Please note that Blackwell Hollow will be closed between 9.30am and 3.00pm on Monday 11th May to allow urgent treeworks to be carried out. Diversions will be put in place

High Street bones are animal in origin

TESTS on the bone which was dug up in the High Street yesterday afternoon by workmen for South East Water have shown it is not human in origin.

A police pathology report confirmed this morning that the remains are from an animal, and work has now recommenced on the large hole being dug outside outside Broadleys for the installation of a district water meter.

The discovery of the bone prompted speculation that it might be a relic of Thomas Dunngate, Anne Tree and John Forman, the three East Grinstead martyrs who were burned on the same spot for their adherence to the Protestant faith in 1556.

Coincidentally the Town Council is to place a plaque remembering the three martyrs on the site later this summer.

They are also remembered with three stone memorial stones – not gravestones – outside St Swithun’s.

Going on in the Gallery

UNTIL 3 June: Stitched Up Textiles presents Apertures

An exciting exhibition by Stitched Up Textiles – each member of the group has interpreted the theme in a different manner, making an interesting exhibition of high quality textile work.

Friday 5 June to Tuesday 9 June –  Fibre Fusion 2015 An exhibition by East Grinstead Spinners

An exhibition of textile work by members of this local group.  There will be demonstrations of spinning and weaving, and displays of wheels and looms.

East Grinstead spinners are affiliated to the Association of Weavers, Spinners and Dyers.

Thursday 11 June to Friday 19 June – East Grinstead Art Society Annual Summer Exhibition

East Grinstead Art Society Annual Summer Exhibition – meet the artists exhibiting and maybe consider joining the friendly Art Society

Check out Chequer Mead

Tuesday 2 June at 7.30pm – The Fureys

Legends of Irish music The Fureys, renowned for hit songs including I will love you, When you were Sweet 16, The Green Fields of France and The Old Man are making their first appearance at Chequer Mead.

The Fureys are responsible for some of the most stirring music ever to capture the public imagination, and their folk-based music has received standing ovations in some of the biggest concert halls in the world. They credit their musical ability to their parents, Ted and Nora, who were well-known musicians and encouraged their sons to play music from a very early age. Tickets £18.

Wednesday 3 June at 8pmJulie Felix

Julie Felix, who recently celebrated 50 years in the world of music, arrived in England from California in 1964 and became the first solo folk artist to be signed to a major British record company when she signed with Decca.

In 1966 Julie became the resident singer on the amazingly popular TV programme The Frost Report and quickly became a household name.

Tickets £15/ concessions £13.50

Thursday 4 June at 7.30pmChequer Mead Silver Screen presents Mr Turner

Mr Turner is a 2014 biographical drama based on the life and career of the 18th century British artist J.M.W Turner, played by Timothy Spall.

Profoundly affected by the death of his esteemed father, loved by his housekeeper, Hannah Danby, whom he takes for granted and occasionally exploits sexually, he forms a close and loving relationship with a seaside landlady.

Throughout all this, Turner travels, paints, stays with the country aristocracy, visits a brothel, has himself strapped to the mast of a ship so that he can paint a snowstorm, and is both celebrated and reviled by the public and by royalty.

Tickets £5/concessions £4

Friday 5 June at 7.30pmRichard Digance

Richard Digance returns to Chequer Mead for another evening of hysterical nostalgia as well as a wealth of new songs and anecdotes.

A BAFTA-nominated performer, a world acclaimed poet, an author and an artist and one of the country’s most celebrated comedy entertainers.

Richard will also be exhibiting some of his paintings around the Pavilion for purchase.

Tickets £16.50/ concessions £14.50

Saturday 6 June at 7.30pmEast Grinstead’s Summer Comedy Gala

Four top comedians perform for one night only.

The line up includes the brilliantly deadpan Romesh Ranganathan (Drunk History, Mock the Week, Live at the Apollo), the uniquely quirky and award-winning comedian Joe Wilkinson (Him & Her, Miranda, Live at the Electric, 8 Out of 10 Cats) and the gorgeously quick-witted Kerry Godliman (Derek, Live at the Apollo, Michael McIntyre’s Comedy Roadshow).

The night will be MC-ed by the hugely likeable funny man, Paul McCaffrey (Russell Howard’s Good News, Practical Jokers)

Tickets £10 in advance, £12 on the door.

Thursday 11 & Friday 12 June at 7.30pm – Rising Stars Adult Theatre Company presents Sweet Charity

After box office success with their play version of Blood Brothers, Rising Stars returns with the Broadway hit musical Sweet Charity.

