Warminster Highbury FC Under-7 Team Lost To Trowbridge Wanderers

November 2006

A Warminster Highbury Youth Under-7 team,
pictured during November 2006,
on the occasion of a friendly match
against Trowbridge Wanderers.

The final score was
Highbury 0 – 3 Trowbridge Wanderers.

It could have been worse but
Liam Gibbens made some top class saves.

Pictured above, left to right:
Liam Gibbens, Ben, Louis Cole, Thomas McFerran,
Rebecka Fry, Chay Andrews, Matthew Read,
Harry Guerri-Fear.

Warminster Highbury Youth FC Under 7 Team Which Lost To Trowbridge Wanderers

November 2006

A Warminster Highbury Youth Under-7 team, 
pictured during November 2006,
on the occasion of a friendly match
against Trowbridge Wanderers.

The final score was
Highbury 0 – 2 Trowbridge Wanderers.

Pictured above, left to right:
Isaac Magee, Devlin Skinner, Austin Reid,
Kieran Strong, Drew E., 
Reece McDermott, Dylan Bell,
Ben Stone, Jack Preston.

Sumoculture At The Weymouth Arms, Warminster

Saturday 14th October 2006

Local musicians were to the fore on Saturday when Sumoculture entertained a lively and enthusiastic audience at the Weymouth Arms, Warminster.

The band started with a brisk drum tattoo, and swiftly moved into some pretty heavy stuff, which featured the rhythm section, as the vocals and guitars were under-amplified (by comparison) at the start.

Balance problems were swiftly sorted out, but there was a pause at the end of the first number while Sam Kirwan re-strung his guitar.

The word “Sumo’ appeared in the lyrics of the second song, which sounded a little like upbeat and happy musical punk, but more joined up.

There were pauses between some of the songs for tuning instruments and muttered discussions between band members, while on other occasions the numbers flowed from one to another without a pause.

Most of the songs were characterised by fast paced rattling drums and a quick rhythm. The crowd seemed to like it and I was quite keen too. The songs are original, and they have a flowing and melodic way to them that renders them reasonably easy on the ear.

About six or seven songs in they played something which sounded like a thrash version of Police’s Don’t Stand So Close To Me.

The set was over all too soon, after about 50 minutes or so, but they were part of an evening which included a lot of DJ-ing, and two other bands had played earlier.

I missed the first band and all but the last two songs from the set by Attack The System. They are a six strong band (including two singers, one of whom struggled with the confined space and the heaving throng to take photos of his colleagues during the last song. Attack The System sounded like a competent twin guitars, bass and drum, thrash metal outfit.

Sumoculture clearly have a dedicated local following, and some of the crowd (including members of local band Ronin) knew the lyrics well enough to sing along.

Sumoculture started as a trio about 11 years ago, according to Crockerton guitarist Sam Kirwan. Bassist Richard Godfrey and Sam were friends since they cut their milk teeth, and drummer Ben Pickett went to the same primary school as Richard.

During the summer between primary school and Kingdown School the band coalesced. The other guitarist, Ricky McCoy, joined them in 2001.

All of the musicians are in their early twenties. Ricky is from Warminster, and Ben and Richard live in Longbridge Deverill.

Sam owes his musicianship, he thinks, because he comes from a musical household (his father is the long time keyboard player with Blues Express). Sam also plays piano.

Ricky is a self taught guitarist and says he has been a friend of the others since leaving school.

The name Sumoculture was chosen about seven years ago, from a line in the film Something About Mary.

Before that the band sailed under a variety of names – none of them permanent.

(Review and notes contributed by The Vulture, Charles Drought.)

Highbury Youth Football Club – Charter Standard Award Ceremony, 2006

From the Programme:

Highbury Youth Football Club
Charter Standard Award Ceremony
Friday 17th February 2006
Warminster Assembly Rooms

Programme for the Evening

8.00pm
Opening
by
Robin George, President

Speech
by
Mike Benson, Secretary of Wilts County F.A.

Presentation
by
Richard Gardiner, Chairman of Wilts County F.A.

