The Clock above the Colin Atkinson Pavilion

A bit of research by Paul Baker has uncovered, he believes, that the clock at the top of the Colin Atkinson Pavilion celebrates its centenary this year (2024).

He writes “It previously resided at the top of the old scoreboard which stood, more or less, on the current site of the Colin Atkinson Pavilion, until 1979. It was then moved to its current location. It is the only remnant of the ground from before 1979. The old scoreboard was paid for by a donation of, as far as I can see, £69 from the Stragglers Club. The donation was made at the end of the 1923 season and so, and I have made a bit of an assumption here, the scoreboard was in place for the 1924 season. It has therefore seen a few things and a bit of change in its time.”

The Colin Atkinson Pavilion Clock 
1924-2024

I am the Colin Atkinson Pavilion clock. 
I marke the walk of Old Father Time. 
Endlessly measuring days 
Since John Daniell stood firm at the crease, 
And Ramsay McDonald first reigned in Downing Street. 
New, from atop the scoreboard then, I cast my steady gaze. 
Now, I am the only remnant of those post Great War days. 
I am the Colin Atkinson Pavilion clock. 
Marking time. Tick tock, tick tock, tick tock. 

Days when brightly jacketed amateurs formed Somerset’s front line, 
With names like Critchley-Salmonson and Ulrick Considine 
Playing on endless summer days. 
Days when Munich’s Beer Hall Putsch simply melted away, 
And winning the Championship was a thing for another day. 
I saw Bill Andrews and Arthur Wellard in their prime. 
In days when Neville Chamberlain claimed peace in our time. 
I am the Colin Atkinson Pavilion clock. 
Marking time. Tick tock. Tick tock. Tick tock. 

I stood firm as another war was fought and won. 
Then saw Gimblett strike sixes into the churchyard, as if for fun, 
As times changed 
Nye Bevan laid the NHS at our feet 
Before our years of perpetual Championship defeat. 
I saw Maurice Tremlett create a team to fear, 
And Bill Alley score three thousand runs in a year. 
I am the Colin Atkinson Pavilion clock. 
Marking time. Tick tock. Tick tock. Tick tock. 

I saw the shift from Gentlemen to Players 
And one-day cricket come to Taunton’s sacred acres 
As times changed 
In the wake of the Sixties social revolution 
I watched as Somerset built towards one-day trophies with professional resolution. 
Close, Richards, Garner and Botham to the fore 
But the Championship never came to our door. 
I am the Colin Atkinson Pavilion clock. 
Marking time. Tick tock. Tick tock. Tick tock. 

The old scoreboard was the first of the old ground to go. 
In its place the new Colin Atkinson Pavilion on show. 
As times changed 
With traditional industries swept away in the face of global competition, 
And wood-splintered cricket stands displaced by plastic modernisation. 
For Somerset, no Championship, but five glorious trophies to ponder, 
Before, beneath my gaze, a great team split violently asunder. 
I am the Colin Atkinson Pavilion clock. 
Marking time. Tick tock. Tick tock. Tick tock. 

I gazed on in the quieter years that followed. 
Watching the artistry of Jimmy Cook and Mushtaq Ahmed. 
As the world moved on 
The Channel Tunnel completed. The Berlin Wall demolished. 
The Soviet Union unseated. Apartheid abolished. 
Then, at Taunton, a stirring: the Botham Stand erected, Jamie Cox appointed, 
But still, the ever-patient wait for the Championship pennant to be hoisted. 
I am the Colin Atkinson Pavilion clock. 
Marking time. Tick tock. Tick tock. Tick tock. 

Then, amid the razzmatazz of a new millennium 
Came energy and infrastructure regeneration. 
As times changed 
The Twin Towers came crashing down, filmed live in their plight. 
While Andy Caddick bowled endlessly, never ceasing to fight. 
And Jamie Cox produced a team which played as if in his image cast, 
With atomic energy unleashed, and a trophy eighteen years after the last. 
I am the Colin Atkinson Pavilion clock. 
Marking time. Tick tock. Tick tock. Tick tock. 

I saw the Stragglers Bar and wooden benches fall away, 
To be replaced by structures designed for the modern day. 
As times changed 
Lehmann Brothers crashed, and Harry Potter ruled supreme, 
While Justin Langer arrived to pursue the Championship dream. 
He laid the foundation for two decades of first-division play, 
But the Championship still in the future lay. 
I am the Colin Atkinson Pavilion clock. 
Marking time. Tick tock. Tick tock. Tick tock. 

I saw Craig Overton and Jack Leach in their prime, 
And Marcus Trescothick batting with touch sublime. 
As times changed 
In the unreal world, Twitter, Facebook and Instagram held sway, 
While in County Cricket’s world, live streams became the order of the day. 
I saw Alfonso Thomas take four in four, 
And James Hildreth’s hundred with a broken ankle at its core. 
I am the Colin Atkinson Pavilion clock. 
Marking time. Tick tock. Tick tock. Tick tock. 

Now, as my second century beckons, 
And another dictator threatens, 
As times change, yet remain the same, 
I look down with hope renewed as I have at each new season’s start, 
Waiting to see who will come forth and who will play their part. 
And with every run, and every wicket and cheer 
Breathe the eternal hope, “This year. This year.” 
I am the Colin Atkinson Pavilion clock. 
Marking time. Tick tock. Tick tock. Tick tock …