Hungerford Arcade – “Happy St. George’s Day”

Hungerford Arcade owners, managers, stallholders and staff wish you all where ever you are a very Happy St. George’s Day.

 

L-R Stallholders Frances Jones and Ann Parker with Arcade co-owner Adrian Gilmour holding Ann’s beautiful Pug, Spencer

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Hungerford Arcade “Happy Birthday HRH Queen Elizabeth II”

Hungerford Arcade owners, managers, staff and stallholders wish Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II a very happy and joyous Birthday.

 

 

By Original: Joel Rouse/ Ministry of DefenceDerivative: nagualdesign (www.defenceimagery.mod.uk) [OGL 3 (http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3)], via Wikimedia Commons

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Hungerford Arcade “Hungerford World Village Market 28th & 29th April 2018”

Hungerford World Village MarketA 2-day family-friendly street market featuring colour, character and originality!

 

Zoom Events is delighted to be hosting their popular World Village Market in Hungerford for the first time this April. The Market will be held on Friday 28th and Saturday 29th April 2018 with the High Street providing the ideal location for what promises to be a fantastic shopping and eating experience in the town centre.

 

The 2-day street market will feature unique and colourful stalls showcasing a variety of products and mouth-watering food from around the globe. The event aims to bring together products and produce of colour, character and originality!  Visitors can expect to find stalls selling delicious groceries, beautiful ethically produced jewellery, crafts and accessories as well as tasty street food served from pop-kitchens.

 

Hungerford World Village Market will run 9.00am-6.00pm on Friday 28th April and 10.00am-5.00pm on Saturday 29th April 2018. The Market is set to be the first of two events in the town this year organised by Zoom Events; the second being Hungerford Food & Drink Festival on 30th June and 1st July. Zoom Events is looking forward to welcoming both the residents of Hungerford as well as visitors from further afield to both Hungerford World Village Market and Hungerford Food & Drink Festival.

#HungerfordWorldMarket
More information can be found at www.zoomevents.co.uk and www.facebook.com/zoomeventsuk

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Hungerford Arcade “For Whom The Bells Toll-Murder Mystery & Hog Roast”

Saturday 23 June is the date of Wilton Windmill’s sixth Murder Mystery and Hog Roast

 

The event is a fundraiser for the Windmill and it’s always popular – early booking is
advised!

 

Hungerford Arcade - For Whom the Bells Toll

 

This year’s plot is “For Whom the Bells Toll” – a riotous comedy of machinations,
mayhem, murder and morris dancing – with opportunities for some serious (and not-so serious) sleuthing.

 

The entertainment is supplied by Smoke & Mirrors, a professional murder mystery
company, and tickets include an outstanding gourmet hog-roast buffet (with vegetarian
option); and there’ll be a cash bar available all evening. And of course there will be prizes of champagne and chocolates!

 

Large groups are most definitely welcome, and we’re pleased to offer one free ticket for
every group of ten booked.

 

WHERE | Wilton Windmill, Nr Marlborough, SN8 3SW
WHEN | Saturday 23 June, 7.00pm
TICKETS | £27.50 (murder mystery & hog roast)
GROUP RATE | Buy ten, get one free
BOOKING | Phone: 07769 977779
Email: info@hauntedmysteryweekend.co.uk

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Hungerford Arcade “William Mallory of Deal”

Hungerford Arcade Blog Mallory of Deal

Tobias Conrad Lotter [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

William Joseph Mallory was one of the lesser known members of the East Kent School of Artists.  He is mainly associated with seascapes painted in and around his home town of Deal, but he also completed a large number of religious works and illustrated a number of books of poetry by his close friend and travelling companion Thomas Punney.

Both Mallory and Punney visited the Holy Land on a number of occasions and the latter in his later years, lived in the Pas-de-Calais which occasioned frequent visits from Mallory from 1860 onwards.

 

A number of Mallory’s most famous works were painted in the Outreau area and were as prized as much as his Deal and Walmer paintings at the time of their completion.

Although celebrated during his long life after his death in 1879, his reputation waned and today Mallory is chiefly remembered for the oddity of his signature or to be more specific, that of his daughter.

 

Gennady Ladyzhensky [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Anne Mallory was born in 1850 and from a very young age was remembered as always being in her father’s studio which faced the sea in Deal.  It is said that in the autumn of 1853 the young Anne touched one of her father’s drying oil paintings with her thumb and this was not noticed by the artist until the work was completely dry.  But far from being angry at his daughter for touching his work, Mallory requested that she would apply her left thumb print to all his paintings as a form of signature.  When painting abroad he would take his daughter with him so that she could apply her strange signature as soon as the work was nearing completion.

 

Anne is recorded as visiting the Holy Land on no less than five occasions between 1853 and 1865 and she often served as a model for some of the lesser biblical characters represented.

