Warminster: Close Junior School Foot Shield Competition 1936

Danny Howell has in his collection of ephemera an account of the Warminster Close Junior School Sports Event, held at the Avenue School Field, Warminster, on the evening of Tuesday 28th July 1936. From the account it can be gleaned that:

Heavy rain throughout the day stopped in time for the two hour event in the evening.

The school pupils were divided into three “houses” called Battlesbury, Cley Hill, and Copheap, and they competed for the Foot Shield. It seems that marks were given to pupils, for their respective “houses” during the three school terms, beginning in September 1935, for ability in work, ability in examinations, and general conduct and discipline. To these marks were added further marks gained at the annual sports event, which were often crucial in deciding the “house” that was victorious and won the Foot Shield.

In 1936, Battlesbury came last in the sports, but their commanding lead in marks gained during the three terms, saw them winning the Foot Shield. The marks for the sports were: Cley Hill, 81; Copheap, 75; and Battlesbury, 48. When these marks were added to the marks for the three terms, the totals were: Battlesbury, 1,119; Cley Hill, 1,106; and Copheap, 912.

After the sports had concluded, the Headmaster, Mr. E.H. White, on behalf of all the pupils, thanked the people who had made it all happen: Mr. H.B. Edwards, Mr. and Mrs. S.C.H. Perry, and Mr. E.G. Williams, who were the judges; Mr. N.H. Dewey, the starter; Mrs. W.T. Watkins (recorder); and Mr. Alford, Mr. S. Bishop, Mr. H. Moody, Mr. G.C. Noyce, and others who had assisted.

Mr. White then introduced Dr. Wilfred L. Hogan, who had kindly come along to present the Foot Shield to the Boys’ Captain and the Girls’ Captain of the Battlesbury team. Dr. Hogan told the children it was a fine competition, which encouraged great industry, endurance and sportsmanship. The children then gave three hearty cheers to Dr. Hogan, and Battlesbury gave three cheers for the two losing teams.

RESULTS:

Blindfold Race, Girls: 1. D. Norris and J. Pratt. 2. K. Cornish and B. Penny. 3. B. Cornaby and B. Cook.

Blindfold Race, Boys: 1. J. Angell and H. Hicks. 2. M. Daniells and D. Head. 3. J. Curtis and J. Smart.

Egg and Spoon Race, Girls, 6 to 8 years: 1. C. Coombs. 2. J. Pearce. 3. G. Collier.

Egg and Spoon Race, Girls, 9 to 11 years: 1. B. Roberts. 2. M. Cole. 3. F. Staunton.

Egg and Spoon Race, Boys, 6 to 8 years: 1. R. Penn. 2. T. Pearce. 3. M. Silcox.

Egg and Spoon Race, Boys, 9 to 11 years: 1. R. Coleman. 2. A. Phillips. 3. D. Vaughan.

Flat Race, Girls, 5 years and under: 1. Pat Asquith. 2. Pat Collinson. 3. J. Conway.

Flat Race, Girls, 6 to 8 years: 1. G. Kingstone. 2. I. Partridge. 3. B. Penny.

Flat Race, Girls, 9 to 11 years: 1. B. Ladd. 2. D. Norris. 3. J. Pratt.

Flat Race, Boys, 5 years and under: 1. V. Adlam. 2. L. Bower. 3. C. Cornelius.

Flat Race, Boys, 6 to 8 years: 1. M. Cole. 2. D. Bower. 3. P. Redfern.

Flat Race, Boys, 9 to 11 years: 1. A. Fox. 2. D. Bishop. 3. M. Daniells.

High Jump, Girls: 1. J. Redfern. 2. D. Norris. 3. K. Cornish.

High Jump, Boys: 1. H. Hicks. 2. A. Fox. 3. D. Vaughan.

Late-for-School Event, Girls: 1. J. Morement. 2. J. Pratt. 3. C. Coombs.

Late-for-School Event, Boys: 1. D. Head. 2. D. Hicks. 3. L. Smart.

Medley Race, Girls: 1. K. Cornish. 2. I. Partridge. 3. P. Pearce.

Medley Race, Boys: 1. A. Silcox. 2. M. Cole. 3. D. Bishop.

Relay Race, Girls, 6 to 8 years: 1. Copheap. 2. Cley Hill. 3. Battlesbury.

