Connect with us
DAPA Banner
DAPA Coin
DAPA
COIN PAYMENT ASSET
PRIVACY · BLOCKDAG · HOMOMORPHIC ENCRYPTION · RUST
ElGamal Encrypted MINE DAPA
🚫 GENESIS SOLD OUT
DAPAPAY COMING

NewsBeat

‘World’s End serial killer probed over my missing sister but I think our neighbour killed her’

Published

on

Daily Record

Patricia Black went missing in 1976 and her younger brother Alan Black is still looking for answers 50 years later.

Advertisement

The brother of a woman whose disappearance has been linked to serial killer Angus Sinclair has made a dramatic plea for help in solving the case 50 years after she went missing. Patricia Black, then 22, was last seen standing at a bus stop in the Ayrshire town of Irvine on her way home to her parents in neighbouring Saltcoats but was never seen again.

Retired bus driver Alan Black is convinced there are people still alive who know what happened to his ‘ big sister’ and has urged them to come forward and finally break their 50 year silence. In recent years Patricia’s disappearance has been linked to Sinclair who was convicted in 2014 of the World’s End murders of Helen Scott and Christine Eadie in October, 1977.

Police have always believed that Sinclair who died in prison in 2019 had other victims, particularly from around that time. However Alan is convinced that the person responsible for his sisters disappearance is a local man who she met that day in Irvine and not Sinclair.

He added: “I would like to give my sister a decent burial, somewhere I can go and talk to her. The worst part is not knowing where she is is or what happened to her.

“I still get emotional now even when I think of it. I think of her every day.

“Someone out there knows something. If you have murdered a person you couldn’t keep that quiet. You couldn’t keep that in your head all these years without telling someone like a a partner or best mate.”

Three weeks after Patricia’s disappearance police found her handbag in the River Irvine in an area of the town called the Moor, about five minutes walk from the bus stop where she had last been seen. Patricia, one of five siblings, left the family home, on Friday, October 8, 1976 to go to meet a friend in the Turf Hotel in Irvine and stayed overnight in the town with the pal at their home.

The factory worker phoned her mother Janet the following day to say she would be home that evening. It that was the last the family ever heard from her. Alan, who has six kids and five grandkids and now lives in nearby Stevenston, was about to turn 18 when Patricia vanished.

He had passed his driving test and was excited at the prospect of taking his sister to the hotel that evening. She invited him in for a drink but Alan declined. Something which he now regrets.

Alan, who believes his sister was murdered, added: “I am sorry about it now. I now feel as if I had gone in with her that evening everything would have changed and she would still have been here. All her movements would have been different.

“My mother and father are dead and my two brothers are dead. When I talk about them I am fine.

Advertisement

“For some reason when I talk about Tricia I break down down. I don’t know what happenned to her or where she is now.”

Alan’s departing words to Patricia were “goodnight” and “enjoy yourself”. It was the last time he saw her.

Alan says the local police were slow to react in the early days of the inquiry believing that she was staying with with someone or had gone away of her own free will. However the police investigation was stepped up three weeks after she went missing when the handbag was found in the River Irvine weighted down by stones. Her purse was also missing.

Advertisement

Alan added: “The fact that it was weighted down meant someone was trying to hide it. The police thought she had met someone or runaway but but Patricia wasn’t like that.

“She wasn’t the type of lassie that just disappears. She wouldn’t go away even for a few nights without telling her mum.

“If the police had acted had acted quicker at the time they might have found more evidence.”

Alan believes that his sister’s body was dumped in the river, which had a strong tidal current, and she was swept out to sea. The last official sighting of Patricia was around 5pm on Saturday October 9, at the bus stop in Irvine’s Eglinton Street opposite the Turf Hotel where she had been the previous evening.

Their father John passed away aged 65 in 1979 followed by wife Janet, 76, in 1990 without knowing what had happened to their daughter. Alan added: “The family accepted Tricia was dead quite early.

“We knew something had happened to her. She was a popular lassie with lots of friends.

“All my mother and father ever wanted was for a body to be found to give her a decent burial. That’s all that I want. The truth. Answers.”

Advertisement

A month after her disappearance a 21 year old man from Irvine gave an interview to the Daily Record and admitted that he had walked Patricia to the bus stop before heading to a local jewellery shop to buy a Christmas present for his wife.

The man and three pals had earlier met Patricia and her friend in the local shopping centre in Irvine around 4pm.

