Remembrance Day service

Armistice Day is approaching and Rev Richard Sherlock has today confirmed this years service is again to be held outside the old library on 11th November starting at 10:45am

Confirmed attendees are currently representatives from the Army, the Royal British Legion, locals schools, Cllr Melanie Whitehand and Jonathan Lord MP.

Please be sure to observe the customary two minute silence, even if you can’t make the event itself.

Warm welcome to new Crown landlords

The first week of trading is complete and, despite a couple of early niggles, new landlord Ade Jones and landlady Sarah Nubeebuckus-Jones are delighted to join the village!

Coming from a pub in Wantage, Oxford, the couple are very keen to make their mark and enjoy a long term at The Crown. Ade said

It’s only been a week but it feels like we’ve been here a lot longer, people have been so welcoming!

Their first Saturday saw the best sales since the pub re-opened in February which even considering the curiosity factor is a great sign for the future of the pub. With a new menu all hand made by Sarah and locally sourced produce, the eating should also do well. Look out for the special sausage and mash nights in the near future, cheekily called ‘S&M’, named with a nod to the previous problems the pub has endured…

I hope everyone finds the time to at least stick their head round the door to welcome the newest landlords in town!

Oktoberfest!

Oktoberfest is coming to Mizens Railway this October.

 

Make sure to visit this fantastic event to celebrate all things steam train and mechanical organ related!

 

Open from 12 noon to 5pm on Sunday 16th October; admission prices are Adults £2, children £1 and a family ticket £5 (2 adults and up to 3 children).

 

Roadworks warning!

MGJV, on behalf of Thames Water, have notified residents of impending work in the area.

Part of the sewer between Broadford Lane and Scotts Grove Road will be replacedwith the aim of reducing flood risk in the area. Work is scheduled to commence at the end of October for 6 weeks with hours of work between 0730-1800 Monday – Friday and 0800-1300 on Saturdays.

 

Contact Thames Water:

Customer relations, Thames Water, PO Box 286, Swindon SN38 2RA

0845 641 0011

Reference CAP 5 / BB 946433

www.thameswater.co.uk

 

Robin Hood request

I’ve been contacted by Anthony, a regular from the Robin Hood pub in Robin Hood Lane (where else?!) with a special request for our readers – does anyone have any old photos of the pub and the area that they wouldn’t mind sharing with the new owners, Jackie and Andy? The pictures are to be framed on the walls after an extensive refit starting in October and will [hopefully] reflect the history of the pub inside and out.

 

If anyone can help out, please send your contact details to me at Editor@knaphill.org and I shall pass them on.

Woking Choral Society performance

Elijah comes to Woking!

A very special night for lovers of classical music is planned by Woking Choral Society when they perform the epic oratorio Elijah by Felix Mendelssohn which is scheduled for the H G Wells Hall on  December 3rd 2011.

Elijah is widely considered to be one of the supreme works in the choral repertoire standing alongside Handel’s Messiah in popularity. It is a truly momentous and awe- inspiring experience, placing great demands on the choristers, soloists and orchestra.

It tells the story of the Old Testament prophet Elijah who is instructed by God to bring his wrath on the Israeli King Ahab and his wife Jezebel for their worship of false Gods. It is a powerful story based on a text taken from The Old Testament Book II Kings. It is a work that is powerful, dramatic and full of beautiful melodies; the high point in the creative output of the German composer Felix Mendelssohn.

The work has a special place in British culture, having been specially written for the 1846 Birmingham Festival, where it had its first performance to an audience of two thousand  on 26th August 1846, who gave it a rapturous reception. It has never lost its unique appeal and remains perennially popular to this day.

The concert will feature the Bartholdy Chamber orchestra and four soloists under the baton of Woking Choral Society’s conductor Ben Palmer.

Further information on the concert and ticket prices can be found on the choir’s website www.wokingchoral.org.uk  where ticket reservations can be made for what is sure to be a sell-out occasion. Alternatively telephone  Susan Nichols on 01483 767852.
The tickets will be £15 full (£14 for parties of ten or more) or £8 for students. They can be booked online at http://www.wokingchoral.org.uk or obtained from H. G. Wells Centre Box Office | The Lightbox, Chobham Road, Woking | Christ Church Shop, Town Square, Woking | Surrey Music Store, Woking | Brittens Music, West Byfleet.  Woking’s The Key scheme applies.

Knaphill Wanderers FC want new players

WANTED – NEW PLAYERS

Knaphill Wanderers Football Club is looking for players for r U8 (year 3)) age group.

The teams are playing the Surrey Primary League next season 2011/2012.

The club provides regular training and matches for all age groups for boys from Under 7 to Under 18 and girls from Under 11 to Under 15.

For further information contact James on the following: –

Under 8’s – James Collyer – Call 07748 848946

or email james.c@autotech.uk.net

Or visit our website at: – http://www.kwfc.org.uk

Village Show 2011 – Children’s Horticultural Show Pictures Update

We had lots of super entries from local children for the Children’s Categories at the Horticultural Show: The Miniature Garden and the Object or Animal made from vegetables and/or fruit. Well done to all the youngsters who took part. The judges really had a difficult job to decide on the winners. Well done everyone.

Please note that these pictures are copyrighted low-res editions and if you want a copy in a better resolution or to use them elsewhere please contact the Website Editor for copies and permissions.

If you have more pictures of the show, please contact us to share.

Well done everyone.

We are looking forward to having a new competition next year and even more entries from local children.

We had a wonderful time!

Volunteers from The Knaphill Residents’ Association (KRA), Mizens Railway and local community groups had been working for months to prepare for the Knaphill Village Show on 16th July, so we were not going to let the grey skies and a few drops of rain dampen our enthusiasm.

