Latest News of Local Interest

Village Clean Up

Clappers Lane litter

Sunday 15th April 2018 from 10:30am

Please get involved in keeping the village tidy and free of rubbish. There are four meeting points:

  • Party 1 starts at the corner of Clappers/Holmbush Lanes and moves South;
  • Party 2 starts at the corner of The Street/Clappers Lane and moves North;
  • Party 3 starts at the Ram House by the Shepherd and Dog and moves up The Street;
  • Party 4 starts at The Deans in Poynings Road and moves towards The Street.

Take care of traffic and wear bright colours and please bring suitable gloves and bin liners to collect the rubbish. Dispose of collected rubbish in your own wheelie bins. If this time is not convenient choose your own time and do your bit. Perhaps ending up at the Shepherd & Dog for a well-earned pint! Any queries give me a call on 271.

Bob Rowland, on behalf of Fulking Social Committee.

Agenda for Ordinary Parish Council Meeting – 12th April 2018

FULKING PARISH COUNCIL

Tel: 01273 846310   e-mail: parishclerk@fulking.net
17 Ockley Way, Hassocks,
West Sussex,
BN6 8NE

Following the Local Audit and Accountability Act 2014, and with regard to regulations on Access to Local Government Meetings, members of the public are advised that they have a right to film/record the meetings of Fulking Parish Council. Members of the public are also advised that by attending a meeting of Fulking Parish Council, they give their consent to being filmed/recorded by other members of the public, if such activity is taking place.

Please note that there will not be a separate planning meeting to discuss applications received, and these are included on the agenda below.

AGENDA

Public Participation: There will be a period of 15 minutes set aside at the beginning of the meeting for the public to ask questions or make comments on items on the Agenda. Comments on items not appearing on the agenda can be made at the chairman’s discretion.

  1. Apologies for Absence.
  2. Declaration of Members’ Interests.
  3. Approve the Minutes of the Council Meeting of 4th January 2018 and the Planning Meetings of 8th February and 26th March 2018:  The minutes, subject to any amendments, to be approved and signed as a true record of the meeting.
  4. Reports from District and County Councillors.
  5. Matters Arising & Outstanding Actions:  To clarify and report on actions brought forward from the last meeting.
  6. Planning Matters:  To comment on planning applications received from South Downs National Park.
    SDNP/18/01642/FUL – Erection of dwelling – Cannonberries, Poynings Road, Fulking, BN5 9NB
    Proposal: Erection of dwelling
  7. Planning Decisions from South Downs National Park:  To receive decisions on planning applications from
    Barn Cottage (SDNP/17/06007/FUL), Land at Cannonberries (SDNP/17/06019/FUL),
    Perching Farm Cottage (SDNP/18/00218/HOUS).
  8. Parking – Road Lines: To discuss yellow lines and parking in the Parish.
  9. Grit Bins and Winter Road Management Plan: To discuss the Winter Plan.
  10. General Data Protection Regulations: To discuss changing legislation in 2018.
  11. Reports from Outside Bodies.
  12. Information Items.  To receive information and items for the agenda at future meetings.
  13. Correspondence.  To discuss correspondence and respond to correspondence received.
  14. Financial Matters: To receive the report on the Council’s income and to approve future expenditure.

Date of Annual General Meeting of the Council and Annual Parish Meeting: Thursday 10th May 2018
Date of the next Ordinary Meeting: Thursday 12th July 2018
Both to be held at Fulking Village Hall at 7.30pm.

Bobservation 42: April 2018

Church Matters
I understand that there is a rumour that the Church Commissioners, through the Diocese of Chichester, have instructed the Parochial Church Councils of Downland villages to  take immediate steps to dispose of the church buildings and land in Edburton, Poynings, Pyecombe and the Fulking Village Hall and Chapel. This is with a view to investing the proceeds of the sales in a new, modern building in Newtimber to replace the church there. This will mean a more functional place of worship being available for social activities and will incorporate a fifty seat cinema  as well as an Olympic sized swimming pool and indoor tennis court. With church congregations reducing year by year the Church Commissioners feel that this will redress the reduction and hopefully increase the numbers attending church for whatever reason. There will be a Public meeting at 6pm on Sunday 1 April 2018 to discuss the proposal at a venue to be decided.

