Edvalsons in England Blog Entry---9 September 2018
Greetings from England! Although it is not yet officially autumn, the
weather and foliage is acting like it.
We are still enjoying a mixture of sun, clouds and rain but the days are
rapidly growing shorter and the some of the leaves are starting to turn and
start dropping. We are still on hiatus
from our classes for the rest of this month, but we have started to have new
and returning students begin to return to the Institute. The professional students (medicine &
dentistry) are back in their clinics and the students of Leeds Beckett
University begin classes this coming week.
The University of Leeds undergraduate students still don’t start school
until October 1.
On Monday evening August 27 we were
able to attend the final performance at the Gilbert and Sullivan Festival in
Harrogate of “Pirates of Penzance”. It
was fabulous and of course, we know all the words and story from Sister
Edvalson’s having directed this show 4 times.
The voices were wonderfully operatic.
We took along 2 of the senior sister missionaries from our mission
office and had a great evening together in this delightful old theater. The organizers of the event even came out and
did a sing-a-long of several varied numbers from the G & S Songbook. It was a delightful evening!
For 3 days in late August, we had a
“Mission Tour” by Elder Paul Johnson who serves as President of the Europe area
of the Church, is a member of the Seventy and is stationed in Frankfurt,
Germany. A Mission Tour is when a
General Authority is assigned to annually review the status of the Mission and
meet with the missionaries and mission leaders and give instruction and
encouragement. Two meetings were held by
Elder & Sister Johnson. The northern
half of the mission gathered at the York Stake Center and the southern half of
the mission gathered the next day at the Nottingham Stake Center. The final day was in Leeds with Elder &
Sister Johnson meeting with the Mission Leaders (Zone and Sister Training
Leaders). We had a wonderful
meeting. The primary focus of the
meeting was to promote unity amongst the missionaries. As of July 1 with the closing of the England
London South Mission, the Norwich Stake was added to our mission from the
England London Mission and the Leicester and Nottingham Stakes were added from
the England Birmingham Mission. The UK
and Ireland went from having 5 missions to 4 missions so there was a general
shuffling of boundaries as part of that change.
Elder & Sister Johnson
described the 3 different cultures in the Book of Mosiah in the Book of Mormon
when those that followed Alma (Sr.) and the people of Limhi united themselves
with the people of Mosiah to form one new society. The mixing of these 3 cultures happened in a
harmonious and spiritual way to the benefit of all. The Johnsons wanted the 3 mission cultures
here to have an equally harmonious union after coming together and “likened the
Scriptures” in this case comparing President and Sister Turvey to Mosiah and
the opportunity to bring in these 2 other groups in a harmonious and uplifting
way. It was a great message and was well
received. Before the meeting they
greeted each missionary individually as they entered the chapel and took a few
moments to have an individual conversation about everyone’s assignment and
where they were from.
On Saturday September 1, we were
able to spend our “P” (Preparation) Day making a drive to the Northeast through
the North York Moors National Park and on to the town of Whitby. It was home to an old Abbey and was the port
from which Captain James Cook, the English Explorer, sailed his fleet. His ships were constructed here and it was
also the port from which the coal mined in Yorkshire was shipped down to London
during the heyday of coal mining. Today
it is a tourist beach town and we picked a good day to come as it was about 75
degrees (F) and was the last truly summer like day that we have had. There is a nice beach plus a fairly big
harbor and the Abbey and church which sit overlooking the town. We had a fun walk around the Abbey ruins with
our tour guide (audio tour) narrated by Judi Dench.
We also held an organizational
meeting to plan our welcome back to school week of activities known as
“Freshers Week”. We will hold different
types of welcome activities each night at the Institute the last week of
September. This coincides with “Freshers
Week” at the University of Leeds where new students are introduced to the many
extracurricular activities of student clubs and societies in addition to their
schools. The legal drinking age in the
UK is 18 and we are told that alcoholic beverages are free and flow freely at
these events and we want to provide an alternative to these events where our
LDS students can be comfortable as well as discover all the Institute has to
offer this coming year.
