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WIN (Wisbech Infrastructure Now) is a non-partisan community campaign group, which is arguing the case for Wisbech to have a fair share of development and regeneration funds from the District and County Councils.
The campaign is supported by local business people, serving councillors, concerned residents, and The Fenland Citizen.
At a recent forum and workshop session as part of Wisbech 2020, many people attending were dismayed by the apparent absence of concern from Fenland Council about the derelict state of important buildings in the town, and from the County Council regarding the poor transport infrastructure in the immediate area.
WIN does not seek special treatment, just a fair share for Wisbech. If you wish to sign up for this campaign, or find out more about WIN, you can go these internet sites:
http://www.wisbechmatters.com
on Twitter @wisbechnow
email wisbechnow@yahoo.com
on Facebook at the WisbechNow page
Or you can pick up a leaflet from the following places in town:
The Oasis Centre
The Rosmini Centre
Any shops or businesses displaying this poster
Tuesday, 13 November 2012
Monday, 12 November 2012
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A SHORT AND SHAMELESS PLUG for another excellent Wisbech shop 'discovered'. I must have walked past it hundreds of times, but have never had cause to go inside 'Fancy Fayre' on High Street. My watch having died on me last night, I thought I would go and see if it was a dead battery. A lovely lady served me, made me laugh and had a winning smile that would melt a polar ice-cap. Oh, yes, and she also fixed my watch. All this for the princely sum of £3.50. Some things are just too good to keep to yourself! SUPPORT QUALITY LOCAL SHOPS AND SERVICES!!
A SHORT AND SHAMELESS PLUG for another excellent Wisbech shop 'discovered'. I must have walked past it hundreds of times, but have never had cause to go inside 'Fancy Fayre' on High Street. My watch having died on me last night, I thought I would go and see if it was a dead battery. A lovely lady served me, made me laugh and had a winning smile that would melt a polar ice-cap. Oh, yes, and she also fixed my watch. All this for the princely sum of £3.50. Some things are just too good to keep to yourself! SUPPORT QUALITY LOCAL SHOPS AND SERVICES!!
Sunday, 11 November 2012
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Another well-known local name was William Burall, a member of the Burall family who until recently were businessmen in the town. He was a despatch rider, and was killed near Arras in August 1918.
It is right and proper that Remembrance Sunday focuses on those who died, but it is important to remember that many men survived the war and came back to Wisbech to try to resume their lives. The last known survivor of the wartime Cambridgeshire Regiment lived out his final years in a Wisbech nursing home. I had the pleasure of meeting George White on several occasions, and in March 2000 he was awarded the Legion d'Honneur by the French Government.
Another survivor was Bill Matthews. Years ago, his son lent me his father's diaries and a collection of photographs. Bill, like so many young men locally, joined the Cambridgeshire Regiment. He was a member of 14 Platoon, pictured here 'somewhere in France'. Bill (inset) is on the far left of the back row.
Bill's diaries are an insight into the day to day world of a Great War infantryman - described elsewhere as boredom punctuated by moments of sheer terror. He rarely waxes lyrical, but has a Fenman's wry views on those in authority. In one of his earlier entries he describes The Cambridgeshire's nastiest encounter of 1915 - at a place called Fosse Wood, near Ypres, on May 5th. Dick Walker, mentioned earlier, was a casualty of this attack, as was Percy Kitchen. Percy died at home, and was buried in the Leverington Road cemetery, but his grave is now lost.
Bill was injured just before what many consider to be The Cambridgeshire's finest hour in the war - the attack on the formidable Schwaben Redoubt in October 1917. His diaries end in late December 1916, and his son believes that he may have returned to action in 1917, but may have been gassed at Passchendaele, and finally invalided home. Bill married his childhood sweetheart, Annie, and went on to have a successful career in horticulture.
My favourite photograph of the collection is of Bill taking his son, resplendent in Wisbech Grammar School uniform, on a trip to France to retrace his steps.
What memories this trip must have re-awakened, one can only imagine, and I remember the beautiful lines from a poem written before the war, but so, so appropriate, by Geoffrey Winthrop Young.
"There will be voices whispering down these ways,
The while one wanderer is left to hear,
And the young life and laughter of old days,
Shall make undying echoes."
