Caring 4 Sussex Magazine - Spring 2015
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Transcript of Caring 4 Sussex Magazine - Spring 2015
No. 29 Spring 2015www.caring4sussex.co.uk
Capture the moment– Images with a story to tell
LEISURE • HEALTH • NEWS • COMMUNITY • SERVICES
THE MAGAZINE FOR PEOPLE WHO CARE ABOUT SUSSEX
Companionship, privacy, security and independence – you’ll find them all, and much more, in an Abbeyfield home.
The Abbeyfield Ferring Society has two houses both serving freshly prepared meals.
Cornwell House accommodates twenty residents in its residential home which is close to local shops and the sea.
Old School House provides supported accommodation for eleven residents in the heart of the village, adjacent to the library and Doctor’s surgery and close to the shops.
We aim to provide quality care in a warm, friendly environment. Respite care can be provided, subject to availability.
We also have a domiciliary support service for people who require some assistance to remain in their own homes.
l Friendship, privacy and practical support
l Fully trained and caring staff
l Residents treated with dignity and respect
Please contact Ruth on 01903 240313 for further details
2
Contents
From the Editor
Spring 2015
© Copyright Pinstripe Publishing Ltd. No reproduction in whole or part without written permission. The Publisher cannot be held liable for any loss suffered as a result of information herein or obtained from the Publisher’s website and therefore cannot accept any responsibility for any loss, damage, distress or inconvenience caused by the content of any such website. The publisher accepts no liability for views expressed by contributors and advertisers, undertakes that prices were correct at time of going to press and can neither accept responsibility for loss or damage to unsolicited material nor return it without an SAE. No product or service advertised and/or publicised and/or appearing in Caring 4 Sussex magazine is, unless expressly stated to the contrary, endorsed by and/or otherwise associated with Caring 4 Sussex.
Regular
readers will
have noticed
that often
our features
are inspired
by chance
findings of
various items at the back of
my garage or wardrobe. Cocoa
tins filled with old pennies,
threepenny bits and farthings,
old frocks changed from crimes
of fashion into ‘vintage pieces’
using a bit of thought and
creativity.
The latest was a tiny black
and white photograph of me,
aged about three, teddy in tow,
standing in a village made of
shells – goodness knows where,
probably taken by Dad using his
ancient box camera. Eventually
it was upgraded to a ‘Brownie’
with hot cube flashes, then
an awful disc camera – let’s
not dwell on that one – all
spawning unexciting pictures of
cats on copings outside typical
London terraced houses.
Of course while amateurs
were snapping away over the
decades, the professionals were
busy travelling to important
events around the world
documenting history and
producing images that have
become iconic.
They were serious ethical
photojournalists, respecting
their subjects and were part of
teams of reporters recording
wars, royal events and popular
celebrities of the day.
For our main feature we’ve
picked a sample of just three of
those people who all now live in
Sussex.
Just off now to download
yet another boring picture of
the cat, taken on my mobile
‘phone – all those years ago we
wouldn’t have believed it!
If you’d like to read back
copies of the magazine,
see our page-turners online
via our website –
www.caring4sussex.co.uk
4 Caring 4 Scoops Three photojournalists tell us how it used to be done7 Caring 4 You
10 Caring 4 Books A selection recalling past times
11 Caring 4 Voting Looking at the history of elections
12 Caring 4 Services
14 Caring 4 Heritage A look at the National Archive
16 Caring 4 Directory
18 Caring 4 Health Dr Sarah tells it like it is in A & E
Issue No 29 3
In this issue we are delighted to feature three photojournalists – all now living in Sussex – who began their careers taking pictures on film in an era before the notoriety of paparazzi and privacy invasion. Photoshop was unknown, so they had to get it right first time. They were all fortunate in being able to capture images unavailable to others. See pages 4-6
Pinstripe Publishing Ltd. www.caring4sussex.co.uk
Publisher: Denise Tayler
Editor: Denise [email protected] [email protected] Phone: 01903 244700
Features Editor:Wendy Greene
Design: Verité 01903 241975
Print: Newman Thomson 01444 480 700
It was November 2007 when
Janet Bell and her husband
Sean opened the Janet Bell
Gallery in the pretty town
of Beaumaris on the Isle of
Anglesey. But it was in Brighton
Janet sold her first painting.
“I moved there in 2001
having graduated and
worked in an interiors shop
in the Lanes,” she tells us.
“A gallery opened next door
and I took some of my very
early paintings in. They sold
one that day so I carried on
and had a very successful 2
years with them. Many other
galleries found me and that
was the beginning of my Art
career. I left Brighton in 2003
to make a life in Cheshire,
where I’m from originally.”
Janet Bell – our cover artistThe Gallery started out
as Janet’s studio where she
painted and sold a couple of
her originals, prints and cards
and has since grown into the
gallery she dreamed of owning
one day.
Janet and Sean didn’t have
a master plan. They started
selling other bits and pieces
that complimented Janet’s
own art work, stocking only
items they would have in their
own home, from handmade
artists and designers they
loved.
If you visit Anglesey and find
yourself near Beaumaris Castle,
do drop in to the gallery
at 15 Castle Street. They’ve
won three Anglesey Tourism
Awards for Best Arts and
Crafts and work closely with
the community in organising
events and bringing high
profile attractions to the town.
For more information or to order prints, visit www.janetbellgallery.com or call 01248 810043
Capture the moment
Marilyn Stafford
John Periam
John Jochimsen
Capture the momentWendy Greene talks to three Sussex photojournalists who have recorded history
John Periam is best known
nowadays for his involvement
in the RAFA Shoreham Airshow.
When he left college, his dream
was to be a journalist and
photographer.
“In three years I was taught
by the best and then moved in a
different direction. For 40 years
I travelled a lot as a veterinary
and medical sales person in the
days when selling paid well and
expense accounts were good. I
saw most of the world and fell
in love with the Falklands and
Nova Scotia – by accident, both
these countries inspired me to
get my camera out again.”
