Book Read Free

The Village News

Page 32

by Tom Fort


  Scott, Samuel Haslam, author of A Westmorland Village:

  ‘statesmen’ of Troutbeck, 299

  Troutbeck Players, 300

  life in Troutbeck, 302

  would anyone go back to it?, 307

  Sewell, Rev. William, vicar of Troutbeck, 302, 308

  Sharp, Cecil, champion of English folk dance and music, 62–3

  Sharp, Thomas, planner and author of The Anatomy of a Village, 148–9

  Shepherd’s Life, A, book by W. H. Hudson, 50

  Shepreth, Cambridgeshire, 68

  Sherriff, R. C., playwright, author of Badger’s Green, 161–2

  Shinfield, Berkshire, 312, 317

  Siege of Troy, The, play performed by Troutbeck Players, 300

  Silchester, Berkshire, Roman town, 22

  Slad, Gloucestershire:

  situation, 213

  church, 214

  June summer’s day in, 218

  layout, 219

  Woolpack pub, 220–2

  life in, 222–3

  as depicted by Laurie Lee, 224

  housing pressure, 226

  landscape saved, 227

  Slad Brook, 226

  Smethurst, William, editor of The Archers, 192

  Smith, Rev. Sidney, attacks Game Laws, 144

  Sonning, Berkshire, 328

  Sonning Common, Oxfordshire:

  unremarkable, 326

  lack of history, 328

  growth, 329

  situation, 330–1

  amenities, 331

  parish council, 333–4

  feud, 334

  challenge, 335

  ducks, 336

  Neighbourhood Development Plan, 338–47

  referendum, 346

  affection, 348

  virtues, 349

  our house, 350, 356–7

  charm, 357

  Sonning Common History Society, 328

  South Lakeland District Council, 305

  South Oxfordshire District Council:

  rejects housing applications, 339

  muted opposition, 355

  and NDPs, 365

  Speenhamland, Berkshire, 44

  Splendid Village, The, poem by Ebenezer Elliott, 45

  Squire, English:

  disappearance, 47

  in praise of, 48

  obsession with hunting, 49

  position criticised by W. H. Hudson, 50

  Storm, Alan, author of Family and Marine Community, 109

  Storm, Jacob, Robin Hood’s Bay fisherman, 109

  Storm, family of Robin Hood’s Bay, 109

  Storm in the Village, novel by ‘Miss Read’, 128

  Strange Land, book by Fraser Harrison, 153

  Study of History, A, book by Arnold Toynbee, 199

  Sturt, George, historian of Lower Bourne:

  crucial text, 6–7

  social position, 53

  books, 53

  Change in the Village, 53–6

  village in decline, 148

  Swallowfield, Berkshire, 320, 322

  Tesco, supermarket chain:

  at Bar Hill, 275

  new store 276–7

  what about? 278

  Thomas, Wyndham, town planner, 272

  Thompson, Flora, author of Lark Rise to Candleford:

  description of parson, 144

  depiction of Juniper Hill, 199

  Lark Rise distorted by H. J. Massingham, 200

  triumph, 202

  creative impulse, 203

  belonging, 203

  village, 205

  celebratory realism, 206

  school, 209

  Fringford, 210

  if she could see now, 211–12

  Thousand Laurie Lees, A, book by Adam Horovitz, 221

  Three Fevers, novel by Leo Walmsley:

  story, 110

  Baytown, 111

  sequels, 112

  filmed, 113

  climax, 119

  Three Mile Cross, Berkshire:

  Bowling Club, 310, 316

  M4 motorway, 312

  housing developments, 313

  Mitford Fields, 313, 316–17

  housebuilders, 313–14

  bad luck, 317

  Mary Russell Mitford, 318–24

  layout in early nineteenth century, 322

  W. H. Hudson, 323

  commonplace, 324

  lesson, 325

  To the Manor Born, television comedy, 196

  Tour de France 2014, 189

  Town and Country Planning Act 1947, 271

  Toynbee, Sir Arnold, author of A Study of History, 199

  Trollope, Anthony, Victorian novelist, 143

  Troutbeck, Cumbria:

  landscape, 296

  patterns of life, 298

  ‘statesmen’, 298–9

  church, 299–300

  amusements, 300

  hunting, 301

  farming, 302

  George Browne, 303

  Mayor’s Hunt, 304

  Village Institute, 301–2

  influence of Wainwright, 303

  Mortal Man pub, 305–6

  farming today, 306–7

  glory, 308

  beck, 309

  Troutbeck Players, 300

  Turner, W. J., poet, music critic and author of Exmoor Village:

  as literary figure, 248

  on Luccombe, 248–9, 252

  Turn of the Tide, film, 112–13

  Twyford, Berkshire:

  location, 8

  pubs and shops, 9

  expansion, 12

  Waitrose, 12–13

  Cricket Club, 13

  completely changed, 14

  Tyne, river, 241

  Uley Bitter, beer, 222

  Ultimate Fishing, fishing tackle business in Chopwell, 240

  Unwin, Raymond, architect and planner of New Earswick, 266, 269–70

  Vaughan Williams, Ralph, composer, 63

  Vestry committee:

  emergence, 145

  duties, 146

  power eroded, 147

  Vicar of Dibley, The, television comedy, 197–8

  Victorian Village, A, book by Ralph Whitlock, 287

  Village and village life:

  why people like it, 351

  sustaining, 352

  my policy, 352–3

  need for villages to grow, 353–4

  diversity, 357–8

  need to build at higher density, 360

  motor car, 360

  self-build, 361

  house types, 361–2

  bricks, 362–3

  new ideas, 364

  ‘Village Bedrock’, article by H. J. Massingham, 64

  Village Cricket, book by Gerald Howat, 160–1

  Village halls:

  impulse to build, 60

  Balcombe, 61

  Wolvercote, 61

  Village school, 60

  Village School, novel by ‘Miss Read’, 126–7

  Villages, passim

  Waide, W. Leathley, planning officer in Cambridgeshire:

  new settlements, 271

  site for Bar Hill, 271–2

  evidence to planning inquiry, 272

  concept, 276

  Wainwright, Alfred, author of Lakeland guides:

  cult of, 305

  allegedly advises use of wirecutters on fences, 307

  Walmsley, Leo, novelist:

  family, 111

  war service, 112

  writes Three Fevers, 112

  later life, 113

  Waring, William, squire of Chelsfield, 123

  Warren, C. Henry, author of England is a Village, 368–9

  Water Babies, The, children’s story by Charles Kingsley, 138

  Watkyns-Pitchford, Denys, writer and artist, 369

  Weaver, Lawrence, campaigner for village halls, 60

  Webb, Geoffrey, co-writer of The Archers, 194

  Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, 270

  Westmorland Village,
A, book by S. H. Scott, 299

  Whitlock, Edwin, farmer in Pitton:

  shearing sheep, 286

  as farmer, 287

  old age, 290

  Whitlock, Ralph, writer and farmer:

  as writer, 286

  huge output, 287

  portrait of Pitton, 287–9

  killing birds and animals, 289

  difficulties, 290

  view of village life, 291

  farming families, 295

  Wight, Alf (James Herriott), vet and writer:

  fame and sales, 183

  brand, 184

  becomes vet, 185

  timelessness, 186

  pilgrims, 190

  Williams, Raymond, critic and author of The Country and the City:

  searching analysis, 6

  effects of enclosure, 42

  myth of modern England, 55

  growing up, 150

  ‘the mutuality of the oppressed’, 154

  metaphor of the backward escalator, 290

  Windermere, lake in Lake District:

  erections, 296

  road from, 297

  railway, 302, 308

  Winsom, Gloucestershire, 95

  Winter, Rev. Arthur, curate and cricketer, 160

  Witney, Oxfordshire, 126, 127

  Wokingham Borough Council, 315, 325

  Wolvercote, Oxfordshire, 61

  Women’s Institute (WI):

  importance in village life, 61

  attitude, 62

  Woolpack, The, pub in Slad:

  Laurie Lee, 218

  place in village life, 220–2, 223

  Wordsworth, William, poet:

  walks through Troutbeck, 296

  reveres Lakeland ‘statesmen’, 298

  World We Have Lost, The, book by Peter Laslett, 39

  Wrestling, Lakeland sport, 300

  Wycliffe, John, Bible scholar, 141

  Wylye, river in Wiltshire, 292

  Yorkshire Village, book by Marie Hartley and Joan Ingilby:

  elegant local history, 186

  morning in Askrigg, 186–7

  change in Askrigg, 188

  Also by Tom Fort

  Against the Flow

  Downstream

  Under the Weather

  The Book of Eels

  The Grass is Greener

  The Far from Compleat Angler

  The A303

  Channel Shore

  First published in Great Britain by Simon & Schuster UK Ltd, 2017

  A CBS COMPANY

  Copyright © 2017 by Tom Fort

  This book is copyright under the Berne Convention.

  No reproduction without permission.

  All rights reserved.

  The right of Tom Fort to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988.

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  The author and publishers have made all reasonable efforts to contact copyright-holders for permission, and apologise for any omissions or errors in the form of credits given. Corrections may be made to future printings.

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

  Hardback ISBN: 978-1-4711-5109-5

  eBook ISBN: 978-1-4711-5111-8

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