He then continued walking with Patricia after her friend and the other three men had gone home. The 21-year-old labourer, who had a young son at the time, said: “I have not slept much since I was told she had vanished.

Advertisement

“That was the first day I had met her and when I walked her to the bus stop we were both in a cheery mood. The last thing she said to me was that she was going home to her parents.

“Since I heard of her mystery disappearance I have gone out of my way to help in the search.”

Six months earlier a four year old boy Sandy Davidson had vanished from outside his home in Irvine but the two cases were never linked. To this day both Sandy and Patricia remain missing. Since her disappearance Alan has never given up hope the case will be solved although he has been told that the local man he does suspect is now dead.

Advertisement

He added: “There are people out there still alive who know something. I have been hoping for 50 years for someone to come forward.

“It is not too late. Somebody is holding back that is for sure. Put things to rest, now is the time.”

Police Scotland were contacted for comment.

Angus Sinclair has been linked over the years with as many as nine unsolved murders including the disappearance of Patricia Black. In 2004 Operation Trinity was launched by three Scottish police forces to investigate whether Sinclair was responsible for the specific unsolved murders of six women from 1977.

Improved DNA profiling techniques had linked Sinclair to the 1978 murder of teenager Mary Gallacher in Springburn, Glasgow for which he was convicted in 2001 and sentenced to life. At the time he was serving a life sentence imposed in 1982 for a series of sex attacks on young girls in Glasgow while working as a painter and decorator.

One of the cases which was reinvestigated was that of two teenagers Helen Scott and Christine Eadie who had gone missing in October, 1977 after spending the evening in Edinburgh’s World’s End bar. Three others were Anna Kenny, Hilda McAuley and Agnes Cooney who had been murdered that same year in a three-month period after meeting their killer on nights out in Glasgow.

Operation Trinity also identified Sinclair as a possible suspect for the 1977 murder of Frances Barker from Maryhill, Glasgow even though another man was serving time for the killing. Sinclair was convicted of the murders of 17 year old’s Helen and Christine in 2014 at the High Court in Edinburgh and sentenced again to life.

However much of the evidence from the cases of Anna Kenny, Hilda McAuley, and Agnes Cooney was said to have been lost or damaged and Sinclair was never charged with them Sinclair has also been suspected of the murder of amateur porn movie maker Eddie Cotogno at his home in Dumbarton in 1979, 25 year old mother of four Helen Kane, 24, in Edinburgh in 1970 and the disappearance of Patricia Black in 1976.

He died in Glenochil Prison seven years ago without ever confessing to the remaining unsolved cases.

Get Daily Record Premium for just £1 per month in exclusive offer to celebrate the world cup. Click HERE.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

NewsBeat

Up to 75 new homes could be built in small Cambridgeshire village

Published

on

Cambridgeshire Live

The developer says the homes would address a shortage of affordable homes and provide facilities to meet local need

A developer is hoping to build up to 75 new homes in a small Cambridgeshire village. Orchestra Ltd has submitted an outline planning application to Huntingdonshire District Council for the development of land west of Earith Road in Colne.

Advertisement

Colne lies about 9 miles east of Huntingdon and has approximately 904 residents, according to the 2021 census. The application proposes up to 75 residential units, associated landscaping, drainage, and related infrastructure. Of the 75 proposed homes, 30 would be offered as affordable housing.

Orchestra Ltd says the homes would make a “meaningful and positive contribution toward addressing both overall housing need and the acute shortage of affordable homes within Huntingdonshire”.

A design statement adds: “The development provides high quality, sustainable homes in an appropriate location, helping to meet the needs of households unable to access the open market while also supporting the vitality and long term sustainability of Colne and surrounding communities.”

Additionally, Orchestra Ltd says the residential development would provide local facilities to meet local need, including new open space and walking routes, and enhance the sustainability of the area in Colne.

Advertisement

The site measures 4.6 hectares and is on the doorstep of several local amenities, including the Colne Community Hall, The Green Man pub, Saint Helen’s Church, and other services in the neighbouring village of Bluntisham.

Developer Orchestra Ltd said: “Due to the single landowner status of the land, the development is highly deliverable and can provide much needed new homes in an accessible, sustainable location.

“We believe our proposal represents a logical extension to the village of Colne that is easily accessed via existing highway infrastructure, with direct access onto the B1050, the primary north south route connecting Colne with other local villages.”