Sweet Charity tells the story of dance hall hostess Charity Hope Valentine who finds herself falling in love, time and time again, with the wrong man.  Will she find her one true love finally?  Featuring well-known songs such as Big Spender, Rhythm of Lifeand I Love to Cry at Weddings, this musical is filled with uplifting songs, dances and comedy for the whole family.

Tickets £12/ concessions £11/ children £9.

Monday 15 June at 7 30pm – Germaine Greer presents The Disappearing Woman

Forty years ago it seemed women were about to take their rightful place in the world but Germaine Greer says women are actually disappearing because flesh is not allowed.

As soon as girls accept the size, role and shape of adult women, they begin to fade from view.

With each stage of their lives, as they become successively wife, mother, mother-in-law, grandmother, they become less visible.

And virtually obliterated are the three-quarters of care home residents who are women.

Germaine Greer attempts to explain this state of affairs and to suggest some strategies for change.

Tickets: £15/ concessions £13.

Tuesday 16 June at 7.30pm Chequer Mead Silver Screen presents Trash

Trash is  based on Andy Mulligan’s  2010 novel of same name and follows three Brazilian street teenagers – Raphael, Gardo, and Rato  – who spend their time picking through litter in the hope of finding useful waste.

One day they discover a wallet whose contents will bring them into conflict with the brutal local police force as they find themselves unlikely whistleblowers in a city rife with corruption.

Rated 15.Tickets £5/ concessions £4.

Wednesday 17 June at 8pmA Concert with Albert Hammond

Hypertension Music are proud to present Albert Hammond, with his band, performing his own hits and all the hits he wrote for countless top recording stars.

Hammond is best known for his own hit It Never Rains in Southern California and his songs are responsible for the sale of over 360 million records worldwide including over 30 chart topping hits.

These include When I Need You – Leo Sayer, Nothing’s Gonna Stop Us Now – Starship,  One Moment in Time – Whitney Houston.

Tickets £25.

Thursday 18 June at 7pm – The East Grinstead Business Association presents their Inaugural Business Lecture

This is one of the EGBA’s initiatives towards making East Grinstead a destination and will be an opportunity to hear from Jeremy Siegal, the Chief Executive Officer of White Stuff about their business model, their reasons for coming to East Grinstead and what they believe the future holds.

The evening will also present the opportunity to network both before and after the lecture.

Tickets £10 for EGBA Members, £15 Non-Members.

Block bookings for schools are available please enquire at the box office.

For further information contact caroll.everest@egba.co.uk

Friday 19 June at 8pm – Judie Tzuke, Songs and Stories

Judie Tzuke is one of the UK’s finest Singer/Songwriters and is known all over the world for her timeless song Stay With Me Till Dawn.

The event is part of her Songs and Stories experience and promises to be an intimate evening of old favourites and new songs and tales from across her life and career.

Tickets: £20

Wednesday 24 June at 7.30pm – The New Foxtrot Serenaders presents Strictly Gershwin

The New Foxtrot Serenaders are coming to Chequer Mead to perform an evening of some of Gershwin’s best loved melodies, including such classics as They Can’t Take That Away From Me and I’ve Got Rhythm.

Tickets £17/ concessions £16.

Friday 26 June at 7pm – Gregor Lersch presents Outlook Floral Art Demonstration

World master Florist Gregor Lersch returns to Chequer Mead bringing an exciting evening of Contemporary Floral Art that demonstrates his lifelong passion for plant material.

Tickets £17.

Saturday 27 June at 6pm & Sunday: 28 June at 1pm & 6pm –  the Gieldgud Academy of Performing Arts presentsMoving Pictures

The Gielgud Academy (GAPA) presents an exciting multimedia show combining dance, drama and musical theatre to pay homage to the world of film.  Featuring 250 of GAPA’s gifted young performers.

Tickets £15/ Concessions £12.50.

 

Appeal for help by homeless fire family

AN East Grinstead family whose Lingfield Road home was destroyed by a tumble dryer fire in March has now been offered a house in Newton Avenue.

The family will get the keys to their new housing association home tomorrow, but their new accommodation is bare, and needs to be redecorated, and to have flooring laid throughout.

So Amanda Clark, a friend of the family, is appealing for local residents or businesses to donate paint, carpet, lino and laminate flooring, and/or time to get the house ready for them to move into as soon as possible. The move will reunite them with  Alfie, the family dog, which has been in kennels since the blaze.

“It’s been an emotional and trying three months for the family,” said Amanda, “especially the youngest son who needs stability and routine more than most, due to his special needs.

“I can’t wait to see them settled in a house they can make into a home and start afresh.”

