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Tuesday, 1 November 2011

Holywell Primary School Christmas Fare

Please come along after school on the 2nd.
Holywell Primary School Christmas Fare takes place on Friday the 2nd of December 2011 from  3:30pm - 5:30pm.

There will be Tombolas, a Raffle, Christmas Money Tree, Hoopla, Craft Stalls, Coffee, Teas, Home Made Cakes & Refreshments and lots more !

Please come and join in our festive fun.

We look forward to seeing you there.

Julie Pike
Chair of the Parents and friends of Holywell school
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Thursday, 27 October 2011

Upchurch Horticultural Society October Show

Presentations will be at 3:15pm.
The Upchurch Horticultural Society October Show takes place on Saturday October the 29th at the Upchurch Village Hall.

Doors open to the public at 2:00pm for: Flowers – Fruit – Vegetables 
 Domestic & Craft. There's also Refreshments – Tombola and a Raffle too.

The presentation of prizes will be at 3:15pm followed by the sale of produce at approximately 3:45pm.



Maxine Budden
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Wednesday, 26 October 2011

Indoor Boot Fairs

Come along on the 1st and the 6th.
There will be an Indoor Boot Fair on Tuesday the 1st of November at Upchurch Village Hall. 

Doors open at 10:00am until 12:00pm and admission is only 20p, which is donated to The Stroke Association. Tables  for stalls cost just £6.00.

For more information please contact Lisa on: 01795 428006 or 07968 792354.

The next sale will be on Tuesday the 6th of December 2011.

Lisa Older
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Friday, 21 October 2011

Darby and Joan Christmas Bazaar

All are welcome on the 23rd.

Upchurch Darby and Joan Club are holding their Christmas Bazaar on Wednesday the 23rd of November at Upchurch Village Hall.

Open to all ages with free entry it starts at 10:00am until 12:00pm. There will be all the usual raffles and other attractions with homemade cakes, tea and sausage rolls to.

Please come along and support this event.

Janet Gilbert
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Thursday, 20 October 2011

The Village War Dead Remembered 1914-1918

Every year in November, Remembrance Sunday which is held in the church, allows residents to pay their respects and remember those who died in the two world wars. The names of the 39 men who perished are read aloud and a bugler plays ‘The Last Post.’

Memories of Upchurch.
James Robinson and Herbert Hodges, two agricultural workers from Ham Green and John Allen from Gore Bank became early fatalities when they were killed in action while serving in the Buffs in 1914. Albert Newman, a lance corporal in the Grenadier Guards from Otterham Cottages and Charles Gransden a lance corporal in the Coldstream Guards from Gore Bank also perished early in the war. However, Percy Hales, son of village butcher and stockman Jacob Hales from Horsham Farm joined the Grenadier Guards, fought in the early battles of 1914 and survived unscathed. After being promoted to sergeant he was later killed by an exploding shell on his 21st birthday in France on September 6th, 1917.

With the war well underway, Bill Clark from Yew Tree Cottage in Poot Lane enlisted in the Royal East Kent Mounted Rifles in 1915. The eldest son of Ham Green farmer Henry Clark, he attended Holywell School and excelled as a talented sportsman, playing for the village football and cricket clubs. He was also a member of the church choir and served as a church sidesman. Bill went to France where he was attached to the Buffs and placed in the machine gun section and became a lance corporal. When returning home on leave in July 1916 he married his girlfriend Ellen Banfield and they later had a baby daughter but not before he had returned to the Western Front where he was killed by an exploding shell on June 15th 1917 aged 22.

Arthur Faulkner, son of ‘The Crown Inn’ publican James Faulkner enlisted in the Buffs in February 1916 and went to the Western Front in May. About to return home on leave, he was killed by a bomb dropped by a German plane. Before joining up he had assisted his father in the pub and became well known in the village. Later in 1917 Tom Sifleet, another Buffs recruit, became a casualty when a shell exploded and shrapnel badly wounded him in the head. He died of his wounds on 8th December 1917. He was one of five brothers sent to fight in the war. Before joining up he had become a well known member of the village football and cricket clubs. He left a wife and two young children.

The Banfield family from Bayford lost three family members. Fred was the first killed on September 7th, 1916 just one week after being sent to the Western Front in France. His brother in law William Clark from Yew Tree Cottage in Poot Lane perished one year later then his older brother George was killed while serving in the navy as Chief Artificer Engineer on 4th April 1918. George had been a member of the bellringers and the church bible class.

Several soldiers went missing in action and were later presumed dead. These included Fred Blewitt, a private in the Buffs from Church Farm Cottages in Forge Lane aged 25, Robert Tumber, a private in the East Sussex Regiment from Plantation Cottages aged 24 and Edward Muggeridge, a private in the Buffs from Gore Bank aged 25. All had served on the Western Front.

Some Upchurch men joined the navy like farmer’s son Roland Whitnell from Windmill Hill who served on H.M.S Dirk until it was torpedoed and sunk by the Germans on May 28th 1918. The 18 year old had joined up only two months previously. Percy Betts also died at sea on 27th March 1918 aged 26 when H.M.S Kale on which he was serving was mined in the North Sea. Wilfred Baker from Plantation Cottages died of pneumonia aboard H.M.S Valentine aged 24 while Walter Hatton from The Street was killed in a magazine explosion aboard H.M.S Vanguard in Scapa Flow harbour on July 9th 1917 aged 24.

Henry Marsh from Rose Cottage in Forge Lane joined the 1st Canadian Pioneers before the war but died of pneumonia aged 35 on March 7th 1916 and was buried at Ross Bay in British Columbia with full military honours. Although many servicemen who died are buried in foreign war cemeteries some are located in Upchurch churchyard. These include Henry Thurley, a private in the Buffs and Albert Stapleton, a corporal in the Royal Engineers both from Kent Terrace in Canterbury Lane and Stuart Mercer a Royal Naval stoker from Breach Lane.

All those who perished and remembered on Remembrance Sunday have their names inscribed on a marble tablet located in the church.

David Wood, who was born and raised in Upchurch, is able to write from personal experience about many people and aspects of the village and of changes that have taken place over the years making ‘Memories of Upchurch’ a very readable book and a detailed historical study of the village.

David Wood's book ‘Memories of Upchurch’ is available direct from David on:  david3702001@yahoo.co.uk  price £12 + p+p £2.

David Wood

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Monday, 17 October 2011

Friends of the Church of St. Mary the Virgin - Update

The new trust launched on the 8th of October.

Thank you to those who have responded to Upchurch Matters and have joined us as Friends of the Church of St. Mary in Upchurch.

It has been decided that for something as important as the historic Church building, that those who become members before 31st December 2011 will be recorded alongside the first Trustees as FOUNDER MEMBERS of the Friends.

If you want to join and would like a Membership Application Form  then contact Gerry Lewin on: 01634 366113 or send a text to: 07946 996789 or an email to: lewing135@tiscali.co.uk

Gerry Lewin - Chairman of ‘The Friends’
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