Bluebells
Our bluebells at Furzefield should be good this year. Do please remember that all villagers, families and friends are welcome to wander around. Please ring 271 so we know when you are coming. It is important that the paths are respected (single file is best!), if you bring children please make sure they are kept under strict control and sorry; no dogs.

Fulking Fair
Les and Louise Nicholson, of Artisan Bakehouse, who will be bringing their baked goodies to the fair, have just won the ’Sussex Best Eating Experience of the year 2018’. Amber John will be bringing her ponies for pony rides in the field at the back of the Shepherd & Dog which is kindly being  provided by Aidan & Nicole. Allsorts Dog Rescue will be organizing a ‘Fun dog show’ in the middle of the North Town Field. Tina Ware, as the fair musical arranger, has The Shoreham All Stars already lined up, more musical acts available including Fulking village musicians and the Marta Scott dancers opening the proceedings through the village. This will be a really busy fair! Make sure you come on Sunday July 29.Louise Holman needs bottles (not necessarily alcohol) for the Tombola.

Downland Calendar 2019

09 September John Hazard
Due to popular demand and the success of the last calendar, Fulking villagers are putting together another photographic calendar to be published in 2019. The aims are to celebrate the beauty of our village and the South Downs, and to raise funds for Fulking Village Hall. So — please email your best photos of the following: Fulking and environs through the seasons, landscapes of the South Downs, scenic Downland villages, also wildlife, farming life, community life. The email address is photos@fulking.net. You will be fully credited and receive a free copy of the calendar.

Photos should be landscape format [horizontal] if possible, and preferably of a minimum pixel dimension of 2500 x 1700. Deadline for photo submissions: May 31, 2018. Please get snapping and send in those submissions!

Jen Green (552)

The Adventure of the Twenty Oxen

King Henry VII in the Star Chamber, July 1504

King Henry VII in the Star Chamber, July 1504

Over the centuries, residents of the parish of Edburton have been involved in all kinds of litigation. But the available records only document a single occasion on which one of these affairs ascended to the legal stratosphere that the Star Chamber used to represent. The case involved twenty oxen that may, or may not, have been stolen from Perching Manor.

KING & QUEEN’s ALMONER v. COOKE.
Dated 15 Feb., 4 and 5 Philip and Mary (1557-8).
No bill or other pleading.

Interrogatories to be ministered to John Cooke of [Edburton], co. Sussex, yeoman of the Queen’s Guard, and Thomas Cooke, his brother, concerning the unlawful taking and detaining of twenty oxen which were late of the goods of Edward Lawes, late of Pearching, “ffealon of hymselff”.

The interrogatories inquire (1) how many, and the names of those who took the cattle out of the pasture at Pearching, after the death of Edward Lawes; whither the oxen were driven, and in whose keeping they are; (2) Whether Edward Lawes did in his life-time sell the said oxen to John Cooke and William Davys, and for what sum of money, and upon what conditions.

John Cooke of Edburton deposes that the oxen were taken by his brother, Thomas Cooke, at his commandment, in the high way at Edburton, and driven to Waltham in Essex, and that eighteen were sold to Mistress Stacye, and two to a servant of Mr. Wrothe.

Thomas Cooke of St. Martin le Grand, in the City of London, haberdasher, deposes the taking of the oxen to Waltham.

The outcome of the case is unknown — the relevant documents disappeared in 1719.
[Excerpt from Percy D. Mundy, ed. 1913 Abstracts of Star Chamber Proceedings relating to the County of Sussex, Henry VII to Philip and Mary, Lewes: Sussex Record Society, page 102.]

The Devil’s Doggerel

The Devil's Doggerel
Following the spontaneous outburst of village enthusiasm that greeted our recent posting of contemporary topographic verse (Shepherd & Doggerel), a weightier piece by William Hamper dating back to the early nineteenth century has been added to the local history section. Nothing that includes words such as adown, cruciform, lightsome, luminary, wyght, and yclept, and a gratuitous line of Latin, employed for the rhyme, can be all bad. But it isn’t Coleridge. Rather, it is the kind of piece that a Victorian gentleman could commit to memory and then reproduce at Sussex wedding parties and other social occasions, with ribaldry and acclaim from a bibulous audience already well familiar with the plot (compare Rocky Horror sing-a-longs for a contemporary analogue). Read in that spirit, one can detect its merits.