* Any enquiries can be directed to  Amanda Clark, via email: ALPC.campaign@gmail.com or Facebook: www.facebook.com/HouseFireSurvivors. Donations can be made via: www.gofundme.com/FireSurvivors

Lest We Forget

IN a regular feature on the Town Council website, we will be remembering, on the anniversary of their deaths, the East Grinstead soldiers who died during WWI,  and who are named on the High Street War Memorial.

lest-we-forget

This month we recall (as recorded on The Roll of Honour website):

Aylmer Vivian JARRETT, DSO

Captain 2nd Battalion, The York and Lancaster Regiment. 16th Division.

Died of wounds 22. 6.15. age 35.

Son of Colonel H.S.Jarrett (CTE) and Mrs. Agnes Jarrett of South Lodge, East Grinstead.

Buried Hop Store Cemetery, Belgium B.2.

Charles Henry KNIGHT

Stoker 1st Class K/15736 Royal Navy. HMS “Victory”

Died at home 23. 6.15. Aged 18.

Son of Frederick and Caroline Knight of 89, Dunning Road, East Grinstead.

Buried Rosskeen Parish Churchyard Extension. Ross and Cromarty, Scotland

Albert John STRIPP

Bombardier 66690 26th Battery Royal Field Artillery

Killed in action on Gallipoli 20. 6.15. Aged 22.

Son of Paul Alonzo and Fanny Stripp 16, Anatola Road, Upper Holloway London. Enlisted in Islington.

Buried Redoubt Cemetery, Helles, Gallipoli, Turkey.

 

A Celebration of Freedom

The High Street flower beds, which last year took Gold for the Best War Memorial, have another stunning theme this year with A Celebration of Freedom.

The beds are themed to remember Waterloo – complete with bombs and whicker horses – the 100th anniversary of the WI, the signing of Magna Carta and the 75th anniversaries of VE and VJ Day.

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Town Promotions officer Simon Kerr to retire

TOWN Promotions manager Simon Kerr, is to retire next month.

Simon, who took on the role of putting East Grinstead on the tourist trail 20 years ago, is a very well known figure in the town, and one with an encyclopaedic not only of its present – where to go, where to stay, what to do – but also of its past history.

In the two decades since he took on the role, a new one for the town, Simon has made many TV and radio appearances to promote East Grinstead, worked with journalists from the national press and magazines on articles and projects, and met a great many prominent figures.

And a real bonus was the arrival into the town station of the Bluebell Railway.

“How often,” Simon said at the time, “does a town get a major new tourist attraction delivered to its doorstep?”

Renowned as a snappy dresser, thanks largely to his penchant for beautiful silk ties, Simon has never been shy if the occasion demanded – and demanded the occasion often has – to don fancy dress which is why he appeared as President Chester Alan Arthur to mark the 125th anniversary of the Meridian Line at East Court.

He also conducted several hugely popular High Street ghost tours for Hallowe’en dressed as his alter ego Professor Skull.

But the good news is that although he is stepping down from town promotion, Simon will be stepping up his involvement with both Sackville College and the Town Museum.

A man with an encyclopaedic knowledge of town history, he will also be working on a new book, The Invention of East Grinstead.

“I have tried to take all the opportunities which have come my way to raise the town’s profile,” he said, “and I believe I have done that – one person can make a difference.

“It has been a fantastic job – and a complete pleasure.”

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Photos courtesy of East Grinstead Online

The Rev Clive Everett-Allen is presented with the Freedom of East Grinstead at his farewell reception

NEWLY-elected Town Mayor Dick Sweatman made the formal presentation of a scroll recording the award of the Freedom of East Grinstead to the Rev Clive Everett-Allen last night.

Councillors joined Clive’s colleagues, parishioners and friends at a reception in the Meridian Hall to mark his retirement after 17 years as parish priest to St Swithun’s.

The Freedom award was a unanimously agreed recognition of service which will be awarded only rarely, said Dick Sweatman in handing over the framed scroll, but one which in Clive’s case was richly deserved.

“May this scroll mean that a part of East Grinstead goes with you. Know that you are always wlecome here, and we hope you will visit us from time to time,” he said.

In his speech thanking everyone for their support during his time in East Grinstead – including his wife Cyn – Clive said he could not believe that 17 years had passed since their arrival at St Swithun’s.

“But then time always goes fast when you are enjoying yourself,” he smiled.

Photos courtesy of East Grinstead Online

Town Mayor Dick Sweatman handing over the Freedom of East Grinstead scroll

Former Town Clerk Chris Rolley with his successor Julie Holden.

Meridian certificates

MERIDIAN certificates are available from East Court at £1 a time.

Anyone who has stood with one foot in the Eastern Hemisphere and one in the West can pop into East Court and buy a certificate for £1. They come with your name, are signed by the mayor and make an ideal souvenir for visitors to the town.

Parties can order theirs in advance.

To find out more phone 01342 410121