
Saltaire
Saltaire is a Victorian model village near Shipley, West Yorkshire, situated between the River Aire, the railway and the Leeds and Liverpool Canal.
Saltaire takes its name from its founder, Sir Titus Salt, and the River Aire which runs through the village.
Salt’s Mill and the houses were built by Titus Salt between 1851 and 1871 to allow his workers to live in better conditions than the slums of Bradford. The mill ceased production in 1986, and was converted into a multifunctional location with an art gallery, restaurants and the headquarters of a technology company. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Salt built neat stone houses for his workers, washhouses with tap water, bathhouses, a hospital and an institute for recreation and education, with a library, a reading room, a concert hall, billiard room, science laboratory and a gymnasium. The village had a school for the children of the workers, almshouses, allotments, a park and a boathouse. Recreational initiatives were also encouraged such as the establishment of a drum and fife band for school age boys and a brass band.
As you step inside Salt’s Mill, you are immediately greeted by its grandeur and architectural beauty. Salts Mill is home to one of the largest collections of David Hockney’s art.
There is so much to discover in Salt’s Mill and the village of Saltaire, but we just didn’t have the time to see everything.
Some photos can be seen here.



Claire Mooney
With sadness we have to inform you that Claire Mooney died on Monday, 12 August.
Her long and courageous battle against cancer ceased. Claire was a singer songwriter with numerous albums to her credit.
With Claire you expected lots of audience participation, community singing, audience dancing and lots of fun. She mixed the political with the playful and blended it altogether into a performance of serious fun. In September 2022 I attended “An Evening with Claire Mooney” in the Performance Space in Manchester Central Library. She soon had me up on stage! In October 2023 the radio station ALL fm 96.9 opened the Claire Mooney studio to recognise Claire as a presenter, musician, lesbian activist, humanitarian and role model for us all.
She touched many of our lives.

Kenneth Felts who Came Out at 90 Celebrates First Wedding Anniversary with Husband

Kenneth Felts, now 94, and Johnny Hau found each other after Kenneth’s “coming out” story went viral. They are celebrating their first wedding anniversary.
“After meeting Johnny, everything has just bloomed,” Kenneth Felts, who announced he was gay in 2020, when he was 90 years old, said. “The freedom I have to speak out, go around, things like that – I’m a new person. I’m a different person.”
For their anniversary on Monday, 8 July, the couple had a “wonderful” time attending a local drag show at Hamburger Mary’s, according to Felts (who said he also got a lap dance from his husband onstage).
The previous day, they also celebrated with his daughter, Rebecca Mayes, and her family at their usual Sunday lunch.
“We gave them a gift card to go out to dinner together and got them an ice cream cake that we all had a slice of,” says Mayes.

Photo courtesy: Kenneth W Felts
For Felts, saying yes to spending the rest of his life with Johnny Hau, 35, was a journey that took decades.
In 2019, the retiree and Korean War veteran was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma. He underwent chemotherapy and by 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, he was forced to endure his sickness while isolated at his Arvada home.
Felts said that during this time, a friend convinced him to write a memoir. He started and got to a point where he mentioned his first love, Philip Jones.
During a visit one day, his daughter, who came out to her father as a lesbian after she graduated college, asked why he was crying. He replied, “Because I should never have left Philip.”
“I outed myself to my daughter,” he recalls now. “I had never intended to out myself to anybody, but I outed it to her … She took it very well. So I decided to put it on the net, on my Facebook, and instead of doing it to my friends, I did it to the public unknowingly.”
Soon, his story was being told across the globe, and one of the people who first heard about it was Hau.
“It took a lot of courage for him to come out, and I wasn’t really fully out also,” Hau, who works in I T, said. “I just felt like I wanted to talk to someone about this.”
So Hau reached out and the pair set up a blind date.
“We met on a Friday evening, and we had our masks on, of course, because of COVID,” Felts says. “We went up to the salad course, and then we were able to unmask. We talked, and I liked what I saw and I liked what I heard.”
Despite the decades-wide age difference, Hau says he felt “connected” to Felts. He said that it was a “real battle to be at peace” with his affinity for older partners, but the moment he met Felts, he found the two had a lot in common.



One of those commonalities was their faith.
“I was raised Catholic and a lot of this idea of how to not commit sin and stuff like that and that was really bothering me,” Hau says. “I saw that similarity with his story about him finding guilt when he was trying to be happy with Philip, and that really connected with me.”
The two would stay up talking the night they met and ultimately, as their relationship grew, Hau began to visit each weekend and on Tuesdays.
Then on 8 July 2023, the two shared a small backyard wedding. “It was a real close family affair there, and it was just a wonderful feeling, and especially to know that Johnny was going to be mine forever,” Felts says.
Now in remission, Felts said that, outside of his first marriage and Mayes’s birth, the last four years have probably been the best in his life.

Photo courtesy: Kenneth W Felts
Born in Kansas in 1930, Felts says that he was raised in a “rather fundamental Christian family.” He completed two years of college and joined the Navy, serving in the Korean War from 1950 to 1954. He then graduated from college and started work as an insurance investigator in California.
Although he identified as straight at the time, he remembers that “one of the guys in the group came over to my desk” to help him with his forms. That man was Philip, and the pair started “meeting for coffee” and then it “wasn’t long before we were dating.”
The two kept their relationship a secret but grew closer, eventually living together. “Sitting in church one day, he was in the choir singing, and I was in the pews, and I was bombarded with guilt,” Felts says. “This basic Christian indoctrination that I’d had all my life really kicked in.”
He acknowledges that he ended things with Philip by “ghosting,” and he left California and moved back to Dodge City, in Kansas. Hiding his true identity, Felts got married in 1962 and become a father 10 years later. But he and his wife divorced in 1980.

Photo courtesy: Kenneth W Felts
“I started looking for Philip again,” he says. He used the phone book and called every Philip Jones he could find, but was never able to track him down.
When Felts came out to his daughter – who lives a mile away from him – Mayes, a married mother of two, felt overwhelmed with “compassion”.
Mayes has always had a close relationship with Felts, who raised her from about the age of 11, and admits she wasn’t totally surprised by his admission.
Finally living his life freely, Felts published his memoir, My Handful of Stars: Coming Out at Age 90, in 2022 and enjoys creating art using organic and recycled materials – some of which has been on display at the Denver Art Museum.

Photo courtesy: Kenneth W Felts
Meanwhile, Mayes says that the family has lunch together at least once a week with her son, who is in college, and often joins them.
Felts says he’s living his life as if age “did not matter.”
“I just enjoy every day now knowing that Johnny is here and my family is here, and we get together,” he says. “I’m an old man, but I’m very happy to be an old man with all my support around me.”




Sad news about Claire Mooney, who I’ve had the pleasure to see a couple of times. May she rest in peace
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Many thanks for your last message Tony, I will go to Saltaire, as I Love the Victorian Period! It’s Brian here!
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