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Diamond League Stockholm: Keely Hodgkinson runs PB but stunned by Audrey Werro in 800m

Published

on

Keely Hodgkinson poses on a throne after breaking the world indoor 800m record

Meanwhile, Olympic and world champion Duplantis suffered his first Diamond League defeat in three years.

In March, the 26-year-old broke the world record for the 15th time, with a jump of 6.31m slightly north of Stockholm in Uppsala.

But the best he could muster on Sunday was 5.80m, second to Australia’s Kurtis Marschall (5.90m).

“I felt I was pretty unfocused, not ready to compete at the top level,” said Duplantis, who is getting married next week. “I feel bad for my fans and family but I am not that mad.

Advertisement

“We have a saying in Sweden that says you are either lucky in games or in love, and in some strange way I think there’s some message or silver lining in this that says something about the commitment that I am about to make in my marriage.”

There was one local win in the men’s discus for Daniel Stahl, with the world champion’s throw of 69.60m beating Australia’s Matthew Denny (69.02) and Slovenia’s Kristjan Ceh (67.67).

Britain’s Lawrence Okoye was eighth with 64.02, some way short of his season’s best (71.88).

In the women’s 100m, Britain’s Amy Hunt ran a personal best 10.97 seconds to finish second to America’s Melissa Jefferson-Wooden. Dina Asher-Smith was sixth in 11.24.

Advertisement

British sprinter Jeremiah Azu was disqualified after a false start in the men’s 200m, which was won by American Kenneth Bednarek in 19.87 seconds, with South Africa’s Sinesipho Dambile second in 20.10.

GB’s Elise Thorner was second in the women’s 3000m steeplechase, finishing almost 12 seconds behind Tunisia’s Marwa Bouzayani, who won in a meeting record eight minutes and 59.28 seconds.

Charlie Dobson was fifth in the men’s 400m, won by South Africa’s Zakithi Nene in 44.48 seconds.

The men’s 800m was won by America’s Cooper Lutkenhaus in a season’s best one minute 42.70 seconds, with GB’s Ben Pattison (1:43.70) and Jake Wightman (1:44.39) fourth and seventh respectively.

Advertisement

American middle-distance runner Yared Nuguse outlasted 19-year-old Australian Cam Myers to snatch victory in the men’s 1500m.

There was another meeting record in the women’s shot put with the Netherlands’ Jessica Schilder registering 20.89m.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

ITV’s Emmerdale and Corrie big schedule changes this week

Published

on

ITV's Emmerdale and Corrie big schedule changes this week

The popular ITV soaps have often been moved or axed from the schedule due to football matches, with next week no different.

One night this week will also see the soaps return to their hour-long format.

Here is all to know about the week ahead for the soaps and when you can watch the newest episodes.

Advertisement

Emmerdale and Coronation Street to get big schedule changes this week

Both Emmerdale and Corrie are facing multiple changes to their regular programming in the week ahead.

This is due to the football, both the Women’s Qualifiers and the start of the Men’s World Cup in Canada, Mexico and the USA.

Both shows usually air back-to-back in a soap “power hour” each weeknight, with Emmerdale from 8pm to 8.30pm followed by Corrie from 8.30pm to 9pm.

The first change is on Tuesday (June 9), in which neither show will air due to the Women’s World Cup Qualifier between England and Ukraine.

Advertisement

On Wednesday (June 10), both will air an hour earlier, with Emmerdale at 7pm and Corrie following at 7.30pm.

This is because of ITV airing England’s final warmup game against Costa Rica at the Inter&Co Stadium in Orlando, Florida.

The World Cup then begins on Thursday (June 11), with the opening ceremony taking place.

As a result, neither Emmerdale nor Coronation Street will air on Thursday, June 11.

Advertisement

The biggest change, however, comes on Friday (June 12), with the format changing for both.

Emmerdale will air for an hour from 8pm to 9pm. with Corrie following at 9pm to 10pm.

It is not the first time this year Emmerdale and Corrie have both had schedule changes due to sport.

The soaps were moved to a weekend in March due to the England v Uruguay match.

More recently, both were taken off air due to the women’s football between England and Spain.

Advertisement

Coronation Street star returning after 23 years

While fans may be frustrated at the schedule changes, many may be excited due to a returning face after more than two decades.

Jake Parry, who originally played Simon Barlow on the ITV soap in 2003 alongside his twin brother Oscar, will make his comeback in a new role 23 years later.

