a® Clitheroe Advertiser and Times, January 17th, 1980 3 L ALL I. 23278.
Kt 7-30 p.m. C O N C O R D E (A) Fat 7-30 p.m.
)
I WOULD like to thank the Advertiser and Times for the publicity given to the suggestion by the Lancashire Natural is ts ’ Trust that a nature reserve be established in the Cross Hills area. However, it was
NATURALISTS DON’T SEEK a i L OF crosshills ssstfarc;
whole area be desig nated as a reserve, and in particular, we do not envisage the former builders’ rub- < ble tip as part of such a scheme. Neither would we
never the Trust’ s intention that the
in uH im iR H rt t., C
OUB I Y, Al'M» 0>« M LMIA IM j, Telly Savalas
WERING INFERNO, A y's THE RESCUERS,
wish to prejudice any ideas to establish a recreation area and cricket pitch. Some parts of the area have
Letters to the Editor MARK in action on the River Leven
Trio make mark in
R HIRE ■MITED
Is FOR HIRE HEROE
{Parson Lane 23483
lociation presents EWAN MacCOLL
oe 8 p.m. s 75p)
ition Office and MPAA,
Y wild water
THREE Clitheroe school boys have been achieving fast times in wild water canoe racing in North of England events.
Langshaw Drive, came second in the 11-18 event on the River Wharfe recently with a fast time, and is now in the second d iv i s io n of r a c in g canoeists.
Mark Mashiter (15), of
Salthill View, is a close rival and beat Mark in a race on the River Leven on Sunday.
Michael Bentley (15) of
of Hillside Close, is the youngest member of the trio, but is rapidly building
Steven Johnson (14)
muscle power and stamina, as well as the skill needed
to stay on course during a raCe< Mark and Steven are
pupils at Ribblesdale School, and Michael attends St Augustine’s, Billington. Wild or white water races are held on river
waterfalls up to three feet high and with obstacles such as large boulders, eddy currents and sharp bends to create extra tur
bulence. To achieve better times,
the boys have their own racing canoes which are narrower and therefore less stable than ordinary canoes.
Make room for the
cricketers
FOR almost five years the Clitheroe and District la
Cricket League has been campaign provision of public cricket facilities u .— Valley and has met with only partial success.
Epitaph for a
unique site
BEFORE naturalists in the area go cock-a-hoop with delight about the proposal to landscape Crosshills, perhaps some sober reasoning would not be amiss. Crosshills is renowned
for its unique flora and fauna and there to enjoy. I t is a natural reserve, without any transforma tion, management, restor ing or landscaping being necessary. Years ago, people in
high places came from the land of Nanki-Poo and decided it was better to make part of Crosshills a tip.
MICHAEL shows his skill in the water
Deborah makes
progress ,68101
L your
$ u
READ girl Deborah Anne Harrison, injured in a road accident last week, was reported to \ k “quite com fortable” in the Royal Manchester Children s Hospital on Tuesday. Deborah (11), daughter
• eral Hospital sufferin from a suspected fracture skull, after an accident with a car in Whalley
of Mr and Mrs James Har rison, of Woodhead Road was taken to Burnley Gen
Road, Read. She was transferred to
the Manchester hospital on
Thursday. Deborah’s friends at
Clitheroe Girls’ Grammar School, where she is a fir st-year pupil, have sent get well cards.
Footpaths idea is
discussed
A suggestion to resurrect an old footpath from Wad- dington churchyard into the Coronation Gardens was decided after consid eration by the parish coun cil not to be a good idea.
One of the reasons was
that children would use the path and run in and out of the gardens and expense was another factor. The Gardens Committee
was against the idea, but the Parochial Church Council had been in
favour. The parish council will
now ask the church to improve and surface an existing path. from the churchyard which led to a path skirting the gardens.
