It is wonderful to see the Plough and Fleece back open in the safe hands of John, Jack and Jules. ..and for the Horningsea Hot Pot to be on the menu once again! Don’t forget to book a table for Mothers Day. https://ploughandfleece.co.uk/
..and on admin matters.The Herald was started by Sabina in 2009. PDF was used as though the focus was on email, newsletters were also printed out by helpful people and distributed to neighbours who did not have access to the internet. For many years we’ve intended to update this to something more suited to reading online. However, the Herald is meant to be accessible by all villagers. So if residents still print this out then we need to know. I’ll put a poll to accompany next month’s Herald but for now if anybody is aware of somebody who only has access to a printed copy then please let us know (just reply to this email). I’m aware that I am asking this in an email… :-
The HRA and the church will be organising events over the coronation weekend.
This page will be updated as plans become firmer but so far:
Saturday 6th May
All in St Peter’s Church, Horningsea
Live streaming of the Coronation on a large screen in the church from first thing until the appearances on the balcony of Buckingham Palace. Drop in for part of the day (or stay all day if you like). Refreshments will be available all day
Exhibition of books about the royal family collected by Vee over the last 80 years.
Exhibition of photographs of Royal occasions in the village since 1953
Horningsea Coronation mugs will be available to distribute to Horningsea children and to sell.
Sunday 7th May
Special Coronation Service
St Peter’s Church, Horningsea
Special Coronation Service at 10:30 in St Peter’s church
Picnic and Ceilidh
Village Green, Horningsea
Come and celebrate the historic occasion of the Kings Coronation with a party on the village green on Sunday 7th May. Horningsea Residents Association (HRA) invite you to join your friends and neighbours on the village green from 3pm.
Please bring your own picnic and maybe a cake to share and join us to celebrate this special day.
HRA will be supplying beer and fizz and organising a Ceilidh which will start about 5PM, dancing is optional and a great way to burn off a few calories and enjoy yourself! Stay late to party the night away with the beacon lighting at dusk.
Picnic on the village green from 15:00 until late
BYO food
Prosecco and barrels of beer – free to villagers
Stomp Happy Ceilidh, two to three sets throughout the evening from 17:00
Beacon lighting at dusk
Display of the village photo – Everyone In the village photographed ahead of the day and presented on one large picture to be hung in the village hall.
Monday 8th May
At 11:00 the bell ringers will “Ring for the King” – come and watch or sit in your garden and listen!
At 14:00 the Friends of Horningsea church invite you to volunteer to work on a wildlife project in the churchyard. It is hoped that we can do enough conservation work to apply for a Bronze medal. Tasks will include making signs showing where our bug hotel is based, making a hover fly lagoon, checking our churchyard is hedgehog friendly with drinking areas, noting the spring flowers and early summer flowers growing at the margins…. And looking for bugs, butterflies, bees, birds, bats and anything else beginning with “b”!
cleanup
During the weekend
Bells will Ring for the King at some point over the weekend
Easter Egg Bingo, Friday, 18:30, 10th March, Horningsea Village Hall
Horningsea Social is delighted to be hosting the ever popular Easter Egg Bingo on Friday, 10th March at Horningsea Village Hall. This much-loved family event will kick off at 18.30 when you are invited to buy your books, place your orders for a Fish and Chip supper and nab your table, ready for ‘eyes down’ at 19:00. Prizes will include Easter Eggs and a selection of alcoholic tipples. Come along and enjoy the fun – you’ve got to be in it to win it! Please bring your own drinks and glasses!
Cecilia Lucie Leeds Saunders was born in Clayhithe in 1889, the youngest of four girls. Her father had been born at Eye Hall and her uncle lived in The Lodge. Lucie (as she was called by everyone) wrote a Memoir of her life as a child at Clayhithe, her childhood in Cambridge, her first marriage in 1915 and her adventures in Art School in London in the 1920s where she became caught up in the world of the Bright Young Things. Her first marriage ended and she lived the life of a Bohemian artist socialising and partying with Basil Taylor, Robert Bevan, Cedric Morris and Stanley Spencer. She eventually set up home with John Aldridge and spent time with Robert Graves in Majorca. She and John Aldridge gravitated towards the artists’ colony that was establishing itself in Great Bardfield in Essex with Eric Ravilious, Tirzah Garwood and Edward and Charlotte Bawden. John Aldridge was a painter, Lucie developed her interest in rug making. The Memoir finishes as Lucie and John settled into their alternative lifestyle at The Place in Great Bardfield in 1933. From the postscript it is clear that the Bohemian existence and partner swapping continued and it is hard to keep up with who was sleeping with who! This life continued until about 1960 when Lucie finally left Great Bardfield and moved to Gresham Road in Cambridge where she lived until she died in 1974. The Great Bardfield artists were prolific with Ravilious’s landscapes, etchings, woodcuts – he was the first war artist to be killed in WWII and is the subject of the recent film Drawn to War. Edward Bawden specialised in woodcuts. John Aldridge was known for his portraits, book illustrations, dust jackets, landscapes. The Fry Gallery in Saffron Walden has a good collection of the work of the Great Bardfield Artists including one of Lucie’s rugs.