He revealed the news in a TikTok post, sharing a brief clip from the show and writing: “Coronation Street trailer.

“Catch me as DAMO next week.”

Advertisement

Although Mr Parry’s return marks a return to the famous Weatherfield set, he has been clear that he will be playing a new character.

Mr Parry and his brother Oscar portrayed Simon Barlow from July to November 2003, though Daniel Whelan briefly took over the role for episodes aired in September that year.

Simon Barlow has since become a long-running character on the soap, most recently played by actor Alex Bain.

Mr Parry’s new character, Damo, is described in soap spoilers as a “young man,” though further details about the role remain under wraps.

Who is your favourite character on Emmerdale and/or Coronation Street? Let us know in the comments.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Mum’s horror after daughter escapes Darlington school through fence

Published

on

Mum's horror after daughter escapes Darlington school through fence

The pick-up horror took place at Red Hall Primary School on Wednesday (June 3) when the 36-year-old arrived to police officers on the ground and drones in the sky.

The dental therapist, who wishes to remain nameless, said it was there that she was told her daughter, who has autism and ADHD, had fled for the “third time in six months”. 

Her daughter, who is part of the school’s social, emotional and mental health needs provision, is said to have escaped with two other children aged seven and nine.

Advertisement

Around an hour after police arrived, she said the three children were found a staggering two miles away from the school by the River Skerne, near Darlington Police Station.

Julie Davidson, executive headteacher of Red Hall, said the school takes the safety and wellbeing of all students “extremely seriously”.

But despite the head saying parents were “contacted promptly”, the mum-of-three claims she only found out at pick up – and that a parent of another missing child was told by police.

“It was horrific. You don’t expect something to happen like that in this day and age”, the woman, who lives at West Park, said. 

Advertisement

“I just turned up at the school to find police vans, and at this point, there were drones out. I had gone in to get her, and they said she went missing with two other boys. 

“[The school] explained that the kids had escaped again but had to contact police as there had been no sightings of them for the last hour.”

She continued: “I just felt sick. I thought something really bad had happened. It was pouring down that day as well.

“They were found just before 5pm, they were found near the River Skerne, next to the town.”

Advertisement

The woman, who has lived in Darlington since she was 15, said it is the third time that her daughter has absconded in the last six months. 

“I feel as though the school doesn’t seem to care, they are not getting it”, she argued.

“It is supposed to be a unit for kids who have special needs, but they have escaped three times. 

“The last two times they were found within one hour in the Red Hall estate, but we were again never informed until we got to the school.” 

Advertisement

She now feels that a “serious safeguarding investigation” must be carried out and is due to visit the Headingley Crescent school for a meeting on Monday. 

“Anything could have happened to them”, she said. “The fact that this is the third time as well…

“It is not like this is a one off. It makes you not want to drop your kid off at school. You drop them off at school, and you expect them to be safe. 

“If this happened to me, she wouldn’t be in my care.

Advertisement

“[My daughter] is fine. She doesn’t understand the consequences or the dangers. The school is more than aware of that.”

A Durham Police spokesperson said: “Police were called just before 2.20pm on Wednesday (June 3) to assist with a search for three children who had been reported missing from Red Hall Primary School, in Darlington.

“Officers attended and located the children around an hour later.”

All full statement from Ms Davidson said: “We take the safety and wellbeing of all our students extremely seriously. When this incident took place, the parents of the children involved were contacted promptly to let them know what had happened, as were the police.” 

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

M6 traffic LIVE as drivers face long delays as lanes shut after ‘serious’ crash

Published

on

Manchester Evening News

Drivers are facing long delays on a stretch of the M6 motorway amid reports of a ‘serious’ crash this morning.

Three lanes have been closed off on the northbound stretch of the motorway near Wigan, according to traffic alert service Inrix. They are shut from junction 25 for Bryn to junction 26 for the Orrell Interchange.

Long delays are building up to the closure. Motorway cameras show queues forming on the northbound carriageway.

Advertisement

Click here to get the biggest stories straight to your inbox in our Daily Newsletter

Follow our live blog below for the latest traffic updates.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Trump denies that he campaigned on ending wars: ‘I didn’t promise anything’

Published

on

Trump denies that he campaigned on ending wars: ‘I didn’t promise anything’

President Donald Trump denied that he has broken his campaign promises by entering a war with Iran and vowed that the conflict would not be “endless” during a contentious interview this weekend.