 

Hungerford Arcade Blog Mallory of Deal

Henri Adolphe Schaep [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

In 1870 Mallory lost both his wife Jane and his closest friend Punney within months of each other.  This caused a shift in his work and a number of his seascapes from this period were darker and quite often showed violent storms and shipwrecks.  Due to his failing health, Mallory did not travel abroad after 1875 but often painted the Holy Land and France from memory and could be found on clear days painting the nearby coast of France from the Deal aspect.

 

Hungerford Arcade Mallory of Deal

By Nat Pikozh (Stalida Sea Storm Uploaded by Alaniaris) [CC BY 2.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Anne, although a talented artist and a minor poet of some repute, never married and lived with Mallory in their sea front house in Deal.  Funded by her father, she ran two very successful lace-making businesses in both Deal and Sandwich.  On the 22nd of July 1879 Mallory was found dead at his easel on the beach between Deal and Walmer whilst adding the finishing touches to his final painting Storm Clouds over the Goodwin Sands.

 

His daughter, who was visiting a cousin in Kettering at the time did not apply her famous signature to this work and Storm Clouds over the Goodwin Sands remains the only work by Mallory from 1853 onwards that does not bear his daughters thumbprint.  It was thought lost after the bombing of Deal during World War Two but came up for auction in 1960 and is currently owned by the Museum of Kent.

 

On hearing of her father’s death, Anne wrote in her diary her most remembered lines of poetry which are often quoted in anthologies and in books about Deal and the surrounding area:

 

Oh death bringing breeze
Why did you not cancel
Your appointment with my dear father
For just a week and a day?

     

Anne inherited the whole of her father’s substantial estate and for the next seventy three years lived in her childhood home where she became known in her later years as La Dentelliere de Kent.

 

This is of course a fiction created during an idle day in Deal last summer.  However, when you visit the Arcade have you even considered the stories behind the many seascapes which one can find for sale?  William Mallory might have existed and painted successfully.  There were a great number of William Mallory’s active during the nineteenth century who are all but forgotten today.  So when you next find a seascape whether it be a print or an original, take a little time out to consider the artist.  If you purchase the painting, you might want to visit its location for pleasure.

 

We are very lucky that a great number of the coastal resorts and other places have not changed greatly so it is still quite easy to see what the artist was seeing over a century ago and what a splendid thought that is.

 

Just a short article this time and I hope that you enjoy your time by the sea. 

Summer is on its way.

 

Happy Hunting

 

Stuart Miller-Osborne

 

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Hungerford Arcade Impromptu Car Show

We don’t know where they came from, we don’t know what brought them to Hungerford, and we don’t know where they went when they left.  But what we do know is that we would very much like them to come back!  On Saturday the High Street was suddenly full of classic racing cars and as I said, we don’t really know why.  But here they are in all their glory for you to enjoy as well.

 

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Hungerford Arcade “Hungerford Town Football Club”

 If you are thinking of visiting Hungerford we are more than a lovely town situated in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.   Hungerford is also a sporting town which supports rugby and cricket clubs as well as a very successful football club who at present play in the sixth tier of English football.  Why not after you have enjoyed the arcade pop up to the Bulpit Lane Ground and catch a game?  It is only about five minutes drive from the town and for £12.00 (concessions £6.00) you can enjoy a great standard of football and maybe you will see an ex Premiership player doing his best for the opposing side or even turning out for Hungerford Town.

 

I have been watching Hungerford for a couple of seasons now, although I did take in the odd game before that and also if my memory serves me correctly, played on the sloping pitch in a county cup game in the 1980s.  But what of Hungerford Town, well they have been part of the town since their formation in 1886 and for most of that time have played at the Bulpit Lane ground (they previously played on Hungerford Marsh).  In the early days they played at Intermediate level and remained there for many years playing in the Newbury & District League and also The Swindon & District League.

 

Senior status for the club came as late as 1958 and in 196, the club lifted the Hellenic League Benevolent Cup (one does not see many of these charmingly named trophies these days).  In was not until the 1970s that Hungerford Town made its mark reaching three Berks & Bucks Cup finals in three years.

 

In the 1977/78 season (their last in the Hellenic League) the club had an amazing run in the FA Vase losing to Barton Rovers in the semi-final.  This helped the club to achieve election to the Isthmian League in 1978 and in the following years, the club narrowly missed out on promotion twice.  This said, they were in this time invited to participate in the Anglo Italian Semi-Pro Tournament during this period.  I can remember the senior tournament quite well with results (if my memory serves me correctly) such as Swindon beating Juventus 4-0 and Blackpool putting ten past Atalanta without reply.  The senior tournament was also remembered for its indiscipline with players often being sent off for fighting.

