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Rights of Way Improvement Plan 2017/18
Rights of Way Improvement Plan 2017/18 – 2027/28 July 2017 Access and Rights of Way Service 0300 123 4047 www.hertfordshire.gov.uk/row CONTENTS Page Section 1 About this document 1 1.1 Introduction 1 1.2 What is a Rights of Way Improvement Plan? 1 1.3 The Assessment 1 1.4 The Statement of Action 1 1.5 Strategic Environmental Assessment 1 Section 2 The Hertfordshire Context 2 2.1 Hertfordshire Overview 2 2.2 Health in Hertfordshire 2 2.3 Age and gender of the population in Hertfordshire 2 2.4 Ethnicity in Hertfordshire 2 2.5 Car ownership in Hertfordshire 2 2.6 Travel and transport patterns in Hertfordshire 3 2.7 Open spaces in Hertfordshire 3 2.8 Linear routes in Hertfordshire 3 2.9 Other access areas 3 2.9.1 Access to Woodlands 3 2.10 Strategies and Plans affecting the delivery of the RoWIP 4 2.10.1 The Local Transport Plan 4 2.10.2 Health & Wellbeing in Hertfordshire 5 2.10.3 Walking for Health (WfH) 6 2.10.4 Change4life 6 2.10.5 Sport and Physical Activity 6 2.10.6 Herts Sports Partnership 6 2.10.7 Volunteering and Rights of Way 7 2.10.8 Cycling and walking Investment Strategy (CWIS) 7 2.11 Economic Development 8 2.12 NPPF Policy Planning Guidance ‘Planning for Open Space, Sport and Recreation’ 9 2.13 Tourism, Leisure and Culture 10 2.14 Biodiversity 10 2.15 Green Infrastructure 11 2.15.1 Landscape Character 11 2.16 Neighbouring Authorities’ RoWIPs 12 Section 3 Hertfordshire’s Rights of Way Network 15 3.1 Introduction to the Rights of Way network 15 3.2 Types of routes 15 3.3 The Definitive Map and Statement 15 3.4 Applications to -
Response to Hertfordshire County Council South
Walking in Hertfordshire – Time to Reverse 60+ Years of Loss of Walking Routes South Herts Living Streets Manifesto for Walking in South Hertfordshire South Herts Living Streets Group is dedicated to improving walking routes in South Hertfordshire, including part of the London Borough of Barnet that was previously in Hertfordshire. We focus on walking routes between North London and Hertfordshire, from Apex Corner at Mill Hill and High Barnet Station North towards Borehamwood, South Mimms, North Mymms, Welham Green, Hatfield, Stanborough and Welwyn Garden City. We also propose an East-West walking route from the Herts/Essex border at Waltham Abbey to Waltham Cross, Cuffley, Northaw, Potters Bar, South Mimms, Ridge and Borehamwood. Our comprehensive survey of walking in South Herts shows a major loss of pavements and safe walking routes due to motorways and trunk roads that were built in the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. These have had a major impact on walking routes in the South Hertfordshire Area. Many walking routes that go along or across major roads have been lost or have become unsafe due to: A6 South Mimms Bypass (1958) A1 Mill Hill to South Mimms change to dual carriageway (1960s and 1970s) London 'D' Ring Road/M25 (1971) A1(M) Junction 1/M25 Junction 23 at South Mimms (1972) A1(M) Junctions 1 - 2 South Mimms to South Hatfield (1970s) A1(M) Junction 3 and Hatfield Tunnel (1982). Since then more walking routes have been lost because some footways beside roads were planned but were never built and other footways that existed in the past were buried under banks of earth. -
Sawbridgeworth to Bishop's Stortford
Sawbridgeworth to Bishop’s Stortford (Full Walk) Sawbridgeworth to Bishop’s Stortford (Short Walk) 1st walk check 2nd walk check 3rd walk check 1st walk check 2nd walk check 3rd walk check 15th March 2014 06th July 2019 06th July 2019 Current status Document last updated Sunday, 07th July 2019 This document and information herein are copyrighted to Saturday Walkers’ Club. If you are interested in printing or displaying any of this material, Saturday Walkers’ Club grants permission to use, copy, and distribute this document delivered from this World Wide Web server with the following conditions: • The document will not be edited or abridged, and the material will be produced exactly as it appears. Modification of the material or use of it for any other purpose is a violation of our copyright and other proprietary rights. • Reproduction of this document is for free distribution and will not be sold. • This permission is granted for a one-time distribution. • All copies, links, or pages of the documents must carry the following copyright notice and this permission notice: Saturday Walkers’ Club, Copyright © 2014-2019, used with permission. All rights reserved. www.walkingclub.org.uk This walk has been checked as noted above, however the publisher cannot accept responsibility for any problems encountered by readers. Sawbridgeworth to Bishop’s Stortford (via Henry Moore Foundation) Start: Sawbridgeworth Station Finish: Bishop’s Stortford station Sawbridgeworth Station, map reference TL 490 150, is 6 km south of Bishop’s Stortford, and 48m above sea level. Bishop’s Stortford Station, map reference TL 491 208, is 43 km northeast of Charing X and 61m above sea level. -