TRINITY METHODIST CHURCH presents
SLEEPING BEAUTY JANUARY 26th, 30th, 318t
FEBRUARY 1st, 2nd, at7-15 p.m. prompt
Admission rEvenlng performance 60p, matinees 40p
Saturday evening, February 2nd, 70p __ ... . Jr
Seats reserved at Trinity Methodlsi School on Friday, innuarv 18th 7 to 9 p.m., and Saturday, January 19th, 30^ r t o 1 2 noP
on, and from January 21 a. each weekday afternoon from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
servation, there has been a later plan to destroy the lot and ‘Turn Crosshills into a recreation area and cricket
campaigning for the ilities in the Ribble
The artificial wicket-at Roefield was welcomed as being better than nothing, but unfortunately it has failed to meet our expecta tions so far as club cricket
is concerned. Cricketers at Roefield
and at certain others clubs in the league presently share facilities with foot ballers. Due to the appa rent indefinite expansion of football seasons, this means that these pitches, following frantic work to eliminate holes and boot- marks, are only available for cricket over a very limited period. It was with great satis
faction, therefore, that we noted the county council’s proposal to provide a recreation area, including a cricket pitch, at Cros shills. But it was with equally
After this gem of pre
pitch.”These two acta alone- were sheer brilliance on, the part of anyone sup posed to be an environ mental planner. There is a belief, more
great concern that I read in last week’s Advertiser and Times of abandoning this plan in favour of a nature reserve. We have no objection to the provi sion of nature walks, but we feel that to allocate the whole area to this purpose would be a serious blow
indeed. more natural history
™ore,. interesting areas lie nearer to the
tip61” ^ an former. I know that last
ween the trust’s offic ers and the local coun cil’s representatives)
which we would like to se e form the
reserve. In the main
these part of the Cross
week s report has caused some disquiet among people seeking the establishment oi some form of recrea tion area, and I would like to state that only
‘breach of trust1
Bill is ’
Hills area has been proposed to form a nature reserve.
MR TONY COOPER
Ribble Valley C on se rva tio n Officer,
Lancashire Naturalists’ Trust, Hillside Close, Clitheroe
Questions and an sw e rs on Billington Gardens
. residents L .V i .S l *
t wnNDER when the nf Billington
of . Gardens are gome: to 6 ^
some s t r a ig h t^ ,. from the. Ribble Valley Council, instead of uw series of evasions that has been the normal response so far to questions about the modernisation of the
given a written undertak
estate’s houses. Last spring we were
ing, some people jnig even say a promise, by the
council that the first stage in the modernisation prog" ramme would begin that
August. When work had not
s ta r ted by that time, inquiries brought the reply that the council did not have the money available to undertake the work. But money must have
. political capital
last General Election and started fulfilling promises ■-v
from the they have made.
report in the Press that the council had authorised money to be spent on the new offices to protect them from the weather, providing the cost did not exceed £6,000. What more protection do
I was intrigued by a
have stopped this happen- ing.
• b * » 1 * “ v • ^ Board has not been able to provide the necessary design information in view of unprecedented demand for gas conver
F irs t ly , the Gas
, to be available from sup pliers for several months.
sions and for the same reason the central heat ing boilers were unlikely
they need than that nor mally provided by four external walls and a roof. But where is this money to come from, because it will surely add to the ever increasing cost of the coun cil’s most monumental folly to date.
— not with a great deal of hope — some honest ans wers from someone, some where, sometime.
I look forward to getting
been available earlier in the year, or is the council in the habit of making promises it is not going to
keep? The excuse that there
was a General Election in between, with a conse quent cutback in pubhc expenditure, will not hold good. For it was reported locally that at a -council meeting it had been stated that the authority had underspent its estimates
' year this would be done. I was personally told
after all, are not noted for the damage-they cause to -
prevalent than imagined, that filling a pleasant dell with civilisation’s rubbish is beneficial, provided that, when the tip is full, a grassy sod is flung on the surface to put the underly ing, heaving mess out of sight. One can then assume
innocence, pretending district changed and Cricket
.........
nothing has ----- - ■ despoliation has not taken
place.
ling is being conveniently linked with the quarry, and this must be viewed
Already, the tip level . , ,
with suspicion. It must not be surprising
at all that, when the level ling day arrives, there is a sly suggestion that land scaping (destroying) a
larger area "while the machinery is still on site would be advantageous. This would be the start of
deciding the future of CrosshilTs, that due regard is paid to the habitat of the most endangered of all species, the Clitheroe and . district League cricketer.
the environment. :We ask, in short, when
KEVIN FITZPATRICK, secrei
Cricket League, 7 Lingfield Avenue, Clitheroe.
