Farnham Workhouse Burials

Thanks to Marion Bridger’s research we know that the following people who died in Farnham Workhouse were buried in St John’s Church, Hale:

Name Age Burial Date
John Stevens 17/06/1845
William John Flourday 05/09/1845
Unknown Man 09/10/1845
William Trimmings 75 years 05/01/1846
Ethel Brockhouse 81 years 27/01/1846
Harriet Bartlett 1 day old 03/03/1846
William Lovelock 79 years 02/05/1846
James Ellins 80 years 09/06/1846
Charles Hack 20 days old 11/06/1846
William Dudley 52 years 18/09/1846
Mary Franklyn 40 years 21/09/1846
William Weedon 69 years 28/10/1846
William Smith 46 years 12/11/1846
William Fountain 102 years 26/12/1846
Rose Anne Moore 27 years 04/01/1847
Mary Bartlet 40 years 08/02/1847
James Praddy 71 years 15/04/1847
Elizabeth Allen 3 months old 20/04/1847
Herbert Herd 83 years 03/07/1847
Thomas Fewtrell 78 years 16/08/1847
James White 6 weeks old 27/12/1847
John Warner 77 years 17/01/1848
John Baptist Garrett 54 years 11/02/1848
Maria Jones 36 years 19/02/1848
Michael Page 62 years 11/04/1848
James Steer 4 days old 03/07/1848
Charles Middleton 30 years 13/09/1848
Christiana Brown 58 years 01/01/1849
Thomas Harrison 8 years 03/02/1849
Mary Ann Wish 1 year old 27/03/1849
William Morris 1 month old 04/04/1849
Jane Grover 5 years old 08/05/1849
Thomas Allen 69 years 14/05/1849
Martha Dolman 74 years 02/07/1849
William Grover 21 years 02/07/1849
John Williams 03/08/1849
Mathew Hawkins 26 years 29/08/1849
Stephen Mathews 68 years 10/09/1849
James Paris 18/09/1849
Sarah Reen 39 years 19/10/1849
William Dolman 54 years 23/02/1850
William Boxall 92 years 26/03/1850
John Paggott 66 years 02/04/1850
James Bridger 74 years 22/06/1850
Mary Donovan 11 months old 05/07/1850
William Toad 46 years 19/08/1850
Anthony Kincher 82 years 24/09/1850
Daniel Prince 60 years 23/10/1850
George Pullinger 69 years 25/11/1850
Elizabeth Harris 73 years 03/12/1850
Mary Drinkwater 77 years 17/07/1851
Eleanor Bide 92 years 23/07/1851
Joseph Robinson 45 years 05/08/1851
Phebe Lunn 79 years 25/10/1851
Richard Bridger 23 years 13/01/1852
James Ramsgate 45 years 05/02/1852
Catherine Alderten 91 years 20/02/1852
Elizabeth Boxall 76 years 02/03/1852
Sophia Withall 28/05/1852
James Stagg 40 years 11/08/1852
James Dowling 20 years 15/09/1852
John Williams 65 years 09/10/1852
Ann Edwards 86 years 26/10/1852
James Smith 83 years 24/02/1853
Charles Hoodgen 63 years 09/03/1853
George Taylor 47 years 30/03/1853
Thomas Nichols 67 years 18/05/1853
Michael Smith 36 years 24/05/1853
Jesse May 62 years 10/06/1853
Elizabeth Coles 80 years 02/01/1854
William Martyn 82 years 11/02/1854
James Younge 58 years 21/06/1854
Harriet Woodyer 24 years 07/08/1854
John Compton 62 years 08/08/1854
William Hilton 3 months old 17/08/1854
Sarah Woodyer 1 year 7 months old 09/10/1854
George Woodyer 3 months old 17/10/1854
James Ellis 1 week old 23/10/1854
David Barham 73 years 09/11/1854
William Bridger 2 years 7 months old 14/11/1854
Mary Ann Chambers 7 months old 18/11/1854
Mary Ann Ruffin 31 years 09/12/1854
Eliza Skilling 26 years 15/12/1854
Mary Ewens 3 years 6 months old 30/12/1854
Sarah Deadman 86 years 27/01/1855
Emily Barfield 1 year old 02/02/1855
George Newman 81 years 24/02/1855
Thomas Bird 41 years 03/03/1855
James Hickery 86 years 05/03/1855
Maria Nash 2 years old 06/03/1855
