I’ve posted lots of other people’s memories of Edge Hill, but what of my own? I’ve worked at Edge Hill for almost four years but it’s influenced my life for much longer than that.

I grew up in and around here – I went to Ormskirk Grammar School for seven years and one of the annual rituals was walking up Ruff Lane to hold the Sports Day at Edge Hill College (or EHCHE as is was known then). It may not surprise you to learn that I wasn’t my form’s best athlete but even then I was a bit of a geek so for five years one of my friends Craig Rigby and I ran the score keeping.

This was advanced stuff! We didn’t have Excel or Access – we wrote software from scratch to log results, show a running total and work out top girl and boy within minutes of the last race.

The first few years we were locked in the entrance to Stanley Hall, barely allowed out into the sunlight but eventually Sporting Edge was built and we got stationed in the gym before it was fully finished with a view across the events below.

The opportunities I got to develop my skills while at school stood me in good stead for my working life.

Back in the mid-nineties Edge Hill played a role in connecting up Lancashire’s schools to the internet and that included providing dialup internet and email access to Ormskirk Grammar.  Originally the Grammar was connected through Demon Internet but Edge Hill was able to offer a similar service for free.

This involved a SLIP connection (pretty rare because most ISPs only provided PPP) and email queue.  Our original Demon addresses ended @ogs-net.demon.co.uk but Edge Hill didn’t support dashes in subdomains so my email address had to change to [email protected]. A few months after I started at Edge Hill I got to take a look at the DNS configuration and was far too excited to see ogsnet.ehche.ac.uk still at the bottom of one of the files!

2 responses to “Sports Day”

  1. I would like to point out that when I won the triple jump and relay during the first year that the sports day software was running, it wasn’t a family stitch-up as was widely suggested at the time!