There were stalls and attractions from Knaphill community groups, churches, craftsmen and women and local businesses, plus marvellous Mizens train rides. There was Live Music from The Charlie Farley Sunday Four, a well stocked Beer Tent, BBQ and lots of food and refreshments to try. Popular new attractions this year included: Professor Dickie Richards Punch & Judy Shows, Bellytricks – Belly dancers, Alysia Welch’s Diddi Dance and Chobham St Lawrence Morris Dancers.  We had a wonderful day with over a thousand visitors to the Show.

The Knaphill Residents’ Association would like to thank everyone who helped to make the show such a success.  We are really grateful for the financial support of Andrew White at Seymours Knaphill as the main show sponsors, and the many other local businesses and individuals helped by donating Prizes for the Horticultural Show and for the Tombola.

Special thanks go to the volunteers, the clubs and stall holders who worked so hard to create a traditional event for everyone to enjoy. Thanks  also to the people of Knaphill who brought the sunshine with them to share for this fabulous community day.
Thank you everyone.

Photographs reproduced by kind permission of Surrey Advertiser (top photo.) and of Ron Dewar(other photos on this page).

Remember Mizens Railway is open on Sunday and Thursday afternoons during August.

See the Mizens website for details: www.mizensrailway.co.uk

Memory Lane – Knaphill History, The Brookwood Hospital

When we look back over the history of Knaphill we find that the ‘Brookwood Hospital’ played a vital part in the development of the village. In the 1850’s local settlement was at the bottom of Anchor Hill, near the thriving nurseries, but the building of the ‘Brookwood Lunatic Asylum’  (completed in 1867) brought major changes.

The initial hospital population was 650 patients: 321 males and 329 females. It was built in 150 acres of land in an isolated part of the country as the trend at that time was to house those deemed to be ‘lunatics’ at a distance from ‘normal’ people. Over the next hundred and twenty years it was a major employer, recruiting doctors, nurses, ancillary staff, maintenance and support workers and the life of Knaphill flourished around it.

From the early days the hospital expanded and by 1903 the patient population had risen to 1,265. In 1919 the title ‘asylum’ was dropped and replaced by ‘Mental Hospital’. With so many patients and staff to care for them, Knaphill grew. The brick works were busy and so were the builders and developers. We can still see the many different styles of houses that were constructed for the growing population of the village. Shops of all kinds, public houses and churches thrived too, catering to the earthly and spiritual needs of the bustling community. At the time of The National Health Act in 1946, the hospital was the home for 1,900 patients.

For our Memory Lane articles in the Knaphill News we have spoken to many local people who still remember the hospital in its hay-day; and they have clear personal recollections of this aspect of our local history. Many local people worked at the hospital and have vivid memories  of the years when it was a major local employer and played a key role in the treatment of mental health in South Eastern England.

Marion Healy started her nursing career here in 1948 and stayed until 1990. Marion told KRA about her memories of the Hospital and changing attitudes to ‘Mental Health Care’ during the years that she worked there. Marion remembered Brookwood’s high standards of care and training, but also the locked wards, many geriatric patients and the T.B. Unit. As a Nursing Sister she saw how the gradual advances in medicine helped to bring patients’ symptoms under control by drugs. Change continued so that in 1974 the NHS was being reorganized again and it was decided to close all large mental hospitals and from 1986 a programme was underway for the closure of the Brookwood Hospital in 1994.

Marion’s recollections were of the tolerance of local people; of nurses from all over the world coming there to train there; of the range of social events that entertained patients, staff and locals and that made it a very happy place to live and work. For so many Knaphill residents the hospital was the source of employment. It attracting people from all over the county and many of them settled down and got married, had families and those families continue to live locally.

June Harding was born in Knaphill. Her parents met when working at the hospital and later married. “My father came here in the 1920’s and worked mainly in the high security unit. My mother left home in Wales aged seventeen to come to work there because her father was so strict.”

“The farm had cows, sheep, and shire horses and where the Vyne Car Park is now was the piggery. The hospital driveways were lined with beautiful rhododendron bushes, kept in immaculate condition, largely by patients working under supervision.” June recalled Christmas parties, annual coach outings to the seaside and Saturday Dances. “That was the highlight of my week as a teenager! And the highlight of the year for everyone was the August Bank Holiday Fete on the   main playing field. There were marquees exhibiting flowers, fruit and vegetables, handicrafts; side-shows, swinging boats and stalls. It was a wonderful event for everyone attracting people from miles around.”

Willi Jost came to work there in 1956 as a ‘drain man’, keeping the sewage etc clear. Over the years he was promoted and eventually came to be in charge of the staff restaurant. (Yes, an interesting career path!) Willi remembered Brookwood as a good place to work. Staff lived in the ‘hospital cottages’ on Oak Tree Road, Sparvell Road, The Spur; everyone lived locally and worked locally, people were good neighbours, all helping one another.

In the hospital there were workshops for boot-making, printing and all manner of repairs. Brookwood even had its own Fire Station and Willi worked as a Volunteer Fireman for extra income. The good social life was important to Willi too: the cinema shows, weekly dances (old time and modern), and Willi mentioned that quite a lot of ‘courting’ was done on those famous dance nights!

Since the hospital closed in 1994 the area has changed dramatically. The clock tower and the central building around it were converted into expensive apartments and named Florence Court (acknowledging the ‘Florence Wards’ originally named after Florence Nightingale); but most of the buildings were demolished, trees and flower beds etc removed. New houses were built, creating Redding Way, Percheron Drive, Barton Close, Florence Way, Tringham etc, again being given names that had links with the ‘Brookwood Hospital’. These are reminders that, for so much of its history, the life Knaphill was interwoven with the life of ‘the Hospital’.