Parish Council Meeting – 9th April 2015 7:30pm – Village Hall

Fulking Parish Council will hold their quarterly meeting at 7:30 on Thursday April 9th in the Village Hall — agenda. Members of the Press and Public are welcome to attend.

Derek Blackhall
Clerk to Fulking Parish Council
01273 846186
22 Kymer Gardens
Hassocks
West Sussex
BN6 8QZ
(using the email address below)

andreadicksonfpc@gmail.com

Bobservation No. 4

Social CommitteeFULKING SOCIAL COMMITTEE

Fulking Social Committee was formed by Jill Bremer in 1996 and since that date has been ably chaired by various villagers, most notably Jill herself and latterly by Jenny Tooley. The aim of the Committee is to raise money for village needs, and promote a spirit of togetherness in Fulking.The constitution is posted on the village website.

Amongst fundraising events the principal activity is the annual fair which, thanks to the generosity of Harry and Charmayne Diamond, has been held in Downside Meadow for the last five years. This year it will be held on Sunday 26 July and helpers are greatly appreciated and very much needed. The Annual General Meeting of the Committee is being held in the village hall at 8pm on Thursday 5 February and all villagers are welcome with the proviso that, if you come along with an idea you must be prepared to carry it out.

Any request for the disbursement of Social Committee funds is always sympathetically and sensibly considered by the Committee and if it is of benefit to the village as a whole the request is likely to be granted. The need to continue raising and retaining money will be justified should a contingency arise such as major treework in the North Town Field, major repairs to the village hall or an eventual replacement for the building.

Parish Council 8th January 7:30pm Village Hall

Fulking Parish Council will hold their quarterly meeting at 7:30 on Thursday January 8th in the Village Hall — agenda. Members of the Press and Public are welcome to attend.

Andrea Dickson
Clerk to Fulking Parish Council
01444 451060/andreadicksonfpc@gmail.com

Old Thatch

Old Thatch Fulking c1900

Old Thatch, circa 1900. Note that each of the four component cottages had a front door and an adjacent ground floor window.

Old Thatch is a Grade II listed house on the north side of The Street adjacent to the North Town Field. Now a single dwelling, in the nineteenth century it comprised a terrace of four cottages. The listing details read as follows:

Probably C17. Two storeys. Four windows. Now faced with flints and brick, both painted. Thatched roof, hipped at west end. Casement windows.

Old Thatch was originally built in a hall (barn) style. It was constructed without ceilings or chimneys and a hole in the thatched roof allowed smoke from fires to escape. Hence, the roof beams are covered in soot. The house now has a large inglenook fireplace, reputed to be the only one in the village that does not smoke. The original building was timber framed with lath and daub infill, some of which is still visible at the rear of the house, and a brick extension was added on the west (left) side of the present front door. The original façade was destroyed at some time by fire and was rebuilt using flints. The front windows were originally small square panes of glass and the stumps of the window bars that were cut out in the 1920s to make way for the existing diamond shaped leaded lights are still evident. The marks where the four cottages were later merged into a single dwelling are still just about visible on the front elevation. Old Thatch has a cellar under the eastern end of the building with a drain that at one time discharged onto The Street. There is a well in the front garden, some eighteen feet deep, which is somewhat below the average level of the water table in the village. John Durrant (see below) sealed this well off — it was not filled in — and constructed a pond over it. Frogs and toads once inhabited the cellar under the house and they probably used the well to breed.

The nineteenth century census records are somewhat opaque with regard to the identity of persons living in the smaller houses in the parish. However, the order of names suggests that members of the Burtenshaw family were resident in one of the four cottages in both 1881 and 1891, with a branch of the large Lelliott family living next door in 1881. Both Amos Burtenshaw and Walter Lelliott were farm workers.

Old Thatch Fulking in 1947

Old Thatch in 1947. The resident with the buckets is returning home from the fountain adjacent to the North Down Field. Fulking did not have mains water at the time.

The house was vacant during WWII and during this time it was used as the headquarters of the 13th Platoon of the Home Guard. This included some thirty men from Fulking and Poynings There were three officers, four sergeants and two corporals. The youngest member was a mere fourteen years old and the oldest was about seventy. Their Captain was a Mr. Molesworth who lived at The Dean on Poynings Road. They paraded, and were inspected, in Fulking Village Hall every Wednesday night at 7:00pm by Sergeant Henry Harris. Every night, two members of the platoon patrolled the area. They were given the next half-day off work. Their orders were to raise the alarm if they saw spies or troops being parachuted in. They were also trained to shoot advancing enemy troops and blow up tanks that might cross the Downs during an invasion.

Peggy and John Durrant in 1985

Peggy and John Durrant

After the war, the house was purchased by the Wallis family. It was then sold to John and Peggy Durrant in 1953. John had been an RAF Squadron Leader in WWII and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for his courage and devotion to duty while on active service. He was very much involved in the conservation of the village and spent a considerable amount of time, on a voluntary basis, maintaining the North Town Field. He always supplied electricity for village events in the Field and the present owners carry on this tradition.

John also did everything he could to save the village post office from closure. At the time, the Royal Mail assessed the financial viability of its premises by the number, not the size, of transactions carried out. So, every morning, John would deposit one pound in an account and in the afternoon withdraw it, thus ensuring that the number of daily transactions was boosted. Regrettably this ploy failed to save the post office.

John Durrant RIPA plaque on the outside of the west boundary wall of Old Thatch, just inside the entrance to the North Town Field, commemorates John Durrant’s life in Fulking.

Tony Brooks

[Copyright © 2014, Anthony R. Brooks. Adapted from Anthony R. Brooks (2008) The Changing Times of Fulking & Edburton. Chichester: RPM Print & Design, pages 160-161, 235, 292, 404, 441.]

Old Thatch 2008 Ed Lancaster MSDC

A 2008 photograph of Old Thatch taken by Ed Lancaster for the MSDC Fulking Conservation Area Appraisal.

Fulking Parish Council – Budget 2014-2015

Fulking Parish Council set a budget of £7,303 for the current financial year at its meeting on 10th October 2013.

Parish Council budget covers items such as the grass cutting & maintenance of the playground at NTF, street lighting and repairs, public liability insurance, website hosting, cost of audits, subscriptions to local societies, as well as additional training for Councillors & Clerk and the Clerk’s salary.

The budget has remained the same as last year.

A full copy of the budget is available here.

Andrea Dickson
Clerk to Fulking Parish Council
andreadicksonfpc@gmail.com

Fulking Parish Council — Annual Meeting Thursday 1st May 2014 at 7:30pm

Woodland Trust
Agenda

  • Outgoing Chairman’s welcome
  • Election of Chairman and Vice Chairman
  • Closing of the meeting

This is then followed by the Annual Parish meeting

Agenda

  • Apologies for absence
  • Approval of minutes for May 2nd 2013
  • Chairman’s report
  • Reports from District and County Councillors
  • Speaker from the Woodland Trust: Sylvia Goddard
  • Date of next meeting
  • Closing of the meeting
  • Election of new North Town Field Trustees

The evening will be rounded off with refreshments.

Andrea Dickson, Clerk to Fulking Parish Council
01444 451 060 / andreadicksonfpc@gmail.com