Relay Race, Girls, 9 to 11 years: 1. Copheap. 2 Cley Hill. 3. Battlesbury.

Relay Race, Boys, 6 to 8 years: 1. Cley Hill. 2. Battlesbury. 3. Copheap.

Relay Race, Boys, 9 to 11 years: 1. Battlesbury. 2. Copheap. 3. Cley Hill.

Skipping, Girls, 6 to 8 years: 1. G. Kingstone. 2. I. Partridge. 3. B. Penny.

Skipping, Girls, 9 to 11 years: 1. B.Ladd. 2. J. Redfern. 3. J. Pratt.

Skipping, Boys, 6 to 8 years: 1. P. Redfern. 2. G. Fox. 3. V. Adlam.

Skipping, Boys, 9 to 11 years: 1. A. Fox. 2. D Bishop. 3. M. Daniells.

Thread The Needle Race, Girls: 1. B. Roberts. 2. P. Morement. 3. J. Pearce.

Thread The Needle Race, Boys: 1. J. Moody. 2. A. Phillips 3. D. Baverstock.

Three-Legged Race, Girls: 1. J. Redfern and B. Ladd. 2. P. Morement and B. Roberts. 3. D. Norris and J. Pratt.

Three-Legged Race, Boys: 1. J. Moody and A. Fox. 2. D. Bishop and A. Silcox. 3. J. Angell and H. Hicks.

A Telephone Exchange For Imber

From The Wiltshire Times, Saturday 8th February 1936:

Imber. A Telephone Exchange.
There was a time when the village of Imber was remote from all. But for some time, Imber, no longer remote, has been on the ‘phone, and the latest news is that “progress” is being made with the introduction of a small manual exchange at Imber, pending the development and provision of ‘County Satellite’ equipment specially designed to serve small rural communities. This is the official news from the Post Office.

The Warminster Postmaster George Strode Manley

Danny Howell writes:

The Warminster Postmaster George Strode Manley

Edmund and Charlotte Manley’s son, George Strode Manley, was nominated Postmaster at Warminster by Treasury letter on 19 April 1875 and took up his duties on 31 May. He had previously been postal clerk for nine years.

George Strode Manley was responsible for 17 sub-offices and he periodically visited, inspected and tested postman’s walks, and even measured the whole distance to Imber using a measuring chain (six and a half miles), the villages of the Wylye Valley as far as Steeple Langford, and Horningsham and Kingston Deverill.

George Strode Manley retired in 1915 after 40 years service as Postmaster. No pension was granted on the grounds that a private business had been operated from the Post Office premises at the same time. Thus ended the Manley family connection with Warminster Post Office.

Following a well-earned retirement in good health, George Strode Manley passed away after a sudden heart attack on Tuesday 7 January 1936. His death occurred at his home at 42 Boreham Road (later re-numbered No.35), Warminster. He left a family of three sons and a daughter – William Manley who resided at Capetown; Frank Manley who worked for the post office in Bristol; schoolteacher Victor Manley; and Miss Manley who resided with her father.

George Manley’s wife, Charlotte Emma, who was the eldest daughter of Mr. Toomer, the postmaster at Salisbury, predeceased him on 10 December 1923. She was of a retiring disposition, rarely taking part in public life. She enjoyed remarkable health, retained by long country rambles, which were her chief delight. A repetition of a short but serious illness she suffered during the winter of 1922 occurred in October 1923 during which she battled bravely. She died of heart trouble, aged 68. Her funeral at St. John’s Church, Boreham Road, Warminster, was conducted by the Rev. Canon Jacob. Mrs. Manley’s obituary referred to her as “A quiet, unobtrusive character, whose meekness and singular purity of heart, combined with much virility displayed in the management of home life, made her indeed saintly in the eyes of her intimate friends and acquaintances.”

Warminster U.D.C. Chairmen’s Portrait Collection

From The Wiltshire Times, Saturday 25th May 1935:

Warminster. Chairmen’s Portrait Collection.
A collection of portraits of ex-chairmen of Warminster Urban District Council was inaugurated at the Town Hall on Saturday afternoon, when the Marquess of Bath, K.G., unveiled the framed photographs of all the townsmen who have occupied the municipal chair since the inception of the council 40 years ago.

