Heather Grahams family and friends walked over 84miles along Hadrian’s Wall to raise a fantastic £700. Well done Heather

Heather Graham and friends on Hadrian's Wall
Heather Grahams family and friends walked over 84miles along Hadrian’s Wall to raise a fantastic £700. Well done Heather

Heather Graham and friends on Hadrian's Wall
Taking part in this year Great North Run was Alison Jobe who raised a total of £569. MKMRF Patron Gayle Tomlinson also took part raising over £100 to help raise money for research into mesothelioma. A huge thank you to you both.
Pharmacists in Gateshead and South Tyneside has been showing their support for mesothelioma research. They’ve completed a sponsored cycle ride in October and a sponsored walk in November. Their efforts resulted in raising thousands of pounds by cycling 40miles from Gateshead along the River Tyne to South Shields and then along the coast to Roker Park and back again.
The cyclists were started by the Mayor of Gateshead by the Mayor of Gateshead who was diagnosed as a mesothelioma sufferer herself in February 2007. The Deputy Mayor of Sunderland was also there to show his support.
Then in November it all started again thanks to Gateshead and South Tyneside and Sunderland’s Pharmaceutical Committee. More than 200 took part as pharmacists encouraged friends and local GPs to don their walking shoes and hit the streets.
Grateful thanks to pharmacists Tracey Groves and Louise Lydon who took on the enormous task of organizing the events.
It was an excellent way to help to raise awareness and local people were delighted to give their support in area which suffers more than most of asbestos related disease. With the help and support of local people a fantastic £7,200 was raised and donated to the Mayor of Gateshead’s Appeal which the MKMRF will benefit from. Thank you; your support is very much appreciated.
The Snowdrop is a flower we all hold so dear
It reminds us of loved ones who are no longer here
Snowdrops flourish and grow to give us hope
Showing us there is a way to cope.
They push and push through frozen ground
Showing us that together a friendship we’ve found
To be able to go forward and help one another
Is something we strive for to make us be stronger.
Sweet snowdrops keep blooming year after year
To show us our loved ones will always be near.
By Edna Thorpe (husband Alan died from Mesothelioma in January 2007)
A blanket of snowdrops has been planted on both sides of the River Tyne to commemorate those who have died from mesothelioma. In total 10,000 snowdrops planted by Gateshead Council, North Tyneside Council and South Tyneside Council Durham Colliery Mechanics Trust in partnership with MKMRF have created memorial gardens across the region.
The Snowdrop Memorial Garden’s are dedicated to the men and women who lost their lives to the asbestos related cancer Mesothelioma. Creating lasting tributes bringing hope and promise for a better future. When the bulbs blooms in spring they will be a reminder of the tragic legacy of asbestos, but will also give hope that one day we will find a cure for this terrible disease.
The Mayor of Gateshead, Maureen Chaplin, who was diagnosed with mesothelioma herself in February 2007, attended the first planting ceremony in the Workers Memorial Garden in Saltwell Park, Gateshead.
The Elected Mayor of North Tyneside, John Harrison supported the second ceremonial planting of snowdrops which took place in the grounds of the Sir GB Memorial Hunter Hospital where MKMRF and the Self help group is based.
The third garden is at Lawe Top Roundabout which looks across the River Tyne was a perfect setting for the memorial garden in South Shields. The Mayor and Mayoress Councillor and Mrs Alex Donaldson took part in the ceremony. Snowdrop poems were read out at each ceremony by relatives of loved ones lost to the disease.
Councillor Maureen Chaplin sadly died 11th February 2009 our heartfelt condolences go to her husband, Bob and family.