 

At the time of writing, I have not found Hungerford’s results but whatever they were, I am sure it was a great experience for the players involved.  Although I have visited Italy on many occasions, I have not been able to catch a Series A match and the only football I have seen was from an amateur league not far from Milan and Verona.

 

But let’s get back to West Berkshire and go back to 1982 when Hungerford won the County Cup beating Wycombe Wanders 1-0.  Like most football clubs, Hungerford have had their ups and downs but in 1989 they reached the FA Vase semi-finals only to lose to Sudbury Town when Wembley was so very near.

 

In the late 1990s Hungerford appointed Swindon Town legend Don Rogers (a player I remember well) as manager but Don resigned just after the start of the 1999/2000 season.  A little aside, I was in Swindon recently and noticed that Don’s sports shop was still going strong.  It is situated about ten minutes from the new shopping centre and not far from what remains of the Swindon Railway Works.  If you are interested just ask for directions I am sure you will find his shop.

 

© Copyright nick macneill and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.

Football is a great sport and wherever you are in the word it is a universal language.  In my view, it is one God’s greatest gifts to mankind.  Unfortunately this does not stretch to its administrators who I have found very wanting.  In my day,the Berks & Bucks FA were more concerned at dissent on the football field than the actual physicality of the game.

 

More than once I have seen a referee (under instructions from the local FA)  enter a changing room before a game and tell the players that he would not tolerate industrial language or dissent on the field and then during the match ignore some very poor tackles.  I remember clearly an opposing player being sent off for calling the referee a bloody disgrace during a very unpleasant and physical cup tie in Wokingham in the 1980s in which players from both sides spent ninety minutes kicking lumps out of each other without punishment.

 

Whilst I am not condoning dissent, one must live in the world of reality.   Football is a passionate and physical sport and because of this, emotions can run high.  Last season Hungerford went very close to achieving a place in the play offs to the National League which was an amazing feat considering the resources available.  But then, the FA put their foot in it and said that the Bulpit Lane ground was not up to standard and even if Hungerford achieved promotion, they would not be promoted which was crass stupidity on behalf of the FA.  A great deal of hard work had been put in and to be disqualified for a technicality was pure nonsense.

 

 

But this as nothing new, as at the end of the 2001/02 season, Hungerford found that they had not met the FA criteria for ground improvements and  as a punishment were forced to play in the newly formed Isthmian Division 2 against their will the following season.

It was a time for reflection and the club thought it wise to play in the Hellenic League (where my old club Holyport are now) and in 2003/04 they dropped down a level.  They finished sixth in their first season but won the Hungerford Cup beating AFC Newbury 2-0.  By the time the start of the 2006/07 season arrived things were again looking rosy and the club had a great FA Cup run beating Weston Super Mare and Bashley before falling (0-3) to a strong Weymouth side in the 4th Qualifying Round.

 

In the 2007-08 season, Hungerford reached the quarter finals of the FA Vase before losing 1-0 to Whitley Bay (this was one of the first games I attended) but they sadly lost out on promotion that season.

 

After the election of a new chairman (Nigel Warrick) the following season, Hungerford after a poor start in the league, went on a twenty-two match unbeaten run and after a draw at Hook Norton clinched promotion to the Southern League.  In 2010, Bobby Wilkinson joined the club as manager and this was when things really took off for our local club and in the 2015/16 season Hungerford Town finally made it to the National League South after beating Leamington 2-1 ( in a game that I missed as I was in Kent at the time).

 

Last season under Wilkinson was better than anybody expected and as I have noted, the club was heading for the play offs until a ridiculous FA decision took the wind out of their sails.  One memorable game (there were many) was the 1-1 draw against the eventual champions Maidenhead United when the ground was nearly full and a great atmosphere was shared by everybody

 

Sadly, Bobby Wilkinson left the club this season (for Wealdstone) and although both Jon Boardman and Ian Herring have done their best, the team has struggled at times.

Injuries and suspensions have not helped and as I write this article, I have just noted that Hungerford have lost 2-0 at Havant which means they are hovering rather close to the relegation places.  I believe that the club will survive as judging from the matches I have attended this season, there is a great team spirit which having played football for many years, is very important.

 

To some extent, Hungerford have not had the rub of the green this season with poor refereeing (nothing changes) not helping the cause.  It is important that Hungerford maintain their current status as strictly speaking they are playing in Division Six of the football pyramid which is amazing for a club of Hungerford’s size.

 

Sadly, football these days is all about money with some famous ex league clubs facing uncertain futures (Hartlepool, Chester) and others falling even further (Darlington, York City).  I have known players who were picking up sizable pay packets at part-time clubs who could ill afford them.  These players were also holding down well-paid full time jobs.