Some years ago I put Bill's diaries, along with the stories of Eric Gardiner and James Cole, into a book called 'Three Men Went To War' It was self published, and I no longer have copies for sale, but there are copies in local libraries.
WISBECH - REMEMBERING
On a day when the nation remembers its dead, it is appropriate to think once more about Wisbech and what was to be 'the war to end wars' - The Great War. Earlier blog posts looked in particular detail at men from the Wisbech area who died in the war, such as Eric Gardiner and James Cole. We looked at the eventful war of March hero, Harry Betts, and reflected with sadness on the many young men from Barton School who lost their lives. Today's post is rather more random, but hopefully still relevant.
The War Memorial itself was officially dedicated on July 24th 1921. Crowds lined the streets, and family members of the fallen grieved again, before trying to get on with their lives in the harsh economic climate of post-war England.
Crowds little smaller had turned out six years earlier to pay their respects to Wisbech's first war victim - young Daniel 'Dick' Walker, who had been wounded in Flanders, sent home, but died of his wounds on May 13th, 1915. He was interred with full civic honours in the town cemetery, where his grave can still be seen.
DANIEL WALKER |
Another well-known local name was William Burall, a member of the Burall family who until recently were businessmen in the town. He was a despatch rider, and was killed near Arras in August 1918.
WILLIAM BURALL |
It is right and proper that Remembrance Sunday focuses on those who died, but it is important to remember that many men survived the war and came back to Wisbech to try to resume their lives. The last known survivor of the wartime Cambridgeshire Regiment lived out his final years in a Wisbech nursing home. I had the pleasure of meeting George White on several occasions, and in March 2000 he was awarded the Legion d'Honneur by the French Government.
GEORGE WHITE |
Bill's diaries are an insight into the day to day world of a Great War infantryman - described elsewhere as boredom punctuated by moments of sheer terror. He rarely waxes lyrical, but has a Fenman's wry views on those in authority. In one of his earlier entries he describes The Cambridgeshire's nastiest encounter of 1915 - at a place called Fosse Wood, near Ypres, on May 5th. Dick Walker, mentioned earlier, was a casualty of this attack, as was Percy Kitchen. Percy died at home, and was buried in the Leverington Road cemetery, but his grave is now lost.
Bill was injured just before what many consider to be The Cambridgeshire's finest hour in the war - the attack on the formidable Schwaben Redoubt in October 1917. His diaries end in late December 1916, and his son believes that he may have returned to action in 1917, but may have been gassed at Passchendaele, and finally invalided home. Bill married his childhood sweetheart, Annie, and went on to have a successful career in horticulture.
BILL AND ANNIE MATTHEWS |
What memories this trip must have re-awakened, one can only imagine, and I remember the beautiful lines from a poem written before the war, but so, so appropriate, by Geoffrey Winthrop Young.
"There will be voices whispering down these ways,
The while one wanderer is left to hear,
And the young life and laughter of old days,
Shall make undying echoes."
Some years ago I put Bill's diaries, along with the stories of Eric Gardiner and James Cole, into a book called 'Three Men Went To War' It was self published, and I no longer have copies for sale, but there are copies in local libraries.
Friday, 2 November 2012
Follow @wisbechevenmore
BREAKING NEWS! I am able, under The Freedom of Information Act, to publish the full text of the replies I have received from Fenland District Council, and my FDC councillor, about the thorny issue of the derelict Constantine House. I posted the letters nearly two weeks ago. Fenland District Council were very forthright..
My councillor was equally eloquent, and I fully respect his views. He replied ...
Now, either my first-class stamps were cunning forgeries, and the letters were undelivered, or....STOP IT....STOP IT !
BREAKING NEWS! I am able, under The Freedom of Information Act, to publish the full text of the replies I have received from Fenland District Council, and my FDC councillor, about the thorny issue of the derelict Constantine House. I posted the letters nearly two weeks ago. Fenland District Council were very forthright..
My councillor was equally eloquent, and I fully respect his views. He replied ...
Now, either my first-class stamps were cunning forgeries, and the letters were undelivered, or....STOP IT....STOP IT !
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