

The latest edition of Kitty includes details of the resumption of pilates classes on Tuesday and Friday next week and also Rehearsal day for the forthcoming 5 Village Proms.
You can download the full Kitty here:
https://mailchi.mp/e7a2412b0fbd/fladbury-kitty-1-16536515?e=3501a6f3e4
The latest edition of Wychavon’s business newsletter includes an article on an ambitious £19 million bid to the Government’s Levelling Up Fund to help kick-start the transformation of EveshamTown Centre, details of new business start-up drop-in clinics at Evesham library in September and October, details of business start-up funding to give eligible SMEs that are less than three years old a significant helping hand, news of new arrivals at Vale Business Park, and much more.
You can download and read the complete newsletter here:
Work on the Old Schoolroom extension and internal upgrades continues apace, with the new block paved drive now completed and the builders’ Portakabin removed.
The new kitchen is now complete with flooring, cupboards and appliances and work to fit out and decorate the new toilets is ongoing.
Please see below the winners of the July draw:
1st prize £50.00 Brian Coleman no 49
2nd prize £30.00 Rob Hiscocks no 6
3rd Prize £20.00 Becky Joiner no 64
Work on the extension and construction of the new kitchen and toilet facilities, funded in the main by Wychavon District Council, is progressing well, and is on schedule to be completed by early September. See below some pictures showing progress.
We would ask that members of the public don’t access the site either during or after work is in progress. New safety fencing has been erected to discourage this.
This month’s edition includes many articles and also details of the events making up the Pershore Plum Festival which runs from 27th to 29th August this year. You can download the latest edition of the Pershore Times at:
http://www.pershoretimes.co.uk/index_htm_files/Current Month.pdf
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This month’s edition of Wychavon District Council’s business e-newsletter includes a plea for businesses able to offer employment to people coming to the district from Ukraine.
It also contains many helpful articles including:
– the availability of grants up to the value of £30,000 from Enterprising Worcestershire to help start-up businesses in the County
– “Women Who, Worcestershire” which is now Worcestershire’s biggest and most popular business networking group for women who live and work in the county
– details of free assessments and grants under the Business Energy Efficiency Programme (BEEP) and the Low Carbon Opportunities Programme (LOCOP) to help businesses save money and reduce carbon emissions
– links that may be helpful to businesses in Wychavon signposting to MentalHealth Services
You can download the complete e-newsletter here:
Evesham and Pershore’s Safer neighbourhood Team issue quarterly e-newsletters. You can view and download the summer 2022 edition here:
The following is an article written by Julian Hawley, a long time Charlton resident and keen local historian:
150 years ago on 30th July 1872, Henry Workman’s new church in Charlton was opened.
Workman was born in 1802 and when his wife died at a young age in 1847, he devoted his life to his work as a solicitor, as mayor of Evesham and to carrying out many philanthropic works. His good works in the town included the Workman Bridge and the Workman Gardens.
In 1865 he bought Charlton manor house and its extensive surrounding estate. He took on the role of a benevolent squire, providing support for his tenants and workers through investing in their educational, moral and religious improvement. He noted that attendance at the parish church at Cropthorne was low, only six out of 385 villagers regularly attending because of the walk up the hill. As a staunch Anglican he was also concerned about the success of the Baptist Chapel on Canada Bank in recruiting Charlton folk. He therefore determined to have a church in the village and in 1870, at his own expense, began the conversion of the medieval threshing barn in the manor house farmery. He employed the best stonemasons in the locality and also provided work for bricklayers who lived in the village. He appointed a curate for the new church, William Clifford and personally paid his stipend and that of his successors for the next ten years.
A service to celebrate the opening of the church took place on 30th July 1872, with Rev. Clifford preaching to a packed congregation, his text being “God is a spirit and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth”. His sermon was very much based around encouraging villagers to attend the new church but his ending was ” Above all ask God to aid you to determine that by his loving help you will make your hearths and homes his temples in which the sacrifice of prayer and praise and of holy and consistent living, shall be daily offered” Hymns 164 and 166 from Hymns Ancient and Modern were sung
This was followed by a lunch for 350 people in a tent erected in the field behind the manor house at which rounds of beef, vegetables and huge plum puddings were consumed, washed down with plentiful beer and cider. Another service took place in the evening, again to a full church, after which the tent was again filled with villagers who were entertained by Workman with a splendid tea.
This event coincided with Workman’s 70th birthday and also the opening of a new bridge in Charlton, replacing the ford across the brook at the bottom of Canada bank.
At this time it is appropriate to remember Henry Workman and give thanks for his good work for Charlton, including, later, the addition of the Schoolroom and the Vicarage. Also, we should thank God for 150 years of a thriving church in the village and remember and thank the many enthusiastic Charlton people who have worked for and supported our church over these years. Long may it continue.
This month’s edition of Wychavon DC’s Parish Matters newsletter contains a number of articles including helpful advice on energy saving measures. However, please note that the recommended temperature at which clothes can be washed should read 30 degrees C, and not 300 degrees C as stated in the article!
You can download and read the complete newsletter at: