General Meeting Of St Lawrence Chapel And Friends Of St Lawrence Chapel, Warminster

Monday 13th May 2024

Notice of a General Meeting of St Lawrence Chapel Warminster.

Charity Number 1194628

Notice is hereby given that a General Meeting of St Lawrence Chapel and Friends of St Lawrence Chapel Warminster will be held at St Lawrence Chapel, High Street Warminster BA12 9AG on Saturday 18th May 2024 at 10am.

General Meeting Agenda – by order of the Feoffees, Trustees and Friends.

1. Apologies.

2. To receive and adopt the 2023 annual report of the trust.

3. To receive and adopt the annual receipts and payment accounts for 2023.

4. Update on the Friends of the Chapel.

5. Friends of the chapel financial report.

6. AOB.

I. Frostick,
Chair of the Feoffees.

Martin Read Banned From Spotted In Warminster Town

Sunday 12th May 2024

A message from the Admin Team of the Spotted In Warminster Town Facebook page:

We are writing this post further to seeing what we can only describe as wholly unacceptable and disgraceful comments made by Martin Read on a earlier post.

We have now blocked and banned Martin Read from our page.

We do not tolerate our page being used in that way.

We want to make our page more positive and reduce down on the negative posts and comments on our page.

If you send in a post or publish a comment which our admin team deem to be of a negative nature we will not publish it and if necessary we reserve the right to pass it on to relevant local authorities including the police or local council and further legal action would be pursued.

We unfortunately can’t monitor every post and so we really need your help to achieve this, if you spot anything of a negative nature on our page, please message in to us admin and we will endeavour to remove it as soon as we can and if necessary take further action.

Please help us to keep our page nice and friendly.

We want to deliver a local community page for you, the local community of Warminster, which all visitors to our page can enjoy visiting and a page which is a useful local resource for local news, events and information.

Thank you and best wishes from the admin team.

Longleat: British TV Series, The Runaways

The Runaways by Victor Canning was first published in Great Britain by William Heinemann Ltd., in 1972, and again as a Puffin Book by Penguin in 1978.

The Puffin paperback (190 pages) has the following introduction:

The Runaways
‘Samuel M.,’ he said, ‘you got to think this out. You’re wet and muddy and half naked. Your clothes is all soaked and your belly’s rumbling a bit now and then because all you’ve had in the last two days is them eggs just raw and nothing to write home about. You are wanted by the police. Like a real criminal, which you aren’t.’

On a night of wild storms, Smiler (Samuel M.) escapes from a police car – he’d absconded from an approved school and the police were taking him back. On the same night, only ten miles away, Yarra, a female cheetah, escapes from the Longleat Wild Life Park.

Both boy and cheetah are determined to stay free – Smiler because he’s waiting for his seaman father to return and help to prove he is innocent of the charge that landed him in trouble, Yarra, because she wants a safe, private place in which to have her cubs.

The hunt goes up both runaways – and as the days pass, Smiler feels that Yarra is his mascot. That while she’s at liberty, all will be well for him. Yet both are in considerable danger, from other people and from each other, as they find out how to live their separate secret lives on the edge of Salisbury Plain. This story combines an exciting adventure with a love of animals and of other wild things. It is the first in a series of three stories about Smiler. The others are Flight Of The Grey Goose and The Painted Tent, also now published in Puffin.

Danny Howell writes: Victor Canning was born in 1911 and died in 1986. He wrote over 60 short stories, novels and thrillers. Although The Runaways is fictional, the text mentions Longleat, Warminster, Crockerton, Heytesbury, Imber and the Wylye Valley. At one point in the story, the lead character Smiler goes into the Warminster branch of Woolworths to buy an alarm clock. The postscript to The Runaways reads: ‘Joe’s old green van was found by the police late that afternoon. It was abandoned in a lay-by on a main road twenty miles from Longleat. Lying on the driving seat was a note that read: This van belongs to Joe Ringer of Heytesbury. Say to him the old grey goose is still flying.’

Danny Howell adds: A tv movie was made of the book, filmed at Burbank Studios, California, produced by Lorimar, and was released in the USA in 1975. But later on, and it must have been in the late 1970s or the 1980s or 1990s, The Runaways was made into a children’s tv series and broadcast on British television at teatime. It was filmed locally. I can remember seeing how the production team made a community camp at Norton Common, Corsley, for filming some scenes and when I watched the series on tv (at which time I was an adult) I was able to recognise many places and roads in the Warminster area. Does anyone else remember this series, whether it was called The Runaways or something else, who filmed it and who were the actors in it?

The End Of BT’s Phone Book Online

Tuesday 30th April 2024

It’s goodbye today (30th April 2024) to BT’s digital directory.

After April 30, the digital directory, The Phone Book Online, which lets users look up a person’s or company’s phone number, will be unavailable. They now have to phone 118 500 at £1.55 a minute, in addition to a 77p call fee, if they are unable to access the internet or cannot find the number they need online.

This is BT’s second axing of a service this year. In March deliveries of the printed phone directory to doorsteps ended. BT said 18 million copies of its phone book were printed annually but people are now using internet search engines to obtain the same information.

Donate Old Mobile Phones, Laptops, Routers, Cameras, Leads And Adaptors

Monday 22nd April 2024

Harriet James, of Sustainable Warminster, writes:

Do you have old mobile phones, laptops, routers, cameras, leads and adaptors etc. lying around?

