Friday, 8 November 2019
Swale Borough Council Dishes out £25,000 for Christmas
The scheme aims to bring local people together to celebrate this festive time of year by giving community groups and organisations the opportunity to apply for help to pay for their Christmas lights, decorations and events.
This year, a total of 23 organisations have received grant money, going towards fairy lights to decorate village halls, decorations for a children’s nursery, a solar powered Christmas tree, Santa sleigh rounds and lantern parades.
In Sittingbourne, Bobbing Village Hall were awarded £179.97 to buy Christmas fairy lights to decorate the village hall, Lakeview Village Hall were awarded £750 to plan a Christmas Party for local kids and pensioners, and Sittingbourne Christmas Lights Association were awarded £4,000 for their Christmas light switch-on event and Santa sleigh rounds.
In Faversham, Hartlip Village Hall were awarded £250 to decorate their village hall, Sheldwich Village Events Management Company were awarded £469.98 to put up Christmas lights and a tree at the centre of the village, and the Faversham Community Christmas Lights Committee were awarded £2,738.88 to grow their Christmas light display.
In Sheppey, the Queenborough Harbour Trust were awarded £312.82 to put up Christmas lights around the harbour, children and families in Sheerness were awarded £500 to decorate Seashells nursery, and Sheerness Town Team were awarded £4,000 for Christmas lights in the High Street.
Local list
• Upchurch Parish Council were awarded £399 to buy a Christmas tree.
• Hartlip Village Hall were awarded £250 to decorate their village hall.
• Newington Parish Council were awarded £500 to add Christmas stars to the village lamp posts.
• Sittingbourne Christmas Lights Association were awarded £4,000 for their Christmas light switch-on event and Santa sleigh rounds.
Swale Borough Council
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Wednesday, 6 November 2019
Cyberhood Watch
New Cyberhood Watch initiative launched between Neighbourhood Watch and Avast.
Neighbourhood Watch is about making sure that fewer people feel afraid, vulnerable or isolated in the place where they live. In recent years that also means helping members learn how to protect themselves, and their local community against cybercrime. This has become a key priority because over a third of Neighbourhood Watch members are now more concerned about falling victim to cybercrime than to actual physical crime.
The new Cyberhood Watch initiative between Neighbourhood Watch and online security provider Avast is a response to the growing challenge that cybercrime poses to local communities who rarely have a ready resource for information to keep themselves safe from all the latest scams.
Recent research has highlighted a general lack of confidence in talking about cybercrime experiences within the community, and in understanding the best methods of online protection, in particular for more vulnerable members of society.
Avast’s involvement includes a range of services to help Neighbourhood Watch members become more informed and less at risk of falling victim to cybercrime. It will include a training and accreditation scheme for local Neighbourhood Watch representatives, local informative events, downloadable guides and resources, and ongoing sharing of information about relevant emerging threats.
Follow the link >> www.avast.com/uk-cyberhood
Upchurch Matters
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Tuesday, 5 November 2019
White Ribbon Day 2019
November 25th 2019 is White Ribbon Day
Every year around November 25th 1000s of people in the UK come together to raise awareness and work towards ending male violence against women.
This year the theme of White Ribbon Day is “Creating a future without male violence against women” with the focus on engaging with young men and boys in particular.
White Ribbon UK was founded in 2005 and is part of the global movement to end male violence against women. They work with men and boys to challenge those male cultures that lead to harassment, abuse and violence. Their volunteer ambassadors act as role models, engaging with other men and boys to call out abusive and sexist behaviour among their peers and promote a culture of equality and respect.
Wear a White Ribbon and make the promise
The most important thing you can do to support White Ribbon UK's work is to wear a White Ribbon and make the promise. Only by standing up and being counted can we hope to end male violence against women.
Men are specifically being asked to make the promise, however, anyone over the age of 14 can take it.
White Ribbon UK call all men to lead by example and stand up against male violence against women, in every way. Take the pledge and join thousands of men who are standing up to be counted. Over 35,000 people have taken the promise online. Join them.
Lets’ end male violence against women together.
Swale Borough Councillor - Hartlip, Newington and Upchurch Ward
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Monday, 4 November 2019
Newington History Group
Newington Remembrance
Travelling through Newington this week you'll notice giant poppies lining the A2 and Church Lane that have been erected by Newington History Group as its annual remembrance tribute.
Dean Coles, the Newington History Group chairman, putting up the poppies assisted by Eric Layer. |
Each of the 55 poppies poppy represents a villager who died in wars during the last century – 48 from the First World War, six from the Second and one from the Korean War.
The poppies link the Memorial Garden, under the village sign, with the war memorial in the churchyard.
This year marks 100 years since the unveiling of the war memorial – on September 7th, 1919 – and the village's first annual Remembrance Service. The service on Sunday will start at 10:15am in the church.
