Warminster Saddle Club Trial Evening Show Jumping Competition

April 2008

Class One:
1. Miss Plum; Stephanie Higgins, Frome.
2. Tomas; Emily Miller, Westbury.
3. Forlan High Hopes; Jake Coward, Dilton Marsh.
4. Crossway Calvary; Jasmine Sadler, Frome.
5. Millie; Lucy, Steeple Ashton.

Class Two:
1. Megan; Louise Oldall, Bradford On Avon.
2. Minty; Alexis Symes, Dilton Marsh.
3. Barnaby; Alexis Symes, Dilton Marsh.
4. Marley III; Stacey Martin, Frome.
5. Tomas; Emily Miller, Westbury.
6. Ace; Fiona Perrett, Bradford on Avon.

Class Three:
1. Ace, Fiona Perrett, Bradford On Avon.
2. Byn; Annica Lavis, Westbury.
3. Megan; Louise Oldall, Bradford on Avon.
4. May Deane; Mary Corrie, Teffont.
5. Marley III; Stacey Martin, Frome.
6. Tomas, Emily Miller, Westbury.

There were over 60 rounds altogether for the cross country course and the show jumping.

Clear Round rosettes were awarded to 48 competitors.

www.warminstersaddleclub.com/

Kingdown School, Warminster, Is Outstanding

From Kingdown Week, the official weekly newsletter of Kingdown Community School, No.13/2008, week beginning 21 April 2008:

“OUTSTANDING”

This is the conclusion of the Ofsted inspector at their recent visit to Kingdown. It is the top grade and only given to 5% of schools.

“All members of the school community do everything in their power to provide each and every student with the right learning experiences that lift aspirations, build confidence and bring tremendous enjoyment to learning and enable students to make outstanding progress.”

“The school is outstanding”

“Students and parents speak highly of the school”

“The head teacher provides outstanding leadership”

“The school works with utmost persistence to keep students at school and designs tailor-made provision where necessary to engage youngsters”

“Students’ behaviour in lessons is excellent”

“Teaching and learning are outstanding”

“The school’s specialist status as a sports and vocational college . . . . has been highly instrumental in extending the breadth of educational opportunities”

“The school is successfully nurturing and developing older students to act as role models to younger ones”

“The excellent educational provision of the main school extends into the outstanding sixth form”

“Students’ contribution to the lives and well being of younger students, through the vertical tutor group and house system, is valued and very significant”

“Sixth form students are indeed heroes as the school intends”

LETTER FROM H.M. INSPECTOR TO ALL STUDENTS
14 March 2008

Dear Students

Inspection of Warminster Kingdown, Warminster, BA12 9DR.

Thank you for your welcome when I visited the school recently with another inspector. We much appreciated the conversations we had with you. I write to let you know of our findings.

Your school is outstanding. It enables you to achieve increasingly well in your academic work. It also enables you to develop extremely well into confident, considerate young people, ready to take your places in society and to make outstanding contributions to it and your own future lives. It is clear that you enjoy school greatly. Your behaviour in lessons is excellent. Whilst less than perfect behaviour does occasionally occur, you feel that the school deals with this very well.

The range of learning experiences that the school provides, in Years 7 to 11 and in the sixth form, is outstanding. Most lessons are good and some are excellent. It is because of these lessons and other activities that your learning in all aspects of development is of such high quality. You are extremely well cared for. Those of you who join the school other than in Year 7, and particularly those from armed forces families, are welcomed warmly and supported to make good progress. You are given excellent guidance about your work and how to reach your targets. You value greatly the way that the vertical tutor group and house system enable you to mix with, learn from and support students of different ages.

Your head teacher provides excellent leadership and the school is extremely well led and managed. Staff and governors do everything in their power to provide you with the best possible chances to succeed at school and in the future. The school building is a pleasant place to work in even though some parts of it are showing signs of age. Leaders constantly strive to improve the school, often in very creative ways. We agree with them about the key actions for the future and highlight the need to work further on improving the literacy skills for some of you. You should do all that you can for yourselves to keep developing these skills, by reading for pleasure and taking care to do your best writing in every subject, for example. Teachers generally have excellent skills in questioning you about how well you understand your work, and to deepen your thinking. This is not so in all cases and so we have asked the school to develop these teaching skills so that they are always as good as the existing best.