Consultation Statement Appendix 4 Published by Bishop’S Stortford Town Council, the Old Monastery, Windhill, Bishop’S Stortford CM23 2ND
2016−2032 Consultation Statement Appendix 4 Published by Bishop’s Stortford Town Council, The Old Monastery, Windhill, Bishop’s Stortford CM23 2ND www.stortfordplan.org All Saints, Central, South & part of Thorley Table of Contents Focus Group Invitees...................................................................................................................................... 3 Focus Group Invitation (Example Text) ................................................................................................. 3 Example Newsletter Advertising Focus Group (also placed on website) .................................. 4 Example Tweets for Focus Group ............................................................................................................. 4 Notes for AECOM Housing & Design Focus Group 15/10/15 ........................................................ 5 Notes for Green Infrastructure Focus Group 05/08/15 .................................................................. 7 Notes for Transport Focus Group 10/11/15 ........................................................................................ 8 Notes for Business and Retail Focus Group 13/10/15 .................................................................. 11 Notes for Education Focus group 20/10/15 ..................................................................................... 12 Notes for Goods Yard Focus Group 22/10/15 .................................................................................. 15 Presentation for East of Manor Links Focus -
Islington U3A Longer Walks Group
Islington U3A Longer Walks Group Walk Title Cuffley - Hertfordshire Chain Walk (see Walk No. 103 Interesting Facts below) Area Hertfordshire Type Circular Date Friday, 5th August 2016 Distance 10.7 miles (16.4km). Timing 5 hours walking time + travel and lunch stops. Say 7 hours in total. Therefore expect to be back in Islington by 5.00pm. Meeting up Meet at 9.40 latest, at the entrance of Highbury & Islington, ready to & travel catch the Great Northern 9.56 direct train to Cuffley (toward Hertford North) from Platform 4 at Highbury & Islington station. It’s about a 30 mins journey. The Freedom Pass/ 60+ Travel card area extends just to Crews Hill so you’ll need a ticket from Crews Hill to Cuffley - 1 stop. Should be able to get an Off Peak Return - £2.20. For our younger members – you’ll need a ticket to Cuffley (£7.90 cheap day return). Route From Cuffley station we turn right & immediately right again into Tolmers Rd. Follow this windy road through the back streets of Cuffley (nice houses!!) for about a kilometre along the Hertfordshire Way on to the Hertfordshire Chain Walk and into Home Wood. Through the wood turning right at the end onto ‘Newgate Street’. Although part of the Hertfordshire Chain Way unfortunately there is no pavement for about 1km on this busy main road until we get to a T junction (2.8km). Nice church here! Take the right road but immediately cut off left down a track towards Home Farm – pleasant quiet going here now. We pass a remote golf course. -
Viking Man Lost Weighty Gold Ring in Essex 1,000 Years Ago, Say Archaeologists Curator Carolyn Wingfield on the Almost Pure Gold Ring Lost by a Viking Man in Essex
Viking man lost weighty gold ring in Essex 1,000 years ago, say archaeologists Curator Carolyn Wingfield on the almost pure gold ring lost by a Viking man in Essex "The size and weight of the ring suggest that it was most likely worn by a man. It weighs over 32 grams and we know from X-ray fluorescence analysis at the British Museum that the metal is over 95% gold, the rest being silver and copper. That’s fairly common for gold of this date, to be a good standard. Vikings were very concerned with the purity of the metal. On silver coins you sometimes find little nicks made with a knife blade where they were testing that they’d got decent quality silver. Fig 1: This weighty gold ring, dating from between the 10th and 12th centuries, was lost by a Viking in the Essex town of Thaxted© Saffron Walden Museum It’s got a little bit of damage - probably hit by a plough or something in the thousand years that it’s been buried - but it’s our policy to preserve the ring as found and not try to restore it to ‘as new’ condition. The ring was made by twisting two strands of gold wire and then twisting these with two tapering gold rods to form a hoop. The thin ends of the rods and wires were joined at the back of the hoop by beating them together into a flat, diamond-shaped plate. The plate is decorated with tiny punched circles. Fig 2: A metal detectorist reported the ring after finding it in 2013© Saffron Walden Museum This is a fairly widely-known style that goes throughout the Viking period. -
Charity Coffee Morning
