.1 - CUTHEKOEADVERTISER&TIMES £ ' lu i i ^ f c !
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WWW clrtheroeadvertiserxo uk Thursday, MarehS, 2014
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Small school shows it’s got a
IJ ^m p l lS r is e d Payroll Services ^ 'S e cu r ity Payslips T
. • Cash/Cheque Analysis • Real Time Information (RTI)
Tel: 01254 825615
email:
info@abbeypayroll.co.uk www.abbeypayroll.co.uk Abbey Payroll Services Ltd,
* . 1 Calder Mews; Manor Rd, , Whalley, Clitheroe, Lancs. BB7 9TE O Abb& Ribblesdale Pool
' ' Ribble Valley Borough Council-
v I FFER I i1
- Introduce a friend to become a member at- Ribblesdaje Pool and you wilfboth receive „ your memberships at half price. „
; • Your half p rice membership will be like for like (price equivalent) eg. i f new member buys a 12 for 10 for half price, you will receive a 12 fo r 10 half price.
Offer, runs .1st April.2014 to 30th April 2014 only. -
. * Admission to the public swimming sessions only and not to any instructed (Aqua-fitness) sessions. ^ :
* ■ Mr Bibby in action watched by the whole school, (s)
A pare taker at a Ribble Valley primary school who has just
c Vall
turned 65 proved he is still fit asafiddleandraisedfundsfor
Sport Relief at the same time. Mr Bibby, who is the care
taker at St James CE Primary
School, Clitheroe, was invited to a special birthday assembly attended by Foundation and Key Stage One children at
- ■ — •> e ~'Z V'riDon’tmiss our ' .- - '’’ v -t i > :C ^ A ' g u a ^ B o o t J S a m ^ £^20.p«.«M8loS^^r.. For more information please contact the pool on 01200 424825 w m a m m ;* - T h e k t e s t s , p The latest Sawley Farmers’ Market will be ’
--------------J e f a n n e r s ’ m a r k e t ' '
-
There isamobile garden centre ahdstaUsbvr TennantsFreshFishjthefainousMalldnPio. • •
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held mthe village hall on Sunday froniinam us "V f to e igH om e Delicious cakes and to4pm. ' ' /
madejams and chutneys and craft stalls.
• ' - — - biscuits, home produced Pexmenten cheese, “?|£®4J,r®a4fifom'Doiigh2Be; curry
"yG abriellaandmore,plushome- . v 4 ‘^ o u r A E m e r g e m ss& a ***** pmm mm L...................
School caretaker marks his 65th birthday with fitness fundraiser
which he was presented with guts, cards and a birthday cake to which every class in
which he was
the school had contributed. And, although he has
passed a milestone birthday Mr Bibby, who has been em ployed at the school for the past 17 years, proved he has
not lost any of his strength or e.9 thusiasin by. taking part in
. . . . . _
raising money for Sport Ri lief. Pupils donated money t see Mr Bibby perform 65 tr cep dips in the Friday mornin assembly. . The children were all ir
. „ „
vited towear sportswear t school and each class too part in a Sport Relief mile ru r with almost £300 being raise through the day. ~
s r r a ^ e
' • * B l c i c l < k > « j r r » B B 1 K 7 B G . ^ T e l s ^ O J i a S ^ i M O p O
ri 4 , ; ','iL ' i. l Vi. » r ** s I* > ^ ^ ' : /
SERVICES '
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• Monthly Inland Revenue Calculations • Holiday Pay, SMP, & SSP Calculations
: SomeoftiieBrennand’s Endowed PrimarySchoolpupils with theirSportRelief certificates, (s)
Avillageschool which hason its role only 50 children from just 34families managed to
§Mf-ll| raise £1,600for Sport Relief with an eventful day on Friday.
: There was a whole school day o f sporting events at Bren- nand’s Endowed Primary School, Slaidburn, including
aerobics with fitness trainer Sam Roscoe in the morning
, followed by a cool down ses sion in the classroom. After
. thistherewasfuncircuittinie before lunch.
In the afternoon there was
a sports quiz and classroom activities followed by a Sport Relief mile run.
SP@RY RELIEF 2014
;■ Pupils collected spon- , sors to run the mile, with the younger pupils in Key Stage One completing half a mile.
: So far they have raised £1,600 with more money to come in.
Winners for sportsman
ship, collecting the most number o f sponsors, most active child of the day, perse-
, verance,skillsetcwerenamed on the day.
Children, staff and parents
all joined in and worked hard to make the day such a suc- . cess.': .
.
>
: Thursday, March 27,2014 -
www.ditheroeadvertiser.couk
CUTHER0EADVERHSER&1IMES I
n
Tributes paid to former headmistress of Clitheroe Girls’ Grammar
- Nearly300 people crowded ; into Clitheroe Parish Church on Monday for aservice ' of thanksgiving for the life
. of Miss Barbara Bingham, former headmistress of, Clitheroe Girls'Grammar School.
