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Joy Davies obituary

1 day ago
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My mother, Joy Davies, who has died aged 89, was a chemist, social worker and passionate advocate for people with severe learning difficulties.Born in Ormesby, North Yorkshire, to Olive (nee Postgate), a midwife, and Thomas Hansell, a butcher, Joy went to the Cleveland school (now Teesside High) in Eaglescliffe.She left aged 16 and decided against working on the family farm near Swainby in North Yorkshire, choosing instead to join the Ministry of Agriculture, based in Newcastle upon Tyne.Her work testing milk at farms took her all over a region that remained close to her heart all her life.In the late 1950s, she joined British Titan Products, a company that manufactured titanium oxide, as a chemist, and worked in the company’s laboratories in Billingham, near Middlesbrough.

She lived in a bedsit near Albert Park in Middlesbrough and it was there that she met Tony Davies, a technical author for the British Iron & Steel Research Association, whom she married in 1965,The couple briefly lived near Maidenhead, Berkshire, where Tony got a job working for Ferranti, before moving back to Teesside so that he could study computer science at Teesside Polytechnic (now Teesside University),Joy supported his ambition by working night shifts in the local Tetley’s tea factory for much of the early 70s,In the early 80s Joy began her own studies, qualified in social services at a college in Middlesbrough, and became a field officer for Cleveland county council, working with people with severe learning difficulties across Teesside,In time she rose to become a deputy manager of adult training centres, working in Grangetown, Hartlepool and Middlesbrough.

Joy and Tony retired in the mid-90s, and she fulfilled her dream of returning to the Yorkshire countryside by moving to a village near Thirsk.She became a well known and active member of the community, keeping hens, geese and ducks and maintaining a beautiful garden.She led a successful campaign against plans by North Yorkshire police to build a new headquarters in the area, as she was concerned about its proximity to the village school, the increase in traffic and the damage to wildlife in the rural setting.Joy had a lifelong love of theatre.She acted, directed and designed costumes for the Eaglescliffe Stage Society for many years.

Her other passions included nature and sport, specifically tennis, Middlesbrough Football Club and Yorkshire cricket.Tony died in 2023; Joy is survived by her sons, Andrew and me, and four grandchildren, Laurie, Alec, Georgia and Ben.
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Norwegian biathlete wins Winter Olympics bronze and then tells TV interview of affair

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about 11 hours ago
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Muirhead vows to rally Team GB as curling defeat means wait goes on for Winter Olympic medal

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about 11 hours ago
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US figure skater Amber Glenn resolves Winter Olympics music dispute with Canadian artist

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about 13 hours ago
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Winter Olympics officials find fix for broken medals and promise repairs

After days of embarrassing stories about Winter Olympic medals cracking, snapping, and even breaking in two after falling in the snow, organisers say they have finally fixed the problem.Officials have also promised to repair any of the medals that were awarded in the opening three days of competition in Milano Cortina, after identifying on Monday that the issue stemmed from the medal’s cord, which is fitted with a breakaway mechanism required by law.The system is designed to release automatically if pulled with force, preventing the wearer from being choked. However it led to problems that began on Saturday when the American downhill skiing champion Breezy Johnson revealed that her gold medal had fallen off her ribbon as she jumped in celebration.Speaking at the daily Milano Cortina briefing, spokesman Luca Casassa said: “Following reports of issues affecting a small number of medals, the organising committee immediately reviewed the matter, working closely with the State Mint, which produced the medals

about 14 hours ago
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Jos Buttler insists ‘dressing room knows the truth’ about McCullum’s qualities

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about 15 hours ago
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The Breakdown | Test rugby coaches have a shelf life and Townsend must know he’s near the end

The witty Anglo-American author Ashleigh Brilliant passed away last September at the age of 91, but his best lines are timeless. Beleaguered sports coaches worldwide will all recognise one of his characteristically pithy observations: “I try to take one day at a time – but sometimes several days attack me at once.” To be responsible for an under-pressure national side must induce a similar feeling.So what do you do when coaching life starts serving you lemons? After a while there are only two options: try to ride it out, or accept it might be wiser for someone else to have a go. It can be a delicate judgment, often shaped by non-sporting considerations

about 15 hours ago
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Ukraine racer defies IOC ban by wearing ‘helmet of memory’ as anger grows

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‘My needles are waiting’: Ben Ogden credits knitting habit after cross-country silver

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