Hertfordshire. [Kelly's

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Hertfordshire. [Kelly's 10 HERTFORDSHIRE. [KELLY'S Surtees Henry Edwa.rd esq. Redworth hall, Durham Vcrulam Earl A, Gorhambury, St. Albans 'faylor Alfred esq. :Bridge house, :Bishop's Stortford Wales Henry Charles esq. ArJ.esdene, Cheshunt Taylor Herbert Wilbrnham esq. Hadley Bourne, Barnet Walters Robert esq. The Priory, Ware Terry John esq. Wood street, Barnet Watkins Josceline Frederic esq. Tunnel Woods, Watford Thompson Archibald esq. M.A. Mymwood, Potter's Bar l\1Iittingstall Major George Fearnley-, ID5 Queen's gate, S.O. Middlesex London SW Thomson James Duncan esq. Ast<m house, Stevenage Wigan Jame.s esq. Water lane, Bishop's Stortford Todhunter Robert :Forman esq. The Campions, Barnet Wilkinson Hy. esq. Whit€ Webbs park, Enfield, London N Toulmin Henry Joseph esq. D.L. The Pre, St . .A.lbans Williams J oseph Grout esq. Pendley manor, Tring Townshend The Marquess D.L. Raynham hall, Rougham, Wilshere Charles Willes esq. D.L. The Frythe, Welwyn Bury St. Edmunds Wodehouse Charles Edward esq. M.A. Woolmers, Trotter Lieut.-Colonel Frcderick, D)Tham park, Barnct Hertford Trotter Stuart esq. Hill farm, Wormley, Broxbourne S.O Wodehouse William Herbert esq. B.A., D.L. Woolmers, Vander-Meuleri Rear Admiral Frederick Samuel, Stan~ Hertford sted road, Hockerill, Bishop's Stortford Woollam Charles esq. Abbey mills, St. Albans Van Koughnet Commander Edmund Barker R.N. Tytten­ Woolrych William Richard esq. Croxley house, Rickmans. hanger park, St. Albans worth R.S.O DEPUTY-LIEUTENANT NOT MAGISTRATE. Hanbury Edmund Smith esq. Poles, Ware (;1erk of the Peace, Charles Elton Longmore, 24 Castle street, liertford & St. Peter's street, St. Albans Deputy Clerk of the Peace, Joseph Thomas Sworder, 24 Castle street, Hertford COUNTY POLICE. HEAD QUARTERS, HATFIELD. Chairman of Standing Joint Committee, T. F. Halsey esq. M.P. Great Gadclesdon, Herts Chief Constable Lieut.-Col. HenryS. Daniell, Hatfield Deputy Chief Constable, Superintendent Charles L. M. Pearson, Watford Staff Surgeon, Charles Dradge esq. Hatfielcl Chief Clerk, Supt. William Reynolds, IIatfleld The force consists of a chief constable, deputy chief constable, 5 superintendents, 7 inspectors, 20 sergeants & 157 constables A, or Ware Division-Superintendent, Capt. R. A. Wy- Boxmoor, Crouchfield, Ohipperfield, Cupid Green, mer, Ware; stationS', Braughing, Broxbourne, East- Flamstead, Great Berkhamsted, Hemel Hempstead, wick, Hoddesdlon, Hunsdon, St. Margarets, Standon, Kensworth, King's Langley, Markyate SLreet, North- Wadesmill, Ware, Wvrmley, Buntingford, Cottered, church, 'l'ring, Wiggington, \Vilstone, Brydens Camp, Westmill, Ry~ Common, Hare Street Potten end B, or Bishop's Stortfmd Division-Superintendent, Wm. E, or Hitchin Division-Superinwndent, John Reynolds, Tripp, Bishop's Stortford; stations, Albury, Bishop's Hitciliin; inspector, James Hart, County Constabulary Stomford, Much Hadham, Little Hadham, High Wych, office, Royston; stations, Ashwell, Aston, Baldock, SawbridgeW'Orth, Thorley, llrent Pelham Barley, Barkway, Bennington, Datchwol'1th, Hitchin, C, or Watford Division-D.O.C. & Superintendent, Chas. Ickleford, Ippolitts, Kimpton, King's Walden, Little Lyons Markham PearS'on, Watford; inspector, Henry Munden, Lilley, Offiey, Paul's Walden, Pirton, Royston, Duke, Watford; stations, Ohorley Wood, Croxley Sandon, Stevenage, Therfield, Walkern, Watton, Weston, Green, Harpenden, HuntDn Bridge. London COlney, Hinxworth, Knebworth, Graveley Mill End, Park Street, Redbourn, Rickmansworth, F, or Hertford Division-Superintendent, James