The early chapters of the Memoir give a delightful account of life in Clayhithe at the end of the 19th C and early years of the 20th C. She recounts a story her older sister used to tell to frighten her …. “A bear would arrive at Waterbeach station, it had just got out of the train on its way to Clayhithe … now it has reached The Willows… now it is reaching the Marsh … now it is crossing the bridge over the river and soon it will be passing the cottages… now it is coming up the back-kitchen stairs and has crept in and is under the bed”!
The house at Clayhithe
“Our house at Clayhithe stood uphill from the River Cam, which ran all along one side of the garden.” She spoke of games they played with the croquet ball – ”…occasionally one of the balls would roll over the verge of grass by the river and sink beyond recovery into the Cam mud….”, “Clayhithe had a most beautiful garden, a long expanse of lawns leading finally to an orchard and kitchen gardens. There were tall box hedges making a double serpentine called “Lovers Walk”. People from a distance came specially to see as much of the garden as they could from the road or the river. …there was a weeping ash in front of the house where meals were brought out to us and we half lived under it. During summer it makes a large umbrella and my father had two hoop-like shapes cut so that he could see the road to Horningsea and also the eights practising on the river on their way to the Bridge Inn where they stopped for tea. All this beauty was a wonderful setting for us girls to be brought up in, and I look back on my childhood with infinite gratitude, the wonderful peace and security of those days with devoted parents, devoted servants and plenty of them, and governesses we generally adored.”.
The weeping ash mentioned in the book still stands.
Robjn Cantus has donated a copy of the book to Horningsea Church so if you want to read more about Clayhithe, Lucie’s wild partygoing and the Great Bardfield artists you can borrow it at any time!
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26 March 10.30 Joint Three Parishes Holy Communion
Coffee Morning in the church
1 March, 15 March and 29 March from 10.30 followed by time of prayer at 12 noon.
St David’s Day
Wednesday 1 March 10.30 in St Peter’s Church
Coffee and Welsh cakes, Teisen Lap and Bara Brith will be on offer to celebrate St David’s Day. Come along with you daffodil or leek! At 12 noon there will be an opportunity to pray together if you want to stay and join in.
Mothering Sunday
Sunday 19 March – service in the church at 10.30
This will be a special family service when posies will be distributed to mothers, grandmothers, godmothers, to those who want to remember their own mothers …
After four long years Horningsea Residents Association are pleased to announce that their ever popular International night will be held on Saturday 18th February this year in the Village Hall.
The HRA’s list of events for 2023 is also in the Herald.
Unfortunately the Plough and Fleece is shut until the 8th February.
If you are stuck for somewhere to go during the cold week days then we have Coffee in the Church and Horningsea’s Warm Hub:
Coffee in the Church – Wednesday 1 Feb from 10.30 – Wednesday 15 Feb from 10.30 Horningsea’s Warm Hub – Tuesday mornings from 10.30 until 12 noon
The day we have all been dreading, but preparing for, is here. Anglian Water put in their application to relocate the sewage works to Horningsea on the 31st January. The Planning Inspectorate has 28 days to accept or reject this. Then the really hard work starts! You can read more on the SHH website.
Here’s to those first daffodils, snowdrops and aconites popping up over the next week or so!
After 4 long years Horningsea Residents Association are pleased to announce that their ever popular International night will be held on Saturday 18 February this year in the Village Hall.
If you’ve never been before then please join your fellow neighbours and villagers for this really fun evening!
Bring a dish, sweet or savoury to share then grab a seat and enjoy the huge selection of food that will be on offer. Horningsea has some amazing chefs and dishes from all around the world are cooked and enjoyed but don’t worry if you don’t feel like cooking, turn up anyway and for just £7 for adults and £2 for children you can join in the evening too and eat what you like!
Don’t forget to bring your own drinks and glasses.
The HRA hope you can join them on their first event of many that are planned for this year and if you can’t make International night there will be plenty more to look forward to throughout the year including celebrating the King’s Coronation in May.
Look out for more details of all events either in the Herald, on social media and on posters around the village.