We wish you all the very best for the future.

Wiola Hola,
Her Majesty’s Inspector.

How Gordon Faulkner And Roger Hooton Faked The UFO Photograph Of The Warminster Thing

Friday 18th April 2008

Posted by Tim, from Waikiki, Western Australia, on the PomsInOz forum ~ 

 How I Faked Britain’s Flying Saucer ‘Sighting’

Roger Hooton shudders at the terrible trick he played on his fellow Britons . . . . .

‘Oh my Gawd! I knew the joke had gone so terribly wrong.’

‘Twenty-nine years ago, my friend, Gordon Faulkner, and I, built a toy flying-saucer, photographed it, and handed the picture over to the editor of the Warminster Journal, circulation at the time: 2,000 a week. With a Letter to the Editor saying Faulkner had seen a UFO in Warminster.’

‘The only problem was the joke went too far. And it caught the imagination of millions of people, starting a UFO stampede to Warminster, before Gordon and I could admit what we’d done and stop it.’

‘A freelance journalist had seen the joke letter and photo on the editor’s desk, “borrowed” them and then took off by train to London and sold the picture to a national newspaper. It was splashed all over the centre pages of the Daily Mirror with a front-page headline saying a ‘Thing’ had been sighted. ‘The Thing’ was in fact made from a sawn cotton-reel, a black button and a silver-foil milk bottle top, bent and painted black. Gordon and I had photographed it being dropped, taking the film to the local chemist to be processed.’

Within 24 hours of the Mirror hitting the streets sleepy Warminster was being overrun by reporters and photographers with interviews of its citizens splashed around the world.

‘It started the whole UFO-sighting industry in Britain, the UFO experts now admit. And it was all our fault . . . .’

‘This is actually how it happened. And it’s the first time I’ve told the real story . . .’

Warminster, Wilts., in 1965, had 14 pubs and a population of 10,200. There was a lot of noise about as the defence departments experimented with their ‘flying bedsteads’, vertical take-off jets. Salisbury plains were the scene of gliders and weird-shaped objects being towed behind aircraft. And small rocket firing outside the town added to the racket.
Otherwise it was a sleepy little village. It wasn’t far from the mysterious Stonehenge circle of stones; it wasn’t far from the famous Westbury horse, carved into a chalk hill. And it is at the crossing point of the mysterious Ley lines that some people claim have an earth ‘power’ going back thousands of years.
So it was at the right place for something odd to occur.’

‘I was a printer, aged 23, working on an old Wharfedale press that printed the Journal. It took two full days to clank out the weekly 2,000 copies, and at the time there was a tradition among the staff to insert a “joke” letter now and again to the editor. The paper was really a village notice-board.’

‘One night Gordon and I were having a pint with several other staff members of the Journal in the Weymouth Arms, and someone started talking about flying saucers. That was it! That would be our next joke Letter to the Editor, Charlie Mills. Ideas were awash in the hazy atmosphere of the pub on how a flying saucer photograph could be faked. We chatted about boy scout hats, saucers, plates, the bedroom urinal pot . . . Gordon and I were both keen photographers and so we took on the challenge.’

‘One of the chaps in the pub was a reporter called Arthur Shuttlewood, a tall, thin man not unlike the classic Sherlock Holmes. Arthur could ferret a story out of a stone; but in his freelance capacity had never managed to find a big enough story for the national newspapers. But his time was approaching.’

‘Arthur had a son working as a compositor for the Warminster Journal and it was he who told him that another joke letter was on its way to Charlie Mills, the editor.’

‘In the meantime, Gordon and I were experimenting with my Praktica single-lens reflex camera on a tripod. We reckoned we needed a small image, nothing in the foreground or background to indicate distance. And of course nothing that would indicate size. It also had to be a ‘lucky’ photo, taken on a film already half-used.’

‘We took many experimental shots and developed them in our own homes. But for one reason or another they weren’t right. We’d suspended the 1-ins. wide ‘UFO’ on black cotton, but that also showed up. It took two weeks for perfection. We photographed “The Thing’ as we dropped it.’

