'People think it's just parmos. There's much more'

Robert Nichols standing on Linthorpe Road. He has short grey hair, brushed to his right, and is wearing a blue-and-black Middlesbrough FC tracksuit top. A row of terraced houses can be seen in the background on the left, while on the right are two advertising billboards.
Image caption,

Robert Nichols says the tour aims to strip away perceptions of Middlesbrough

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A town hit by riots last summer is shining a light on its community in an effort to "strip away people's preconceptions".

Hundreds of people confronted police during protests in Middlesbrough in August, with more than £750,000 of damage estimated to have been caused.

It was one of a number of violent outbreaks across parts of England in the wake of the murders of three girls in Southport.

This week, a series of free tours are being held, focusing on the area around Linthorpe Road where the disorder began, which feature audio recordings of several residents who have shared their memories of the town.

Organiser Robert Nichols said the one-hour tours, which are part of Middlesbrough Local History Month, were a chance to "amaze and inspire".

A car burns on a road during a riot. A female police officer, wearing riot clothing and a shield, is standing in front of it. Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Cleveland Police described August's riots in Middlesbrough as "like a warzone"

"We want to show people the streets where the riots happened and strip away any preconceptions they have, to show them the streets through other people's eyes," he said.

"The healing started the very next day when the community came out to clean up the streets."

'Healing' after riots

Mr Nichols said many people did not know a lot about the town's history.

"It's all about sharing our heritage with new facts to learn and stories to amaze and inspire," he said.

"I wanted to talk about the people who have come into the town as there are so many.

"It was founded in 1830. Everybody came for industry. Before that, it was just a farm."

The tour also includes Ayresome Gardens, which sits on top of what was Old Linthorpe Road Cemetery - home to 11,000 graves including 5,000 belonging to children.

People of all ages with brushes walking along a main street in MiddlesbroughImage source, Ian Forsyth/Getty
Image caption,

The community came together to clean up their streets after August's riots

Khadim Hussain is another of those to have recorded his memories of life in the town over the past 50 or so years.

He moved to Middlesbrough in 1975 having initially relocated to Bradford when his family left Pakistan eight years earlier.

After several years working at one of ICI's local chemical plants as a research assistant, Mr Hussain and several family members opened a curry house on Linthorpe Road in 1990.

He later published a book about curries in 2006 and began compiling poetry after taking a creative writing course at Teesside University.

Khadim Hussain standing on Linthorpe Road holding a sign for his old restaurant, Cleveland Tandoori. He is bald with a grey beard and is wearing a grey jacket and polo T-shirt. Vehicles can be seen behind him along with shops.
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Khadim Hussain ran a curry house in the town for 12 years

"I came here in summer 1975 and have been here ever since," he said.

"Even though people here might be a different skin colour or religion, we share a culture.

"Middlesbrough is a friendly town. We know everyone and we're all part of a family even if we have different interests."

'Best-kept secret'

Dominic Nelson-Ashley came to Middlesbrough from London in 1995 to take up a job as a careers advisor.

He later founded a social enterprise to help disadvantaged people gain work skills via creative arts and then launched a record label.

Dominic Nelson-Ashley standing in Ayresome Gardens. He is smiling as he looks into the camera. He has short greying hair and is wearing black glasses, a brown jacket and blue top. Behind him are grassed areas and a basketball court.
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Dominic Nelson-Ashley says Middlesbrough and the North East have much to offer

He said he was shocked by last summer's riots and believes Middlesbrough and the wider North East have much to offer.

"That was not a true reflection of what I know this area is. It's one of the country's best-kept secrets," he said.

"Everything you could possibly want is in this area if you care to look for it."

He highlighted how easy it was to access the seaside in nearby Saltburn and the countryside in Osmotherley, on the edge of the North Yorkshire Moors.

"If you walk down Linthorpe Road, you can experience all the cultures of the world on one high street. That's fantastic," he said.

"People from outside Middlesbrough might say, 'Oh, that's the place with parmos', but there's so much more."

The tours are free and start at 14:00 BST from the Dorman Museum, but people are asked to book a place.

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