Derby Telegraph

Stolen statue is back to greet holiday children

ORIGINAL WAS TAKEN FROM OUTSIDE CHARITY’S SEASIDE HOME

- By SARAH NEWTON

A MUCH-loved statue which was stolen from outside a holiday centre for underprivi­leged Derbyshire children during lockdown has been replaced by local councillor­s.

The statue of a skipping boy was taken from outside the Derbyshire Children’s Holiday Centre, in Skegness, in the early hours during the height of the pandemic.

Neither the culprit nor the statue was ever found but Skegness councillor­s Mark Dannatt and Richard Cunnington paid for a £450 replacemen­t from their community funds.

The new statue of a boy on stilts is by Toscano, the same company that made the original. This time, the oak barrel on which it sits has been filled with concrete to prevent it from being stolen again.

Centre manager Ali Byerley said she and her fellow staff had been “devastated” after receiving a call from the police to say the original statue had been stolen.

Ali said: “It’s outside the centre just to depict all the children having a happy time and we were devastated that it just vanished overnight.

“It was a little bit of a landmark, and we were quite sad that someone would steal from a charity that works hard to give children some happy memories.”

The statue had been in situ since the charity celebrated its 125th anniversar­y five years ago and was an important symbol for the children attending the centre, not only to welcome them back each evening but to remind them to relax and have fun.

The children who attend the centre are from all over Derby and Derbyshire and may never have experience­d a holiday before. In normal circumstan­ces, the centre is open between April and October with spaces for 660 children a year. Derbyshire Children’s Holiday Centre chairman Alan Grimadell said: “We are extremely grateful to councillor­s Richard Cunnington and Mark Dannatt for their generosity in replacing the statue.

“It’s very important to us as a charity that children who go to the centre get a sense not only of where they are, but that it’s all about having fun!

“It was very upsetting when the original statue was stolen, so it’s great to see it replaced with an equally lovely replacemen­t.”

The Derbyshire Children’s Holiday Centre has not been able to open for the summers of 2020 and 2021 because of the Covid-19 pandemic. It is hoped that children can once again be welcomed in 2022.

It was very upsetting when the original statue was stolen, so it’s great to see it replaced with an equally lovely replacemen­t. Alan Grimadell

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 ?? ?? The replacemen­t statue is unveiled outside Derbyshire Children’s Holiday Centre. Pictured from left are Councillor Richard Cunnington, charity chairman Alan Grimadell, centre manager Ali Byerley and her grandson Riley Williams
The replacemen­t statue is unveiled outside Derbyshire Children’s Holiday Centre. Pictured from left are Councillor Richard Cunnington, charity chairman Alan Grimadell, centre manager Ali Byerley and her grandson Riley Williams

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