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Wednesday, 4 February 2015

UpARA - Latest Schedule of Events

Upchurch Active Retirement Association


Into another new year on the calendar and a new year for UpARA not far off. As of 1st March annual subscription become due at £15, the same as last year. Obviously it is necessary to be fully paid up to maintain your membership. You can even pay early if you like! Hopefully everyone will sign up again, but if you decide not to continue with us it will be very helpful if you can let the committee know, as we do have a waiting list of over 30 people eager to join us.

Monthly Meetings (2nd Friday of the month)
(Members Free; Guests £2.00)
*
Friday 13th February 2015 - 2:00pm
*
Friday 13th March 2015 - 2:00pm

Coffee Mornings (4th Tuesday of the month)
(Members £1.50; Guests £2.00)
*
Tuesday 24th February 2015 - 09:30am until 12:30pm
*
Tuesday 24th March 2015 - 09:30am until 12:30pm

Village Walks (1st & 3rd Friday of the month)
*
Friday 6th February 2015 - 10:00am
*
Friday 20th February 2015 - 10:00am 

Outings
*
Tuesday, 10th February 2015
ITV Studios, London
Mel & Sue
*
Saturday, 21st March 2015
Thriplow Daffodil Festival


David Powell - Chairman
Email: davidrpowell5@hotmail.co.uk
Telephone: 01795 843550
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Tuesday, 3 February 2015

Two Upchurch Men at the Battle of Gallipoli in 1915 by David Wood


William Wood.

Charles Gransden.
With the outbreak of war in 1914, men from all over Britain joined up to fight for King and Country. In Upchurch William Wood from Ham Green and Charles Gransden from Forge Lane both enlisted in the East Kent Yeomanry, a cavalry regiment made up of landowners, farmers and farm workers under the command of Lord Harris and they were soon undergoing training in Canterbury.

On September 24th 1915 the two Upchurch men sailed from Liverpool with their regiment to Mudros in Greece then on to Gallipoli where they had their first experience of warfare but were not used as cavalry, instead they operated as infantry in trenches. Coming ashore on the Helles Peninsular, they faced Turkish gunfire and shrapnel shells from high cliff-top positions. William Wood said they were targeted by a determined enemy who British soldiers respected as fighters and nicknamed ‘Johnny Turk.’ On the day after they arrived the allied commander General Sir Ian Hamilton visited and welcomed the East Kent Yeomanry but had a narrow escape when a shell fired by the Turks exploded directly above him according to his personal diary from 1915.


Armed Soldiers of the East Kent Yeomanry 
Serving at the front line for two week periods followed by two weeks behind the lines where soldiers constructed roads and unloaded provisions, Wood and Gransden survived in trenches and dugouts in the firing line with their fellow soldiers and food was brought to them on a mule. When a Turkish sniper eventually shot and killed the mule this apparently affected the men's morale badly. Disease also became a problem with an estimated 50,000 allied soldiers suffering enteritis or dysentery. Unsuitable diet, flies, unburied putrid corpses and open latrines caused this. William Wood contracted dysentery but survived mainly off periodic food parcels sent from home.

Eating bully beef, biscuits and jam as a daily main meal, soldiers suffered more when the weather became inhospitable with a severe blizzard that lasted for three days in November causing hostilities to temporarily cease. Ferocious winds with torrential rain flooded trenches and the snow and frost that followed caused frostbite and death from exposure. The regiment spent several months facing Turkish gunfire on the rugged Helles Peninsular until they were successfully evacuated at night by the Royal Navy in late December 1915 which turned out to be the most successful part of an otherwise disastrous allied campaign.

During 1916 the regiment amalgamated with the West Kent Yeomanry to form the 10th Buffs Yeomanry Battalion. The new Battalion formed part of General Allenby's Palestine offensive against the Turks. After landing at Alexandria in Egypt in 1917 they participated in the Second Battle of Gaza, then the Battle of Beersheba. They also played a leading part in the capture of Jerusalem from the Turks. William Wood recalled that during the campaign he remembered Captain Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia) regularly entering the army camp on horseback with Bedouin warriors to deliver information about enemy movements in the Hijaz Desert to General Allenby. Apparently, soldiers ran from their tents to stare or laugh at the captain dressed in traditional Arab clothes.

Heavy casualties on the Western Front required the withdrawal of infantry divisions from Palestine to France in May 1918. After fighting at Merville, the Kent Yeomanry Battalion moved to the Somme in September and participated in the advance on the Hindenburg Line and then in the final advance which led to the armistice of 11th November 1918.

When the war ended William Wood returned to his farm at Ham Green physically unscathed while Charles Gransden who sustained a serious leg injury in a rail accident in France returned to Forge Lane and later became bellringer captain and churchwarden at the village church. Both men maintained contact with their old regiment and regularly attended the annual reunion dinner together until they both passed away during the mid-1960s.

In 2001 on Anzac Day which is observed by Australians and New Zealanders, I visited the site of the Battle of Gallipoli in Turkey where an Australian military historian took me to the beach where my grandfather and Charles Gransden came ashore with the East Kent Yeomanry and to the rugged and desolate area where they had fought, a fascinating and enlightening experience almost a century after the event.


David Wood.
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, 30 January 2015

Kent Community Messaging - Driveway Cleaning & Block Paving Work

Reference: Community Message.

A group of males are operating in this area offering driveway cleaning and block paving work.

There is a white van involved. Please do not deal with these males at the door and report any pushy / threatening behaviour to the Police on 101.

Kent Police Websitewww.kent.police.uk

Kent Police Neighbourhood Watch
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Monday, 26 January 2015

Cash - Mobile - Land Rover Discovery All Stolen - Horsham Lane

Hartlip Newington & Upchurch Ward

Message 058 from Neighbourhood Watch

XY/002898/15: on Sunday 25th of January, a male bogus customer was involved in theft of cash and a mobile phone from an insecure office at FCS Car Sales in Horsham Lane Upchurch. He was described by another customer as 50 years of age wearing a cream pullover and drove away in a purple car with a younger female.

XY/002913/15: A silver Land Rover Discovery, registration: LC12 ZRT was stolen from a garage in Horsham Lane Upchurch between 5:30 and 8:30 pm on 25th of January.

If you have any information that could help investigators please contact Kent Police on telephone number 101 and quote the crime number above.

For more information on crime prevention visitwww.kent.police.uk

Kent Police Neighbourhood Watch
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Wednesday, 21 January 2015

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