Trump told NBC’s Kristen Welker in a pre-taped interview on Meet the Press that the war with Iran would soon come to an end, repeating an assertion that he and members of his Cabinet have made for months as the war has stubbornly dragged on without an end in sight. In his latest remarks, the president characterized the holdup as a dispute over language surrounding Iran’s future ability to acquire or purchase nuclear materials.

The president claimed that he made a distinction during his campaign for president in 2024 between “wars” and “endless” conflicts, adding that it wasn’t worth building up America’s military to never use it.

“First of all, I didn’t guarantee no war. Why would I have built the strongest military in the world?” he asked.

Advertisement

“When you say I promised, I didn’t promise anything. I don’t like these endless wars. [But] this is not an endless war,” Trump told Welker.

Donald Trump fought back against criticism of his war with Iran during an NBC interview
Donald Trump fought back against criticism of his war with Iran during an NBC interview (NBC News – Meet the Press)

He went on to compare the war in Iran to his military strike on Venezuela, which took place in January and led to the capture of ousted leader Nicolás Maduro by U.S. forces in a daring late-night raid. The president still sees similarities between that operation and the conflict against Iran, which is now more than three months old and continues without any sign of U.S. progress towards its objectives.

“We took over Venezuela in a matter of minutes. We destroyed the capability of Iran in a matter of days. Nobody’s ever seen anything like it,” Trump said before comparing it to what he saw as the alternative.

“Remember, you were in Vietnam 19 years because of stupid people,” he said. “You were in so many different countries. Every war, you were in for years. Look at Iraq. You were there for years.”

Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign launched as the war between Ukraine and Russia remained top of mind for the U.S. and the Israeli assault on Gaza was rapidly deflating President Joe Biden’s popularity within his own party. Much of Trump’s foreign policy platform centered around blaming the Biden administration for those two conflicts, which he argued were only allowed to happen and spiral out of control because of passive U.S. leadership.

Advertisement

But he did promise that he would not start wars, despite his claim in the NBC interview. In his 2024 victory speech, he told his supporters: “I’m not going to start a war, I’m going to stop wars.”

Trump also frequently claimed that the Ukraine invasion would not have happened on his watch. “The Ukrainian conflict should never have happened, and would not have happened if I were President,” he said in September 2022.

U.S. naval forces have proved unable to forcibly reopen the Strait of Hormuz
U.S. naval forces have proved unable to forcibly reopen the Strait of Hormuz (Reuters)

Trump spent much of 2025 openly campaigning for the Nobel Peace Prize as he sought to cultivate an image of a global peacemaker, which he has largely abandoned. He pushed for a new focus on Russia-Ukraine negotiations that failed to amount to anything and leaned on Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to drive the acceptance of a peace deal in Gaza.

But he also began a campaign of using military forces to strike small boats carrying suspected drug traffickers in the Caribbean, a year-long series of attacks against what were once considered civilian targets, resulting in the targeting and killing of dozens of people the administration labels as drug traffickers without trial.

Video Player Placeholder

On Meet the Press, the president also threatened to U.S. military force to directly seize and destroy Iran’s remaining nuclear materials if a deal was not met.

“The way you do it is, if we make a deal, if we make a deal now we’re friendly, we’ll all go together. It’ll be our equipment. We’ll take it out and destroy it, whether it’s onsite or whether we take it offsite,” Trump said of the nuclear material.

Advertisement

“Now, if we don’t make a deal, then we’re going to take them out militarily very harshly,” he said. “And we’ll wait till we do that before we go, in which case we’ll have safety either way.”

He concluded the interview by storming out after a back-and-forth with Welker over his false claims about the 2020 election.

Video Player Placeholder

The president’s comments come after a week of White House officials, including Trump, claiming that the president was within moments of ending the war in Iran and had a peace deal on his desk waiting on his approval that would do so.

That peace deal has not materialized, and on Sunday the president said he was looking for further assurances about Iran’s future purchasing abilities in the deal. He added, in an attempt to assure his hawkish critics, that he would not trigger sanctions relief or the unfreezing of Iranian funds in the U.S. financial system before Iran demonstrated compliance with the potential future agreement.

As he searches for a permanent end to the war in Iran that doesn’t involve the “endless” deployment of U.S. forces or a retreat from his objective of assuming U.S. control over the future of Iran’s nuclear program, the president is still attempting to sell the importance of his strikes against Iran with the American people.