Parish, Sarratt, St. Albans, St. 1\-Iichael's, Saundridge, Wheat- Hertford; inspe>Ctor, William Wood, Welwyn; .stations, hampstead, West ~de, Abbots Uingley, Garston, Col- Bayford, ;Bengeo, Essenden, Hatfield, 'Wellham Green, ney heath, Leverstock Green Little Heath, Newgate Street, Tewin, Hertford Heath, D, or Hemel Hempstead Division~Superint>Cndent, Fredk. Letty Green, Codicote, Welwyn Frogley, Hemel Hempstead; inspector, Charles Boutell, R, or Head Quarters Division-Superintendent, William Great Berkhampstead ; .stations, Aldbury, Bovingdon, Reynolds, Hatfield • The Telephone System is worked throughout the county NOTE-A portion of the county is within the metropolitan police district, viz.:-~. Division (Islington), Cheshunt; S. Division (Hampstead), Barnet, Bushey, Elstree & Shenley. The following Table shows the acreage under each kind of crop, and the number of horses, cattle, sheep and pigs in Hertfordshire, as taken from the Agricultural returns, 1893· • .-------------------------------~--~·----------~--~----------------~-------·• ~ J' CROPS. ACRES. LIVE STOCK. NUMBER. --------------------------------------:---------- ------------------~-----------------j----------1 Corn and cereals ........................................ 127,947 Horses used solely for agriculture ..•.•..•...•••. .II,I57 Roots, artificial grasses, cabbage, kohl-rabi Unbroken horses ............... , .................... ~ .. 3,421 and rape ............................................. 37,012 Brood mares , .......................................... ··-·· 57~ Clover and grasses .............. _ ........ ··-...... 39,Io6 Cows in milk or calf .................................. .. 14,628 Permailent pa.sture ............... -··-............ II6,302 Other cattle, 2 years and above ··············~·· 8,538 Ea re fallow...... .. .. .. .. .. ... I7,0CJ7 Ditto, I year and under 2 ................... _. ..• 7,213 Orchards ............................... ~ ................... I ,I 53 Ditto, under I year .................................. 6,694 Market gardens .......................................... 728 Ewes kept for breeding ..•... ·-· .....•. ___ .... ~·· ss,ssr Nursery grounds ... ··························--·· .... 498 Other sheep, t year old and above •.•. ····--···· 31,205 Woods and plantations ........................... 23,151 Ditto, under I year .................................. 52,620 Sows kept for breeding .................•....••...• 3,469 Other pigs·········~·····--········· ... ······-···· .. ····· 21,005 ·-----------------------------------~----------------------------~.--------------------~ Herts contained in I8g1, inhabited houses ...•••....•........•.....•......................... ··· Parishes .............. I •••••••• I • .............................................................................. • • • In 1874, owners of land below I acre .............•............•..............•...... 9,556 Owners of land of I acre and upwards ............................ ,................. 2,831 I29J87 ................................ 384,808 'fatal acreage Of rated lands ". e "e e e."" e 10 " •• 10" 10 """" "10" "e "." " e I • 00". 10" I 1010 "10 1010 •• "" 10.10 I I 10 e •• 10 "10." 1010 " •• IO •• Rateable Value •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 10 10 [1,296,298 4o6,r6I Tot~~I acreage of the county ··••·•····••····••··•··········••••·• · · · · · · · · · · · ••• · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · .
Recommended publications
  • 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.
    [Show full text]
  • 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.