Council spokesman said nothing had been d e c id ed about the future of the tip. The suggestion — one of many — about turning it into a recreation area and cricket pitch had been made at a committee meeting last July, but no action
• A Ribble Valley
Crosshills’ epitaph. The Trust, and others
tEkciii Since then the Trust
with them who have bat tled on, are worthy of highest praise and thanks from the rest of us. Let us hope that the
had come up with its idea and this was now being looked at in the context of the whole
area.
remainder is in th e ir favour and Crosshills can once more be enjoyed as a natural reserve, free from any in te r f e r e n c e or “improvements” from pan ning experts.
SINCERETAS. Council of fic ia ls •
would be meeting rep resentatives from the county council and the Trust before the end of the month to discuss th e v a r io u s p o s sibilities.
T O P T W E N J Y
l id out where there Ting hills, tall cliffs Es, castles, stately | else from bingo
iw to get there ir,'plane or eyen
[ up with maps-, ; covering the
1st mine of holiday
;h st Board
E n g lan d . annual GENERAL MEETING
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5th at 8 p.m.
in NEWTON VILLAGE HALL All
nersons we/comg-
fo lk , night ROGER WESTBROOK
FRIDAY; 1st FEBRUARY 8-11.p.m.
the two beggarmen .
r.MTQQTftN £1 50 INCLUDING SUPPER
(13) “With you I’m born again” — Billy Preston- n i “Rrnss in Docket” — Pretenders.
3 (3) “Another brick in the wall” — Pink Floyd i
5*. (2) “I only want to be with you — Tourists. 6. (8) “Tears of a clown/Ranking full stop — The
1 “Mv eirl” — Madness.
10* (10) “Working for the yankee dollar — Skids. 11/ (5) “Walking on the moon — Police.
7. (4) “I have a dream — Abba. 8 (11) “London calling — Clash._ 9 T6) “Day trip to Bangor — Fiddlers Dram.
Beat. , ' „ . . .
12 (9) ‘.‘Is it love you’re after” — Rose Royce. 13. (_ ) “Please don’t go” — KC and the Sunshine
14. (15) ? rm in the mood for dancing” — Nolan Sisters..
■■ ’ '■ ■ ■
15. (14) “John, I’m only dancing” — David Bowie.. 16. (6) “My simple heart” — Three Degrees. 17. (_ ) “i wanna, hold your hand” — Dollar.
18. (—) “Better love next time” — Dr Hook. 19. (18) “Spacer” — Sheila B. Devotion. 20. (12) “Union'City Blue” — Blondie. Last week’s placings in brackets. Tip for the top
“Babe” — Styx. LP of the week: “Pretenders” — The Pretenders. Chart compiled by Ames Record Bar.
• Secretary, .Clitheroe and
£40,000 for the Billington Gardens scheme have come out of this? The last promise made by the coun cil last year was that all the roofs would be insulated, but it did not say in which
by £160,000. Why could not the
clfWe ;.would,. hope ,, that a (council employee who’was r om p rom ise - can- be >. -inspecting the structure of ceached so that both n e e d s 'th e houses'.that a rotting
_____ ,........ ..................... three months ago by a
an : be " met; Cricketers, window ’ frame , would be
replaced, ham still await ing the replacement.”-• ■ It is time the councillors
stopped trying to make
C O L D , RESIDENT.
D A M P
son, chief ex e cu t iv e officer, Ribble Valley Council, replies:—
• Air Michael Jack-
I CAN appreciate the con cern, annoyance and above all bewilderment of the residents of Billing ton Gardens about altera tions to the programme fo r improving th e ir houses.