‘And at the same time that we were experimenting, we were steadily building up the joke. Other “sightings” had to be reported first, so gossip was spread about people seeing weird lights in the sky at night. There was a mysterious “discovery” – after someone had seen flashing lights – of a line of rats all found dead and facing the same direction, with scorch marks on the ground. The rats looked like they had been subject to intense heat.’

‘On a quiet Sunday afternoon on Cradle Hill, a lonely cow field, Gordon took several shots with the Praktica, and then, while I dropped “The Thing’ in front of him, the historic shot. Next day he took the film into the chemist to be developed. Neither Gordon nor I, made any comment to anybody about our “sighting”.’

‘On Thursday, 9 September, 1965, the editor’s office at the Warminster Journal was open, but the editor was not there. Arthur Shuttlewood happened to be passing. There, on Charlie Mills’ desk, was the UFO photograph and the negative. Staff in the shop noticed him go in and walk out.’

‘Several people on Warminster station saw Arthur on the station, waiting for the London-bound train, and passed the time of day with him. He did not tell them why he was going up to London.’

‘At the Daily Mirror office he was vetted by senior staff, and he remained in the building all night until the first edition was printed. Next day all hell broke loose in Warminster. The Mirror had a scoop picture of an historic event. On the front page and all over the middle pages they called it “The Thing’. And they called Arthur Shuttlewood ‘the Editor of the Warminster Journal,’ doubling its circulation to 4,000.’

‘Reporters and photographers from other papers rushed down. And hard on their heels were UFO “experts” and eventually “government investigators”.’

‘Arthur was interviewed by press and radio and instantly became the town’s leading UFO expert. Gordon and I stayed out of the limelight. I shot off to London on my motor-bike to stay with my parents.’

‘Three days after the national publication of the picture an angry Charlie Mills, owner/editor of the Journal, was heard in his office having a heated interview with Arthur. Charlie also refused interviews.’

‘I became so scared of being found out I gave notice and moved back to Harlesden, in London. Gordon Faulkner had already completed his papers to migrate to Australia. He told Shuttlewood to keep the negative as he wanted nothing more to do with it.’

‘Letters poured into the Warminster Journal from around the world. Now there were other “sightings” of UFOs in the village and stories of people being taken away by them. Psychic News moved in and did a special edition.’

‘Shops and hotels began to do a roaring trade with the tourists. An industry was spawned.’

‘One of the world’s foremost UFO authorities, Mr. John Spencer, years later listed the sighting in his respected UFO Encyclopaedia that has recorded most world sightings and interviews with people claiming to have been abducted: “In 1965 Gordon Faulkner photographed a banded, disc-shaped UFO over Warminster which was highly publicised in tabloid newspapers such as the Daily Mirror. Immediately there were rashes of photographs of similar objects making headlines in newspapers.”

“All came from Warminster, which instantly became one of the most famous UFOcals in the world. For around a decade it was to remain the British Centre of UFOlogy. Largely due to the diligent efforts of the local devotee, Arthur Shuttlewood, Warminster was a collection of UFO cases.”

‘Mr. Spencer went on to hint that there might well have been abductions of Warminster citizens into flying saucers, but they were “passed over” through lack of investigation into particular cases.’

‘And Mr. Spencer, who is also Investigative Secretary for British UFO Research, said the other day: “That photograph really did focus everybody’s attention on Warminster. It kicked off the entire Warminster thing.”

‘In March, 1992, I decided to confess all. I, too, had migrated to Australia and on a trip back to England I contacted Mr. Spencer.’

‘He and his wife came down to see me and put me through a three-hour grilling. Two years later, having returned to Australia, I went public with my confession. Mr. Spencer said: “He actually felt terribly guilty about it. He wanted to put the record straight. I think he was glad to get it off his chest. He was almost worrying that he had committed some offence.”

‘He added: “He and Mr. Faulkner had lined up dead rats in a field and set alight to them, saying a flying saucer had just taken off and the rats had been burned. The “sighting” was at the time a very important one. It brought Arthur Shuttlewood, the freelance journalist, to the fore. He became a guru on UFOs and wrote several books, even leading expeditions over the hills looking for space-ships.’