Advertisement

During his interview with NBC, he clashed with Welker over whether he had a message for farmers and others whose industries have seen major economic disruptions take place as a result of the war.

Complicating the issue for the White House is the Strait of Hormuz, the key waterway off Iran’s coast which the Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has shut down since the war began, causing major disruptions to global shipping traffic. The U.S. has proven unable to force Iran to open the Strait for months, while facing questions about why or whether the administration was apparently unprepared for it when the war began.

Gas prices in the U.S. shot up by more than a dollar per gallon after the war began in late February and are only beginning to fade from their peak prices as Americans head into the summer travel months. For farmers, prices for fertilizer and other goods remain elevated as the Strait remains closed.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Monaco Grand Prix: Harry Benjamin’s driver ratings as Kimi Antonelli wins again

Published

on

A split image of Lewis Hamilton spraying champagne and Charles Leclerc looking disappointed

Gabriel Bortoleto – 4/10

Could have fought for Q3 but the Nouvelle chicane crash rather ruined the Audi driver’s weekend.

George Russell 6/10

Tough weekend. Didn’t look like he had to pace to even match Mercedes team-mate Antonelli. Needless penalties on top of that and it’s a further hit in the championship challenge.

Advertisement

Nico Hulkenberg – 6/10

Started strong, faded in qualifying but with the chaos could have ended up with points bar a penalty.

Franco Colapinto – 4/10

Has been looking so good the past few races but Monaco didn’t click. Too many near misses with the wall and how he didn’t shunt into Turn One I’ll never know. While his Alpine team-mate Gasly could have been on the podium, he was nowhere to be seen and also had a needless crash with Sainz.

Advertisement

Sergio Perez – 2/10

Unfortunately, what would have been a decent score was all undone by not one but two penalties for being out of position on the grid and costing Cadillac their first point. What makes it worse is that Alonso inherits it, so Cadillac are last in the constructors’ championship as a result.

Carlos Sainz – 6/10

Played the team game but fell behind Williams team-mate Albon this weekend.

Advertisement

Max Verstappen 8/10

Mighty lap in qualifying to only just miss out on pole. Was expecting Verstappen-like things down into Turn One but sadly, it wasn’t meant to be with Red Bull’s engine issues.

Charles Leclerc – 6/10

It wasn’t the fairytale end for Leclerc but even before the crash, he was not happy with his Ferrari team, be it brakes or pit strategy. Doesn’t take away from his speed here but it fell away from him in qualifying and ultimately he still put his car in the wall.

Advertisement

Lando Norris 6/10

Ended up starting behind McLaren team-mate Piastri and then got done by Gasly at the start. Ultimately had to retire from the race for the second grand prix in a row.

Oliver Bearman – 5/10

A bit unlucky with timings in qualifying but didn’t put the laps together when they counted.

Advertisement

Valtteri Bottas – 3/10

Outperformed by Cadillac team-mate Perez again and couldn’t get in the mix with Alonso or the Haas cars.

Lance Stroll – 4/10

Another weekend of struggles. Last in qualifying and a crash in the race.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

The first-class training hub advancing careers in education

Published

on

The first-class training hub advancing careers in education

Growing up in Crook, Catherine went to Parkside Comprehensive School, in Willington, and returned there to become an English teacher before progressing, via different roles, into senior management, and specialising in teaching and learning and professional development.

Now, as she celebrates her 30th year in education, Catherine is in her ‘perfect job’ – heading up an innovative training hub launched by a growing North-East Education Trust.

Last September, she became director of the ALP Institute of Teaching, Leadership and Research, established by the Advance Learning Partnership. Strategic partnerships with Evidence Based Education (EBE), and Durham University have strengthened the reach and impact of the Institute.

“It’s already exceeded expectations, growing rapidly into a successful hub for learning and development in our Trust and beyond,” says Catherine. “It’s so exciting and rewarding to see the levels of engagement and the impact it’s having on our colleagues.”

Advertisement

The Advance Learning Partnership’s origins go back to 2012 when Parkside converted to academy status. ALP was formally established five years later, growing into a mixed-phase Multi Academy Trust, serving nursery, primary and secondary pupils across County Durham and Darlington.

The majority of the 23 schools are in communities facing social and economic challenges, and ALP Institute’s launch is the latest phase in the Trust’s development.

“Having been a pupil at Parkside, then to go back there as a teacher, and be given so many opportunities to develop my own career, this role feels like a unique opportunity to give something back,” says Catherine, who has worked for ALP throughout the Trust’s existence.

