Wednesday, 21 May 2014
European Parliamentary Election - South East
1935 residents from the village are entitled to vote in tomorrows European Parliamentary Election.
Our village Polling Station is: Upchurch Village Hall, Upchurch, Sittingbourne, Kent, ME9 7EU.
A statement of parties and individual candidates nominated can be found on the Swale Borough Council website. Link to PDF here
Upchurch Matters
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Tuesday, 20 May 2014
Upchurch Village Market - Sunday 25th May
Upchurch Village Market returns to the Village Hall this Sunday the 25th of May between 10:00am - 1:00pm
Upchurch Mattersspace
Monday, 19 May 2014
Nursery Days - Diary Dates for 2014
Tuesday 3rd June
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Graduation pictures
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Lee Baddely will be in to take photos of the children that are graduation.
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Friday 13th June
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Father’s day
3.30pm – 4.30pm
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We are inviting the fathers, carers or men in the children’s lives in
to join the children for tea.
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Tuesday 15th July
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Graduation
10.30am – 11.15am approx
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This is a lovely (and a little sad) ceremony where we celebrate the
children’s time at nursery and wish them well for the future.
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Tuesday 15th July
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Snowflake parents evening
4.00pm – 6.00pm
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A chance for you to come and look through your child’s file and have
a little chat with your key person.
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Wednesday 16th July
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Sunbeams Parents evening
4.00pm – 6.00pm
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As above.
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Thursday 17th July
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Rainbow parents evening
4.00pm – 6.00pm
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As above.
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Wednesday 17th September
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Teddy bears picnic
3.00pm – 4.30pm
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This is to be organised by Snowflake room so watch this space.
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Tuesday 30th September
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Parent lunch
11.30 – 1.00pm
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Tuesday 14th October
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Mad hatters tea party
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Today we will be going through the rabbit hole and into the magical
land of Alice in wonderland. The
children will enjoy a mad hatter’s tea party with teapots, cups and saucers
and some special dainty food that asks you to ‘eat me’.
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Tuesday 9th December
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Snowflake room Christmas gathering
3.30pm – 4.30pm
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Parents/carers are invited into Snowflake room to share mince pies,
meet some other parents and listen to Christmas music.
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Wednesday 10th December
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Sunbeams Christmas performance
10.30am -11.15am / 2.30pm – 3.15pm
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Yet to be announced, but always an excellent production, Sunbeams
Christmas performance. More
details nearer the time.
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Wednesday 17th December
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Rainbow Christmas craft morning
9.30am – 11.30am
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Rainbow room invite all the parents in to the room to watch and join
in some Christmas art and craft activities. There will be lots going on and is an excellent
opportunity for you to see the room in action.
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Please note that Nursery Days is shut on all Bank Holidays. We also close early at
4:00pm on Christmas Eve and reopen on the first working day after the new
year. Children in need will be announced nearer the time.
Mel.
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Sunday, 18 May 2014
A History of ‘The Three Sisters’ Public House
The Three Sisters circa 1910. |
There are several theories about how the pub acquired
its name but the exact reason is unknown. The first of these is connected with
three sarsen stones which are situated at the south west corner of the pub.
These mark the footpath that passes through Natal Farm. Secondly, there were
once three beacons situated on the marshes to guide shipping that were known as
The Three Sisters. Another theory is that the pub was named after the three
Hubbard sisters who lived in a nearby cottage during the 19th
century.
George Freeman served as the first publican of
the Three Sisters with his wife Ellen who originated from Ireland. In 1871 his
niece Frances Sarden and a lodger named William Lacy also lived there. George
Freeman’s name appears on the 1861 census list as publican of the Anchor and
Hope pub in Otterham Quay where he worked before taking on The Three Sisters.
By 1881 George Clark had taken over and he remained there until the 1890s. Bill
Edmunds then took over with his wife Rose and two children William and Rose.
Bill Edmunds, a short, stocky man with bushy black eyebrows and a mustache
became well known in the area and became a prominent member of Rainham Cycle
Club whose headquarters were based at the Green Lion Inn in Rainham High
Street. While serving as publican at the Three Sisters he organised regular
excursions to the seaside and short cycling trips for customers.
During the 1890s ‘The Jolly Brickmakers club’
became established in the pub. Members contributed money so that social trips
could be organised to different locations. Many trips took place including one
to Yalding in 1894. Concerts were also held at the pub in aid of needy
parishioners. In August, 1899 a smoking concert raised £4 for blind parishioner
Richard Turrell from Otterham Quay.
In 1900 brickfield workers like Richard Parr
and Fred Wilkman lodged at the pub along with a servant named Edith Wills who
helped out in the building. Landlord Bill Edmunds who had made a big
contribution to the pub while managing it died prematurely from pneumonia aged
40 in 1902.
During the 1960s brickfield workers, foreign
seamen from Otterham Quay and locals continued to
patronise the pub with characters like Bill Richardson who lived nearby in a
bungalow. He personally constructed it single handed over more than a decade.
‘The Keg Boys’ from Rainham with members like Stan Peace, Neville Huggins and
Colin Chapman also periodically drank there along with other locals.
Robert Moulton and his wife Margaret became
long serving landlords at the pub until the 1970s but with the closure of the
brickfield trade from brickfield employees ceased and the pub had to rely on a
hard core group of locals to keep the pub going.
One of the most popular landlords and
innovators at the pub, a former talented local footballer named Mick Harris,
resided there during the 1980s to the mid-1990s. A very outgoing, sometimes
outspoken and lively individual, he encouraged a younger clientele with discos
and music nights and proved to be a very popular landlord with large numbers of
customers attending at weekends. In 1997 Sue and Graham Fry took over and they
stayed until 1999.
Sally Godden who is a familiar local figure in
the equestrian world now runs the pub which is known to many customers as
‘The Six Tits’. The pub has a regular band of drinkers, it serves food and hosts
regular, live weekly music with Karaoke nights. Singers and musicians like
Mickey Blue Eyes, Annie Love and Lisa Mills perform there. With a main bar at
the front, a functions room and a beer garden at the back, oak beams on the
ceiling, an open fire in winter and pub games like pool, darts and cards, The
Three Sisters remains a popular pub in the area and has developed a new image
compared to the old days when it attracted brickfield workers.
About David:
David Wood was born and raised in Upchurch and 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's book ‘Memories of Upchurch’ is available direct from David at: david3702001@yahoo.co.uk or from us here at Upchurch Matters. Price £12 + £3.50 postage and packing.
David Wood.
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Friday, 16 May 2014
Thursday, 15 May 2014
Allotment at Upchurch
Currently, the annual rent is as follows:
Parishioner: £16 per full plot /£8 per half plot
Non-Parishioner: £25 per full plot/£12.50 per half plot
(Rates valid as at 1st April 2014. Please note that the rent is due on 1st April each year.)
Claire Attaway, Clerk to the Parish Council.
Email: clerk@upchurchpc.kentparishes.gov.uk
Tel: 01634 363906.
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