George Moth 56 years 02/04/1855
Harriet Boxall 2 years old 11/04/1855
William Palmer 4 years old 11/04/1855
William Warner 81 years 14/04/1855
Thomas Stevens 1 year old 14/04/1855
Eliza Nash 4 years old 21/04/1855
Fanny Moorey 4 years old 26/04/1855
Richard Maunders 89 years 21/06/1855
James Samuel Slaughter 41 years 05/07/1855
Jane Herbert 07/08/1855
Georgiana Peters 2 years old 08/09/1855
Richard Newnham 14 years 02/10/1855
Catherine Dean 24 years 09/10/1855
John Bigwood 68 years 10/10/1855
Rebecca Clarke 26 years 20/10/1855
Henry Mansell 53 years 09/11/1855
Rebecca Johnson 42 years 16/11/1855
Mary Baker 80 years 24/03/1856
Catherine Pithers 60 years 28/03/1856
Elyah Granham 66 years 02/05/1856
James Elsleys 76 years 13/05/1856
George Green 71 years 15/05/1856
John Copus 63 years 16/05/1856
Eliza Savage 4 years old 26/05/1856
Emma Rapson 10 years old 11/06/1856
James Vicars 51 years 13/09/1856
James Brown 40 years 13/09/1856
Maria Higgins 22 years 15/10/1856
Sarah Mayhew 01/11/1856
Frank Lawrence 19 years 12/12/1856
Eliza Judge 3 years old 29/12/1856
John Aharan 28 years 29/12/1856
John Martin 63 years 05/01/1857
Levi Judge 4 years old 12/01/1857
Thomas Edward Mason 8 years old 12/01/1857
Edward King 48 years 02/02/1857
Lucy Edwards 18 years 13/02/1857
William Hickman 64 years 14/02/1857
Anne Gadd 68 years 21/03/1857
Martha Morris 92 years 06/04/1857
John Franklin 50 years 19/05/1857
Thomas Hill 59 years 26/05/1857
Ann Lamport 67 years 20/06/1857
Thomas Coles 24 years 01/07/1857
Elizabeth Newman 18 years 16/09/1857
Richard Davis 10 weeks old 24/09/1857
Emma Foot 19 years 02/10/1857
William Everett 1 year old 02/10/1857
Mary Ann Amison 19 years old 20/10/1857
Eliza Lovegrove 19 years 03/11/1857
Richard Heyes 29 years 03/11/1857
Emma Masters 18 years 01/12/1857
William Martin 5 days old 05/12/1857
Frank Dennis 55 years old 05/12/1857
William Gardener 57 years 18/01/1858
Jane Steer 36 years 26/01/1858
Charlotte Michener 20 years 26/01/1858
George Champion 24 years 02/02/1858
Rose Ann Morris 4 days old 06/03/1858
Susanna Thompson 32 years 12/03/1858
Mary Newman 67 years 27/03/1858
Eliza Downs 19 years 29/04/1858
Mary Duke 20/05/1858
Michael Butler 13 years 07/06/1858
John Thompson 19 years 14/06/1858
John Mathews 75 years 29/07/1858
Henry Martin 60 years 15/09/1858
Caroline Attfield 23 years 08/10/1858
Patrick Foran 33 years 13/10/1858
Arthur Knowles 87 years 20/10/1858
Ann Fuller 10 years old 10/11/1858
Mary Ann Edwards 1 year 10 months old 24/11/1858
Mary Ann Penfold 12 years old 23/02/1859
~~~~~~ Cooper 48 years 24/02/1859
Margaret Wareham 18 years 06/04/1859
John Keene 64 years 18/04/1859
George Knight 65 years 06/05/1859
Robert Thorn 64 years 19/05/1859
Sarah Eaton 23 years 20/05/1859
James Brown 37 years 11/06/1859
Susan Avis 20 years 07/07/1859
William Bedford 47 years 24/08/1859
George Gunner 28 years 17/12/1859
Richard Passey 50 years 24/12/1859
John Elliot 34 years 26/01/1860
Frederick Fitzroy Herbert Meakin 5 months old 04/02/1860
Jane Thompson 20 years 14/02/1860
Alexander Faulkner 3 months old 01/03/1860
Michael Egan 40 years 09/03/1860
Henry Grubb 55 years 30/03/1860
Jesse Risbridger 60 years 18/04/1860
Robert Walters 5 years old 16/05/1860
James Lamport 64 years 24/05/1860
Mary Worden 18 years 26/05/1860
George Kemp 60 years 29/05/1860
Joseph Craig 64 years 06/07/1860
Ann Jackson 22 years 14/08/1860
William Faithful 40 years 04/10/1860
Eliza Scarlett 20 years 11/10/1860
James Hack 75 years 29/10/1860
John Pharo 3 months old 30/11/1860
Ellen Clarke 22 years 03/12/1860
Jane Bonn 23 years 08/12/1860
Thomas Brown 63 years 23/02/1861
Sarah Muckle 24 years 26/02/1861
Elizabeth Riley 63 years 06/04/1861
Emma Jones 24 years 15/04/1861
Jane Gray 24 years 16/04/1861
Elizabeth Ledley 24 years 29/06/1861
William French 20 05/07/1861
Emma Gallagher 15/08/1861
James Binfield 70 years 29/08/1861
Elizabeth Bandell 25 years 09/09/1861
Charlotte Seyman 21/09/1861
Henry Askew 24 years 28/10/1861
William Clarke 34 years 02/11/1861
Stephen Best 22 years 19/11/1861
Ellen Aslett 22 years 04/12/1861
William Trimlade 2 years only 20/12/1861
Peter O’Hare 31 years 03/01/1862
Henry Williams 36 years 22/01/1862
William Howell 11 months only 30/01/1862
Catherine Mc’Dermott 10/02/1862
George Lyons 48 years 05/03/1862
Jane Martin 21 years 06/03/1862
Richard Crawford 80 years 22/03/1862
George Trussler 21 years 01/04/1862
John Barrett 61 years 02/04/1862
Richard Ashett 50 years 10/07/1862
Mary Full 24 years 25/07/1862
Sarah Maria Collins 20 years 04/08/1862
Sarah Evans 20 years 11/11/1862
Edward Palmer 42 years 25/11/1862
Ann Balchin 63 years 01/12/1862
Maria Cutler 21 years 04/12/1862
Sophia Hathan 65 years 13/12/1862
Eli Beacher 49 years 17/12/1862
Eliza Serace 20 years 09/01/1863
William Coxhead 57 years 02/02/1863
Robert Kelmaster 09/02/1863
Mary MacDonald 22 years 28/02/1863
Joseph Saunders 86 years 13/03/1863
Martha Alkins 71 years 21/03/1863
Clara Golden 29 years 27/04/1863
Emma Townsend 20 years 02/05/1863
James Bason 52 years 17/06/1863
Mary Ann Robinson 23 years 27/06/1863
John Ryan 22 years 23/07/1863
Josiah Gowland 50 years 29/07/1863
Peter Hughes 84 years 25/08/1863
Jane Everett 26 years 19/09/1863
Henry Blackall 34 years 23/09/1863
Eliza Osborne 23 years 29/09/1863
Mary Ann Phillimole 62 years 09/10/1863
Frederick William Sargent 5 years only 16/11/1863
Elizabeth Baigent 18 months old 20/01/1864
John McKenzie 3 years old 04/02/1864
Alfred Mould 34 years 15/02/1864
Eliza Eady 22 years 20/02/1864
William Savage 4 years old 24/02/1864
Robert Mausey 2 years only 14/04/1864
Emma Weeks 20 years 03/06/1864
Emily Simmons 1 year 4 months only 15/06/1864
Ellen Ellis 20 years 13/07/1864
John Lewis 62 years 20/07/1864
Mary Ann Clerk 23 years 02/08/1864
Elizabeth Boundey 20 years 03/08/1864
Mark Vickars 52 years 15/08/1864
Richard Summers 42 years 02/09/1864
Tom Brown 18 years 08/10/1864
Mary Anne Hearne 33 years 29/10/1864
Lydia Williamson 28 years 30/11/1864
Benjamin Andrews 84 years 07/12/1864
Benjamin Lucas 63 years 08/12/1864
Thomas Cook 40 years 09/12/1864
Henry Weeden 70 years 23/12/1864
Emma Heath 26 years 19/01/1865
Lazarus Roberts 76 years 13/03/1865
Emma Noel 38 years 22/03/1865
Mary Ann Rogers 39 years 01/04/1865
Frederick William Clear 21 months only 01/04/1865
Mary Tapley 84 years 06/04/1865
Mary Ann Sargent 38 years 08/04/1865
William Stock 3 years only 03/06/1865
Henrietta Granett 24 years 09/08/1865
Mary Ann Beal 23 years 05/09/1865
Henry Johnson 29 years 17/10/1865
William Knight 75 years 16/11/1865
William Oates 5 years only 16/11/1865
Catherine Green 32 years 18/12/1865
Louisa Norgrove 70 years 29/12/1865
Rachel Cooper 40 years 16/01/1866
