article and thus any old pictures of the answer Whitby and particularly Haydock’s place, which is off Flowergate, I would be very grateful if you would contact me.  alan@whitby.uk.net  mobile 07813779273

Albert T Pile 1882 – 1981 MSM, FRSA, SGA

Albert T Pile was born in London were he lived the greater part of his life. He was educated at King’s College in London and had ambitions to become a doctor and particularly a medical missionary. To this end he studied anatomy in his spare time, but the pressure of work in the education department was too great and he never realised his ambition.  

Albert T Pile 1882 – 1981 MSM, FRSA, SGA  

 During the First World War he served in the RAMC at St Omer were the wounded men from the battlefield were brought on hospital beds. Pile painted and sketched  for pure pleasure and never wish to become a professional artist. The varied locations of his watercolours are explained by them being done while he was  on holiday in Lancashire, Cumbria, Devon, Cornwall town of white, Belgium and various parts of southern England.  His art and his daily work  were completely separate until 1930s when much of Whitehall was being demolished and Pile undertook to record the fastest falling buildings,  Though he rarely sold any of his work Pile exhibited widely. 

Pile married in later life is life came from Brighouse which is where he retired. Later they moved to Whitby living in the Stakesby area. They had no family he was a quiet retiring man loft at above all else. 

 It was in Whitby that he furthered his interest in passing and demolishing of  old parts of the town. The yards of Church Street and Boulby bank, together with those that were behind Haggersgate and the Fish Quay are documented with sketches of their gradual disappearance, with dates and times and even record of the number of cottages depicted in each yard are all carefully recorded. Sometimes the creative artist is able to devote his whole life to an artistic talent. It is hard to belive  that the person who uses his leisure time and retirement can have the ability to produce the amount of creative work of the calibre of Albert T Pile

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  1. [...] Also drawing the yards of Whitby before they had gone forever ! by Albert T Pile 1882 – 1981 [...]

  2. Very interesting. I love Albert Pile’s work. His drawing style somehow compliments the ramshackle nature of his subjects. Superb.

    Brilliant blog Alan. Always nice to read about Whitby. My name is Chris Whitehead and I run the blog OUT ON YE! in which I try to feature some of the less well known aspects of the town’s history and mystery. Oh, and I like the rockpools too.

    Chris W
    Whitby

  3. [...] Also drawing the yards of Whitby before they had gone forever ! by Albert T Pile 1882 – 1981 [...]

  4. AlanNo Gravatar says:

    hello Chris

    just a quick one I’m sorry I didn’t reply quickly, I forgot the idea of a blog having messages coming back in! I can be stupid sometimes. Very interesting about you also having a blog on the more obscure kind of facts of Whitby, maybe we could team up sometimes why don’t you send me an e-mail if you feel like it alan@whitby.uk.net I’ve got some ideas about doing some historical things on the Internet also about the old town. See you around I hope all the best Alan

  5. AlanNo Gravatar says:

    Chris I forgot to say I got the phone call from a gentleman a few weeks back who knew Albert T Pile but unfortunately I didn’t have time to speak to monastic to ring me back, he has not yet but I’m hopeful :-)

  6. [...] Also drawing the yards of Whitby before they had gone forever ! by Albert T Pile 1882 – 1981 [...]

  7. AlanNo Gravatar says:

    Hi

    I could not read all your message but I did love Mr Piles drawings

    All the best Alan

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