Website: www.newingtonhistorygroup.btck.co.uk
Sunday, 3 November 2019
Knitted Poppies at St. Mary’s
Click the photo montage to enlarge. |
They look lovely.
Remembrance Sunday - November 10th 2019
Upchurch Matters
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Saturday, 2 November 2019
Mysteries of Upchurch Church by David Wood
The church of St Mary the Virgin has stood in the village for more than one thousand years and has a rich history, but it also has several mysteries which are unsolved.
The tower with its spire is unusual and is known as a ‘candle snuffer.’ There are only three other churches in Kent with similar spires. These are at Willesborough, New Romney and Bexley. The reason for the design is not recorded, but the generally accepted theory is that it was used as a navigation marker for boats sailing along the River Medway because the church is situated high on a hill making it clearly visible from the river. Another theory is that when the bells were installed in the tower the gap between the octagonal top and the square base allowed the sound of the bells to escape uninhibited. However, the true reason remains unclear and unconfirmed.
The St Mary's tower with its spire is unusual and is known as a ‘candle snuffer.’ |
Inside the church situated on the right just before the Lady Chapel, the top part of a wall painting is visible. When the church walls were scraped of emulsion before re-painting during the 1940s, Reverend Lightburne made a series of drawings of the painting which depicts scenes from the life of Saint Spiridon, patron saint of the Ionian Islands.
The unanswered mystery is why scenes from the life of a saint in a distant land are depicted on the wall of Upchurch church? The most likely theory is that somebody who participated on one of the crusades to the Holy Land returned home with the story and it was then made into a wall painting. Another theory is that the Carmelites who founded a convent in Aylesford established a settlement in Corfu where they had a devotion to Saint Spiridon in 1242. A convent also existed in Upchurch until some point during the fourteenth century and this may have been the connection with the Carmelites. The building now known as Wayside in Horsham Lane is believed to have been the possible site of the convent due to its closeness to the church although conclusive written proof does not exist.
Could the two brasses in St. Mary's Church, Upchurch be a memorial to Hugh and Joan Herland? |
Near the entrance to the vestry, brasses of a fourteenth century couple can be viewed on the wall. These are memorial plates taken from the floor under the church organ. The couple are identified as a wealthy merchant and his wife from the mid-fourteenth century. Although records of Upchurch residents from the period are scarce it’s known that King Richard ll’s royal carpenter Hugh Herland and his wife Joan resided in Upchurch from the 1370s to 1391. Because Hugh Herland was rewarded with ‘passage of wool’ by the king as a reward for work he had completed at Queenborough castle and other locations it meant that he had become a member of the merchant class with the right to trade in wool. Could the brasses be of Hugh Herland and his wife? Although the couple moved from Upchurch to Kingston-Upon-Thames in 1391 after they had inherited property in the area through Joan’s family, their burial in Upchurch is a possibility but is not conclusive. Other wealthy residents may have lived in Upchurch during the fourteenth century but Hugh Herland and his wife are the main recorded candidates for the brasses.
Edmund Drake, the father of St Francis Drake, served as vicar of Upchurch from 1560 to 1567 but mystery remains regarding his burial place in the churchyard. This is because marked graves before the eighteenth century no longer exist there. However, Edmund Drake stated in his will that he wished to be buried in the churchyard beside his son Edward who had died in infancy. Lady Eliot Drake confirms in her book about the history of the Drake family published in 1911 that Edmund was definitely buried in Upchurch churchyard. Although this evidence exists the exact burial place of Edmund Drake remains unknown.
Village folklore suggests that a secret passage leading from the church to the building known as Wayside opposite in Horsham Lane exists. This is possible because when Henry VIII broke relations with Rome and introduced Protestantism, government officials were sent to persecute priests and confiscate the wealth from Catholic churches. This led to secret passages being constructed in churches as an escape route for priests to avoid arrest or persecution. An inspection of the cellar walls in Wayside has not shown any evidence of an opening or passage which may have been blocked in the past.
Was this once the entrance to a secret passage leading to Wayside in Horsham Lane? |
When restoration work took place in the church in 2002, the raised platform on the floor of the children’s area to the left of the main entrance had to be moved. This revealed a sealed arched vault. After consultation with an archivist a decision was made not to investigate further as it would have meant a longer closure of the church which had already been closed for the restoration work for almost a year. Therefore, the mystery of a secret passage remains unsolved.
Although the mysteries connected with the church remain, at least the evidence available allows for thought and an interesting discussion.
About David
David Wood was born, raised and still lives in Upchurch today. He is able to write from personal experience about village life and the changes that have taken place over the years, making ‘Memories of Upchurch’ a very readable and 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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