Aaron Mallett 19 years 17/01/1866
Martha Curtis 42 years 01/02/1866
Thomas Anderson 65 years 09/02/1866
Mary Brown 74 years 13/02/1866
Eliza Pownex 30 years 20/02/1866
Elizabeth Cumber 30 years 21/02/1866
George Hays 43 years 01/03/1866
Ann Lee 19 years 12/03/1866
Ellen Hill 24 years 19/03/1866
Henry Sandle 12 years only 26/03/1866
Ann Elizabeth Punter 43 years 13/04/1866
John Wheatley 33 years 25/05/1866
Richard Smith 58 years 02/06/1866
Joseph Cook 57 years 09/06/1866
Ann Browning 45 years 11/09/1866
George Jewers 47 years 30/11/1866
William Gummell 68 years 23/01/1867
Alice Harriett Sargent 41 years 22/03/1867
William Henry Gough 5 months only 02/09/1867
David Barnes 17 years 06/01/1868
Charles Draper 79 years 09/01/1868
William Stubble 9 months only 28/02/1868
Thomas Green 2 years only 28/02/1868
James Stovold 54 years 13/03/1868
Charles Cranham 7 months only 04/04/1868
Charles Mearing 36 years 21/07/1868
Henry Eden 2 days only 16/09/1868
James Painter 18 years 16/11/1868
Richard Williams 2 weeks only 26/12/1868
George Kenton 70 years 20/01/1869
Sarah Ellen Gains 9 weeks only 05/02/1869
Elisha Everdell 10 months only 13/02/1869
David Spearman 46 years 17/02/1869
Albert C Everdell 2 years 2 months only 21/05/1869
Charles Grinham 2 years 03/09/1869
Jane Pettett 24 years 06/01/1870
Rebecca Simms 51 years 27/09/1870
Frederick Hart 49 years 28/12/1871
Sarah Harriet King 4 months only 12/01/1872

An invitation to our 175th birthday service

 

Come to a 175th birthday service at St John’s Church, on Sunday, November 24, at 9.30am, bringing to a climax several months of celebration.

Everyone is invited to join in a celebratory service, marking 175 years since the church was consecrated in November 1844, and just as a bishop, Charles Sumner, was at the first service, so a bishop will be at this service 175 years later. The Rt Rev’d Andrew Watson, Bishop of Guildford, will lead the service and preach, and the Archdeacon of Surrey, the Ven Paul Davies will also be there, along with former clergy and members of the congregation.

There will be traditional, favourite hymns, a Communion service and afterwards birthday cake and a chance to reminisce about the past and look forward to the future.

Join us on November 24 at 9.30am, at St John’s Church, GU9 9AB, to celebrate the past and look forward to the next 175 years.

 

Picture by http://www.post19.com

Join us on a Journey to Bethlehem

As the schools break up this Christmas, everyone is invited to join ‘A Journey to Bethlehem’ – a short re-enactment of the journey Mary and Joseph took to Bethlehem on the first Christmas, complete with angels, shepherds, kings and even a couple of donkeys.

On Friday, December 20, at 7pm, two groups of adults and children will make their way from St Mark’s Church in Upper Hale and from St George’s Church in Badshot Lea, to St John’s Church, Hale. Among the groups will be shepherds, angels, kings, donkeys, Mary, Joseph and Baby Jesus, and on the way they will meet more members of the traditional Nativity cast, including an innkeeper with no room at the inn, and a star to guide them.

Everyone is invited to join them on the route and to join in the carol singing as they go.

The two groups will converge on St John’s Church for a short service at 7.30pm, followed by refreshments.

