Ashwell Yearbook 2020
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FORWARD PLAN Notice Of
HERTFORDSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL FORWARD PLAN Notice of (a) key and other decisions likely to be made on behalf of the County Council by Cabinet, (b) key decisions likely to be made on behalf of the County Council by Officers and (c) decisions on Traffic Regulation Orders likely to be made by Officers on behalf of the County Council in the period 1 September 2019 – 31 December 2019 Published: 7th August 2019 [Note: Key decisions and other decisions due to be reached in August 2019 but not yet made remain listed (notice of these items was given in the Forward Plan issued on 4 July 2019)] Contents DECISIONS BY CABINET KEY DECISIONS BY CHIEF OFFICERS Subject Subject New items are shown in bold. Ref. No. Matter for Decision Ref. No. Matter for Decision A032/19 Next Generation Programme: Approval of the service delivery options B001/19 Traffic Regulation Orders - various (see attached Schedule Appendix 1) for decision presented as part of the Outline Business Case A043/19 To agree the recommendations as set out in the Broxbourne Air B104/17 New contract for the Provision of a Two bed Emergency Therapeutic Quality Project Outline and Final Business Case Study residential Unit for Children and Young People aged 11-16 with Challenging and Complex Needs (Hudnall Park) A044/19 Approval of Winter Service Operational Plan 2019/20 B102/18 Procurement for the provision of an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) System for Herts FullStop: Award of contract A046/19 Extension of existing credit facility available to Herts Living Ltd B109/18 HCC1810703 – Property -
The Eagle 1967 (Michaelmas)
EAGL � l � No. 269 D •. ',,'nrl ;H r;vpnt Rritain bv W. Jefferson & Son Ltd., Ely The Eagle A MAGAZINE SUPPORTED BY MEMBERS OF ST JO HN'S COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Cover Photograph by John A. Rose Editorial page 137 The JCR Survey 139 Christmas by Alasdair Hamilton 149 Winter Words by Rex Hughes 150 Perfect for Sound by John Betjeman 151 Behaviour of a Hedgehog by Th e Master 153 W. H. R. Rivers by Professor Sir Frederic Bartlett 156 Photograph of the new lighting in Hall by John A. Rose fa cing 160 f2C\1. Portrait of Rowland Hill fa cing 161 Letters of Rowland Hill, edited by Michael Mavor 161 0 The Flame of Baverstock 171 s= Welcome to John's by fan White 173 The Burnaby Girl by Michael Mavor 176 � The Falkland Islands Today by C. W. Guillebaud 184 � Book Review by Roger Nokes 188 � College Chronicle 190 < CO � CO College Notes 207 0') 'P""4 r.l Editorial Committee � Mr BROGAN (Senior Editor), Mr HINSLEY (Treasurer), MICHAEL := d MAVOR and JOHN ARMSTRONG (Junior Editors), STUART HA RLlNG, � ::s RICHARD GRIFFITH. ...., All contributions for the next issue of the Magazine should be sent to the Editors, Th e Ea gle, St John's College. VOL. LXII JANUARY 1968 NO. 269 Questions and Answers STUDIOUS readers of Th e Eagle (there are no others) will note that the present issue contains an unusually large amount of material directly bearing on 10hnian life, past, present, and to come. The editors can take none of the credit for this con sistency : it must go to our contributors, and to the coincidence which made so many of them sail on the same tack. -
Area Summary Assessment Guidelines Evaluation BENINGTON-SACOMBE
BENINGTON-SACOMBE RIDGE summary assessment evaluation guidelines area71 area 71 Buntingford County map showing location of LANDSCAPE CHARACTER AREA Stevenage ©Crown copyright .All rights reserved. Puckeridge Hertfordshire County Council /Standon Bishops 100019606 2004 Watton Stortford -at- Stone Ware Sawbridgeworth Hertford LOCATION KEY CHARACTERISTICS Narrow interfluve between Beane and Upper Bourne • narrow undulating plateau valleys, north from Woodhall Park and expanding into • chalk visible on the surface larger area. • settled, with ribbon development • small woodlands set among large unhedged fields LANDSCAPE CHARACTER An area of ancient countryside with small woods, winding DISTINCTIVE FEATURES green lanes and numerous stream-eroded valleys. It consists • chalk flora: beech as prominent tree, with scabious, wild of a narrow, gently undulating settled plateau, with a hops and clematis in field banks continuous ribbon of development along its length from Benington southwards. Although predominantly in agricultural production, this is also a more populated area, with a slight commuter character derived from the substantial houses in large plots and a variance in character through the different linked villages. Benington, view towards church • (P. Shears) East Herts District Landscape Character Assessment pg 106 BENINGTON-SACOMBE RIDGE summary assessment evaluation guidelines area 71 PHYSICAL INFLUENCES HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL INFLUENCES Geology and soils. Slowly permeable calcareous clayey The ancient, settled character of this area is exemplified by soils over chalky till (Hanslope series). In this area the chalk Benington and its surroundings. There was a castle here, content is visible at the surface and directly influences the but it was pulled down in 1212; Benington was one of only native flora. -
Descendant Indent Chart
Descendant Indented Chart of George Burchmore of Row End Farm George1 BURCHMORE (723), b. 16 Dec 1762 at Flamstead, Hemel Hempstead, HRT, England, d. 1 Aug 1843 at Flamstead, Hemel Hempstead, HRT, England, bur. after 1 Aug 1843 at Flamstead, Hemel Hempstead, HRT, England +Susannah1 REDDING (727), b. 1763 at Redbourn, HRT, England, m. 29 Oct 1784 at Flamstead, Hemel Hempstead, HRT, England, d. 13 Jan 1788 at Row End, Flamstead, HRT, England ├── George2 BURCHMORE (277), b. before 20 Jan 1786 at Flamstead, Hemel Hempstead, HRT, England, d. 2 Dec 1838 at Flamstead, Hemel │ Hempstead, HRT, England, bur. after 31 Jan 1838 at Flamstead, Hemel Hempstead, HRT, England │ +Elizabeth2 PLUMMER (5552), b. 1790 at Studham, BDF, England, com. circa 1813 │ └── George (Studham)3 BIRCHMORE PLUMMER (5553), b. 10 Jul 1813 at Studham, BDF, England, d. 13 Mar 1884 at Whipsnade, │ Dunstable, BDF, England │ +Ann3 MATTHEWS (8668), b. 1815 at Whipsnade, Dunstable, BDF, England, m. 1 Oct 1835 at Whipsnade, Dunstable, BDF, │ England, d. 1858 at Whipsnade, Dunstable, BDF, England │ ├── George4 BIRCHMORE (PLUMMER) (8150), b. 1850 at Whipsnade, Dunstable, BDF, England, d. Jun 1915, bur. 24 Jun │ │ 1915 at Lambeth, London, SRY, England │ └── Lucy4 BIRCHMORE (19956), b. 1857 │ +Ruth3 COOK (6884), b. 1819 at Kensworth, Dunstable, HRT, England, d. 22 May 1904 at Whipsnade, BDF, England │ └── Ruth4 BIRCHMORE (9248), b. 1857 │ +Eliza3 BATCHELOR (5561), b. 1829 at Whipsnade, Dunstable, BDF, England, m. 18 Jun 1859 at London, MDX, England, d. 19 Aug │ 1867 at Whipsnade, Dunstable, BDF, England │ ├── Ellen4 BIRCHMORE (5562), b. 21 Mar 1860 at Whipsnade, Dunstable, BDF, England, d. -
HERTFORDSHIRE. (KELLY's
164 ROYSTON. HERTFORDSHIRE. (KELLY's Smith Rivers R. agricultural seed & wine & spirit manding ; Sergt. .Alfred Clarke, drill instructor), .Ar · merchant, Market hill • moury, Melbourn street Soundy & Powell, drapers, Market hill Walker Robert, chemist & druggist, High street Spink Edward William, beer retailer, Baldock street, & W.:m·l & Oo. ironmongers, Kneesworth street florist, Kneesworth street Ward J ames Lloyd, beer retailer, Market hill Stamford James, cab proprietor & agent for Great Ward William, ta.ilor, Market hill ~·Jrthern Railway C:o. Knee.>worth street Warren Brothers, printers, publishers, book & music Stamford William, bill poster & town crier, 6 Sun hill sellers, stationers, bookbinders, engravers, news agents, Stevenson Charles, boarding school, Victoria house, stamp distributors, & circulating library, High street Kneesworth road Whltaker & Co. drapers & tailors, The Cross St~mpson Richard, Prudential superintendent, Gower rd Whitehead Brothers, stone, marble, granite & monu Stockbridge & Sons, corn & seed mers. Melbourn street mental masons & general contractors ; established 184o, Stockbridge William, hair dresser, Market hill The Warren Stone Edgar William, draper, High street Wiffen John, beer retailer, Kneesw!Yrl·h street Stone N. F. (Miss), organist & teacher of music, Knees- Wilkerson Samuel & Son, corn, cake & seed merchants, worth street Kneesworth street Streather Geo. Edwin,stone ·&marble mason, Cambridge rd Williamson Edward, shoe maker, Market hill Thair Ernest, hair dresser, High street Wilson Charles Cook, blacksmith, Kneesworth street Thurley Richard, beer retailer & builder, Gas House rd Wilson Luther, wheelwright, Barkway road Thurnall Harry Joseph, a.rtist, Baldock street Wilson Robert, tailor, Kneesworth street Thnrnall John Edward, land surveyor & valuer, & agent Wilson William, carriage builder, Kneesworth street to County Fire Office, High street Woods Edward, greengrocer, Market hill Titchmarsh Edward, draper & grocer, & agent for W. -
The Impact of the Straw Plait and Hat Trade in Nineteenth-Century
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by University of Hertfordshire Research Archive How Saucy did it Make the Poor? The Straw Plait and Hat Trades, Illegitimate Fertility and the Family in Nineteenth-Century Hertfordshire NIGEL GOOSE University of Hertfordshire Abstract The straw plait and hat industry provided considerable employment for women and children in south and west Hertfordshire in the nineteenth century, but was absent in much of the north and east. Many contemporaries felt it had a deleterious effect upon morality and the stability of the family, and its regional specificity within Hertfordshire allows these propositions to be tested through a comparative analysis of illegitimacy and examination of the family circumstances of young straw workers. It is discovered that illegitimacy ratios often give a misleading impression, failing to take into account the size of the population ‘at risk’, while illegitimacy rates suggest only minor differences between straw and non-straw areas, a more noticeable feature of the data being the generally higher illegitimacy rates found in Hertfordshire’s small towns. Nor does the evidence suggest that the industry led to early break up of families. The rise and decline of illegitimacy in England between the late eighteenth and late nineteenth centuries presents a continuing conundrum, and while the growth and decay of the straw industry offers little explanatory value, this article suggests that the changing conditions in the agricultural labour -
Cambridgeshire.
158 u UILDEN MORDEN. CAMBRIDGESHIRE. .. · [KELLY'S GUILDEN MORDEN is a parish and village on the of Edward II. there were two principal manors in this river Rhea, near the borders of Bedfordshire and Hert parish, then belonging to the families of Kyriell and fordshire, 4 miles north from Ash-well sta.tion on the .Avenell; one of these was given to the Priory of Barn Hitchin, Royston and Cambridge branch of the Great well, but after the Reformation it was consolidated with Northern railway, 6 north-west from Royston and about the manors of Boondesbury, Bancis, Foxley and Pychards• rs south-west from Cambridge, in the Western division as a single manor, and known as the manor of Guilden of the county, hundred of .Armingford, petty sessional Morden. There is a recreation ground. Morden Hall, division of Arrington and Melbourn, union and county an ancient mansion containing an oratory or chapel and court district of Royston, rural deanery of Shingay and surrounded by a large moat, was formerly the seat of archdeaconry and diocese of Ely. The church of St. Thomas-de-Hayguilden, and in 1375 a licence was Mary is an embattled building of flint and stone in the granted by Bishop Arundell for the celebrating of divine Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave -with offices in the chapel of the mansion; it is now the clerestory, aisles, south porch and an embattled western re!'idence of F. B. Montague esq. The manor was tower with four crocketed pinnacles and spire, contain pmchased in 18o6 by Philip, 3·rd Earl of Hardwicke. -
The Ice Age in North Hertfordshire
The Ice Age in North Hertfordshire What do we mean by ‘the Ice Age’? Thinking about ‘the Ice Age’ brings up images of tundra, mammoths, Neanderthals and great sheets of ice across the landscape. This simple picture is wrong in many ways. Firstly, there have been many different ‘Ice Ages’ in the history of the earth. The most dramatic happened between 2.4 and 2.1 billion years ago, known as the Huronian Glaciation. About the same time, earth’s atmosphere suddenly became rich in oxygen, and some scientists believe that the atmospheric changes reduced the temperature so much that the whole planet became covered in ice. 1: an Arctic ice sheet (© Youino Joe, USFWS, used under a Creative Commons licence) Another global cover of ice happened 650 million years ago when the first multi-celled animals were evolving. Geologists sometimes refer to this period as the ‘Snowball Earth’ and biologists know it as the Proterozoic. Temperatures were so low that the equator was as cold as present-day Antarctica. They began to rise again as concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere rose to about 13%, 350 times greater than today. Some carbon dioxide came from volcanic eruptions, but some was excreted by microbial life, which was beginning to diversify and increase in numbers. Neither of these Ice Ages is the one that dominates the popular imagination. Both happened many millions of years before life moved on to land. There were no humans, no mammals, no dinosaurs: none of the creatures familiar from The Flintstones. The period most people think about as the ‘real’ Ice Age is the geologists’ Pleistocene era, from more than two-and-a-half million years ago to the beginning of the Holocene, almost 12,000 years ago. -
23 July 2021
NORTH HERTFORDSHIRE DISTRICT COUNCIL WEEK ENDING 23 JULY 2021 MEMBERS’ INFORMATION Topic Page News and information 1-4 CCTV Reports - Pre-Agenda, Agenda and Decision sheets 5-16 Planning consultations - Planning applications received & decisions 17-33 Press releases 34-35 Produced by the Communications Team. Any comments, suggestions or contributions should be sent to the Communications Team at [email protected] Page 1 of 35 NEWS AND INFORMATION AGENDA & REPORTS PUBLISHED WEEK COMMENCING 19 JULY 2021 None FORTHCOMING MEETINGS WEEK COMMENCING 26 JULY 2021 None CHAIR’S ENGAGEMENTS WEEK COMMENCING 24 JULY 2021 Date Event Location None VICE-CHAIR’S ENGAGEMENTS WEEK COMMENCING 24 JULY 2021 Date Event Location None OTHER EVENTS WEEK COMMENCING 24 JULY 2021 Date Event Location None Page 2 of 35 REGULATORY SERVICES MEMBERS INFORMATION NOTE North Hertfordshire Local Plan Examination Update The latest consultation on the new Local Plan for the District closed in June 2021. Members of the public and other interested parties were invited to comment upon the latest proposed changes to the Plan and a number of supporting documents. The consultation followed the further hearing public sessions held by the Inspector between November 2020 and February 2021. The Council received approximately 670 responses to the consultation. These contained approximately 1,500 distinct representations on the documents and detailed proposed changes that were consulted upon. The Inspector has now given the go-ahead for the responses to be made public. The independent Programme Officer, who helps administer the Examination, has asked for the website to be updated so that people know that the representations are available to view and to add the following text: The Inspector will be reading and considering all the representations that have been submitted. -
90 Bus Time Schedule & Line Route
90 bus time schedule & line map 90 Royston - Letchworth View In Website Mode The 90 bus line (Royston - Letchworth) has 2 routes. For regular weekdays, their operation hours are: (1) Letchworth: 9:25 AM (2) Odsey: 1:25 PM Use the Moovit App to ƒnd the closest 90 bus station near you and ƒnd out when is the next 90 bus arriving. Direction: Letchworth 90 bus Time Schedule 45 stops Letchworth Route Timetable: VIEW LINE SCHEDULE Sunday Not Operational Monday Not Operational Bus Station, Royston Barkway Street, Royston Tuesday 9:25 AM Recreation Ground, Royston Wednesday 9:25 AM Town Hall, Royston Thursday 9:25 AM Melbourn Street, Royston Friday 9:25 AM Princes Mews, Royston Saturday 9:25 AM Kiln House Yard, Royston Golf Club, Royston 1 