    [Show full text]
  • Newsletter November 1984
    November 1984 Some days you win 1. The events and activities programme each year has covered a remarkably varied range of subjects. The program is a tradition and the Association's contribution to the social / cultural life of the Town. The support it gets is also remarkably diverse and unpredictable. Some events have had satisfyingly large audiences, others the reverse. We just have to take it in our stride and try, difficult as it is, to maintain the variety and calibre of speakers. It is the same with the rambles - always a feature of our annual programme with New Year, Easter and Autumn being the occasions for an organised potter round a different corner of our countryside. The Autumn Ramble is nearly always the best because of the colours in the trees. Three weekends before and one weekend after the 'Sunday of our Ramble', were each sunny and warm. On the day, however, it rained. You can't win them all! 2. But don't miss this The talk by Richard Page M.P. was well attended and an interesting evening, with lots of questions. Our thanks have been Given to Richard for giving us his time, particularly on a Friday evening of a precious weekend, Our next event promises to be equally but differently interesting. Mr Charles Driver - Headmaster of Berkhamsted School will talk on 'Justifying the Future' on Thursday 29 November at 8pm at the Sessions Hall. Friday 14 December at 8pm at the Sessions Hall is the date and time of our winter social gathering - to sing carols and sip a glass of wine (or two) together with Mince pies.
    [Show full text]
  • 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,
    [Show full text]
  • ON the MOVE for January/February 2015
    ON THE MOVE for January/February 2015 Clergy Other Appointments Obituaries Bonnie Evans-Hills has become Priest- Area Dean of Hemel Hempstead Olive Albon, Reader Emeritus in in-Charge in the benefice of Kimpton The Revd Lizzie Hood has taken on the Sharnbrook, died in November 2014. w Ayot St Lawrence (half post) and is role of Area Dean of Hemel Hempstead for , Reader with PtO in continuing as Diocesan Interfaith Adviser. 5 years and the Revd Mike Macey will be Christine Barron taking in the role of Assistant Area Dean. St Albans, died at the end of November Robert Evens, presently Rector and The commissioning service will take place 2014. Rural Dean of the Sharnbrook Deanery, on 27th January. Valerie Phillips, Reader Emeritus in is to become Rector of the nbenfice of Kimpton, died in December 2014. Ashwell with Hinxworth and Newnham Karen Gardiner presently Team Vicar in the Elstree & Borehamwood Team Ministry with special responsibility for St Nicholas, Elstree is to take up a house- for-duty post as Priest-in-Charge in Rural South York benefice. Jonathan Jasper, Rector in the benefice of Barkway, Reed & Buckland w Barley left with effect from 1st December 2014. Adrian Manning, previously Chaplain at St George’s School Harpenden has become Vicar of the benefice Ivinghoe w Pitstone, Slapton and Marsworth, in Oxford Diocese. Simon Mansfield presently Vicar in the benefice of St Gregory the Great, Wednesfield, in the diocese of Lichfield is to become Vicar in the benefice of Hockerill. Adam Prior, previously Assistant Curate at St Peter’s Church, Watford has become Ordained Pioneer Youth Minister for Stevenage.