Page 32 Leaden Reading CHARITY COFFEE Volume 1, Issue No. 35 March 2020 Introducing Rev’d Robert Stone. MORNING Dear Neighbours, What a joy to have moved into the Rectory at Leaden Roding and to be getting to grips LEADEN RODING with what it might mean to be your Vicar. Inside this Issue I am an Essex lad through and through and Who’s who? 2 was born at Frenches Farm, Felsted, not in VILLAGE HALL the stable but not far away. Village Hall 3 Village Hall/ Lottery 4 I grew up in Felsted and Little Dunmow. I GOOD FRIDAY 10TH APRIL Bowls Club 5 made my own Christian commitment aged Scouts & Cubs 6 & 7 18 and realised this would have a long- COME ALONG FOR A CHAT WITH A DRINK AND HOT Frontline 8 lasting impact as I started working out Recycling, 9 what this meant for my life. CROSS BUNS Brownies/Defibrillator 10 I was licensed as a Lay Preacher aged 27 and served in this capacity until Citizens Advice/VE Day 11 I was ordained in 2016 and I have been the curate at St. Peter’s Parish Roding’s School /Saffron Screen 12 Church in Bocking for the last three and half years. Throughout all of RWG / Cloghams CC 13 that time I was working full-time in Local Government first for Essex Owing to the current emergency Dogs/Mobile Library 14 County Council and most recently for Chelmsford City Council. I applied Mutts in Distress 15 for the post of Vicar here after doing a three-month placement here early it has been decided to CANCEL Velow Essex 16/19 in 2019. -
The Parochial Church Councils of the Ten Villages
THE PAROCHIAL CHURCH COUNCILS OF THE TEN VILLAGES St Mary the Virgin, High Easter St Andrew’s, Good Easter St Margaret’s, Margaret Roding St Mary the Virgin, Great Canfield All Saints, High Roding St Mary the Virgin, Aythorpe Roding South Rodings – Leaden Roding, White Roding, Abbess Roding and Beauchamp Roding Data Privacy Notice 1. Your personal data – what is it? Personal data relates to a living individual who can be identified from that data. Identification can be by the information alone or in conjunction with any other information in, or likely to come into our possession. The processing of personal data is covered by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which comes into force on 25 May 2018. In this statement we explain how we will use your data, provide an overview of your rights and indicate where you can get further information from. 2. Who are we? The villages of the Rodings, Easters and Great Canfield consist of 10 village churches, three benefices and seven Parochial Church Councils, (PCCs). Each of the PCCs is a ‘Data Controller’ for the administration of the parishes and the Parish Priest is a ‘Data Controller’ for pastoral care within the parishes. In this privacy statement, “we” may refer to either the PCCs (and its employees or volunteers) or the Parish Priest. The parishes are currently split into two historic groups; The Six Parishes with six individual PCCs, (High Easter, Good Easter, Margaret Roding, Great Canfield, High Roding and Aythorpe Roding) and The South Rodings which is a single parish with one PCC (Leaden Roding, White Roding, Abbess Roding and Beauchamp Roding). -
RODINGS, EASTERS and GREAT CANFIELD ……Serving Our Communities
THE RODINGS, EASTERS and GREAT CANFIELD ……serving our communities St Edmund, Abbess Roding - St Mary the Virgin, Aythorpe Roding - St Botolph, Beauchamp Roding - St Andrew, Good Easter - St Mary the Virgin, Great Canfield - St Mary the Virgin, High Easter - All Saints, High Roding - St Michael and All Angels, Leaden Roding - St Margaret, Margaret Roding - St Martin, White Roding www.thesixparishes.org.uk and www.essexinfo.net/southrodingschurches RODINGS, EASTERS and GREAT CANFIELD …… serving our communities CONTENTS Welcome page 3 Background to the post page 4 Who we are looking for page 6 What we do well page 8 Church life page 9 Parish life page 11 The Rectory page 13 Dunmow and Stansted Deanery page 14 Aythorpe Roding High Roding Great Canfield High Easter White Roding Good Easter Abbess Roding Beauchamp Roding Leaden Roding Margaret Roding WELCOME 2 RODINGS, EASTERS and GREAT CANFIELD …… serving our communities WELCOME Thank you for taking the time to look at our Parish Profile. The fact you have opened this document means you must be inquisitive and brave, both qualities we admire and that you will need! We are a group of rural parishes set in the very heart of beautiful mid-Essex countryside whose churches are committed to following Jesus and serving our communities. We hope the pages that follow will give you some insight into the opportunities and challenges that lie ahead for us as we begin a new chapter of shared ministry. Whilst we recognise there are many challenges, there is an enthusiasm for change and a deep spirituality amongst our small rural congregations, which although expressed differently, provides a strong base on which to develop. -
CPRE Hertfordshire Walk the Ver Valley and Bricket Wood