‘I am not a believer in space-ships and little green men. But Warminster was a window-area for UFO sightings in Britain; there were lots of glowing lights and objects in the sky. We had cases where there were elements of abductions having taken place. People were reporting missing time and there were “entity” sightings. At the time it wasn’t acceptable to talk about aliens. It is now acceptable; and it is quite possible that a lot of stuff that wasn’t investigated then would be investigated today.’

Said Roger: ‘I’m still terribly embarrassed.’

http://www.pomsinoz.com/forum/news-chat-dilemmas/33840-how-i-faked-britains-flying-saucer-sighting.html

Warminster Branch Wiltshire Wildlife Trust Treasurer’s Report 2008

Treasurer’s Report for Warminster Branch of the Wiltshire Wildlife Trust, Year ended 31 March 2008:

We have held two successful fundraising events during the financial year. These were the coffee morning in April 2007 hosted by Christopher and Jennifer Chaundy, and the Autumn Lunch at Langford Lakes. Both events enjoyed good weather.

Our meetings were mostly well attended and the entrance fee covered the expenses. The exceptions were the last two meetings which were less well attended and did not cover the overheads of the speaker and the hire of the hall. Overall the talks almost broke even.

The enjoyable trip to Sheep Drove Organic Farm was funded by those who went. Other trips involved lift sharing but no financial outlay.

The unusually large sum held at the end of the financial year was because we had expected to pay for essential fencing work and tree surgery in Smallbrook Meadows Local Nature Reserve. The work was delayed and the fencing work was not completed and paid for until this summer. The delay to the tree surgery work resulted in storm damage to the large diseased beech tree which made it a public danger and the surgery was paid for directly by the Trust.

We are in a position to be able to keep the cost of the meetings to the same level as last season, despite the cost of hire of the Assembly Rooms and Sutton Veny Village Hall being increased. We will also be able to pay directly, with agreement from Head Office, for the cost of more equipment and maintenance at Smallbrook Meadows. This well visited local nature reserve is much appreciated by the people of Warminster.

The opportunity to visit a son in New Zealand means that I am not able to attend the AGM for which I apologise.

Isabel Buckingham
Treasurer.

Kingdown School, Warminster, Welcomes South African Link Teachers

From Kingdown Week, the official weekly newsletter of Kingdown Communuity School, Warminster, issue No.11/2008, week beginning 25 March 2008:

Kingdown welcomed Mrs. Matlaka Nong, Headteacher and Shimane Moatshe, Link teacher from the Erasmus Monareng School, Gauteng, Jonnasberg, South Africa. The visit was the second phase of Kingdown’s involvement in the British Council/Youth Sport trust initiative “Dreams and Teams”.

Mrs. Brown and Mr. Dudley travelled to South Africa last October and visited Erasmus Monareng School and Mrs. Nong and Mr. Moatshe arrived for the return visit. The initiative aims to develop leaderships and global awareness in both schools. Mr. Moatshe asked if Kingdown was a University as the facilities were so good and only Universities in South Africa have such facilities. Both South African colleagues were involved in the life of Kingdown school for three days, where they met students, teachers, school council members and the governing body.

Kingdown will be sending four Post 16 students out to South Africa next February to further develop links and run a primary school sports festival for Erasmus Monareng’s feeder primary schools.

Brian Everett Recalls Selwood House School, Warminster

Monday 11th February 2008

John Brian Everett, who was born in Warminster in 1927 (son of John Everett and Hilda Everett, nee Crouch) but now resides at 309 Vigo Road, Andover, writes ~

“I was a pupil at Selwood House School, Warminster, during the early 1930s.”

“The school was situated above what was then Tanswell’s Garage, in the Market Place. The garage sold petrol – an horrific fire risk, so we pupils had to carry out regular fire drills. Escape was by way of a back window and wooden stairs leading to the playground. This yard was clinker based, with the remnants of an old car as the main attraction.”

“Mrs Fraser, the head teacher, was very strict. She was assisted by Miss Siminson. I can also remember a Miss Gurney.  Mrs Fraser’s daughter Betty also helped out.”

“Every morning, after prayers, we paraded around the classroom, singing patriotic songs and taking it in turn to carry the Union Jack.”

“A broad basic education was provided, including French (text book: French Without Tears). Ink was made up by mixing a powder with water.”