The hymns and readings had been chosen by Miss Bingham before her death: the Bible readings from 1 Corinthians 13 and John 14:1-6 and 27 were read by Canon Jim Duxbury andtheprayersledbytheRev. Andrew W h iteh ead ., Those attending includ
ed her relatives, long-stand ing friends, godchildren and former colleagues and pu pils from Park School, Pres ton; Giggleswick School and Clitheroe Royal Grammar School. Many neighbours and
members ofthe St Mary’s con gregation werejoined by those who had travelled from as far away as Essex to attend.
Bom in Preston UI1925, she
was the only child of Thomas and Jenny Bingham. Sadly, Barbara’s mother died only
......a v ’"-**’ —v* - 4- ± VJ~ ^
V- 4- > P H 1 1 C K S
s o h d t o r s w ' t v v v
J^ V V I L L S <Sc E S T A T E
\ P R O B / a E ? & ; T R U S T S ‘ ^ ' ' ^ ^ ^:^ C 3 L J R T C Z > ^ P R O T E C T I O N a t t o r n e y ;
R E S ID E r^ T I^ L : U r " i _ * « a< K »■ r v ^ iQ- r ■~ 7 r ■ weeks after the birth and she
was subsequently brought up by her aunts and father, who managed the furniture de partment of the Co-op. Barbara first attended
Cambridge House Private School at Fishergate Hill in Preston and then the Park School in Preston. Her ear ly promise was noted by the school when she was ob served to have “a lively mind and capacity for lead ership”. She was made a prefect in the lower sixth in 1941 and in the upper sixth the followingyear. From 1943 to 1946 Barbara
studied geography at the Uni versity of Liverpool. When she was not studying, Barbara found time for a rich social life, taking up youthhostelling and carrying out voluntary work at the local Allied Centre. In 1947 Barbara began her
teaching career after she ob tained her teachertraining certificate in Liverpool. She began her teaching career at Colston’s Girls’ School in Bris tol before going on to teach at
Wallasey High School from 1950 to 1954.
, Then she started a new
post as head of geography at the newly opened Pen-, w’ortham Girls’ Grammar School where it was noted she “taught with authority tempered with kindness and good sense”. She subsequent ly became deputy head at the « school. .:
She taught with
authority tempered with kindness
andgoodsense’ . v In 1964, Bar- ,
bara was1 made; head of Clitheroe ■ Girls’ Grammar School where she remained until her retirement in'
1985. During her time at the
school, Barbara made a point of teaching all the fir st year groups, so that she would get to know the new pupils, and she steered the school through a period of unparal leled change. In 2009 she was made the
first female president of the Clitheronians. Barbara also served as a magistrate and as a governor of Giggleswick School. She was a member of the
W ' Miss Barbara Bingham, (s) - -
Pendle Forest Association and of the National Trust,’visiting
• many houses and gardens in the UK over the years. Also-an accomplished
photographer, Barbara was a long-standing member of Clit heroe Camera Club. She put her hobby to good use giving illustrated talks of her extern sive travels. •• She loved walking in the
Lancashire countryside and until comparatively recently
5 2^
regularly climbed Pendle. She. was also a very good cook. For many years Barbara
-was a member o f Clitheroe Parish Church,-on the paro chial church council, a sides man and a member of the Ladies’ Group, helping with the coffee duties after church and in charge ofthe cake stall. She not only helped with the flowers, but helped teach
. many others the art and craft .of flower arranging. - V. ■ Judith Child, the current headteacher at Clitheroe Roy al Grammar School, said: “We were very sorry to hear that Miss Bingham had passed away. , “Miss Bingham was a high
ly respected member of our school community. She was headteacherofClitheroeRoy- al Grammar School for Girls from 1964 to 1985 prior to its amalgamation with the boys’ school. Former students and staff recall that Miss Bingham knew every student individu ally and taught classics to all students in theirfirstyear. She was a wonderful headteacher and a great inspiration to the girls in her care.
“Since her retiremen t
Miss Bingham had kept in close touch with the school, and attended our commemo ration day service and awards evening. She was a member of the Clitheronians’Associa tion and was honoured to have held the position of president in 2009-2010. “Miss Bingham will be
missed by all who knew her.” The vicar at Clitheroe Par
ish Church, the Rev. Andy Froud, said: “She was the heart of both the church and the community. . “I always liked that when
ever she walked into a room people would straighten their ties and make themselves look more presentable in front of her. ~ “She will be greatly missed
at the church and was active right up to the end of her life. “She was always going out
and doing little jobs for every one and was a very thoughtful and caring person.” . _ Popular with pupils, one
told us that Miss Bingham was “very fair and patient” and that she always “commanded respect”.
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