Hannah Moore said: “This will be a lovely start to the Christmas holidays for children and adults alike. Come and join us as we remember the journey that Mary and Joseph had to make, and Jesus’s humble birth when God came to earth in human form. Another name for Jesus is ‘Emmanuel’ which means ‘God with us’ and that is just what this Christmas story is all about.”

Everyone is invited to arrive at either St Mark’s or St George’s at 6.30pm, ready to leave at 7pm and make their way to St John’s at the bottom of the Upper Hale Road. Children are particularly encouraged to wear nativity costumes with suitable footwear for winter weather. There will be marshals but please also bring torches to light the way.

Picture above ©anyka6 via Canva.com

 

 

Journey to Bethlehem front

‘When I hear The Last Post I think of him’

St John’s Church, Hale, was packed on Saturday night when people of all generations gathered for the Farnham Festival of Remembrance, to pay tribute to all who have suffered and died in armed conflict and to pray for peace in a divided, war-torn world.

The Festival featured the Royal British Legion and other representatives of the armed forces in the form of A Company, 4th Battalion, Princess of Wales’ Royal Regiment; the Sea Cadets of TS Swiftsure1 Battalion Aldershot Army Cadet Force; and 229 (Farnham) Squadron Air Training Corps.

Civilians were represented by the Mayor of Farnham, Cllr Pat Evans; the British Red Cross; St John Ambulance; the Guides; and three local schools – Badshot Lea Infant School, William Cobbett Primary School and Farnham Heath End School.

Music was provided by Farnham Brass Band; TS Swiftsure; the combined Parish choir; Frances Whewell; Wendy Edwards; Liv Jasper;  Sara Burnie; and Dexter and Archie Dedalo-Skilton, Kyle Manson-Hing and Paris McCann, all extraordinarily talented musicians from Farnham Heath End School.

Narration was by Town Crier Jonathan Jones; and a service was led by Rev’ds Hannah Moore and John Morris, with additional reading by Bob Skinner, one of the leaders of Weybourne Community Church. The whole festival had been organised by Simon Alexander, to whom huge thanks and praise must go.

Each brought to the occasion a unique element, from the stirring percussion of the Sea Cadets to the moving tribute of the member of the Army reserve who spoke of his friend ‘Socks’ (so called because one time he forgot his socks when he was deployed) who was killed in Afghanistan. “When I hear The Last Post I think of him” he said.

There was the thoughtful poetry from William Cobbett pupils, the solemnity of the moment when the Guides processed in with the Torch of Remembrance, accompanied by Liv Jasper singing When the Lights Go On Again. There was so much more, including heart-rending poetry from World War One; a simple and beautiful poppy installation by children from Badshot Lea Infant School; memories of World War Two; and the building of a drum altar, draped with the Union Flag and the standard of the Royal British Legion, and topped with a Book of Remembrance of local people who had died in World War Two.

Intertwined with this was the sense that peace is a fragile thing and we must never stop striving and praying for it. In Aftermath, written by Siegfried Sassoon in the year after the end of the ‘war to end all wars’, Bob Skinner read the line: “Do you ever stop and ask, ‘Is it all going to happen again?’”

The young people sharing in the festival and receiving the gift of remembrance from older generations, seemed aware that this gift was a responsibility too and that the hope of peace lay in their hands as much as anyone else’s.

Above all, as prayers were said in front of the drum altar, there was an understanding that , however dark the world is, the suffering God is there in the midst of the darkness.

“Have you forgotten yet?…
Look up, and swear by the green of the spring that you’ll never forget.”
                                                                                    (Siegfried Sassoon, March 1919).

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Lights, craft, action – Christmas kicks off in Badshot Lea

The Christmas lights are being  switched on in Badshot Lea on the evening of Monday November 18th, in preparation for celebrating the coming of God to earth in the form of Jesus, born some 2000 years ago but ever relevant and transformative.

Come and join us at St George’s Church, Badshot Lea, from 4.30-7pm. Not only are the lights going on, there will be a craft fair in the church and, outside from 5-6.30pm, community singing and entertainment by the Sea Cadets and the children of Badshot Lea Infant School.

There are still some craft tables left. If anyone would like one, let us know by email. And come along and do some Christmas shopping, have a sing and get into the Christmas spirit.

 

Picture by Markus Spiske on Unsplash.

Prayer – what is the point?

Yesterday we came across a blog post by Jonathan Clatworthy who writes on God, philosophy, theology and ethics, and it was so useful we wanted to share it. You can find the original here at

but to save you the effort of clicking, here it is below (but do click on his website; there are plenty of other great posts too).

Is there any point in praying?

I actually believe in praying, but not for the reasons many people give. The Christian tradition offers different, and often conflicting, accounts of how to do it and what to expect from it.

This post offers my way of trying to make sense of it.

Can it ‘work’?

At its most basic, praying is what people do when they are desperate. At the beginning of the Second World War, everybody prayed. Even atheists prayed. If there is anyone up there, please please please!

To ask whether it works is to look for evidence. Some researchers ask people what they prayed for and whether it happened. These studies can produce interesting results, but they don’t prove anything.

Others say the opposite: praying can’t work because it’s mumbo-jumbo. Superstition. Unscientific. This is equally unprovable. It’s an echo of that nineteenth-century fantasy that scientists were going to find out everything about everything. If they did, it would follow that anything scientists couldn’t establish doesn’t exist. It’s over a century since scientists believed this. What they have shown is that the universe is far more complex than the human mind can understand. We’ve increased what we know, but what we don’t know has increased much faster. For all we know there may be any number of processes that our thoughts and prayers may trigger. We can’t prove anything, and perhaps that’s just as well.

In any case asking whether prayer ‘works’ is only looking at prayer at its most basic. It’s the prayer of the self-centred, knowing what they want. When we are self-centred, we can still pray. We can start with what we want, and ask God to let us have it. Sometimes we get what we want, even if we would have been better advised to want something different.

Relating to reality

Prayer is about relating to the wider reality, the big context of our lives. Christians call it ‘God’. For some people the word ‘God’ conjures up unhelpful images, but we are all aware that we live our lives in the context of a reality that is mostly way beyond our understanding.

Within the Bible and the Christian tradition, let alone outside it, people have imagined God in very different ways. For example, if we think of God as someone who punishes sinners, our praying will be about pleasing God so that we don’t get punished. If we think of God as a fighter attacking enemies, our praying will be about being on God’s side against the enemies.

In these cases our praying will really still be self-centred, wanting to be on the right side of God. These are examples of unhelpful images.

Prayer becomes more constructive when we adopt more constructive images – when we trust that the forces maintaining the universe, whether or not we call them ‘God’, are well-disposed towards us and want the best for us. This is the basis on which most faith traditions encourage forms of prayer that help us let go of our self-centredness. The aim is to reflect on the ‘big picture’ so as to expand our range of concerns beyond our individual selves, towards a ‘God’s-eye-view’ of reality.

Gratitude

From this perspective, prayer naturally begins with celebrating what we have received. A classic biblical way of putting it is that God has designed us to bless us, so that we flourish. God wants us to live fulfilled and happy lives, and wants everybody else to as well.

An easy way in to praying is to offer thanks for what we have got. Many people say grace at meal times. When you give birth to a baby, you feel thankful. At a funeral of a friend you feel thankful for that person’s life. Some people develop the practice of saying a quick ‘thank you’ to God through the day, whenever something happens that they are glad of. It means that, instead of focusing on what we haven’t got, we focus on what we already have, and express appreciation.

General intercession

There is also a lot that goes wrong. Humans can work towards the common good, but by nature we are also self-centred. We have been given freedom, if we so choose, to only care for ourselves at the expense of other people, or only care for our family at the expense of other families, or only care for our country at the expense of other countries, or only care for humanity at the expense of the environment.

So when we pray about the Amazon rain forest being burnt, or refugees looking for somewhere to live, we can take for granted our own point of view; but we can instead reflect on what God’s point of view might be like.

When we take for granted our own point of view, we can easily imagine we know what God should do. It’s as though we are treating God like a washing machine that doesn’t always work. We know what ought to happen: why doesn’t it? It’s as though we’ve got the intelligence and God has got the power.

Actually it’s the other way round: God has the intelligence and knows what needs to be done, but has given power away to us humans. So when things go wrong God could put aside the laws of nature, blitz the world and put things back the way they were. But that would mean taking away the freedom we have been given for our own good.

However much we might wish God intervened for us, we never see the whole picture. When we try to see it from God’s point of view, we ask ourselves: what would God want? Can we help?

Intercession for ourselves

When we’ve been personally hurt by other people – say, we’ve been injured by someone driving dangerously, or we’ve been sacked from work and have no money – our first thought might be to pray for God to put right what has gone wrong. We might want God to punish the other person.

When people hurt us, we naturally resent it. To pray well, we can spend time noticing our resentment, noticing that our resentment hurts us and doesn’t do any good, and allowing ourselves to distance ourselves from our negative feelings. We may not be able to put right what went wrong, but we can gradually practise the art of detaching ourselves from the feelings that distress us. It’s hard, but it can relieve us of emotional burdens.

So one aspect of praying is to allow time for God to show us what we would want if we saw the world through God’s eyes – inviting God to guide us in our wanting.

Confession

Just as other people hurt us, we also hurt others. We all mess up sometimes. Another part of praying is facing up to the faults in ourselves.

There is no point in just feeling guilty and miserable. The point is to be practical. We can change our own actions more easily than we can change anyone else’s. Our praying can reflect on what we can do about it. Sometimes we can put right something we’ve made a mess of, or give someone an apology. Sometimes it’s more a matter of recognising a habit in ourselves that we need to practise getting out of.

Adoration

Many mystics tell us that prayer at its best goes beyond all these, and lets go of all every agenda to just spend time with God. It’s a bit like spending time with someone you love deeply. You may talk to each other, but what you say is less important than just being with them.

Personally, I’m no good at it. In fact I’m no good at praying at all. But I can see the point. At its best, praying helps us expand our awareness away from the individual self-centredness that comes so easily, towards a God’s-eye-view and the common good.

A welcome for Ava and the new font

There was a sense of celebration in the air at St Mark’s Church, Hale, last Sunday. Not only was baby Ava being baptized, she was the first baby to be baptized in the new handcrafted font at the church.

Surrounded by family and friends, and with help from Ava’s big sister, six-year-old Mollie, Ava was welcomed into the family of God. Rev’d Hannah Moore reminded everyone that “Christ loves [Ava] and welcomes her into his Church” and baptized her in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, pouring water over her head. Ava barely stirred.

Mollie and the other children in the congregation had helped Hannah bless the water and were also delighted by the two small ducks – one marked ‘Ava’ the other ‘Mollie’ – which floated in the font.

Ava's Baptism 7

It was a joyful occasion and a fitting first use of the new, portable font.

The font is made of a beautiful, multicoloured glass bowl resting on a grey wrought iron stand similar to the iron work on the altar rails at the church.

The bowl was made by the Adam Aaronson glass studio and the stand by Cliff Madgwick of Hampshire Metalcraft and the work was commissioned and organised by Pat Manton from St Mark’s, a fine craftswoman herself.

 

 

 

 

A justifiably proud SHIP

“SHIP has been a lifeline to me and I’m sure many others”.

The SHIP in question is the Sandy Hill Inclusive Partnership, a combination of residents and professional groups involved with the community and with a vision to enable Sandy Hill to become a cleaner, safer place where there is a good sense of community and everyone can have a voice.

SHIP is based around the Hale Community Centre, formerly – and still often – known as The Bungalow, and its work reaches far into the streets around, drawing together families and individuals from across the estate.

A recent report of activities from December last year to summer this year indicates just what an impact the group is having, from 95 people going to the Princes Hall in Aldershot to their pantomime, 70 – including many new families – attending a Christmas party – and 50 coming over to St Mark’s Church to play games, have lunch and do craft at February half-term. There was a sold-out trip to Marwell Zoo, a visit to the beach, a craft event, basketball, a busy session of picking up litter followed by tea, a summer barbecue and lots of new relationships formed, including with St Mark’s where two joint events have now been held and more planned in the future. Other churches and the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community have also joined in events.

The report also emphasised that: “it’s not always about numbers but about the individual need of that person/family and the positive impact the activity may have on them at that time and this is not easy to measure”.

One of the groups involved with SHIP is WiSH – Women in Sandy Hill. These are the people who are responsible for the garden by and indeed inside the boat just outside the Community Centre, and they have also been taken part in craft activities, autism awareness, cake decorating, sensory bottle making, and are currently engaged in a 12-week Art for Wellbeing course (some of the work is shown below).