The proposal to rewire
delay meant that when, as late as September, the new Government gave instructions to cut our housing programme by £300,000 and these cuts had to be from schemes where contractural com mitments with builders, etc., had not been entered into, the Billington Gar dens improvement was, through no fault of the council, one of the few options available.
This in i t ia l design
and provide gas central heating to the 30 houses at Billington Gardens was a decision of Housing Committee once it had been told by the Govern ment exactly how much was available to spend on housing improvements in the year beginning April, , lnlloII
•1979 *~5v • ,+'**■*•*' anxious
thatj.the woj-h way. The c ommi t t e e was
sh ou ld be carried out and completed by. November,
1979, 'as indicated to
tenants.Two Simple factors
Assumptions about school
I WROTE on January
3rd to correct a misun derstanding which has deceived the people of Chipping, Thornley ana Bowland-with- Leagram throughout
living memory. Last week’s letter by the
Vicar of Chipping is a last ditch attempt to avoid admitting publicly that Brabin’s is NOT a church school. He is attempting to keep alive the myth that it is a specially religious “sort of C of E” School. I am calling ‘his bluff. It is not fair for Mr Green to make assumptions about the founder's real intentions.
endowed schools is not a matter for arg um en t around the parish pump. It was settled long ago by competent Charity Com mission lawyers. They have never had any doubt that Brabin’s is non- denominational. Their decision ought to be known
The religious status of
clearly by everyone in the area, and respected. In his will, dated 1683,
John Brabin made no religious requirements and gave his executors the sole right to appoint or dismiss the schoolmaster. This made the school exempt from the Church's canon law, and the master did not need a licence from the
neeu a licence Bishop (He .®
acted as schoolmas irrelevant. '
had any significance, tne . .. If these details ha
school would , have gone legally to the Church of
England long ago. “ a Diocese of Blackburn ha
consulted C of E bea(jflufa.' ters and well knows that .
cannot claim Brabin s. ,. No Vicar of ChipP'aS
was a Brabin’s Trustee until 1878. In th a t yeara non-denominational f ra
deed for the school ^ana raragrapn oo
any claim by the Bishop. Paragraph five increased
the number of Trustees. There is no requirement that the Vicar of Chipping should be a Trustee, but there is nothing to prevent
it.
Chipping has always been a Trustee. So it is not sur prising that the myth grew up that Brabin’s was a church organisation, that Trustees had to be chur chmen, and that the school belonged to the church. In the past 15 years
Since 1878 the Vicar of
that Central Government not only dictates to the council how much it can spend, but also what to spend it on. Thus the £160,000 referred to by your correspondent is not available for housing improvement whatever the wishes of the council might be. Even now the allocation for the year commencing April, 1980, is unknown so that for ward planning is very dif ficult.
It is not widely known
r e f e r r e d to w i l l be repaired or replaced as part of a contract of major joinery repairs car ried out annually. On a positive note I under
The window frame
1 5n n v * t i in c ^ r to w i 5 a n d r o * - Is already under, /
stand that the roof insu lation will commence at
-
; C l i tK e ro e A u c t i o n
Councillors' lack of local knowledge
TWO items in last week’s Advertiser and Times indi cate a lack in Ribble Valley Council circles of local k n o w l e d g e a b o u t Clitheroe. One reads that British
Mart
BEST steers and heifers maintained recent rates but other sorts made less money at Clitheroe Auc tion Mart on Monday. Cows met a firm trade at a little less money and fat lambs found an easier
tone. There were 82 fat cattle
Rail have denied responsi bility for the road linkin Chester Avenue car par with Railway Road. Yet for many, many years there was an LMS Railway notice indicating that it was a private road and there was a similar notice at the other bridge by the
station. The bridges used to be
numerous official docu ments from county and other sources have reached the public with the letters CE added, quite incor rectly, to the name of the school.
