Frederick Taylor Court, Warminster, Officially Opened

Danny Howell writes:

Brigadier D.W. Anderson, C.B.E., Commandant of the School of Infantry, Warminster, performed the official opening of Frederick Taylor Court, the Royal British Legion Housing Association Ltd. flats and bungalows, at Bradley Road, Warminster, during the very windswept afternoon of Saturday 24th June 1978.

The dedication was conducted by the Rev. John Day, branch chaplain and Vicar of Christ Church, Warminster. H.F. Knight, President of the Warminster Branch of the Royal British Legion, read the lesson, and Major (Retired) A.H. Morley, the Chairman, performed the exhortation. Following the Reveille Mr. J.J.D. Rivers, the Director and Secretary of the Housing Association, said Wiltshire County Council had bought the land and West Wiltshire District Council had made a loan to finance the project.

The court, comprising 26 flats and bungalows, was one of 176 built in Britain in recent years. It was named after Frederick Taylor, who had joined the British Legion in 1925 and had been vice-chairman, chairman and president of the Warminster branch during his involvement with it.

Frederick Conrad Taylor was a native of Birmingham. He attended Saltley Teachers’ Training College, Birmingham and taught at Mansfield before returning to Birmingham to teach. During the First World War he served with the Royal Warwickshire Regiment and saw action at Flanders and on the Somme. He came to Warminster in 1923 and was headmaster at Sambourne School until 1955 when he retired. During his career he held every county office in the National Union of Teachers. He was Chairman of Kingdown School governors and Chairman of Warminster Branch College of Further Education. He served on the Urban Council for 29 years and was Chairman twice. He appeared in or helped produce many of the shows staged by the Warminster Operatic Society. He was a chorister at Christ Church, senior sidesman and parochial church council member, and President of the Cock Inn Gardeners’ Club. Mr. Taylor, who lived at York Terrace, West Street, Warminster, died, aged 82, at Warminster Hospital, on 29th June 1971.

Prior to unveiling a commemorative plaque at the court, Brigadier Anderson paid tribute to the work of the Legion’s Warminster members. Major Morley made a presentation to retiring R.S.M. Donald Trotter, for the help he had given during the early days of the court.

Among the first residents of Frederick Taylor Court were Douglas Bacon, Allen Bishop, Arthur Blackmore, Wincentyna Brzeska, Olive Cleaver, Rose Cox, Victor Crosse, Ethel Davis, Robert Doe, Sidney Fletcher, Edith Green, Muriel Hewett, Marjorie Kempshall, Ethel Marsh, Adelaide Masters, Kathleen Maxwell, Rose Mundy, William Murray, Edward Pearce, Stanley Pinnell, James Poulter, Harry Schorah, Ivy Seaford, Alice Stacey, Olive Symes, and Dorothy Walker.

Harcourt-Morris I.D.T.A. Medal Test Award Recipients

Wednesday 3rd May 1978

The following pupils gained awards at the I.D.T.A. Medal Test held at the Harcourt-Morris School Of Dancing, Warminster, last weekend:

Ballroom – one dance:
Ruth Bartley
Marnie Shuttlewood
Toni Norris
Ray Edwards;

Ballroom – bronze:
Debbie Johns
Shelly Dodge
Sheree Northeast
Ray Edwards;

Ballroom – silver:
Ted Bond
Josie and Mike Hill
Gordon Self;

Ballroom – gold:
Daphne and Fred Slow
Dave and Jackie Hill;

Latin American – one dance:
Nicola Butler
Marnie Shuttlewood
Ruth Bartley
Phil and Sybil Butler
Dave and Jill Simmonds;

Latin American – bronze:
Debbie Johns
Shelly Dodge
Mike and Josie Hill
Dave and Jackie Hill
Joan and Norman Barnard;

Latin American – silver:
Jackie Gallagher
Kim Norris
Ann-Marie Penny
Diane Robertson
Janene Freeman
Paul and Colin Smith
Dave Wilkinson
Keith and Val Pearce
Sylvia and Mike Newby;

Latin American – gold:
Paula Jones
Phil Norris
Jeanette Holton
Carleton Breadmore;

Ist gold bar:
Charles
Jackie Sutton
Robert Grist
Kim Bond;

Old Time – one dance:
Sheree Northeast;

Old Time – bronze:
Marie Sharp
Dean Wilkinson;

Old Time – gold:
Lorna Cook;

Social Dance:
Alison Sandall
Heidi Jones
Stephen Marshall
Anita Bush
Val Thorne
Shirley Farmer
Jenny Churn.

The test examiner was Miss A. Unsworth from Slough.

Wylye Valley Pony Club Results At Longleat Show 1978

Wylye Valley Pony Club Supporters’ Club Longleat Show April 1978

Results –

Leading Rein:
Trudi Andrew on Star;
Charles Langlands on Ruffles;
Jonathan Sutton on Solo;
Jill Riley on Jester;
Stephen Marshman on Rusty;
Stephen Marshman on Peanuts.

Eleven Years and Under:
Judith James on Dusty;
Gillian Holmes on Snaffles;
Nichola Gray on Gray Girl;
Haley Payne on Spring Surprise;
Adam Stratton on Ringo;
Andrea Caiger on Misty.

Fourteen Years and Under:
Maria Sparkes on The Wizard;
Victoria Button on Silver Streak;
Nicola Albon on Royal Blue VI;
Tracey Wirtz on Sherrington;
Katie Parker on Mr. McHenry;
Julie Regler on Question Mark.

Open:
Maria Sparkes on The Wizard;
Elaine Taylor on Shipton Malone;
Beverley Gray on Edelweiss;
Jane Spedding on Butterick II;
Debbie Wakeling on Blueberry;
Karen Stephens on Question Mark;
Maxine Fox on Lechlade Forget-Me-Not.

Warminster ~ Continued Growth

From The West Wiltshire District Guide 1978:

Warminster is the most southerly of the group of towns that stand in West Wiltshire. The parish includes not only the town of Warminster, but its 8½ square miles include much open country, including part of the western escarpment of Salisbury Plain.

Today the cloth industry is no more but the agricultural trade survives.

In the 19th century Warminster’s growth continued and the town took on something of its present appearance.

A growing town, a busy town and a town set in most beautiful and unspoilt scenery that is – Warminster.