    [Show full text]
  • 160314 07Ci HIWP 2016&17 and FWP 2017&18 Appendix C
    Integrated Works Programme 2016-2017 Cabinet Eastern Herts & Lea Valley Broxbourne Scheme Delivery Plan 97 schemes Commissioning Records SRTS Small Works Pilot Delivery 16/17 BROXBOURNE (District wide) ITP16031 Broxbourne SBroxbourne: Area Road Sections: BR/0 SRTS Small Works Prep 16/17 BROXBOURNE (District wide), COM16009 Broxbourne IBroxbourne: Area; Dacorum: Dacorum Area; East Herts: East DACORUM (District wide), Herts Area; Hertsmere: Hertsmere Area; North Herts: North Herts Area; St EAST HERTS (District wide), Albans: St Albans Area; Stevenage: Stevenage Area; Three Rivers: Three HERTSMERE (District wide), Rivers Area; Watford: Watford Area; Welwyn Hatfield: Welwyn Hatfield NORTH HERTS (District wide), Area ST ALBANS (District wide), Road Sections: BR/0 DA/0 EH/0 HE/0 NH/0 SA/0 ST/0 TR/0 WA/0 STEVENAGE (District wide), WH/0 THREE RIVERS (District wide), WATFORD (District wide), WELWYN HA Maintenance A Road Programme A10 Northbound nr Hailey Surface Dressing Hoddesdon South, Ware South Northbound:ARP15177 Broxbourne WA10 Boundary To North Gt Amwell Roundabout; Hertford A10 Northbound Offslip: Nb Offslip For Great Amwell Interchange; A10 Northbound: North Hoddesdon Link Rbt To East Herts Boundary; A10 Northbound: Northbound Onslip From Hoddesdon Interchange Road Sections: A10/331/334/337/340 A10 South Bound & Northbound Interchange Hoddesdon South, Ware South Northbound:ARP17183 Baas HillSA10 Bridge To North Hoddesdon Link Rbt; A10 Reconstruction Southbound: North Rush Green Rbt To North Gt Amwell Rbt; A10 Great Amwell Roundabout: Roundabout
    [Show full text]
  • OPEN CHURCH SUNDAY a to Z of CHURCHES OPEN in HERTFORDSHIRE
    Across Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire OPEN CHURCH SUNDAY Sunday 21 June 2015 A to Z of CHURCHES OPEN IN HERTFORDSHIRE LOCATION, TIMINGS and ATTRACTIONS plus names of all churches open in Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire listed by Postcode ‘Seek and you will find……’ (Matthew 7.7) A to Z of Churches Open in Hertfordshire ANSTEY St George SG9 0TJ Open all day Features: 398th Bomb Group stained glass window. Graffiti. Lych Gate lock up. ARDELEY St Lawrence The Green SG2 7AQ Open from 8.45am to 6.45pm . Services at 9.30am and 6.00pm Features: Rood and rood loft. Carved roof angels. High Altar reredos. History booklet ARKLEY St Peter Barnet Road EN5 3JF Open from 11.00am to 4pm Teas Features: Stained glass windows. 175th anniversary of the Church. Beautiful Lady Chapel. Flower Festival ASPENDEN St Mary SG9 9PG Open from 11.00am to 4.00pm Tea, coffee, biscuits Features: Fine 19th century stained glass. Brasses. Rural setting. ASTON St Mary Broadwater Lane SG2 7EN Open from 10.00am to 5.00pm Light refreshments available Features: The Tower. Stained glass windows. Churchyard. Possible local history exhibition AYOT ST LAWRENCE St Lawrence Bibbs Hall Lane AL6 9BZ Open throughout the day Visit www.ayotstlawrence.com for details of events BARLEY St Margaret of Antioch Church End SG8 8JS Open all day Saturday 20th June: Church Fete at the Manor, 12noon to 4.00pm BAYFORD St Mary Church Lane SG13 8PP Open all day Features: Church listed. Wall and haha round churchyard. Victorian font cover. BENINGTON St Peter Church Green SG2 7LH Open all day BOREHAMWOOD Holy Cross Balmoral Drive WD6 2QU Open from 9.00am to 11.30pm and 2pm onwards Refreshments from 10.30am and 2pm onwards BOURNE END St John the Evangelist London Road HP1 2RU Open from 12noon to 4.00pm Tea, coffee, biscuits Features: Gilbert Scott design, built 1853, with Alfred Bell windows.
