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read PDF - Pershore Civic Society
PCSnewsletter_Aut_A3 fold 31/10/2014 11:37 Page 1 PERSHORE CIVIC SOCIETY NEWS AUTUMN 2014 PERSHORE PERSHORE CIVIC CIVIC SOCIETY NEWSLETTER LETTER TO AN UNKNOWN SOLDIER Pershore High School students in Years 8,9 10 and 12 have been involved in contributing to a Living Memorial marking the centenary of Worcester Parkway plan Who would like to save 25 minutes travelling to London? Who would like to park with ease and catch trains to Birmingham and Bristol from a new railway station located between Stoulton and Whittington? Visitors to Pershore Town Hall on 20th October will have learned how, after May 2017, this might be possible. Located on a new roundabout on the B4084 in Norton, the proposals for a new Parkway Railway station with 500 car spaces, have already been submitted to Network Rail for approval. A planning application will be submitted during Spring 2015. The proposed cost of the new station is £17.6million of which £7.5 million has already been provisionally secured from the Government’s Local Growth Fund. If all goes according to plan construction will start in the Winter of 2015. What might these proposals mean for Pershore Railway station if they go ahead? Already faced with the possibility of reduced frequency of services and challenged by its lack of parking, we can all too well imagine that, as the new Parkway Station is being built, the case for the closure of Pershore Station is also being constructed! Those with views should contact Worcestershire County Council. Pershore Station’s status, serving the second largest (and still expanding!!) town on the Cotswold Line deserves to be considered. Might the new Parkway Station be a threat to Pershore Station’s viability? More of this emerging story in due course... ‘Remember The Fallen’ visit Pershore Abbey and Royal District Naval Association welcomed guests from the local "Remember the Fallen" Association on Saturday 11th October on their inaugural group outing. Dr Judy Dale, Church Warden of the Abbey was on hand to provide information and the group were delighted to be shown memorabilia about the War Memorial including the history of Pershore's War Memorials carried out by the late Marshall Wilson which can be purchased from the Abbey. Sandra Taylor's website http://www.rememberthefallen.co.uk/ provides people across Worcestershire the opportunity to research relatives whose name appears on a war memorial. If you are interested in becoming a friend of “Remember the Fallen” or wish to donate to this resource, please contact Sandra by email at tommy@rememberthefallen.co.uk or by post at Remember the Fallen, 3 Hunt Avenue, Worcester, WR4 0QW. Pershore RNA's Centenary Commemorative book on Pershore Men during the Great War has this week gone to the printers and will shortly be available for purchase with all profit going to the town's Poppy Appeal. THANKS - to all the lovely people who have contributed to this issue! This issue of our newsletter is sponsored by DO YOU KNOW ANYONE WHO WOULD LIKE TO JOIN PERSHORE CIVIC SOCIETY? Why not offer them this edition of the Newsletter to read and fill in the form below? APPLICATION FORM Single membership £10 Joint Membership £15 the beginning of WW1. There is a statue of an unknown soldier on Paddington Station and he is reading a letter. The Living Memorial comprises letters to him such as the one he is reading. Many famous names in Literature have contributed to this memorial and their letters can be read on the website www.1418NOW.org.uk. Our students have written letters in English lessons and have uploaded them to the website so they can be read alongside letters from Stephen Fry, Children’s Laureate Malorie Blackman and many others. Below is a handful of quotations from the moving letters students have written... ‘...you will always be remembered for your bravery and victory. Don’t let your hope die out, stand strong and don’t be defeated by evil….’ ‘Dearest Friend, I wasn’t really sure what to do without you...I’m still not really, we left together, planned to come home together… Nothing lasts forever, that’s what you used to say’ ‘You are not unknown, not to those who loved you, not to those who made your life special, not to those who were your friends, not to those who pass you on the platform… You are not unknown to us.’ ‘Though you are unknown to the thousands of crowds you attract, the thousands of people you stand for, you are not unknown. Dubbed ‘unknown’ by someone neither you nor I know, you stand for thousands of men, all with a legend to their name.’ ‘It’s been almost two years now. You must tell me all about your travels when you get back...I hope you come back very soon Eddy. I don’t know how much longer I can go on without seeing your warming face.’ Under 21 £3 Under 16 FREE First Member ......................................................................................................................................... Address .................................................................................................................................................. ................................................................................................................................................................... Postcode ........................... Telephone ................................................................................................ Email ....................................................................................................................................................... Second Member at same address .................................................................................................. Please tick method of payment STANDING ORDER q CHEQUE q CASH q Please return this form to: Fred Noble 28, Three Springs Road Pershore WR10 1HS DISCLAIMER Opinions expressed by contributors to this publication do not necessarily reflect those of the editor or of Pershore Civic Society. Visit to the Houses of Parliament Some 20 members of the Civic society enjoyed a visit to the Houses of Parliament on 15th October at the very kind invitation of Harriet Baldwin MP. They enjoyed a guided tour, and were also able to witness a live debate in the House of Commons. The Speaker did not however open up the debate to those in the visitors gallery! A busy and enjoyable day was had by all – a repeat visit next year perhaps? For letters to the Editor please email: petermillichip@live.co.uk P L E A S E V I S I T U S A T W W W. P E R S H O R E C I V I C S O C I E T Y. O R G . U K WW1 CENTENARY PARADE The WW1 Centenary Parade was held in Broad