John moved from Southwold
in Suffolk to Shoreham.
“I’d seen the lifeboats in
both towns go to sea several
times and felt I would like to be
involved. Soon I was greasing
the slipway and washing the
lifeboat down in all weathers,
in an induction period that new
crew members go through.
“My first call came for the
inshore lifeboat and as my
confidence grew I was invited
to go to sea more. Crews are a
I purchased a Nikon and before
I knew it my pictures were
getting published in magazines
and regional press – I reached
places others could not.
“The Senior Air Traffic
Control at Shoreham Airport
Peter Dickerson asked me to
help with the then Shoreham
Airshow. I started to write
words to go with my images.
Peter was my mentor – he gave
me confidence!”
Several years later Don Bean
MBE and Peter Eager founded
the RAFA Shoreham Airshow
and invited John to be their
Media Spokesperson.
The All England Jumping
Course at Hickstead – founded
by the late Douglas Bunn –
gave John a new direction, and
before long he was seeing his
equestrian images published.
Some 26 years later he’s still
writing features on Riders and
Veterinary Surgeons.
close knit team, with boathouse
life extending to social life. I
felt part of the community in
Shoreham.
“One day I went on a fellow
crew member’s boat to see the
Red Arrows display at Brighton.
That day changed my life. One of
the Hawk Aircraft hit the mast of
a yacht and we rescued the pilot,
Squadron leader Steve Johnson.”
An invitation to RAF Kemble
led to a friendship with the
Reds still retained to this day.
“I’ve now extended my
horizons into Polo where I have
strong links to Hurtwood Park
Polo Club in Surrey owned by
Kenney Jones – drummer with
The Faces Rock Group. Prince
Charles to Rod Stewart have
filled my camera lenses, often
behind the scenes.”
John’s book ‘Shelley the
Lifeboat Labrador’ is on
Amazon Kindle and now
he’s going back to sea to
write a book on the History
of Shoreham Lifeboat –
commissioned by the RNLI.
John is Correspondent writing
for ‘Fishing News’ with over 300
features published on the state
of the Fishing Industry. Many
fishermen are lifeboat crew
members.
2014 saw the 25th
Anniversary of the Shoreham
Airshow – now one of the best
in the UK – and John is Press
Officer. What started in the
corner of the airfield and raised
£1,300 has now raised just over
2 million pounds for RAFA
Funds. As with the Lifeboats,
the whole team are volunteers.
“I still use film as my format
for taking photographs. It
makes one’s mind work more
– photography is an art form
and every time I take an image
that is what I try to achieve. I’ve
made many friends in the Media
World. Life is all about trust.
I never publish any feature until
the subject approves it.”
John on board HMS Mersey – with Lt Commander Sarah Oakley
John Periam: Lifeboat at sea All photographic rights reserved
4 Caring 4 Scoops
Our second photojournalist also
shows high moral standards.
John Jochimsen, now resident
in Southwater, was covering the
honeymoon of Princess Elizabeth
and Prince Philip in Kenya when
news came that her father had
died and she was now Queen.
Here was John’s chance to take
the first picture of the new
monarch, but as she left The
Royal Lodge – in respect for her
wishes – the three photographers
present put down their cameras.
John, the son of a Times
newspaper journalist, was born in
1929 in London.
“I witnessed the Depression
and saw out the war with
my mother while my father
continued to work in Fleet Street.
At 16 I joined the government’s
Colonial Film Unit, part of the
Ministry of Information, moving
to its successor, the Central Office
of Information after National
Service and a period with the
News of the World. Then I
became Chief Photographer of
the PR Branch of the UK Atomic
Energy Authority.”
By his early 20s, he had
been trusted with high-profile
and sometimes dangerous
assignments as Britain struggled
to hold her colonies together as
the end of Empire approached.
During a four month tour of
East Africa and the Sudan, he
witnessed the start of the Mau
Mau uprising by being shot at.
He captured political struggle
and civil unrest in Malaya,
Singapore, Borneo and Sarawak
where he lived with the head-
hunting Dyak tribes and became
involved with the pirates of
Borneo. Other tours took him to
Malta, Cyprus, Libya and Liberia.
“In the UK,” John says, “I
went behind the scenes at
military installations for the
Ministry of Defence, gaining a
privileged view of the armed
forces at work and compiling
my unique portfolio. I’ve also
photographed Haile Selassie,
Winston Churchill, Soviet
premiers Khrushchev and
Bulganin, US Presidents Jimmy
Carter and Ronald Reagan with
his wife Nancy, Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher, The Queen
and Queen Mother, the Shah of
Persia, King Hussein of Jordan
and the King of Saudi Arabia.
I even covered the building of the
QE2 for Cunard over six years.”
John published a war-time
adventure and romance, King’s
Flight in 2010 before releasing
his memoirs 80 Years Gone In a
Flash in 2011. His latest book is a
picture anthology, Through the
Lens of a Photojournalist (2013).
Having retired at 67 to a farm
in Slinfold, West Sussex, John,
now 85, has been a Sussex police
volunteer for more than 18 years.
John Jochimsen: Churchill with Haile Selassie
John Jochimsen: A stack of Puma Helicopters of 33 Squadron at RAF Odiham
John Jochimsen in Africa
John Jochimsen, today
Exclusive shots
5
Twiggy by Marilyn Stafford
All photographic rights reserved
Albert Einstein by Marilyn Stafford
Capture the moment continued
Chichester Ship Canal – an outing with a differenceA beautiful accessible retreat close to the city sometimes described as the “green lung” of Chichester.
Chichester Ship Canal passes through 4 miles of open farmland
from the Basin to Chichester Harbour at Birdham. It’s a very
attractive stretch of water for rowing, canoeing, angling and
walking.
At the Basin, there’s Chichester Canal Centre which offers
local residents and visitors refreshments, souvenirs, educational
and tourist information and boat trips. This is one of the
most beautiful locations in the city centre to relax and enjoy
a cup of tea or coffee. The cafe also offers hot and cold light
refreshments, ice creams and confectionery. There’s ample
indoor and outdoor seating, both with good views of the
activities in the Basin.
Adjacent to the cafe there’s a Visitor Centre located in a
19th century old stable which has been refurbished to provide
information about the canal and its history.
Boat trips also depart from the Basin. As well as scheduled
daily trips, the boats are available for charter for social occasions
including lunch, dinner and evening cruises. Passengers of all
abilities are welcome and there is disabled access on both boats.
Watch out for our Fish and Chip cruise, sailing Friday evenings
and Wednesday lunchtimes in the summer.
Photograph: Andy Bayes
www.chichestercanal.org.uk Tel: 01243 377405
American-born Marilyn
Stafford lives in Shoreham
where she has been an active
Wordfest contributor. Her
friendship in Paris with the
photographers Robert Capa
and Henri Cartier-Bresson in
the 1950s encouraged her
to follow photography as a
career, starting as she meant
to go on by taking pictures of
Albert Einstein. Since then she
has photographed and often
made friends with many of the
world’s most famous people.
She dined with
Eleanor Roosevelt,
socialised with Edith
Piaf and discussed
supporting abused
Bangladeshi women
with Indira Gandhi
after the war there.
Other notable subjects
include Joanna
Lumley, Twiggy,
Sir David Frost
and Sir Richard
Attenborough.
Marilyn has worked
internationally as a
photo-journalist doing
features, portraits and
fashion for Vogue,
Harpers/Queen,
BBC Arts Features,
The Observer, International
Herald Tribune and many other
international publications.
As few women were working
as photo journalists in Britain
in the early 60s when she
came to live in England, her
work helped pave the way for
today’s generation of women
photographers.
In the preface to Marilyn’s
book on Lebanon, “Silent
Stories” (see page 10), writer
and Prix Goncourt winner Venus
Khoury-Ghata says, “Marilyn
takes photographs in ways that
another person might write.
Her photographs are mini
stories…”
In 2013 Marilyn was awarded
an Arts Council grant for her
retrospective exhibitions in
London, Arundel Museum,
Shoreham (Shoreham Wordfest/
Brighton Photo Fringe) and
Worthing (International
Women’s Day 2014 with
Women’s Hub). Many of her
pictures have been archived
in such prestigious collections
as The Jean Muir Museum in
Scotland, St Martins School of
Fashion and The Royal Institute
of British Architects.
6
Teeth checked. Eyes checked.What about your hearing?Get your FREE Hearing Test Today!
Ferring Hearing Centre, 32 Ferring Street, Ferring, BN12 5HJTel: 01903 500636 www.ferringhearingcentre.co.uk
Opposite the Library, free parking in front. Open Saturday mornings. Full Disabled Access.
The Friends of Worthing Hospitals are a long establishedregistered charity, formed in 1949 working for the benefit of patients, relatives and staff in the Worthing Hospitals. We provide medical and non-medical items to enhancethe patients care, comfort and stay in our local health carehospitals. Our funding is mainly from bequests, donationsour shop, members subscriptions and fund raising.
We aim to supplement the comfort and well being ofPatients, Relatives, Staff and Visitors in the 3 local trusts we support:
Our shop has moved from the West wing to the mainreception area. It is open Monday to Friday from 7am to7.30pm and Saturday from 8am to 5.30pm
The trolley shop provides service on the wards.
Join us and support our work. Help us to make a difference and make YOUR hospital special.
Membership of The Friends of Worthing Hospital costs aslittle as £5 per year.
A Welcome Break for CarersThe Welcome Break aims to provide carers with theopportunity to take a break. While the person being
cared for enjoys a sociable morning of activity, the carer can take time out at home or in town.
We enjoy outings to places of interest in the area.Recently we've been to Broadbridge Heath and
Portsmouth historic Dockyard, The Bluebell Railwayand other places of interest.
The group is based at 9-13 Crescent Road, Worthingand we meet Tuesdays and Thursdays
10.00am – 3.30pm.
Contact The Welcome In on 01903 234497 for more information www.worthingsalvationarmy.org.uk
Welcome InWorthing Community Programme
It’s more than just hearingThere’s a link to memory loss and other health problems
For most of our lives, if we are sensible, we have one or two dental checks a year. If we have glasses we will
get our eyes checked every other year. Yet how many of us think about taking up the offer of a free hearing test?
Angie McConnell of Ferring Hearing Centre explains, “It may just be that you don’t hear as well as before, but recent studies have shown that as the extent of hearing loss increases, so may the risk of developing dementia.
Hearing loss is a gradual process and the knock-on effect can mean you avoid social occasions as you can hear people speaking but cannot process the words that have been said. Equally if you are having to strain to hear people or the TV,
your brain is focusing on trying to hear and has less chance of remembering the content of the conversation or programme.
Hearing professionals have long been aware of the negative effects of untreated hearing loss – including social isolation. Further studies have found that individuals who used hearing aids reported improvements in many areas including their relationships with friends and family members, self-confidence, social life and self esteem. Identifying and treating hearing loss sooner rather than later may have far-reaching benefits of reducing the risk for developing Alzheimer’s or other forms of dementia and maintaining a good quality of life – for life.
Complimentary hearing tests are carried out in a sound-proofed booth at Ferring Hearing Centre or in the privacy of your
home if it is difficult for you to get out. You have nothing to lose – we can reassure you if
nothing is wrong or enable you to learn the options if you do have a hearing problem.
Caring 4 You 7
At Sixty Plus With Us we have
fun with craft. We provide
specialist craft sessions for
older people in Sussex.
There’s something to suit
everyone – from jewellery
making to needle felting and
everything in between.
We host group sessions
in care/nursing homes, in
sheltered housing complexes,
in our open community
groups, or even in your own
home on a 1:1 basis. We
even arrange craft parties
to celebrate your special day
with friends or family.
We’re a friendly small team
with many years’ experience
in supporting older people
and sharing the joy of
creative activity, along with
the many benefits that being
creative can bring:
• Socialinclusion–joinin
with a group, chat and meet
new friends
• Moodboosting–createin
a supportive and positive
environment
• Relaxing–immerseyourself
in a therapeutic craft
activity
• Physicalhealthbenefits–
boost your fine motor skills
and keep joints moving
• Learnsomethingnew–
many projects available –
choose from our extensive
‘Craft Menu’
We put you first, and treat
everyone individually, offering
help and support when you
need it, how you need it.
Staff are fully CRB checked,
referenced and qualified in
Health & Social Care.
We carry specialist equipment
to make creativity easier – and
our quotes cover all materials.
If you are an establishment, we
also provide Outcomes Reports
which are useful evidence for
client files and for inspections.
Call us now for a friendly chat
and a no obligation quote on
07766 310384 No artist
ic
ability
required!
Suitable for
beginners
Request a
copy of our
craft menu
today
Sixty Plus With Us, 6 Elm Road Portslade, East Sussex BN41 1SA
Tel: 07766 310384 www.sixtypluswithus.co.uk
Like us on Facebook at ‘SixtyPlusWithUs’ Follow us on Twitter ‘@sixtypluswithus’
Craft sessions for older people in Sussex
8 Caring 4 You
Your home could be sold to fund care home fees
“We have worked hard all our lives to leave something for our children and grandchildren. Why should the Local Authority get it all?”
If you have to go into care and
you have assets that total more
than £23,250 (including the
value of your home), you will
have to fund your care in full.
A care home could cost to £600-
£1,000 a week or more. The
reality is that your children could
end up with very little. Although
care might seem only a distant
possibility right now, there are
important steps you should take
now to protect your home.
Married Couples If you and your husband/wife
currently have ‘Mirror Wills’
or ‘Joint Wills’ you risk leaving
your share of your home
to your husband/wife for it
simply to be swallowed up in
care home fees. A legal trust
arrangement within your Will
could save your family tens
of thousands of pounds and
ensure your hard earned wealth
passes to those you choose.
Widowed/Single The options available to you to
protect your home are fewer
and it is vital you act now.
“I’m protected, I’ve signed my
house over to my children”
Have you considered what
will happen if your child/
For a free informal consultation at home, or for more information, call Glenys Laws on 01903 200982 or 07931 512448
children experience marital
difficulties and your home forms
part of a divorce settlement?
What will happen if your child/
children experience financial
difficulties and enter bankruptcy?
Did you know that Capital Gains
Tax is payable on second homes,
meaning a potentially huge tax
bill when your home is eventually
sold by your children?
It’s not too late to put it right – just contact us for advice.The good news is that by
arranging your legal affairs
in advance, you can plan and
protect your home and savings
to ensure that you pass as much
as possible to your loved ones.
It pays to plan in advance, says Glenys Laws at CLS
• Available 8.00am – 11.00pm 7 days a week
• Personal Care
• Assistance with getting up and going to bed
• Preparing and cooking meals
• Assistance with shopping
• Daily visits available
• Accompanied trips out and activities outside the home
• Respite for carers
West Sussex Dementia Care & Support Service
For more information phone 01903 26266627 Stone Lane, Worthing, West Sussex BN13 2BAwww.alzheimers.org.uk Alzheimer’s Society – South East England
Thanks to recent exposure in the media – with soap storylines and news items from celebrities – Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia are no longer the misunderstood, taboo and needlessly embarrassing topics
they once were.The confidence of those
experiencing or caring for people with dementia has strengthened to a large extent because of the work of Alzheimer’s Society. The charity champions the rights of people living with dementia and the millions of people who care for them and supports people to live well with dementia today and funds research to find a cure for tomorrow.
Alzheimer’s Society’s West Sussex Coastal office, at 27 Stone Lane, Worthing offers a range of services for people living with dementia.
West Sussex Dementia Support Service, dementia support workers offer information and practical guidance to help people understand dementia, live with day to day challenges and prepare for the future. Also provides support groups for carers with activity groups for people with dementia running alongside them.
The Centre Club provides a range of activities to promote physical and mental well-being for people diagnosed with dementia at an early age (under 65) and operates on Tuesdays and Thursdays within a familiar and safe environment. Alz Café, for younger people with dementia their carers families and friends, bi-monthly, the cafes provide an opportunity for people to relax, socialise,
meet other people living with dementia and get much needed support in an informal and comfortable setting.
The Dementia Care and Support Service, home care, providing flexible personalised and friendly one-to-one care and support registered with the Care Quality Commission.
The registered manager will work with you to assess your needs and discuss the choices available. Over the past 20 years the service has developed ways to deal with complex needs of those with dementia and their carers, including respite options. Everything is tailored to your own special wishes and needs.
As one client says, “My mother gets to see another person she can trust and socialise with on the visits. And I have advice
and support if things get too difficult.”
All the highly skilled home support workers receive specialist training enabling those they visit to carry on with their lives at home, with personal care delivered in a dignified way. The service is available throughout the West Sussex Coastal area.
The team’s dedication to the standard and continuity of care has been recognised at the 2014 Great British Care Awards. They’ve won both the National Dementia Care Award and South East Dignity in Care Award.
If you have any questions about dementia or require information about services contact the Sussex Helpline on 01403 213017 between 9.30am – 4.30pm Monday – Friday with a call-back service offered outside these hours.
Are you living with dementia? There’s help and support available nearby
Caring 4 You 9
Indigo Restaurant, Ardington Hotel Steyne Gardens, Worthing BN11 3DZ
Private dining rooms are available – please call to discuss
Please call 01903 230 451 to make your reservation
www.indigorestaurant.info 6 hour car parking £2.50
Various other Tea Menus available upon request
Afternoon Tea, homemade scones, clotted cream and jam available everyday between 3 – 5pm £5.95
Full Afternoon Tea with piano, 2nd & 4th Wednesday of each month £12.50
It really is jolly good!The ArdingTon hoTel
AFTERNOON TEA AT
Railway Architecture
By Bill Fawcett
Published by Shire Books
Price £7.95 paperback
ISBN 978-0-74781-445-0
This is a perfect acquisition
for anyone who avidly follows
Michael Portillo’s railway
journeys. On every page you can
find pictures and information
about railway station buildings
from the majestic city terminus to
the smallest village halt, from the
1800s to the present. Bill Fawcett,
Behind The Counter
By Pamela Horn
Published by Amberley
Price £9.99 paperback
ISBN 978-1-84868-884-1
A well-researched history of
retail, from cottage-based
businesses, hawkers and
itinerants to supermarkets.
Here’s an excellent book for
those tracing the lives of
their ancestors, as it tells of
the changes and problems
encountered by successive
generations of proprietors,
workers and customers.
Throughout we find that, in
some respects, nothing changes.
Every new venture threatens
the livelihood of its predecessor,
just as the huge out of town
supermarkets and Internet
sales threaten small town high
streets today. We also learn of
the seven-year apprenticeships
for drapers, grocers and others,
enabling employers to pay
little or nothing – often just
supplying bed and board – with
no promise of work at the end.
Marilyn’s books are full of poignant photographs many with
their own stories captured on film.
Books by Marilyn Stafford
10 Caring 4 Books
a professional engineer, is a
keen conservationist.
ELECTION WORDSEARCH
Silent Stories – A photographic journey through Lebanon in the 1960s
Published by Saqi Books
London.
Stories in Pictures – a photographic memoir.
Forward by Simon Brett.
Limited edition for
Shoreham Wordfest 2014.
See Wordfest website for
details.
parliamenthustingssecret ballotconstituencyelectoratememberrotten boroughexit pollmajoritypocket boroughvotehunglandslidePM
07504 [email protected]
We aim to engage people of all ages and backgrounds in heritage and history by
supporting organisations of all types.
Adult LearningAfter school clubsAssembliesBreakfast clubsCampaignsConsultancyEducational EntertainmentExam PreparationResources
Outdoor EducationPlaysResearchShowsSummer schoolsTalksToursTrainingTripsWorkshops
Elections past and present in SussexWeird, wonderful and worrying facts
For many years until the Great
Reform Act of 1832, Sussex had
far more than its fair share of
representation in Parliament,
with tiny places like Steyning
and Bramber each voting in two
MPs at elections when huge
new industrial cities like Leeds
and Manchester had none.
In addition, Sussex had a
claim for helping to start the
whole concept of representative
democracy in Britain, with the
Battle of Lewes in 1275 leading
Simon de Montford to summons
representatives from all over
the country for the first time.
Sussex could also have
been the scene of a more
worrying first if we fast
forward from 1275 to the
1930s. The anglocentric right-
wing UKIP now have their
first parliamentary seats,
but back in the days of the
Blackshirts and Mosley’s
British Union of Fascists, the
extreme right wing had their
eyes on Worthing becoming
their likely first constituency.
Their would-be parliamentary
candidate, William Joyce told
an audience in Worthing in
1934 that he would thrash Lord
Winterton, the town’s Tory MP
at the forthcoming election.
Thankfully, the arrest of both
Mosley and Captain Charles
Bentinck-Budd, Worthing’s
fascist leader and town
councillor, for inciting riotous
behaviour, seems to have
scuppered his plans.
Joyce went on to be known
as the infamous ‘Lord Haw-
Haw’ who broadcast anti-
British propaganda from Nazi
Germany to his home nation
throughout the war, and as a
result was hanged by Britain in
1946 for treason.
Bramber’s MP in the early
1800s, unlike William Joyce,
was not only successful in
becoming one of the town’s
MPs, but also leader of a much
more noble movement than
the BUF.
We mean of course, William
Wilberforce, who eventually
led Parliament to abolish the
slave trade in 1807. There can
be little doubting his moral
compass, but his geographical
knowledge was perhaps a little
more questionable. A famous
tale tells how, when travelling
through Bramber, Wilberforce,
not knowing where he was,
asked a local. When told, he
replied: “Bramber? This must
be the place I’m member for!”
This seems very different to
today, when many cannot name
the MP who represents them.
Wilberforce’s time as MP
for Bramber was the time of
‘rotten’ and ‘pocket’ boroughs
where few or no electors in a
constituency meant election
results were often a foregone
conclusion. As Richard Childs
says in An Historical Atlas of
Sussex, elections were often
uncontested – so much so that
between 1734 and 1832 no
more than 190 out of England’s
489 seats in Parliament had
more than one person running
for election.
Steyning was one such place
where the number of electors
was small, leading to corruption
and allegations of voters being
brought in from outside the
borough. These ‘imported’ voters would apparently buy pots and
Kevin Newman – local historian, consultant, tour guide and teacher from local history and heritage support organisation All-Inclusive History – has been tasked with finding the most weird, wonderful and worrying election facts and stories to entertain historians, politicians, journalists, or even just quiz buffs attending the Sussex Elections Past & Present gameshow at The Ardington Hotel on Election Night.
Mid Sussex Election, South Street, Worthing 1910
kettles in the High Street and make a great show of doing so and boiling up with them to show they were inhabitants of Steyning. It would be great if the residents of Steyning were once again to get their pots and kettles out on show on May 7th, to resurrect this old tradition – at least it would make election day more entertaining and people visiting Steyning might get a nice cuppa.
However you spend election day, and whichever party you support, we hope you can join us in the Ardington in Worthing for our election night party.
All-Inclusive History organises
events, talks, tours and quizzes
for local organisations and
care homes. For details,
please contact Kevin Newman
07504 863867
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Caring 4 Voting 11
At Melrose, we understand that most people hope to stay independent in their own homes for as long as they can. Our expert and friendly team are able to make this possible for you with our attentive care and support.
Melrose Care gives you and your carers options, we ensure that you are able to choose where you receive your care and to what level you would like us to adapt this care to suit your needs.
Contact our friendly Home Care team to discuss your needs
“The carers who come to my home are wonderful!”
Diane HewardDomiciliary Care Co-ordinator
Louise BruceOwner
Liz SeymourCare Manager
• Companionship• Assistance with medicines• Assistance with travelling
to appointments
• Personal care• Housework• Shopping and light cooking• Respite services for carers
Our care at home service includes:
Tel: 01903 238338 • [email protected] • www.melrosecare.org.uk
Care at Home
Spring clean your legal & financial affairs
Having a ‘spring clean’ of your legal and financial papers is a positive step. It may be something you’ve been putting off, but spare a thought for your family who will be the ones left to sort out everything after you have passed away. The exercise could prove to be invaluable – it will definitely save time, and in some cases money, if your family has to employ professionals to assist with administering your estate.
Ten practical steps to dying tidily
1. Shred all out of date paperwork
2. Only keep tax records going back seven years
3. Store all passbooks, share certificates and deeds safely
4. Record usernames and passwords for your laptop/PC, mobile phone, online store accounts and subscriptions – securely, but where your family will find them
5. Ask someone to take on your pets
6. Buy a funeral plan and include details of your wishes in your Will
7. Tell your children where your Will is stored
8. De-clutter your house and loft and make gifts of unwanted items (i.e. charity)
9. Keep your address book up to date
10. MAKE A WILL and keep it up to date
Carry out these steps and enjoy the peace of mind that comes with knowing your affairs are in order.
For more information on the services offered at Spofforths or to make an appointment please contact Philip Lansberry on 01403 253 282 or email [email protected].
12
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84 Brighton Road, Worthing BN11 2EN. (Easy parking) Call 01903 231578 for a FREE brochure or visit www.russellsmobility.co.uk
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At any one time St Wilfrid’s
Hospice in Chichester cares for
around 200 people in the south
western part of West Sussex,
offering support to their families
and friends. In fact, since
opening in January 1987, they’ve
cared for over 13,000 local
people – yet they rely on public
support for 88% of the annual
running costs. This year they will
need just under £6.7 million.
One of their key areas of
support comes from 17 local
Supporter Groups, made up of
friends or colleagues who come
together to raise funds – last
St Wilfrid’s Hospice Supporter Groups Needs Your Helpyear totalling just over £60,000.
The Supporter Groups have
been helping the Hospice for
over 30 years – long before the
Hospice was even built – and
although the Groups remain
very successful, there’s a real
need for new members with
new ideas and new energy.
Could you spare some time to
join an existing Group or even
start one of your own with
friends or colleagues?
Fundraising activities range
from managing local collection
boxes and running raffles,
to organising events such
as quizzes, music and dance
events, coffee mornings,
shepherd’s pie lunches and
much more. If you can bring
some time, enthusiasm and
even new fundraising and event
ideas – whatever you would
like to organise – and bring
much-needed support to the
Hospice, they’d love to hear
from you. The Fundraising Team
Southbourne Supporter Group, near Chichester, raised over £800 at their Winter Supper last November, inspired by BBC TV’s ‘Allo ‘Allo Series.
at St.Wilfrid’s will provide you with advice and support
in return.
Call Julie Longman, Events and Community Manager
on 01243 755827 or email [email protected]
Caring 4 Services 13
Please feel free to call or pop in at anytime to experience the warmth and friendliness that is the Victoria Royal Beach
% 01903 24649912-16 Grand Avenue, Worthing, BN11 5AWwww.victoriaroyalbeach.co.uk
Victoria Royal BeachRESIDENTIAL CARE HOME
Visiting the National Archives
The National Archives at Kew in
London contains around 1000
years of nationally important
historical documents. Visiting
is a must for those of you who
have researched your family
history and want to take your
discoveries further.
Your first visit may be
daunting – many of us have
Nicola Sheeran writes about the exciting genealogical and historical world tucked away at the National Archives in London
seen the celebrities standing
outside the Archives on family
history television programmes.
I recommend their website –
www.nationalarchives.gov.uk
– for hints on what is necessary
before your first visit.
The Archives hold military
records – service history and
operational records – and
family records such as wills,
divorce papers and criminal
records. There are experts on
hand to help you with your
research.
A word of caution – you may
not always like what you find.
Divorce papers for a distant
relation showed a turbulent
relationship, with all of the
distressing details laid bare.
However, I managed to find my
grandfather’s recommendation
for an MBE from the Army
in WW2, as well as the
operational records for my
father’s RAF squadron when
he was a Leading Aircraftman
in Yorkshire, working on the
Halifax planes for Bomber
Command. Seeing the
documents first hand can be
extremely exciting, and a day
can pass by before you realise.
There’s a lovely café, open
to the public, a restaurant,
library, bookshop and The
Keepers Gallery museum which
contains the Domesday Book.
On a sunny day it’s an idea
to take a packed lunch and
sit in the attractive gardens.
A ten minute stroll from Kew
Gardens station, the National
Archives are a must for history
and family tree buffs.
Photo © Nicola Sheeran
14 Caring 4 Heritage
New Library at Abia Primary School
Local family run businessFREE Estimates • Full Aftersales Service
Friendly & Professional Advice
VISIT OUR SHOWROOM56 Crabtree Lane, Lancing, West Sussex BN15 9PJ
T: 01903 755995 E: [email protected]
wwwgaragedoorassociates.co.uk
Area OfficesBrighton: 01273 207567Chichester: 01243 629075Haywards Heath: 01444 451234Littlehampton: 01903 734334
* Free fitting* Free underlay* Free grippers
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10 Wallace Parade, Goring Road, Worthing, BN12 4AL
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Rustington BN16 3LN Tel 01903 77331954 High Street, Billingshurst RH14 9NY
Tel: 01403 783159
*Free offers apply to carpet sales only, minimum order value £200. Excludes remnants, vinyls, woodfloors and budget range carpets. Terms and conditions apply.
Uganda suffered twenty
years of war. The rebel army
destroyed communities, diseases
like malaria and HIV spread and
many families were broken and
unable to pay for education –
the future for their seriously
disadvantaged children seemed
hopeless.
Imara-Uganda Education Fund
found, despite everything, the
children have the energy and
enthusiasm to learn. Money
Imara-Uganda Education Fund
raised now enables thirty-six
beneficiaries to attend school.
“In 2009 our first target was
to help five beneficiaries in the
first year. With prayerful support
and generosity this jumped
to twenty-one.
In January 2012 seven
scholarship students were added
and each year the number
grows. Our commitment is to
maintain support throughout
their education, including
University.”
One success story involves
Jaspher, an orphan living with
his grandparents and younger
brother. They grow a few crops
around the simple mud hut
A Sussex-based group helping children to a better life
which is their home.
The Rebel Army captured
Jaspher. After two years being
forced to act as a porter, carrying
army loads from place to place,
Government forces rescued him.
Now 22, Jaspher is doing really
well at secondary school and
hopes to become a teacher.
In 2011 the Jill Sutton Prize, a
Disabled Person Scholarship, was
created, commemorating the life
of Jill Sutton. Two disabled girls
– Mercy and Lydia now have life
changing scholarships.
In 2014, Phase 1 (Library) of
our new build Resource Centre
Project opened and Phase 2
(IT Room) opens in 2015.
Book winners: Those who
won books kindly donated
by Graham Lelliott were
Mr M Rainer of Burgess
Hill, Mr M Hill of Brighton,
Mrs C Hall and P Randall of
Shoreham. Five runners-up
will also receive books.
Saturday 13th June is
Worthing Churches Homeless
Project’s annual Flag Day
collection where volunteers
spread across Worthing
Town Centre, Goring, Findon
and Broadwater. There
will be live music at two
locations in the town centre.
To volunteer call 01903
286480 or email
To contribute or hold a fund raising event please contact Norman
Horsley MBE 01903 369523 [email protected] or visit
www.imara-ugandaeducationfund.co.uk
15
Dealers in fine philatelyCollections bought and sold or sell through our auction house70 Victoria Road, Worthing, West Sussex BN11 1UN (near Worthing Central Station)
Call Graham on 01903 [email protected]
Worthing Stamp AuctionsWorthing Stamp Auctions
GOOD QUALITY DONATIONS WANTEDContact 01903 286481 for collection
Thank you for caring about our clientswww.wchp.org.uk
Registered Charity No. 1027832
117 Montague Street, Worthing 26-28 Strand Parade, Worthing52 High Street, Littlehampton
James Perry Interiors
01903 504760 or 07941 553643www.jamesperryinteriors.co.uk
Quality Floor SandingCommercial & Domestic
Sanding & Restoration of wood floorsFree estimates
Worthing LionsGood quality donations wanted
Bring us your used spectacles for re-cyclingJOIN WORTHING LIONS TO HELP YOUR LOCAL COMMUNITY
Worthing Lions Club Charity Shop115 George V Avenue, Goring (opposite post office) Tel: 01903 502807. We can collect and deliver locally
QUALITY HI-FI SEPARATES WANTED
GOOD CASH PRICES PAIDTurntables, Amplifiers, Reel to Reels, Speakers etc.
Can collect!
We are a small husband and wife team based on the Surrey/Hants Border
[email protected] 07890 517695 or 01420 472316
records and cds orevolutions Records wanted
We buy most records including classical, Jazz,50s, 60s, 70s, Rock and Pop, LPs, EPs, 45s and 78s, sheet music & music memorabilia
Leslie Laine Top Floor, 67 Victoria Road, Worthing
Tel: 01903 209553
ONE TO ONE COMPUTER TRAININGFor all standards & ages (especially over 50s)
Learn to use a computer at your pace in your home
Learn to email friends and familyHelp with buying your computer Manage your digital photosAdvise on and set up broadbandSolve i-pod, i-phone, i-pad issuesLearn how to use the internet
Social Networking, (Facebook, FriendsReunited, Twitter)
Learn about on-line shopping, mobile phones, Kindle, Skype, E-bay, Coupons
Troubleshoot problems
Call Julie Knott for more info on 07914 361542
Zebedee’s Pet Supplies
137 South Farm Road, Worthing. 01903 200008
Caring, friendly expert advice Competitive prices (qualified in animal care)
Free delivery service FREE PARKING
Hannah welcomes animal lovers to her small family business offering:
Pop in and take a look: Monday to Saturday 10-4pm. Wednesdays 10-2pm
SEA PLACE GARAGECar Sales (Part Exchange welcome) • MOTs • Service • Parts and Repairs
Welding • Bodywork • Valeting • See website for car listing
67/69 Goring Road Worthing BN12 4AX Tel: 01903 242389www.seaplacegarage.co.uk • A FAMILY RUN BUSINESS
Freelance Hair DesignerMobile service in and around Brighton,Hove, Shoreham, Southwick, Lancingand Worthing.
Call Kristina on 01273 383911 or 07974 358322
• Cutting• Colouring• Highlights
• Wedding• Prom• Childrens’ hair
16 Caring 4 Directory
Visit the day-time café to enjoy a breakfast, lunch or have a relaxing evening drink watching the sunset over Worthing.
This multi-purpose venue is perfect for weddings, balls and corporate events. Fully licensed bar.Enjoy the best views on the South Coast.
For bookings or more information phone 01903 366017 www.worthingpier.co.uk [email protected]
Opening Times: 7 days a week. 11.30am – late.Coals and wood ovens lit all day.Telephone 01903 20201220 Portland Road, Worthing BN11 1QN
www.protorestaurantgroup.com
17
Dr Sarah Honess trained in Medicine at King’s College, London, and moved to Worthing in 2003, where she trained in Anaesthetics and Intensive Care. She now works at the Accident and Emergency Department at Brighton Hospital.
Clapham Lodge is a care home for the elderly,surrounded by a large garden and far reachingviews across ofcountryside and the sea from almost all roomsand flats.
We provide a high quality of care with a homelyenvironmentensuring wellbeingand comfort at all times. Short or long staywelcome.
Call for brochure or visit us at anytime: 01903 [email protected] www.claphamlodge.co.uk
Unless you’ve been living with the Amish, you won’t have escaped the news coverage this winter about Emergency Medicine, Accident and Emergency Departments and the ‘pressures’ or ‘crisis’- depending on what you read- therein.
I couldn’t really miss the opportunity to tell it like it is. You’ll be hearing a lot more about all this in the next few months as politicians of various flavours vie for your votes, using our NHS as the football. As usual.
No one goes into Emergency Medicine for an easy life, a fast buck or glory. It’s a tough specialty. Of course I am biased but I happen to think it is the best job in the world. It’s a bit like having children. Sometimes it’s inexplicably exhausting, totally infuriating, there are a lot of bodily fluids, jangled nerves and tantrums, but the rewards are huge, second to none.
We are, in a sense victims of our own success. I remember the pre 4-hour-target days. People did wait on trolleys or in the waiting room all night. The public now expects and deserves better than that. People don’t always make the wisest treatment choices which means we do spend a lot of time seeing problems that do not remotely constitute emergencies. But people want seeing, and they want seeing now. I do understand. Why would you run the gauntlet of the GP receptionist’s impertinently personal interrogation for
hours on the phone (I’ve had less difficulty booking a table at a Gordon Ramsay restaurant), only to be offered an appointment in 2 weeks- you’ll be dead or better by then- when you can just walk in to any A&E, no questions asked, and be sorted in less than 4 hours? And even supposing you try to do the right thing and phone 111 (don’t start me off), people often find they are carted off by ambulance, when all they wanted was some sensible advice. When I was a kid, an ambulance in the street was a very bad sign. Mrs Moggins probably wasn’t coming home again.
There are often failings in other services too. If an elderly person attends later in the evening, with little or no social support and we cannot guarantee getting them home safely- there is no ambulance transport at night- then we have to admit to hospital. Hundreds of acute hospital beds are occupied by people with social, rather than health needs. This is because Health and Social care budgets cannot provide the support our increasingly elderly population needs. It’s not a flying visit or two by a harassed carer that’s really going to help.
If folk cannot be discharged at one end, then it stands to reason in a closed system of finite bed numbers, we cannot admit at the other. You’ll have heard a lot about the failings of the Emergency Department.
The reason this makes us so mad is that it is rarely true. It’s a problem of ‘flow’ through the department that leads to delay. Most of our patients will have been seen, treated and either discharged or referred to an inpatient team well within 4 hours. They might still be there 6 hours later because we cannot move them to a ward. Our problem? Yes. Our fault? No.
I feel our MPs are kicking the NHS around to serve their own
purpose and that depresses me. Yet vote I will, because people died and chained themselves to railings so that I can. Because millions of people around the world would love to and can’t, and because not voting as an act of ‘civil disobedience’ à la Russell Brand is indistinguishable in practical terms from just sitting at home in a onesie, too apathetic to go out and vote for something.
Dr Sarah’s Party Political Broadcast by the Common Sense Party
Keep your ticker pucker
Heart-related conditions can
be worrying and stressful – and
that’s not really helpful. So it’s
good to know you can turn to
someone who understands and
can give advice.
Cardiac Rehabilitation
Support West Sussex (CRSWS)
aim to address needs of West
Sussex patients who suffer, or
are recovering, from a cardiac
condition – as well as helping
their families or carers, by
providing support, advice and
information.
As a registered charity,
they work with Worthing
& Southlands NHS Trust to
help run exercise classes for
heart patients and provide
a ‘buddy’ support service
run by former patients. They
have funds to help NHS
staff, local organisations and
individuals tackle heart disease,
for example, by providing
defibrillators for local fitness
trainers, paying for NHS nurses
and physiotherapists to go on
specialist training courses and
making sure that up-to-date
leaflets are available free for
cardiac patients.
CRSWS Trustee, Geoffrey
Taylor says, “We raise money
to help local people who have
heart disease. So, if you, or
someone you know, could
benefit from our help or just
someone to talk to about it, we
would love to hear from you”.
It’s easy to access this help.
For information visit www.
cardiacrehabsupport.org.uk or
call Hayley Fairclough, Cardiac
Rehab Senior Physiotherapist,
on 07765376618.
If you or your organisation
deal with heart patients and
would like to know how to
apply for a grant to help you,
visit www.cardiacrehabsupport.
org.uk or write to: The
Trustees, Cardiac Rehab
Support West Sussex, Cardiac
Rehab Dept., Southlands
Hospital, Shoreham-by-Sea,
West Sussex BN43 5TQ.
Cardiac Rehab Support West Sussex helps heart patients in West Sussex
(Views expressed are Dr Sarah’s personal opinion)
18 Caring 4 Health
‘The alternative, highly affordable answer to secure, assisted
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Just the right balance of comfort, warm companionship and practical support.
Whether looking for yourself or a relative, call Wendy our General Manager to find out more about our all inclusive, alternative solution to retirement living.
01903 208665 Office address: Seascapes, 8 Southey Road, Worthing, BN11 [email protected] www.abbeyfield-worthing.co.uk
Seascapes 10 rooms all fully en suite, some with
balconies overlooking the gardens. There is a small lift serving the rear of the house.
Close to shops, buses, surgery and seafront.
Beachside 9 rooms all fully en suite. There is a house lift
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shops and a stone’s throw from the sea.
• We are NOT a Care, Nursing or Warden Assisted Home• There is NO up front purchase or investment involved• Our not for profit organisation provides an all inclusive, affordable alternative• Offering security within a friendly and happy community • Independent living in light and airy en suite accommodation • Forget about the worries of running your own home • Relax knowing there is a resident House Manager• Bring your own treasured possessions and favourite furniture• Come and go as you please and enjoy our delicious home cooking
Why are we an alternative?
Our lovely Worthing homes ...
Abbeyfield.Worthing
19
274301 St Wilfs MAWF A4 Caring4Sussex Advert.indd 1 11/03/2015 14:10