These can be dropped off at Kingdown School reception during school hours. Local company Blackmore IT can either repair and restore them to give to people in the community who need them or recycle the components. There is zero waste going to landfill so this is a project which benefits the environment as well as the community.

For further information on exactly what you can donate, either visit the Blackmore IT website at https://blackmoreuk.com/ or https://donateit.co.uk/

For queries email: will.donateit@gmail.com

Please bring all equipment in carrier bags. Drop off during school opening hours only.

Kingdown School, Woodcock Road, Warminster, BA12 9DR.

Horse Box And Drawbar Theft At Kingston Deverill

Saturday 20th April 2024

From the Facebook page of Warminster Police:

We are appealing for witnesses following a report of a theft from MANOR FARM, KINGSTON DEVERILL. This is believed to have taken place during the late hours of THURSDAY 11th APRIL 2024.

Individuals have gone onto the farm and taken a horse box and a draw bar valued between £6000 – £7000. The horse box is very distinctive with dark blue sides and a light blue front.

If you have any information please contact 101 quoting the reference number 54240041703 – PC 70306 MARSHALL . Thank you.

Warminster Neighbourhood Plan Update

Monday 15th April 2024

Press Release from Warminster Town Council:

Warminster Neighbourhood Plan Update – April 2024

Work continues with the ongoing review of the Warminster Neighbourhood Plan (WNP). Good progress has been made by the Steering Group in drafting the Plan document itself and working on important elements such as the protection of green spaces through the Plan.

With recent changes to national planning policy by the government, the WNP Steering Group has decided to explore Site Allocation as part of the review process.

Site Allocation is the process of designating specific areas or sites for particular land uses such as residential purposes. One of the key changes in the national policy extends the protection period from speculative development to five years for Neighbourhood Plans that allocate a site to meet housing requirements. This is up from the previous two years.

The first phase of the Site Allocation process involves issuing a Call for Sites. This step aims to compile an initial list of potential development sites within the parish boundary. Landowners and members of the public are encouraged to submit their suggestions for consideration.

Proposed sites will then undergo a thorough evaluation based on an established assessment criteria. Only those that are assessed to be potentially suitable for housing, and that could meet our local objectives and need, will be progressed to stages where our community will have their say on allocation. As the WNP will be voted on at referendum, community input and support are fundamental to the Plan.

Further details regarding the Site Allocation process and how residents can participate will be released in the coming weeks. In the meantime, individuals interested in receiving further information are encouraged to sign-up by emailing admin@warminster-tc.gov.uk.

Councillor Phil Keeble, Chair of the WNP Steering Group, emphasised the importance of community involvement in the Neighbourhood Plan review, stating, “This process presents an invaluable opportunity for residents and stakeholders to contribute to the long-term vision for Warminster. By working together, we can ensure that future development is aligned with our shared values and aspirations for the town.”

For more information and updates on the Warminster Neighbourhood Plan review, please visit the Warminster Neighbourhood Plan website www.warminsterplan.com.

Warminster Museum And History Society ~ Programme Of Talks, May 2024 To December 2024

Wednesday 1st May 2024
Commonwealth War Graves Commission: Its Role And Work
Jon Wort.

Wednesday 5th June 2024
Warminster Buildings: Recent Investigations
Dorothy Treasure.

Wednesday 3rd July 2024
Making The Kingdom Of Wessex
David Dawson.

Wednesday 7th August 2024
Victoria County History: Wiltshire
James Holden.

Wednesday 4th September 2024
Warminster’s Public Clocks
David Pollard.

Wednesday 2nd October 2024
1,000 Years Of Warp & Weft: The Wiltshire Woollen Industry
David Birts.

Wednesday 6th November 2024
The Young Elizabeth I
Nicola Tallis.

Wednesday 4th December 2024
Christmas Miscellany.

All talks commence at 2.30 p.m. and are held at Warminster Library –
entrance via the Library’s rear door off the Library Car Park.
Admission: Members £1. Guests £3.

Sculptures By Althea Wynne In Toyah Willcox’s Garden

Friday 5th April 2024

Danny Howell writes:

In an episode of the television series The Cotswolds And Beyond, broadcast today, at 6.00 p.m. on Channel 5 (a repeat, first shown in 2021), Pam Ayres visited the home of musician and actress Toyah Willcox (married to musician Robert Fripp) at Pershore in Worcestershire.

Wandering around the garden which is adjacent the River Avon, and is a beautiful paradise of plants including tulips and magnolias reflected by mirror screens, Pam noticed a sculpture of a man on a horse.

“Do we know who he is?” asked Pam. Toyah replied that she simply calls the sculpture ‘The Horse Man’ and that it is the work of Althea Wynne.

Those of us who live in the Wylye Valley and are interested in art will know that Althea, until her untimely death in a car crash on 24 January 2012, lived and worked at Upton Lovell. Althea’s husband Antony Barrington Brown was also killed in the crash.

Footnote: It would seem that there was once another piece of artwork by Althea Wynne in Toyah’s garden. In a blog post in July 2013, Toyah wrote: “At 10pm there was a loud knock at our front door and three police people came in saying ‘we believe Toyah Willcox might be the target of intruders.; Boy! This was freaky. So they all run out into the garden to discover the mess the intruders had left behind. Out statue RITES OF SPRING made by the sculptress Althea Wynne was smashed as were stone benches. The real sadness of this damage is Althea was killed last year when a truck drove into her car. We can never replace the sculpture, the memory nor the presence of Althea, and that is heartbreaking.” toyahwillcox.com/toyahs-blog-july-2013/

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