CPRE Hertfordshire Walk The Ver Valley and Bricket Wood This walk is a linear route linking stations on the Abbey railway line between Watford and St Albans, following the River Ver Trail. The shorter route between St Albans Abbey station and either Park Street station or How Wood station is 3 miles. The entire route to Bricket Wood station from St Albans is just under 7 miles. Much of the route runs close to the River Ver, passing numerous historic features including water mills. The photo below is looking upstream just below Sopwell Bridge. Trains run regularly on the Abbey line from Watford Junction station to St Albans Abbey station, with an end-to-end journey time of 16 minutes. For timetables visit abfly.org.uk. You might want to note the times of possible return trains before setting out. Alternatively there are numerous car parks in St Albans City centre. The walk described begins close to St Albans Abbey station at the foot of Holywell Hill. It follows the River Ver Trail for much of the route before a short climb to reach Bricket Wood Common near the end of the longer route. The River Ver Trail is mostly close to the river, and in places it can get wet underfoot in winter and after rain, so appropriate footwear is advised. Much of the route is reasonably sheltered and ideal for a winter walk. In Park Street there are various options for refreshments. There are no stiles. Alongside the river and also in the area of flooded gravel workings in the vicinity of Park Street and Frogmore be aware of open and deep water if you have children or dogs. -
Jaarboek Voor Munt- En Penningkunde 97 2010
JAARBOEK VOOR MUNT- EN PENNINGKUNDE 97 2010 KONINKLIJK NEDERLANDS GENOOTSCHAP VOOR MUNT- EN PENNINGKUNDE AMSTERDAM commissie van redactie drs. N.L.M. Arkesteijn, Delft E.J.A. van Beck, Sint-Michielsgestel prof. dr. J.G.J.M. Benders, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven en Universiteit van Tilburg (voorzitter) mr. M. Bloemendal, Dordrecht (namens bestuur) drs. E. van der Kam, Geldmuseum, Utrecht prof. dr. F. Kemmers, Goethe Universiteit, Frankfurt drs. T. Opdam, Zevenaar (secretaris) e-mail redactie [email protected] kopij-richtlijnen Zie www.munt-penningkunde.nl ISSN 090-380X uitgave @ 2010 Koninklijk Nederlands Genootschap voor Munt- en Penningkunde De uitgifte van bet Jaarboek voor Munt- en Penningkunde wordt financieel mede mogelijk gemaakt door: A.H. Baldwin & Sons Ltd Geldmuseum te Utrecht Fritz Rudolf KOnker GmbH Munthandel Verschoor druk n.v. Peelers s.a., B-3020 Herent dankwoord De redactie is dank verschuldigd aan de exteme referent Ralf Wiechmann "Museum fur Hamburgische Geschichte, Hamburg". The Monetary Economy of the Netherlands, c. 690 - c. 760 and the Trade with England: A Study of the Porcupine' Sceattas of Series E Michael Metcalf and Wybrand Op den Velde Volume II \`OLUME I Table of Contents ................................................................................ V FOREWORD ....................................................................................... VII 1. INTRODUCTION I. I Earlier interpretations of Series E ............................................ 1 2. PROCEDURES AND METHODS 2. I The checking -
THE STORY of an ENGLISH SAINT's CULT: an ANALYSIS of the INFLUENCE of ST ÆTHELTHRYTH of ELY, C.670
THE STORY OF AN ENGLISH SAINT’S CULT: AN ANALYSIS OF THE INFLUENCE OF ST ÆTHELTHRYTH OF ELY, c.670 – c.1540 by IAN DAVID STYLER A thesis submitted to the University of Birmingham for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Department of History School of History and Cultures College of Arts and Law University of Birmingham August 2019 University of Birmingham Research Archive e-theses repository This unpublished thesis/dissertation is copyright of the author and/or third parties. The intellectual property rights of the author or third parties in respect of this work are as defined by The Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988 or as modified by any successor legislation. Any use made of information contained in this thesis/dissertation must be in accordance with that legislation and must be properly acknowledged. Further distribution or reproduction in any format is prohibited without the permission of the copyright holder. ABSTRACT This thesis charts the history of the cult of St Æthelthryth of Ely, arguing that its longevity and geographical extent were determined by the malleability of her character, as narrated within the hagiographical texts of her life, and the continued promotion of her shrine by parties interested in utilising her saintly power to achieve their goals. Arranged chronologically and divided into five distinct periods, the thesis demonstrates that this symbiotic relationship was key in maintaining and elongating the life of the cult. Employing digital humanities tools to analyse textual, archaeological, material, cartographic, and documentary sources covering the cult’s eight-hundred-year history, the study charts its development firstly within East Anglia, and subsequently across the whole country, and internationally.