    [Show full text]
  • Read an Extract from Hertfordshire
    Contents List of figures and tables vi Abbreviations ix Units of measurement and money ix Acknowledgements xi County map of Hertfordshire parishes xii 1 A county in context 1 2 Hertfordshire’s ‘champion’ landscapes 32 3 The landscape of east Hertfordshire 59 4 The landscape of west Hertfordshire 88 5 The landscape of south Hertfordshire 117 6 Woods, parks and pastures 144 7 Traditional buildings 178 8 Great houses and designed landscapes 207 9 Urban and industrial landscapes 239 10 Suburbs and New Towns, 1870–1970 268 Conclusion 297 Bibliography 301 Index 317 – 1 – A county in context Introduction This book is about the landscape of the county of Hertfordshire. It explains the historical processes that created the modern physical environment, concentrating on such matters as the form and location of villages, farms and hamlets, the character of fields, woods and commons, and the varied forms of churches, vernacular houses, and great houses with their associated parks and gardens. But we also use these features, in turn, as forms of historical evidence in their own right, to throw important new light on key debates in social, economic and environmental history. Our focus is not entirely on the rural landscape. Most Hertfordshire people, like the majority of their fellows elsewhere in the country, live in towns and suburbs, and these too – although often created relatively recently – are a part of the county’s historic landscape and have a story to tell. The purpose of this opening chapter is to set the scene, explaining some of the physical contexts and broad patterns of historical development which form the essential background to the more detailed studies presented in the chapters that follow.
    [Show full text]
  • Urban Nature Conservation Study
    DACORUM BOROUGH COUNCIL URBAN NATURE CONSERVATION STUDY Hertfordshire Biological Records Centre March 2006 DACORUM BOROUGH COUNCIL URBAN NATURE CONSERVATION STUDY Hertfordshire Biological Records Centre March 2006 SUMMARY Purpose of study The environment is one of the four main drivers of sustainable development, and in this context biodiversity needs to be fully integrated into planning policy and delivery. As part of the new planning system known as the Local Development Framework, information on urban wildlife is fundamental given the pressure on land resources in and around our towns. The aims of the study are: ‘To provide a well reasoned and coherent strategy for the protection and enhancement of key wildlife areas and network of spaces / natural corridors within the towns and large villages of Dacorum’. The Dacorum Urban Nature Conservation Study considers the wildlife resources within the six major settlements in Dacorum, namely Berkhamsted, Bovingdon, Hemel Hempstead, Kings Langley, Markyate and Tring. They were mapped using existing habitat information, additional sites identified from aerial photo interpretation and local knowledge. The areas adjacent to each settlement – up to a distance of 1km – were also mapped in a similar fashion to place the urban areas within the context of their surrounding environments. This process identified the most important sites already known such as Sites of Special Scientific Interest, local sites meeting minimum standards known as ‘Wildlife Sites’, and other sites or features of more local significance within the urban areas known collectively as ‘Wildspace’. These incorporated Hertfordshire Biological Record Centre’s ‘Ecology Sites’ where appropriate, old boundary features such as hedgerows and tree lines, as well as significant garden areas or open spaces which may survive.
    [Show full text]
  • • Village Voice •
    • Village Voice • September 2019 for Caldecote, Edworth, Hinxworth and Newnham No.216 Yvonne’s Last Soup Recycling Your Waste for Charity Lunch North Herts and South Cambs Charity are raising money by August 16th saw the last soup lunch that founder Yvonne recycling your waste. The money raised is used to help support Tookey organised. After sixteen years of serving soup lunches Sandon JMI school, Cancer Research UK and the Willen Hospice. in Hinxworth and Edworth’s village hall, she has handed the soup If you would like to help the charity here is a list of the items that ladle and apron on to Chrisi Hook from Edworth. they collect and recycle: Yvonne was presented with two thank-you cards and a cheque • Tassimo pods and foil packing and a bunch of flowers. • All brands of chocolate and sweet packaging Yvonne thanked all concerned and said that the soup lunches had • Pringles tubes including seals and lids raised thousands of pounds for good causes. • All brands of crisp, popcorn, nuts and pretzel packets • All brands of biscuit, cracker and cake wrappers • Disposable household gloves • All brands of flexible wet and dry pet food and treat packaging (pouches rinsed and dried) • Toothpaste tubes, caps, cartons, toothbrushes, heads and packaging • All brans of soft lenses and blister packs and foil • All brands of baby food pouches and caps but only Ella’s snack wrappers • Airwick twin plastic sleeves, Finish and Vanish flexible packaging • All bread bags (LDPE 4) • All brands flexible beauty wipes packaging, caps, pumps and trigger sprays, plastic pots and flexible plastic tubes, hair colourant kits and plastic roll on deodorants - NO BABY WIPE PACKS The picture shows Yvonne thanking Sofia Broome from Biggleswade for her bouquet.
