The No.1 British And Commonwealth Weightlifter Opened Codford School Fete In 2004

Danny Howell went along to meet him and discover more.

Eight times British and English weightlifting champion, Karl Grant, opened Codford School Fete, on Saturday 10th July 2004, when a demonstration he gave proved popular with the crowd, especially the children.

Karl (34) holds four British records and is currently rated No.1 British and Commonwealth heavyweight weightlifter. He has twice won bronze medals in the Commonwealth Games: in Kuala Lumpar in 1998 and Manchester in 2002. He is Team Captain for the British Weightlifting Squad and hopes to qualify for the next Commonwealth Games, which will be held in Melbourne in 2006.

Karl has a military background and has travelled about quite a lot before settling at Hanging Langford in the Wylye Valley. He is married to Sarah and has two children, Abbie (8) and Jade (2). He owns two health clubs, one in Luton (where he originally comes from) and one in Canterbury.

Karl is currently training four times a week, in two hour sessions, but as the Games approach he will build up to 12 times or more a week. He has no trainer but is quick to point out he has a Degree in Sports Science and is himself a qualified coach. He writes his own programmes and also those for the rest of the British squad. He says his career has been virtually injury free. except for breaking a vertebra, in 1986, and he was able to carry on as usual after it was treated.

When asked if retirement would be soon approaching, Karl said: “After Melbourne I think that will be it. When you get to 30 you’re pushing retirement and by 2006 I shall be 36. I then intend to go back to judo, which I did before but gave up in case minor injuries interrupted my weightlifting.”

He added: “I would also like to offer my services to other sports, like rugby, showing rugby players, not how to play rugby, but how to put their strength to good use. I’ve also got plans to open another gym club, in Salisbury this time, where I can bring weightlifting skills to local people who are doing health and fitness training.”

Weightlifting Champion Karl Grant lifts 160kg at Codford School Fete, Saturday 10th July 2004.

A Fragmented Portrait Of Codford

May 1995

Book:
STERNER DAYS, CODFORD DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR
Romy Wyeth

This is a fragmented portrait of one Wiltshire village during an extraordinary period of history, a period still within living memory. The storytellers allow us to glimpse, through their eyes and their voices, one of the most important chapters in the annals of world history.

In 1939 the first troops since the First World War arrived in Codford, the vanguard of a massive military build-up which was to culminate with Operation Overlord, and the invasion of Europe five years later.

The area east of the road from Codford St. Peter to Manor Farm was the location of the main camp in the village during the Second World War. Another camp was situated between Little Wood and the church at Codford St. Mary.

The 6th Guards Armoured Brigade was at Codford between 1941 and 1943. They were given a fond welcome by the people of Codford and are remembered as being the most popular troops ever to have been stationed in the village. When they left they were succeeded by the 11th Armoured Division who remained only a short while.

When American troops arrived in September 1943 they met with wet conditions underfoot, similar to those of the First World War when the village was nicknamed ‘Codford On The Mud’. It was this which prompted the GIs to build their very own ‘Burma Road’, to combat the morass which appeared whenever the erratic English climate chose to open the heavens and flood the landscape.

Codford was home for the U.S. 3rd Armoured Division, 32nd Armoured Regiment, the Maintenanance Battalion and Supplies Battalion, while Stockton House, nearby, saw the soldiers of Combat Command ‘A’, the 45th Medical Battalion and Trains Headquarters. These men vacated Wiltshire for France during the early part of July 1944 but more Americans arrived for a temporary stay afterwards.

A Polish Corps, under the command of General Anders, was in camp at Codford after the Second World War. Stockton House was used as their headquarters. The Poles were at Codford until demobilisation and some of them later took up permanent residence in the village.

This book, Sterner Days, focuses attention on the military and civilian aspects of village life during the war years, through the memories of those who lived or were based in and around Codford.

Some fought for King and Country, while others worked at essential services, growing the food, tending the livestock and keeping the lines of communication open; preparing to defend their homeland in case of invasion. Women learned to make do and mend, to eke out the rations and to take up the duties of the men away in combat. Codford children found themselves surrounded by soldiers and military activity; childhood, for them, became something of a great adventure.

In 1945 the Second World War ended. It had been a time of upheaval and change, a period after which nothing and no one remained untouched by the experience. Those who remember those tumultous times when the forces of evil were poised across the England Channel and the world was in flames, are dwindling voices. They made history, and their stories evoke another time, a time when Britain stood alone and refused to surrender.

In 1941 Winston Churchill said “Do not let us speak of darker days; let us rather speak of sterner days. These are not dark days; these are great days – the greatest our country has ever lived; and we must all thank God that we have been allowed, each of us according to our stations, to play a part in making these days memorable in the history of our race.”

Sterner Days, Codford During The Second World War.
Romy Wyeth.
Softback, 210 mm x 147 mm, 112 pages, 33 black and white photographs and illustrations.
Published by Bedeguar Books.
May 1995.
ISBN 1872818242.

Horse Was Struck By A Lorry And Killed On The A36 At Codford

Tuesday 2nd November 1982

A 20-year-old horse which strayed on to the A36 Warminster to Salisbury road, west of Codford, at 5.20 a.m. on Tuesday 2nd November 1982, was struck by a lorry and killed.

The lorry was driven by Mr. John Benjafield of West Hill, Wincanton. Mr. Benjafield was not hurt and the lorry was not damaged.

The horse had got out of a field adjacent Chitterne Road, Codford. It belonged to Mrs. Rosemary Crocker, of Cortington Manor Stables, Corton.

Agriculture In Codford, 1980

From “The Changing Village, A Study Of Villages In Hampshire, Wiltshire & Dorset,” conducted by Miss Hilary Tinley for the Arthur Rank Centre, National Agricultural Centre, Kenilworth, Warwickshire, CV8 2LZ, during 1980:

Codford In West Wiltshire District, Wiltshire
There are water meadows along the banks of the Wylye and open arable land up into the chalk farmland of the Plain. The farms are large and mixed with well maintained farm roads and fences. There are patches of woodland and shrub maintained for nature conservation and game management.

Codford Population, 1980

From “The Changing Village, A Study Of Villages In Hampshire, Wiltshire & Dorset”, conducted by Miss Hilary Tinley for the Arthur Rank Centre, National Agricultural Centre, Kenilworth, Warwickshire, CV8 2LZ, during 1980:

Codford In West Wiltshire District, Wiltshire

Population
Electoral roll 569. There are few outlying settlements. There has been a minimal increase in population in the Wylye Valley since 1961 and future increases will tend to result from in-migration rather than from natural growth. The proportion of retired people is above the average for West Wiltshire, but this village has a far smaller proportion of old people than many neighbouring villages.

Favourite Stopping Place For Wheat Carters

HOUSES AND ALE
From Ushers Guide To The West, c1970.

A WAGON LOAD OF WHEAT
In days gone by, Warminster was the great corn market of West Wiltshire, and wagon loads of wheat were a familiar sight after harvest along the roads of the Wylye Valley. They are worth exploring today, from the Royal Oak at Wishford all the way to Warminster. The A road follows the valley on the north bank, the B road on the south bank. My advice is to take both.

The favourite stopping place for the wheat carters of old was the George at Codford, and it is still a favourite today, looking very inviting with its pink walls and blue shutters.

Text by Bill Bawden, circa 1970.     

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