We continue to host our Home
Evening group each Monday evening and a Wednesday evening dinner and social
time. We’ve had up to 18 at our Home
Evening meeting and a dozen or so for our Wednesday evening dinner. We showed “Singing in the Rain” as our movie
on August 31 and we didn’t hold one this past Friday (see below for reason).
We were delighted to be able to
host Dana’s cousin Tami Manning along with her husband Mark from Jefferson,
Oregon who arrived on Wednesday evening (Sept 5) and departed this
morning. We got permission from
President Turvey to do some sightseeing with them while they were here and
thoroughly enjoyed a wonderful time together.
They arrived in time to join the other YSAs for our Wednesday
dinner. Then on Thursday we drove to
Haworth and spent a few hours touring the village and the Bronte’s family home
(now a museum) and nearby church. From
there we made circular loop through the Yorkshire Dales with a visit to the
Wensleydale Creamery (think Wensleydale Cheese from the “Wallace & Gromit”
stop action animation stories and movies).
From there it was on to view each of the 3 parts of Aysgarth Falls and
drive on to Thirsk for a welcome late evening meal at a nice hotel restaurant.
On this past Friday we toured
Studley Royal and Fountains Abbey, 2 National Trust Properties that highlight
an old Abbey which sits adjacent to an 18th Century “Capability
Brown” type formal English garden. These
are both beautiful areas which were very picturesque and we got our 10,000+
steps in this day by having a good walk around each park. Studley Royal is also home to a large deer
park which we drove through on our entrance to the car park. It also contains a great house which was home
to hundreds of boys who were housed and trained to work during the Great
Depression (a project similar to America’s CCC (Civilian Conservation
Corps)).
On Saturday we drove to York and
visited the Shambles, the old city and spent a few hours in the York Minster,
learning about its 800 or so year’s history of the current building along with
the 1200 years of history of the site which was the home of previous churches
and a Roman settlement.
This was almost like a 3 day
vacation as we spent time with dear family members with whom we have spent many
a pleasant trip. The Mannings had just
completed a tour of Scotland, and since we were so close, they extended their
time here in the UK by driving the 4 hours south from Edinburgh to see us and
what kind of things we’ve been doing here as senior missionaries. We miss them already!
We hope you are all doing
well! We feel like we’ve been so blessed
to be here and serve with the Saints here in Leeds. We have welcomed a few new students in recent
weeks. Mateo Llamas has come here from
Northern Spain to have a year abroad at the University of Leeds, which is a
sister university with his university in Spain.
He served his mission here in Leeds about 4 years ago and has enjoyed
seeing several of the members he knew during his mission. He is doing English Studies so he’s happy to
be here. Katia Wesby has moved here from
Miami to study for her Master’s Degree in Sports Psychology at Leeds Beckett
University. She is originally from
Argentina but has lived in Miami since she was young. And sadly, we said goodbye to our YSA
student Melissa Morgan from Fremont California who has completed her Master’s
degree in American Literature. Her
parents came on Friday to pick her up.
We met them and they left after Church today to tour the UK before
returning home.
That’s our report for the past 2
weeks. It seems we’re always busy and
it’s a blessing for us to be here. We
send our love to family and friends!
| Theatre in Harrogate—awaiting “Pirates of Penzance” |
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| Mission Tour in York with Elder & Sister Johnson |
| Elder E at Whitby Harbor |
| Sister E at Whitby Abbey |
| Whitby Abbey |
| Sister E with Tami and Mark Manning at the Bronte Home and Museum in Haworth |
| Elder & Sister E in the Yorkshire Dales |
| Sister E, Tami Manning, Mark Manning and Elder E at Studley Royal |
| Elder and Sister E at Fountains Abbey |
| Sister E, Elder E, Mark and Tami Manning at Studley Royal |
| Elder E, Tami Manning, Mark Manning and Sister E at York |
| Elder E, Melissa Morgan and Sister E saying goodbye |


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