“I have benefited greatly from professional development, so that adds to my passion and determination to help others thrive in their careers in education.”

Advertisement

Since it was launched in September, the ALP Institute’s strategic partnerships have expanded. As well as Evidence Based Education, links have also been forged with Bishop Auckland College and New College Durham. More than 100 free opportunities have so far been offered for professional learning and development, with 1,254 places booked by education professionals through a central online hub.

Forty-six ALP staff have been involved in delivering training, with external education experts also being brought in to lead courses.

The fact that so many ALP staff have signed up for a course already, underlines the healthy level of engagement in an initiative underpinned by three words: ‘learning, empowering, innovating’.

Earlier this year, the training body held its first public conference, with 75 delegates from different schools and Education Trusts coming together at Hummersknott Academy, in Darlington, to share ideas, strategies and good practice.

Advertisement

Catherine Hydon speaking at the ALP Institute conference at Hummersknott Academy (Image: Chris Barron)

Delegates at the ALP Institute conference in Darlington (Image: Chris Barron)

A second half-day conference, focused on Artificial Intelligence, will be staged at Whitworth Park Academy on July 2.

“This is only the beginning, our training programme is evolving all the time, and the aim is for our Institute to become a national resource,” says Catherine.

‘IT MADE ME BELIEVE IN MYSELF MORE’

ELLIE Butterworth, head of Year 9 at Whitworth Park Academy, in Spennymoor, embarked on the ‘Aspiring Senior Leaders’ course through the ALP Institute.

Advertisement

Ellie, who has been teaching since 2009, is in her third year with the Advance Learning Partnership and is keen to take the next step in her career.

“The course was perfect for my continued professional development – a chance for me to experience what senior leadership would be like,” she says.

The course, comprising six monthly sessions, was led by Whitworth Park headteacher, Stuart Dixon, alongside other senior leaders from the Trust.

“Being able to network with other people on the course, and hearing their stories, really helped. It made me believe in myself more and gave me the confidence that I’m ready for the next stage of my career,” Ellie added.

Advertisement

Ellie Butterworth, Head of Year 9 at Whitworth Park Academy; Lee Stott, Deputy Headteacher at Parkside Academy; and Karen McKeough, Assistant Headteacher at Whitworth Park Academy (Image: Chris Barron)

‘THERE’S SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE’

AFTER 26 years in education and eight years at the Trust, Karen McKeough is new to senior leadership.

As well as being assistant headteacher at Whitworth Park Academy, she also leads on professional learning across her school – a position that enables her to signpost staff to the right courses.

So far, she has personally benefited from a number of courses, including the ‘Leading Teaching and Learning’ course and the ‘Training The Trainer’ course, led by Julie Hurst and Val Rayner, deputy headteachers at Hummersknott Academy, in Darlington.

Advertisement

“It was really helpful to get different perspectives from people with experience on strategies that are employed in schools. The course leaders were really knowledgeable about the challenges of leading change, and provided practical advice and strategies,” says Karen.

“It was also a time to be reflective and build confidence. I feel lucky to be part of a Trust that’s enlightened enough to establish its own training arm, so I can pick the courses that are right for me.”

Karen also participated in an artificial intelligence course, led by Jake Burdis, from Durham University, and was thrilled to have created a revision tool app, based on what she learned.

“Everyone has different training needs, at different stages of their careers, and the ALP Institute offers something for everyone,” she adds.

Advertisement

‘IT’S ENABLED US TO BRING IN VITAL EXPERTISE’

LEE Stott has a dual role as deputy headteacher at Parkside Academy and artificial intelligence education lead for the Trust.

He, therefore, finds himself at the cutting-edge of emerging technology and having to shape how AI will benefit the Trust’s employees.

Lee started as AI Education Lead in March 2025 and put together a development team of staff members from primary and secondary schools with an interest in AI.

Advertisement

“One of the things we discovered was that continuing professional development wasn’t embedded in relation to AI because it’s still new,” says Lee. “We recognised the need to enable staff to access expert guidance and support. Through the ALP Institute, the Trust has been able to use its partnerships to bring in that vital expertise.”

A major area of focus has been on how AI can ease workloads and boost wellbeing, helping staff to understand how valuable time can be saved.

“One of the training sessions was on the myths surrounding AI and that eased some of the natural anxieties people feel,” Lee adds.