Downlands, Royston Civil Parish 90 bus Info Ashwell & Morden Railway Station, Odsey Direction: Letchworth Stops: 45 Sunnymead Orchard, Ashwell Trip Duration: 58 min Line Summary: Bus Station, Royston, Recreation War Memorial, Ashwell Ground, Royston, Town Hall, Royston, Princes Mews, Royston, Golf Club, Royston, Ashwell & Morden Post O∆ce, Ashwell Railway Station, Odsey, Sunnymead Orchard, PFP12, Ashwell Civil Parish Ashwell, War Memorial, Ashwell, Post O∆ce, Ashwell, Manor Farm, Bygrave, Wedon Way, Bygrave, Larkins Manor Farm, Bygrave Close, Baldock, Baldock Railway Station, Baldock, Pinnocks Lane, Baldock, Clothall Road Allotments, Wedon Way, Bygrave Clothall Common, Wynn Close, Clothall Common, Sale Drive, Clothall Common, Hurst Close, Clothall Larkins Close, Baldock Common, Eisenberg Close, Clothall Common, -
Harvest Place
HARVEST PLACE CLAYBUSH HILL MEADOW, ASHWELL, HERTFORDSHIRE, SG7 5FJ Hightown Homes has 3 bedroom houses available for shared ownership in Ashwell, a beautiful village in the north of Hertfordshire WELCOME Harvest Place is a beautiful new Letchworth Garden City is less than 20 minutes from Ashwell by car and is the world’s first Garden City offering some development on the southern edge of interesting places to explore. In the town centre you’ll find the Ashwell, an historic village in Hertfordshire. Broadway Cinema and Theatre, the Broadway Gallery plus Only seven miles west of Royston and under plenty of places to shop, eat and drink. 20 minutes’ drive from Letchworth, Harvest Place offers a traditional British village lifestyle with the additional comfort of a modern home. The local area Harvest Place is located a mere 8 minute stroll from the centre of the charming village of Ashwell which dates back to 1350 and is famed for its natural springs, one of the sources of the River Cam. The village is a thriving, active community with a host of Rhubarb & Mustard Store local amenities including a butchers, bakers, post office, hairdressers, dentist, local stores, pubs and cafes. It even has its own museum full of the everyday objects of life in the village and the surrounding countryside from the Stone Age to the present day. Ashwell Village Hall plays host to a Karate Club, Pilates, a Playgroup, School of Dance and Theatre Club. There is also a primary school and day nursery located within the village. The stunning, surrounding countryside is the perfect place to explore on foot or bicycle and changes with the seasons with fields of wheat, barley, sugar beet, peas and oil-seed rape. -
Martin G Hoffman ASHWELL Mark Noble Westbrook
ABCDEFGHIJ Any employment, office, Any payment or A description of any Any land in the Council’s Any land in the Council’s Any tenancy where to The name of any person Any other types of interest (other 1 Councillor Parish trade, profession or provision of any other contract for goods, area in which you have area for which you or the your knowledge the or body in which you than Disclosable Pecuniary Spire Furlong 3 Newnham Way Trustee - Ashwell Village Hall Ashwell Trustee - Ashwell Village Museum 2 Martin G Hoffman ASHWELL Retired NONE NONE Herts NONE NONE NONE Vide President - Ashwell Show 33 West End Mark Noble Ashwell 3 Westbrook - White ASHWELL Ambit Projects Limited NONE NONE Herts SG7 5PM NONE NONE NONE 41 Club 3 Orchard View Sunnymead 4 Bridget Macey ASHWELL NONE NONE NONE Ashwell NONE NONE NONE NONE 92 Station Road Ashwell 5 David R Sims ASHWELL NONE NONE NONE Herts SG7 5LT NONE NONE NONE NONE British Association of Counselling & Psychotherapy Foundation for Psychotherapy & Counselling British Psychoanalytical Council Rare Breeds Survival Hebridean Sheep Society Ashwell Housing Association National Sheep Association Guild of Weavers, Spinners and Dyers Member of Green Party Husband: British Association for Local History Hertfordshire Association for Local 59 High Street, Ashwell History (Home) Hertfordshire Record Scoiety Farm fields at: Westbury, Farm fields at: Westbury, Rare Breeds Survival Trust Self-employed Shepherd, Hunts Close, Townsend, Hunts Close, Townsend, Hebridean Sheep Society teacher, landlord Baldwins Corner,