,
-the Department of Educa tion and Science, advised the school managers to inform parents “The school is not a Church of England school, and the use of CE or C of E in the title is incorrect.” This blunt negative
In 1977 a county council solicitor, after consulting
statement would have helped to clear the misun derstanding, but Mr Green objected, and all the other managers except, myself supported him. So the statement was excluded from the letter to parents, and the myth lingers on. For the good of the
one privately if hew lsnecu. ing The fact that
,
referred to as the “Gas W o rk s” b r id g e and “Bleazard’s Bridge” (in the days when the adjoining b u i l d e r ’s p r em is e s belonged to the Bleazard family. Both notices have disappeared within the
past 30 years. Regarding the concern
voiced about work being done to the footpaths in Waddington Road, anyone who walks the length from the Catholic Cemetery to Brungerley Park could hardly have failed to notice how weatherworn and bro ken were the kerbs, and the amount of filth on the footpath, especially around the top entrance to the
park. By his remarks m com .
m i t te e , Coun. Jo h n Walmsley, of Waddington, has unwittingly revealed th e ov era ll a t t i tu d e towards Clitheroe by the
villagers who now control its destiny.
oa*c} . ■ ridiculous misunderstand- ^
whole community this djsposed of
as quickly and tactfully-as possible. One way-of doing it would be for the Brabin’s Trustees ,to end the mis-
leading and quite unneces sary custom of automati cally co-opting the Vicar. Brabin’s school and char
BYSTANDER, Clithcroe. .
CINEMA
AN action-packed sequel to the story, of the ill-fated
ity are . part of our local heritage. Sadly, they will remain an embarrassment if one group refuses to admit that it nas no unique and special privilege in Brabin’s affairs.
A. R. LORD, ^
liner, the SS Poseidon, comes to the screen in “Beyond the Poseidon
Adventure” a t , the Civic Hall next week.
ail .............
forward, including 34 fat cows, 54 ewes and 389 lambs. Light steers made to 81p
THE clause in the Education Bill giving local authorities abso lute discretion to make charges for school transport is a breach of tru s t over former agreements, and a blow to those parents in rural- areas and those who send their children to denomina tional schools, espe daily secondary ones.
anomolies. It is reported th a t some parents in Oxfordshire will face bills of £320 a term; in County
Furthermore it will create
Durham £10 a week, and in Lancashire up to £2.40 a
week. When we are told that
the government attaches great importance to paren tal preferences, subject to what the public purse can afford, we must suspend belief, particularly since the same Bill provides for a considerable and growin- expense with assiste places at independent schools. Another clause in this
Bill reduces the powers of foundation governors. This, with the effect of yet another clause on appeals bodies on admissions, opposed incidentally by local a u th o r i t ie s on expense grounds, together with the incidence of fal ling rolls and school clo sures, will substantially affect the character of some schools because of forced admissions policies. There is much in the
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to 60p (50.95p). Light lambs made to
160p (138.6p), standard to 148.5p (138.2p), medium to 153p (142p) and heavy to 140p (131p). The overall average for lambs was 138.8p, down 6p from last
week. Half-bred ewes made to
£18 per head (£15.20) and horned ewes to £15
(£10.10). At Friday’s sale, there
were 16 in-calf cattle, 32 store cattle and 125 store hoggs forward. January calving cows
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CABLE DANGER
THE potential danger of an electric cable running underneath the footbridge spanning Waddington brook is causing concern to the Parish Council. After heavy rain and
f lo o d in g , th e c.abl.e becomes submerged and children playing in the
. The Electricity Board
brook could easily pierce it.
. „ ,
rPscueYs who realise that a write expressing^ urgency fortune in salvage awaits for
the.work to be done, thfm fn the dying hulk of-1 The. cable supphes elec-
illv Field, Telly Savalas- to put a covering o\er the n l Karl - Malden a s cable, and the council is to
It stars Michael Caine, promised two months ago ’ i ^
made to £470, February to £445, May to £390 and June to £405. Hereford bullocks made to £342, Friesian bul locks to £290, and heifers
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