Response
by
Chris Finch, Chairman of Highbury Youth F.C.

8.30pm
Buffet

9.30pm
Guest Speaker
Ron Harris

Highbury Youth F.C. are very proud to
welcome Ron Harris as our Guest Speaker
at our Award Ceremony.

Warminster Highbury Youth Football Club
gains Charter Standard.
Official Presentation of Charter Standard
17th February 2006

For some years now Warminster Highbury Youth
Football Club has been working through the rigorous
process of qualifying for the F.A. Charter Standard.
The award of the Charter Standard acknowledges
that the club is providing high quality football training
to children in a safe environment, under the
management of a responsible committee.

The Charter Standard shows that:
the club is well managed by a properly elected committee.
all Team coaches are suitably qualified to teach children about football.
all Team coaches have attended a Child protection course and the club has a nominated Child Protection Officer.
all adults in charge of children have passed CRB checks (Police checks).
any new Team coaches go through a formal application procedure (including providing confidential references).
our club has clearly set out codes of conduct for behaviour of players, managers and spectators.

Wiltshire F.A. has run a Level 1 football coaching course
at Warminster Highbury Youth Football Club and any
team coaches who were not already suitably qualified
have now been certificated. All adults in charge of children
in the club have been through the CRB process and are
deemed not to have any convictions which would make
them unsuitable to work with children. Our Club Codes
of Conduct are clearly displayed at the ground and
individual copies are distributed to all members at
the beginning of the season.

I am very proud of the considerable work which has
gone into making Warminster Highbury Youth Football
Club into a Charter Standard club not just in name,
but in terms of providing good quality coaching and
a high standard of care for all the children in our club.
Chris Finch

Highbury Youth FC would like to thank everybody
who has attended our Charter Standard Award Ceremony
and for helping to make this evening a success.

Peculiar By Name ~ The Chapel Of St. Laurence, Warminster

Wednesday 16th March 2005

The Chapel of St. Laurence in the High Street, Warminster, is peculiar by name and peculiar by nature. However, it is in good company.

A peculiar church is one that operates outside of the Church of England control. St. Laurence’s in Warminster is one such church, as is Westminster Abbey, London, and St. George’s Chapel, Windsor.

St. Laurence’s Chapel in Warminster dates back to the 13th century and in 1575 was bought by the people of Warminster for £38 6s. 8d.

An indenture was drawn up in 1592, appointing 12 trustees, who were called feoffees, to look after the chapel. This system has been kept up until the present day, and the current feoffees now meet three or four times a year.

Geoffrey Tout, who is 81, and lives at Heronslade, Boreham Road, Warminster, has been a feoffee for 35 years. He has compiled a history of the chapel. He said: “St. Laurence is the only church in Warminster that is open every day. It is a refuge space for the town.”

Anyone, of any denomination, can enter and pray in the chapel, and a Sunday service is held once a month. The chapel has pew space for between 60 and 70 people.

The fact that it is still a focal point for the citizens of Warminster was highlighted when people placed many wreaths outside the chapel to mark the death of Diana, Princess of Wales.

Mr. Tout said: “St. Laurence’s Chapel is part of the history of Warminster. You only have to look at the visitors’ book. It is our responsibility as feoffees to make sure that the chapel keeps up with the times.”

The clock in the tower of the chapel will soon be updated. Feoffee David Pollard has masterminded a plan to do this, funded by Warminster Town Council and the Five Towns Initiative.

Mr. Pollard has already restored all of the public clocks in Warminster, and has written a book on the subject which highlights the greatest Warminster clockmaker of them all, Edward Cockey.

The clock at St. Laurence’s Chapel will be attended to in the next month and the cost will be £6,000.

Chairman of the feoffees, Mr. Philip Howard, of Highbury Park, Warminster, says: “It is our principle that St. Laurence’s Chapel will always be open for people to come in and pray.”