“We were provided with slates, sand trays and plasticine at play time.”

“I have very happy memories of my schooldays in Warminster but due to the passage of time it is not without a lot of sadnesses as well.”

The Grey Lady Who “Entered” 43 East Street, Warminster

Danny Howell penned the following note in December 2007. He wrote:

When I lived at Obelisk Court (between 1995 and 2002) one of my neighbours was John Cruse. He lived at No.30 Silver Street, the house on the corner of Silver Street and the lane that goes up to Obelisk Terrace. John was a descendant of the family who had once run a well-known coach hire and motorcycle business in the town. A well-known Warminster family, they were related to the Dawkins’ and Corden’s.

John Cruse was a sensible man and very pleasant to talk to. He once told me, in all seriousness, an anecdote concerning No.43 East Street, the house on the corner of Furlong and East Street, a couple of doors west of the Rose and Crown Inn. He told me that the front door to the house, was approached by a couple of steps that dropped down from the pavement. Nearly opposite the house, between what is now the Plants Green residential estate and the East Street Service Station (the Esso petrol garage), is Roly Poly Lane, a narrow footpath that connects East Street with the north-east corner of Warminster’s Lake Pleasure Grounds (the Town Park).

John told me he had, many years ago, seen a woman – who he called “a grey lady” – come down Roly Poly Lane, cross over East Street, and then descend the steps from the pavement to the doorway of the house, before she passed with ease through the closed door. He had witnessed her disappearing through a solid door.

He told me that several other people, on different occasions, had witnessed this female apparition do exactly the same – exit Roly Poly, cross East Street, and glide with ease through the solid wooden door of the house.

Kingdown Community School, Warminster – The Sound Of Music

Wednesday 17th October 2007

From the programme –

Kingdown Community School
– a Sports and Vocational College –
presents
‘The Sound Of Music’

Wednesday 17th October – Friday 19th October 2007

By arrangement with Josef Weinberger Limited.

Cast

Maria : Anita Sykes
Captain Georg Von Trapp : Kyle Taylor
Baroness Elsa Schraeder : Katheryn Ovenden
Max Detweiler : Matt Graham
Rolf Gruber : Ben Johns
Franz : Carl Hodges
Liesl : Mel Harris
Friedrich : Ashley Holman
Louisa : Louise Vines
Kurt : Luke Byrne
Brigitta : Becky Boyd
Marta : Hannah Muston
Gretl : Jodie Brewer
Mother Abbess : Abbie Johns
Sister Margaretta : Jade Dewey
Sister Sophia : Sophia Achillea-Hughes / Katie Elliott
Sister Berthe : Sarah Welsh
Admiral Von Schreiber : Ben Griffiths
Frau Schmidt : Beth Gray
Baron Elberfeld : Jordan Taylor
Baroness Elberfeld : Eleanor Hewett
Herr Zeller : Adam Holman
Frau Zeller : Fiona Richardson
Nuns :
Hollie Earley
Alex Shobbrook
Alice Weston
Eleanor Hewett
Yasmin Braddell
Hannah Trimby
Sarah Jones
Laura Palmer
Fiona Richardson
Liz Abaya Hamilton
Ensemble :
Connor Good
Ollie Feltham
Henry Sandoe
James Burgoyne

Band

Violins :
Lyndy Bishop
Debbie Mousley
Kate Papworth
Cello : Theresa Dicker
Trumpets :
Mary Kastell
Tabitha Bell
Horn : Lauren Royce-Rogers
Flutes :
Laura Brookes
Georgina Evans
Clarinets :
David Shephard
Matthew Kellow
Emma Papworth
Oboes :
Sarah Todman
Alex Williams
Guitar : Ad Taylor-Weekes
Bass : Alex Keay
Percussion : Tony Stockley
Piano : Clemency Neale

Stage Set :
Mandy Mills
Dave Pallett
Kirsty Moles
Vicky Dix
Ellie-May Masters
Tom Saunders
Holly Southby
Oriana Hunt
Ignacia Hunt

Choreography :
Angela Murphy
Chris Thomas
plus members of the cast who were inspired by
their recent trip to see the West End version of the show.