    [Show full text]
  • Poor Wall Swatch
    Dacorum Festival of Culture Other Festival events to look What is the Festival of Culture? out for in the future: ࡯ Tring Hockey Club Taster Sessions The Nation is gearing up for the London 2012 Olympic Programme of Events June - September 2011 ࡯ Tag Rugby Tournament Games. That's why across Dacorum, a festival, celebrating ࡯ Boxmoor and District Angling our culture will showcase the arts, sport, heritage and An exciting programme ࡯ Badminton Taster sessions leisure in the Borough. We hope to encourage of, arts, sports, ࡯ Berkhamsted Youth Theatre Present, The Witches by Roald Dahl everyone to get involved and celebrate the Olympic and heritage and leisure ࡯ Berkhamsted Choral Society - Christmas Concert Paralympic Games. events throughout the ࡯ Dacorum Heritage Trust - Sports Heritage Project ࡯ Children's Trust Partnership Events A programme of new, funded events together with some Borough between ࡯ Youth Choirs workshops established favourites is planned to take place between June 2011 and ࡯ Children's Trust Partnership Events June 2011 and December 2012. December 2012. ࡯ Flametree & Old Town Hall - Cultural Fashions and Music Project Together they can have real impact and make a ࡯ Age Concern - 1948 Olympic Memories Project sustainable difference to the wellbeing of the whole ࡯ Women's Golf Day at Little Hay Golf Club community. A central aim of the programme is to support ࡯ Flametree & Old Town Hall - Cultural Fashions and Music Project health and exercise programmes, assist learning, and ࡯ Community Bowls Taster sessions ࡯ The Hemel Hempstead and South African School Cultural Exchange personal development, involve the public in arts and ࡯ Grand Water Festival 2012 local heritage and utilise our public facilities and open ࡯ Tennis Taster Days spaces.
    [Show full text]
  • Y Norman Esq
    • • • •• Vlll LIST OF THE PR1NCIPAL SEATS IN HERTFORDSHIRE. • PAUE PAG• Moor Place, Frederick Henry Norman esq. n.L.,.T.P. see St. Pauls Waldenbury, Earl of Strathmore &; Kinghorne Much Hadham. .. ... ....... .. .... .. ... .... .... .. ...... ... 106 D.ll-., J~P- see St. Pauls Walden .............................. 232 Munden, Hon. Arthur Henry Holland-Hibbert D.L., Shendish, 'f. Norton Longman esq. :J.P. see King's •I. I ••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ; • J.P. see Leavesden ...................•.......................... 174 Langley ........ ·~ I7o Netherfield, Henry Lawrence Prior esq. B.A., .T.P. see Shenley hill, Stuart Andros de la Rue esq. see Shenley 237 Stanstead Abbots ................................. ~.............. 2..fO Shephalbury, Col. Hans Charles Maunsell Woods (late Newsells Park, John Edward Darnton esq. J.P. ltl A.)' see Shephall . II ..... I......... :......••. ~ ..... II........ 2J8 see Barkway ............................................ :......... 31 Stagenhoe· Jlark, Wilham Bailey Hawkins esq. St. Node (The), Charles Alex. Cain esq. J.P. see Codicote... 93 Pa uls \Valden ............ I •••••••••••••••••••••••• I •••••••• ·····~ 231 North Mimms park, Mrs. Burns, see North Mimms ... 187 StansteauHury,Spencer'frower esq.see StansteadAbbots 240 Nyn park, Mrs. Kidston. see Northaw ....................... 190 Stocks, T. Hwnphry Ward esq. )!.A. see Aldbury ...... 19 Oak Hill park, Charles Edward Baring Young esq. M.A. Temple Dinsley, Herbert George !<'en wick esq:· see see East Barnet . .. .. .. .. ..
    [Show full text]