“Now, two staff surveys, eight months apart, have illustrated a significant increase in the use of AI, with employees feeling more confident about building it into their roles.

Advertisement

“By next year, we want to move on to a bigger focus on creativity and innovation to make lessons really engaging.”

‘IT’S MAKING A DIFFERENCE IN CLASSROOMS’

VICTORIA Summerfield started as a newly qualified teacher at Copeland Road Primary School, at West Auckland, and rose through the ranks to become Headteacher two-and-a-half years ago.

Copeland Road Primary only joined the Advance Learning Partnership last year, and Victoria says her staff have embraced the ALP Institute with a large proportion signing up for courses.

Advertisement

“It’s particularly relevant in a small school like ours where teachers have to lead on a lot of subjects,” says Victoria.

“It’s been lovely to see how the training has fed into work in the classrooms, with staff feeling more confident about leading subjects and able to connect with staff from other schools.”

One example was Copeland Road maths lead, Emma Crawford, taking the ‘Aspiring Maths Leader’ course. As the only primary teacher on the course, she was able to forge useful connections with teachers from secondary schools. Victoria has also been able to get policy updates and share good practice on issues such as safeguarding and attendance.

“It’s given me more rounded knowledge of what’s happening in education, and what I also love is that staff can put forward ideas for training,” she adds.

Advertisement

The range of courses is evolving all the time. For example, an ‘Aspiring Deputy Headteachers’ course will be added to the existing suite of leadership training next year, alongside a programme of training on Early Years and a joint project with colleagues at EBE which will focus on questioning.

Victoria’s deputy headteacher at Copeland Road, Joanne Murray, has taken the ‘Leading Teaching and Learning’ course, and found networking to be especially valuable.

“It was so useful for finding out about different ways of doing things,” she says.

Such positive feedback from professionals on the frontline of education is heartwarming for Catherine Hydon as she works with colleagues to plot the future of the ALP Institute.

Advertisement

“It’s been a brilliant start, and we know there’s a demand, so it’s about building something special on strong foundations,” she says.

While some school reports might end with ‘Must try harder’ or ‘Must listen more carefully’, the first-year report for the ALP Institute of Teaching, Leadership and Research could be summed up with: ‘Excellent progress – keep it up!

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

French Open 2026: Alexander Zverev had the ‘best and worst moments’ of his life on Court Philippe-Chatrier

Published

on

Alexander Zverev of Germany celebrates victory over Flavio Cobolli of Italy

Zverev had long been dubbed the best player of his generation to have never won a Grand Slam after a string of near misses – including three defeats in major finals.

At the US Open in 2020, he lost the final despite being two sets up against Dominic Thiem and having served for the championship at 5-3 in the final set.

He led Carlos Alcaraz by two sets to one in the 2024 French Open final but it was the Spaniard who ended up lifting his first Coupe des Mousquetaires.

At the Australian Open in 2025, he was outclassed in a merciless performance by Jannik Sinner that left Zverev saying he felt mentally “empty” a few months later.

Advertisement

“Last year was one of the most difficult moments in my tennis career,” Zverev said.

“This year is one of the happiest moments. It’s a very different feeling right now.”

It seemed like the pressure of a Grand Slam final might prove too much for a fourth time when 24-year-old Cobolli, who had twice fought back from a set down, forced a deciding fifth set.

But Zverev, who has struggled with his emotions on court in the past, held his nerve to end his major final curse.

Advertisement

After falling flat on his back in celebration, Zverev dedicated his victory to his team, which includes his father and brother.

“We have been through injury, heartbreaks, losses. We have been losers at times in the most important moments,” Zverev said.

“At the end of the day, we are Grand Slam champions now and that is what counts.

“I was laying on this court with an injury that I didn’t know if I will ever come back from. All of those memories, they’re not wiped out,” he said.

Advertisement

“They’re still with me but this one will beat all of them.”

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Resident in luxury Croydon tower block claims discrimination over bike rule

Published

on

Resident in luxury Croydon tower block claims discrimination over bike rule

During a visit to Altura 50, which asset management company Compass Rock International has recently taken over, David showed the LDRS that only 78 of the 239 cycle parking spaces designated for residents were accessible at the time. The LDRS observed that one of the main cycle storage hubs in the basement was locked and being used to store furniture, paint and maintenance equipment, while two others were inaccessible to residents at the time of the visit.

Source link

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025