Wish art

Some extra outside recognition came this year when the results of South and South East in Bloom were announced in September. In the ‘Your Neighbourhood’ category, Hale Community Centre’s Get Growing Gardening project received a Level 4 Thriving award – progressing from Advancing in 2018.

Melissa, who chairs SHIP, said: “I am amazed by what SHIP has achieved and what individuals in the community have achieved. I have made friends, watched friends flourish and achieve new things and seen individuals go from knowing no-one locally to talking to others regularly and getting involved in community activities….We are proud of what SHIP has become and what it means to people on the estate. There is work to do and people to reach but I believe that Sandy Hill is somewhere to take your time and slowly things will flourish and we are seeing that.”

Coming up soon are more activities, including a Remembrance concert at St Mark’s Church with the Rushmoor Concert Band. Proceeds will be split between Rushmoor Concert Band and SHIP. Tickets are £5 (children free) and there will be a raffle and refreshments. Tickets on the door or by emailing halecommunitycentre@gmail.com

To finish as we started with the words of a resident: “If only they knew how much they helped me. I just can’t find the right words”.

 

The kindness of strangers (and schools)

“For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink.” (Matthew 25, v. 35).

It feels like a dark and anxious time at the moment with deep divisions in the country and real fears for the future, especially for those already on the edges of society. However, from time to time something happens which shines a light into the darkness.

Such a light was shone when, on Friday, October 11,  some unexpected visitors turned up at St Mark’s. Five pupils and a member of staff from Edgeborough School arrived, unannounced, in a van stuffed with bags and bags of food for the Farnham Foodbank. They had collected the food as part of their Harvest Festival celebrations and had given with huge generosity.

The six of them unloaded the van, piled the food high, stopped for a brief photo, and disappeared again, leaving behind more than 220kg of food. We didn’t even know their names and they won’t know the names of the people who receive their gifts. It was a real moment of unexpected light and sharing between strangers. Thank you!

It shouldn’t be the case in 21st-century Britain that people have to rely on foodbanks but that is a reality for increasing numbers of families. Between April 2018 and March 2019, for instance, the Trussell Trust’s foodbank network, with which the Farnham foodbank is associated, distributed 1.6 million three-day emergency food supplies to people in crisis, a 19 per cent increase on the previous year. More than half a million of these went to children. The Farnham Foodbank itself gave 1,499 three-day emergency food supplies to people in crisis last year.

We are all vulnerable to crisis, none of us intend to be. But sometimes, like Blanche Dubois in A Streetcar Named Desire, we find ourselves depending on ‘the kindness of strangers’. And when Jesus was challenged in Matthew 25 to answer “Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you something to drink?” he replied: “Whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.”

A heartfelt thanks to Edgeborough School and all those who donate to Farnham Foodbank.

 

New light on an old mystery

We have come a little closer to solving the mystery of the old wooden altar at St Mark’s. The altar is Tudor in style and has an inscription “GIVEN BI HENRIE LVNNE 1608”, but St Mark’s was built in 1883, 275 years later.

Bob Skinner, a great friend of the church and a leader of Weybourne Community Church, has been on the case and found this cutting in the Surrey Advertiser from December 4, 1880. It’s still three years before the church was built, but read on:

Cutting about Lunn altar

It reads:

‘PRESENTATION TO THE PARISH CHURCH. – The Parish Magazine for December, just published, says:- “A working party of ladies in Farnham have presented a new altar to the Parish Church. This, with a new altar cloth, was placed in the church on St Andrew’s Day, Nov. 20th. The old altar and altar cloth have been accepted by the Vicar of Hale for the use of a church which it is intended to begin next year at Hale Common.”

So, the altar was in St Andrew’s Church – the Parish Church in question – until November 1880. St Mark’s was built over the next three years on land given by Bishop Sumner, the Bishop of Winchester (the area was in the Diocese of Winchester at the time) and flint from the common was used to build the walls.

We still don’t know the full history of the altar but it is possible that Henry Lunne, who has been recorded as living in Farnham in the second half of the 16th century, gave it to St Andrew’s as the church was well established then. In fact, parts of St Andrew’s date from the 12th century.

If anyone does know any more however, let us know. Leave us a comment here or email news@badshotleaandhale.org

Serving the Villages North of Farnham: Badshot Lea, Hale, Heath End & Weybourne