This one should really be known as ‘The Leaning Phone Box of Torphins’ and I’d be surprised if it’s there for much longer… because in addition to it falling over, there’s no phone inside! Poor phone box – it would be nice if this one could be rescued, reutilised and straightened up again, but I’m not holding my breath.
This one still had a phone in it, which is unusual these days! Sadly, it also had a notice inside informing the locals that it was being removed soon.
It’s fairly tatty and looks as though it has been in a state of disrepair for some time. Still, it’s sad to see that this one, like so many others, is due to be carted off to the phone box graveyard.
Dad emailed me the following with regards to this box last October:
‘It’s here […] but wasn’t when the Google street view was done – there’s a post office van there! They have made a bit of wall between the gatepost and the old wall, and added a phonebox from somewhere! So this one isn’t in its original location.’
Strange that a phone box would be moved to a new rural location! I wonder where it was originally.
This one could do with a slight repaint around the top but on the whole is very well-kept, and very neatly positioned between that bin and bus shelter! (Although, thinking about it, the phone box was probably there first…)
I absolutely love the refurbished paint scheme on this box! It was empty when Dad photographed it last September, but it looks as though it had been repainted ready to house a defibrillator. In the Street View image linked above, it was still red, so this is a recent development.
We’re still on Mum and Dad’s Welsh trip, and this week sees a second/third (see update to last week’s post) phone box from near the village of Mynachlog-ddu!
Red phone box, Main Road, Mynachlog-ddu, 11th September 2019.
This box was very tatty and weathered, and sadly, like many of the Welsh boxes that Mum and Dad found last year, it contained a notice informing the locals that the box would soon be going to the phone box graveyard. I’m sure it did valiant service while it could.
I am not at all sure that I have the right coordinates for this one – from the Google Street View image, I think it might be a different phone box. However, it was the only one I could find in Mynachlog-ddu (I couldn’t find St Dogmael’s Church, which this box is near)… so it’ll have to do for now!
Update 19th March 2020: Dad confirmed that it was a different box (but additionally that the one linked on Street View above was also still in situ when they visited – they just didn’t have chance to take a picture of it!). Here’s the correct box:
This box had sadly been emptied of its phone and contained a notice informing the community that it would soon be removed and sent off to the phone box graveyard. RIP phone box. It had become fairly well-kept since the Google Street View photo was taken too 🙁
This box has been repurposed for a defibrillator now (great news!) – you can see it alongside Dad’s photo-taking reflection in the picture! You can also still see the phone box in its previous tired state in the Google Street View image linked above.
The paint on this one is a bit faded, but the surroundings are very pretty. The box now contains a defibrillator instead of a phone, which is top quality phone box re-use!