 

For a couple of seasons in the 1990’s, I watched Windsor who were playing high in the pyramid, but in recent years reality has taken hold and this fine and friendly club has dropped a number of divisions at now plays at a level more suitable to its reduced budget.

 

Hungerford is a well-run traditional country football club which has been part of the fabric of the town for many years.  I will attend games when I can (I am often away from Hungerford at weekends) as I thoroughly enjoy watching live football.  This season I have been thoroughly soaked (Truro Town just before Christmas) and have experienced the joys of early hypothermia and frostbite (many games recently) but I have enjoyed every second on it.  I could watch my favourite club (Chelsea) but resent paying some thirty or forty pounds for the privilege (if I can get a ticket at all).  I would rather wander along to a Hungerford home game and cheer on the local club and if you have a couple of hours to kill on a Saturday afternoon, I suggest that you join me.  The beer is good and cheap and the catering facilities are very acceptable.  There is a club shop and you will receive a warm welcome.  There is also Sky in the clubhouse.  If you cannot make it then, Hungerford’s games are recorded on You Tube which you can access via their website.

 

You may ask me if there is any Hungerford Town memorabilia to be found in the arcade, but to be truthful, I have not seen any recently.  One  might find the odd Hungerford Town programme or even a photograph of a long forgotten player when looking.

 

About five years ago at the Arcade, I picked up a small black and white photograph of a certain Allan Doig who was a noted Newbury goal scorer.  The photograph appeared to have been taken in the 1950s although I cannot confirm it.  Perhaps if you know more about Allan then you might like to contact the Arcade and share your memories.  One thing I can promise you is that after an enjoyable time in the Arcade, you will be in for a memorable afternoon at the football club.

 

The pitch is not great and on cold days there is not much stopping the Wilshire winds but at least you will not have to suffer the dreaded and totally unnecessary VAR which is making the refereeing of what is a simple game a complete lottery at present.

In my view, the standard of refereeing at all levels is quite poor and the referees that visit Hungerford are a mixed bunch.  Some are so poor that that you wonder if they have read the rules whilst others are so good that you hardly notice that they are there at all.

But this is the rich fabric of what you should expect if you pop up the hill and attend a match at Hungerford Town.

 

I look forward to seeing you there.

 

And by the way

Happy Hunting

 

Stuart Miller-Osborne

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Hungerford Arcade Celebrates 100 Years of The Royal Air Force

Hungerford Arcade is very proud to celebrate the magnificent 100 years of the Royal Air Force and congratulate our brave men and women for their service to our country in war and peace.  Thank you.

 

 

 

 

                                                                                 RAF-BBMF-Paul-Johnson

 

Lets give a fantastic salute to the Royal Air Force.  100 years on 1st April 2018

 

 

 

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Hungerford Arcade Swindon and Cricklade Railway

Hungerford Arcade is a great place to come to find links to local history.  Some of the most interesting things seem to have originated just around the corner from us and somehow they seem to find their way home again.  This very thing happened today when we met Anne and Dave Herbert from the Swindon and Cricklade Railway.  Dave found this fantastic cast iron sign in the shop and thought it would be a great idea to take it back to where it belongs. It will be mounted somewhere along the railway, most likely near a station, for visitors to look at.  

The Swindon and Cricklade Railway is a heritage railway rather than a commercial public transport link.  They run steam and dielel locomotives along a private 5 mile long track between Swindon in the south and Cricklade in the north.  They are always looking for things to make the experience more authentic and hoping to extend the railway both north and south as soon as they can.

 

Dave is a consultant for the railway museum and whenever he finds something relevant he tries to source it for them.  He also has a personal collection of 744 items of railway memorabilia! 744!  Anne is the manager of the Whistle Stop Cafe at Blunsden Station at the southerly end of the railway.

 

There is so much history to discover without having to travel far away from Hungerford.  The Swindon and Cricklade Railway is well worth a visit if you are even mildly interested in steam and early diesel locomotion. Dave told me that the sign would be being put up at the railway within a couple of weeks so keep your eyes open for it!

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Hungerford Arcade “St. Patrick’s Day”

Hungerford Arcade owners, managers, staff and stallholders wish all our Irish friends a very happy St. Patrick’s Day.

 

 

Saint Patrick was a fifth-century Romano-British Christian missionary and bishop in Ireland. Known as the “Apostle of Ireland”, he is the primary patron saint of Ireland, along with saints Brigit of Kildare and Columba.

 

May the Irish hills caress you. May her lakes and rivers bless you. May the luck of the Irish enfold you.  May the blessings of Saint Patrick behold you.

 

St. Patrick’s Day is an enchanted time – a day to begin transforming winter’s dreams into summer’s magic.

 

Oh! St. Patrick was a gentleman Who came of decent people; He built a church in Dublin town, And on it put a steeple.

 

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