Street on 4 July organised by The Pershore & District Branch of the Royal British Legion. The welcome was given by Lt Col Payne, President of Pershore Branch of the Royal British Legion followed by an address and a prayer by Rev Mark Jennings. Bethany Ireland aged 14 from Pershore High School read a very moving poem of remembrance and the Pershore Roll of Honour was read by Lt Cmdr Charles Hamlin, President of Pershore Royal Naval Association. The parade was attended by the Chairman of Worcestershire County Council Cllr. Pam Davey, the Vice Chairman of Wychavon District Council Cllr. Val Wood together with the Mayor and Mayoress of Pershore Cllr. Tony Rowley and Mrs. Rowley. Many residents of Pershore watched and listened, making it a very poignant occasion. I was struck during the parade by the incredible ability of those old and young to stand so straight and so still for so long! P L E A S E V I S I T U S A T W W W. P E R S H O R E C I V I C S O C I E T Y. O R G . U K PCSnewsletter_Aut_A3 fold 31/10/2014 11:37 Page 2 Tour of Britain through Pershore Enormous crowds welcomed the amazing spectacle of cyclists competing in Stage 4 of the “Tour of Britain” coming through Pershore on 10th Pershore did the event proud. BBC Television coverage featured the town. Business flourished, and a new generation of young people were no doubt inspired to take up the sport. The Plum Festival David Rudkin Toby Amies Penda’s Fen Many will remember the cutting edge shop window developed by the BBC for British Drama called “Play for Today”. Over 300 programmes were produced between 1970 and 1984. On the 2nd October 2014 Number 8 and the Civic Society jointly hosted the showing of “Penda’s Fen” - forty years since its original screening as a ‘Play for Today’ on TV. In 2011 “Time Out” voted “Penda’s Fen” one of Britain’s 100 best films. It was shot exclusively on location in Pinvin and the surrounding areas of Worcestershire. The play has two main characters: Stephen (played by Spencer Banks), the teenage son of the village vicar, and the beautifully shot landscape we know so well: stretching from the Cotswold escarpment to the Malvern Hills. The playwright David Rudkin, who lives locally, attended the screening at Number 8 and very kindly fielded questions, posed by guest moderator Toby Amies, and the audience. Toby, son of Civic Society members Michael and Elizabeth Amies, has made his career in film and his probing questions and David Rudkin’s candour brought the evening to life following the film itself. As Toby said: “It’s not every day one gets to compere the screening of a psycho drama touching on themes of authority, tradition, hypocrisy, landscape, art, sexuality, and paganism in one’s home town!! And then interview the playwright!” David Rudkin’s career spans theatre, TV, radio, cinema and musical theatre. Following the success of the Penda’s Fen evening, it is hoped that David might be tempted back to Pershore for further screenings of some of his other works, and interviews compered by the knowledgeable Toby Amies. What can be said about the fabulous “Plum Festival” that has not already been said? Not even the ghastly weather on Bank Holiday Monday could dampen the enthusiasm of all those taking part, or visiting the event from far and wide. Your editor retreated from the rain to enjoy “The Plum Jam” at The Pickled Plum, and was treated to musical performances from some unbelievably talented local young people hidden gems which Pershore should embrace and be proud of. Pershore Baptist Church PCS Wolverton Hall visit More than forty Civic Society members and friends attended a fascinating talk by Rev. Mark Jennings, the Baptist minister, about the history of the Baptist church in Pershore. During the disruption in the Church of England after the Civil War, a number of itinerant preachers appeared, while clergymen were expelled from the established church because of their Puritan convictions. Fear of persecution meant that dissenting groups had to meet in secret. It was thought that one of these groups met in Tiddesley Woods. The Baptist church in Pershore, one of the oldest in the country, was founded in 1658. In 1764 it was reported by the Abbey church wardens that a ‘conventicle’ was kept by a man called John Ward who lived in a small house between the Abbey and St Andrews. Local inhabitants attended regular Sunday afternoon services there. On 16th July 1700 the Broad street site was finally acquired by the minister, Rev Timothy Thomas, with the backing of a prosperous local businessman, Samuel Rickards, Snr. Rev Thomas died in 1716. He and his son, also Timothy Thomas, were buried in a spectacular tomb which can be seen in the Abbey grounds (see below). By the end of the 1700s, the church was flourishing. Three cottages were converted into a meeting house and the first manse was built in 1742. The church continued to expand, with changes made to the building, and upper and lower schoolrooms added in 1889. One of the ministers was Rev. John Ash, the 18th century lexicographer who wrote ‘The New and Complete Dictionary of the English Language.’ A Civic Society plaque, in his memory, is on the wall of the manse. Mark ended by saying that although there had been factions within and between churches in Pershore throughout the years, he felt that now congregations from the churches were becoming closer. Setting up and running the Food Bank was an example of how people from all the Pershore churches have worked together. The Society was particularly fortunate, having asked the owner if we might visit his Queen Anne House, Wolverton Hall, to be received in such a generous manner by Mr Coleridge. The whole visit was delightful with the sun shining as we were made welcome through the house to the terrace at the rear. Mr Coleridge talked about the history of the house and we then proceeded through the ground and first floor rooms of this magnificent house which has been sensitively restored by Mr Coleridge. Wolverton Hall is Grade II* listed, built in 1709 and was once the home of the Acton family. The house is built in red brick, with white painted quoins (corner stones) and elegant windows which span across all floors, giving light and glorious views to every room. There followed a tour of the grounds and the recently renovated barn. The visit concluded with coffee on the terrace and an opportunity to have further conversation with Mr Coleridge. Keep Pershore Beautiful The Litter Pick Day organized by Pershore Town Council on Saturday 4th August involved not only councillors but members of the public together with at least three members of the Civic Society showing civic pride: Val Wood, Tony Rowley, Peter Farrall