A Measure Of Corporate Atonement

Newspaper Cutting, unnamed newspaper but dated (London) 6 January 1935:

THE POOR LAW TRANSFORMED

AN ACT OF REDEMPTION

Tomorrow is a day on which we may find good cause to congratulate ourselves. The Unemployment Act, 1934, comes into operation, and the poison that the Poor Law Amendment Act, 1834, injected into our national life is finally expurgated. No centenary that we may celebrate in the current year is comparable with this moral advancement.

When England parted with the old order, and by the Reform Act committed her destinies to the middle-class voter, she fell under the sway of enthusiasts for system and method. It was the hey-day of the theorist. Exasperated by the errors of rule-of-thumb, he set out to create a new world on the basis of principles and statistics. Relief of the poor had been conducted on lines that were capable of abuse. He determined that the benevolence of the State should not be forthcoming until the means of self-support were utterly exhausted. Destitution might claim relief – but nothing short of it. To the appeal of want were opened the doors of the workhouse – which meant the surrender of the home.

No greater piece of self-righteous cruelty has ever been perpetrated in this land of kindliness. Drunk with the new wine of economic science, the politicians were blinded to human realities and human values. They ignored all that is meant by the family and the hearth. They were indifferent to the horrors of a promiscuous institutional existence for the respectable poor. They may have accentuated, “according to plan,” the struggle for industrial self-support and in that way increased the kinetic energy of the community. But they trampled out of thousands of their fellow creatures the last impulse of activity, and robbed life of its meaning for old and young. The new Poor Law became a name of loathing for every wage-earner. The sense of being mere factory-fodder sank deep into the consciousness of the working class. The toiler had lost his status as a human being and become only an economic unit.

Remote as that tragedy of intellectual perversion may be from our own generation, and mitigated as its original harshness has been in the interval, it has never ceased to curdle the milk of public charity. The stigma of the New Poor Law – whatever alleviations have been introduced into its application – has never disappeared, nor the bitterness with which the unfortunate were made to recognise themselves as the refuse of industry. The Act that comes into force tomorrow gives the evil spirit its final exorcism. By its recognition of family rights, its elasticity of treatment, and its fostering of crippled capacity, it is a signal vindication of common citizenship and national fraternity. It is a tardy, but true, measure of corporate atonement.

A Measure Of Corporate Atonement

Newspaper Cutting, unnamed but dated (London) 6 January 1935:

THE POOR LAW TRANSFORMED

AN ACT OF REDEMPTION

Tomorrow is a day on which we may find good cause to congratulate ourselves. The Unemployment Act, 1934, comes into operation, and the poison that the Poor Law Amendment Act, 1834, injected into our national life is finally expurgated. No centenary that we may celebrate in the current year is comparable with this moral advancement.

When England parted with the old order, and by the Reform Act committed her destinies to the middle-class voter, she fell under the sway of enthusiasts for system and method. It was the hey-day of the theorist. Exasperated by the errors of rule-of-thumb, he set out to create a new world on the basis of principles and statistics. Relief of the poor had been conducted on lines that were capable of abuse. He determined that the benevolence of the State should not be forthcoming until the means of self-support were utterly exhausted. Destitution might claim relief – but nothing short of it. To the appeal of want were opened the doors of the workhouse – which meant the surrender of the home.

No greater piece of self-righteous cruelty has ever been perpetrated in this land of kindliness. Drunk with the new wine of economic science, the politicians were blinded to human realities and human values. They ignored all that is meant by the family and the hearth. They were indifferent to the horrors of a promiscuous institutional existence for the respectable poor. They may have accentuated, “according to plan,” the struggle for industrial self-support and in that way increased the kinetic energy of the community. But they trampled out of thousands of their fellow creatures the last impulse of activity, and robbed life of its meaning for old and young. The new Poor Law became a name of loathing for every wage-earner. The sense of being mere factory-fodder sank deep into the consciousness of the working class. The toiler had lost his status as a human being and become only an economic unit.

Remote as that tragedy of intellectual perversion may be from our own generation, and mitigated as its original harshness has been in the interval, it has never ceased to curdle the milk of public charity. The stigma of the New Poor Law – whatever alleviations have been introduced into its application – has never disappeared, nor the bitterness with which the unfortunate were made to recognise themselves as the refuse of industry. The Act that comes into force tomorrow gives the evil spirit its final exorcism. By its recognition of family rights, its elasticity of treatment, and its fostering of crippled capacity, it is a signal vindication of common citizenship and national fraternity. It is a tardy, but true, measure of corporate atonement.

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