Technical Director : Tom Sneddon

Backstage :
Sarah Tingey
Ellie-May Masters

Sound / Lighting :
Andrew Robinson
Oliver Trojak
Jamie Grey

Scene Changes :
William Trojak
Chris Redding

Tickets : Angela Murphy

Props Provision :
Sara Edwards
Sue Tenty
Angela Murphy
Karen Herbert

Poster / Ticket / Programme Design :
Pat Wright
Richard Tully

Costumes / Make-up :
Vicky Griffiths
Coral Pickles
Holly Deacon
Maggie Dulake
Sarah Tingey
Naomi Barnes

Site Managers :
Chris Trimby
Nick Trimby
Nigel Warrington

Director : Phil Partington

Musical Director : Anne Thomas

Vocal Rehearsals :
Emma Murray
Clemency Neale
Sarah Todman






Highbury Football Club Rented And Then Purchased Their Pitch

September 2007

Brian Collyer, of 38 Cheapside, Codford, writes:

Highbury football pitch was a field owned by Major Oskar Teichman who lived at Highbury House. Highbury Football Club (HFC), which was a successful side in the Wilts League, rented the field, for a nominal sum, up until the time of Major Teichman’s death (April 1959). Roy Dunstan was the Chairman of HFC. He organised and set up a fund for HFC to purchase the field. As I remember, all of the HFC first eleven and nearly all of the committee signed as guarantors and had to pay £25 each. The deal, when completed, made HFC the owners of their pitch. I had a long and successful playing career with HFC, as did Dennis Grist, Arthur Pulham, Teddy Bond, Gary Lapham and Johnny Fear, to mention a few.

Highbury Football Pitch – Rumours That It Is Destined For Residential Development – Rumours Quashed

September 2007

During late early September 2007 rumours were circulating that the Highbury football pitch, adjacent Woodcock Road, Warminster, was being eyed up for residential development.

A letter published in the Warminster Journal, Friday 21st September 2007 (written by someone who preferred not to have their name and address known), read:

“Rumour has it that a prolific local property developer wants to build 24 executive homes on the precious Warminster Highbury Youth Football Club pitch in Woodcock Road.”

“I understand that this parcel of land was left by someone by the name of Teichman for the use of sporting activities by local children.”

“Who exactly is trying to sell this land and where are the proceeds going? Where are the young children who play on this site going to go? I’d like to know.”

“Warminster Highbury Youth FC committee is doing a very good with the children by giving them something to keep them off the streets plus instilling a bit of discipline, which can’t be a bad thing.”

“In the football season, Highbury Youth FC is well supported by the children and their parents and the pitch must be kept for them.”

The writer of that letter, although concerned about the loss of amenity if the land was built upon, got his/her facts wrong regarding Major Teichman.

Major Teichman did not leave the field for the use of children. From 1946 up until the time of his death he let the field, for the peppercorn rent of one shilling (5p) a year, to Highbury Football Club (a team playing in the Wiltshire League). After the death of Major Teichman (Tuesday 21st April 1959) Highbury Football Club raised the funds and purchased the field, becoming the owners. Youth football, as we know it today, began in earnest at Highbury football pitch in 1984 when the Celtic Boys (Warminster) FC was founded. The Celtic Boys. after about one year, changed their name to Highbury Youth Football Club, and some years later a further name change occurred, calling themselves Warminster Highbury Youth FC.

Quashing the rumours of residential development on the Highbury pitch, which were circulating in September 2007, the Chairman of Warminster Highbury Youth FC, said: “There are no building proposals and no offers have been made on the land. We have 240 boys and girls, aged from 6 to 17 years, playing in our club, and they are of paramount importance. The pitch is used on Saturday morning and all day on Sundays. We have so many teams we are having to rent additional facilities at Heytesbury, Sutton Veny, and at New Close School, Warminster, to accommodate them. We are spread around and if we could get one place under one roof it would be good but we haven’t heard of anything.”

Local property developer, David Deacon, was reported in the press as saying: “I would dearly love to build some houses there [Highbury Football Field] and have agents on the lookout for land, but I didn’t know it [Highbury Football Field] was on the market.”

And that was that, the rumours were quashed, no planning application was submitted, no homes were built, and the field continued as a football pitch.

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