A Tale Of Two Cities

Sunday 27th February 2005

Julia Haes writes –

The February lecture to the Warminster branch of National Decorative and Fine Arts Society transported members to Turkey. Sue Rollins took her audience to modern described how it had developed from ancient Constantinople.

This subject fortunately coincides with the Turkish exhibition at The Royal Academy.

This extraordinary city has been the capital of two great empires. It was the Byzantine capital for 1,000 years until Ottoman rule, and it was not until Kemal Ataturk that the powerful dynas­ties finally were at an end.

When Constantine the Great came to power he wanted to promote Christi­anity and the obvious place to have as his capital would seem to be Rome. However, the sacred buildings in Rome were on the outskirts of the city and Constantine wanted Christianity to be at the heart of things.

He consequently cast his eye around for a suitable new first city. The ordinary provincial town of Byzantium offered a unique physical landmass with a promontory overlooking water­ways offering both protection and communication and trade by sea.

So it was, in AD328, sleepy Byzan­tium became rapidly expanding and sophisticated Constantinople.

Mosaics and wall paintings exe­cuted over the following hundreds of years go some way to telling the tones of the men who followed on from Constantine. Justinian VI most particularly, Michael, Alexander, Leo and even a female, Zoe, all contrib­uted in some way, mostly positive, to the changing face of the great city.

They built huge churches and inevi­tably with buildings to the glory of God the architectural scale and decoration were outstanding.

Disastrously the Crusaders set their sights on the city and in 1204 attacked by both land and sea. Although there was a revival, indeed something of a renaissance in the next 200 years, Constantinople never regained its for­mer status.

The mid 14th century were the twilight years and it was ripe for picking by the Turks. In 1452 the young Sultan Mehmed built a huge fortification on the European side of the Bosphorus overlooking and over­, whelming Constantinople and the Marmara Sea.

The Ottomans had superior weap­onry. including gunpowder and canon. On 29th May 1453 it fell to the Otto­man Turks and rose from the ashes as Istanbul.

St. Sophia was the first church to be converted to a mosque, and over the next 400 years the architecture and skyline changed to the domes and minarets with which we are familiar. New buildings included Topkapi palace which remained the Sultan’s’ residence for all that time.

The highly decorative surfaces in both paint and tiling were typically non­figurative and highly-coloured. The Isnik tiles with their stylised tulips used a tomato red, amongst the sumptuous blues and turquoises, which have never been replicated. There are 21,000 Isnik tiles in the so-called Blue Mosque, actually Sultan Ahmed I’s mosque: the execution of which in 1620 diminished the famous kilns to 20.

Sultan Abdulmecid topped Topkapi with his own palace, completed in 1856, including a huge crystal chande­lier donated by Queen Victoria. This building could compete with any for flamboyance and in common with many, his extravagances bankrupted the family.

The end of the 19th century brought the end of the Sultanate, but it was not until 1923 that Ataturk founded the republic of Turkey, soon to be a mem­ber of the EU, sealing its unique position across east and west.

Kingdown Community School, Warminster – Years 7 & 8 Swimming Gala 2005: Results

Friday 21st January 2005

Kingdown Community School, Warminster
Years 7 & 8 Swimming Gala
Friday 21st January 2005
Results

Year 7 Girls 25m Butterfly:
1st Penelope Ball,
2nd Francesca Barnard,
3rd Tansy Shingleton.

Year 7 Girls 25m Backstroke:
1st Francesca Barnard –R,
2nd Lauren Angove,
3rd Rhianne Jones.

Year 7 Girls Breaststroke:
1st Lauren Payne,
2nd Francesca Barnard,
3rd Alice Weston.

Year 7 Girls, 25m Freestyle:
1st Emma Ledbury,
2nd Lauren Payne,
3rd Rhianne Jones.

______

Year 7 Boys 25m Butterfly:
1st Adam Cross –R,
2nd Jack Findlay,
3rd Curtis Saunders.

Year 7 Boys 25m Backstroke:
1st Jake Ross,
2nd Jake Stone,
3rd Robin Liquorice.

Year 7 Boys 25m Breaststroke:
1st Will Livesey,
2nd Guy Trimby,
3rd Patrick Willmott.

Year 7 Boys 25m Freestyle:
1st Daniel McIntyre,
2nd Ryan North,
3rd Jake Rose.

_______

Year 8 Girls 25m Butterfly:
1st Beth Hargreaves –R,
2nd Sarah Fuller,
3rd Mikaela Dixon.

Year 8 Girls 25m Backstroke:
1st Beth Hargreaves –R,
2nd Grace Wakefield,
3rd Becky Boyd.

Year 8 Girls 25m Breaststroke:
1st Phoebe Carroll,
2nd Becky Lowe,
3rd Grace Wakefield.

Year 8 Girls 25m Freestyle:
1st Sarah Fuller,
2nd Mikaela Dixon,
3rd Emily Jones.

______

Year 8 Boys 25m Butterfly:
1st Jordan Smith –R,
2nd James Payne,
3rd Sam Smith.

Year 8 Boys 25m Backstroke:
1st James Payne –R,
2nd Ben Colborne,
3rd Jordan Smith.

Year 8 Boys Breaststroke:
1st Lewis Noble,
2nd Carl Hodges,
3rd Dominic Webb.

Year 8 Boys Freestyle:
1st Jordan Smith,
2nd Sam Meale,
3rd Tom Golledge.

= R = record.

________

The records were as follows:

Francesca Barnard (Back’): 19.01;

Adam Cross (B’fly): 17.31;

Beth Hargreaves (B’fly): 17.43;

Beth Hargreaves (Back’): 16.82;

Jordan Smith (B’fly): 17.37;

James Payne (Back’): 18.27;

Wimbledon Year 8 Girls Relay Team: 1.13.64.

____________

Overall House Results:

Loftus, Year 7 Boys 194, Year 7 Girls 199.
Total 393. 1st.

Twickenham, Year 7 Boys 180, Year 7 Girls 204.
Total 384. 2nd.

Wimbledon, Year 7 Boys 181, Year 7 Girls 165.
Total 346. 3rd.

Wembly, Year 7 Boys 155, Year 7 Girls 146.
Total 301. 4th.

______

Wimbledon, Year 8 Boys 134, Year 8 Girls 243.
Total 377. 1st.

Loftus, Year 8 Boys 181, Year 8 Girls 180.
Total 361. 2nd.

Wembly, Year 8 Boys 233, Year 8 Girls 116.
Total 349. 3rd.

Twickenham, Year 8 Boys 162, Year 8 Girls 171.
Total 333. 4th.

A Peg For His Hat

Leo Macey, who lives in Warminster, has had a novel published. It is called A Peg For His Hat. 245 pages. The cover design is by Philip Macey.

In the Preface, Leo writes:

I first wrote A Peg For His Hat in 1966. That year I went to Malaya and the original manuscript was left in safekeeping of a relative who at the time was in the process of moving house. I can only guess that during that move the manuscript was lost or thrown out by mistake. That was the last I ever saw of it.

When I returned to England in 1969 I re-wrote the story from the much amended and dog-eared duplicate and thought no more of it.

Recently, during a period of ‘sort out’, the manuscript again came to light. Friends and family have persuaded me to publish it. So here it is thirty eight years late.

Notes on the back cover read:

‘Without a belief in something outside this life you are nothing more than a complicated composition of cells evolved by chance and destined for nothing. You will drift through your life like a man in a crowded pub looking for a peg for his hat.’

The Second World War has just ended, Alan Burn, an orphan, with an inate ability to paint, longs to fulfil his ambition to become an artist. Following a whirlwind romance in Cairo with Anna, a military nurse, he returns to postwar London and with the help of his Aunt Millie embarks on a journey to fulfil his dream. This journey brings: loyal friends, love, romance, disappointment, grief, despair and religious discovery. But does it find a peg for his hat?

“An ideal holiday read”

A Peg For His Hat by L.F. Macey is published in paperback by Forrest Hall, ISBN 0-9547673-0-6, price in UK £4.99.

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