Saturday 28 February 2009

Bowerchalke Views Using A Different Mapping Source

I've been looking around on the Internet and come across the following aerial photographs of the old Bowerchalke Cricket Field* and the surrounding area.

These photographs seem to be slightly better, offering more flexibility, appear to be more recent and have more detail on them.

* I've decided that 'field' is better description than 'gound' and fits in better with how people locally would have known it and referred to it.

THE CRICKET FIELD
It's interesting to note the much clearer definition of tractor tracks on this photograph and the 'linking' of the two gates. I don't believe it was ever that well defined when cricket was played there.
View this aerial image on Multimap.com
Get directions on Multimap.com


THE ENTRANCE GATE HIGHLIGHTED
Note that tree just south of the gate on the field border. I wonder how long that has been there?
View this aerial image on Multimap.com
Get directions on Multimap.com


THE LOCATION OF THE OLD PAVILLION
This is where I remember it being, as I said in a previous blog entry it looks like the concrete base is still there, although that might be something else now...perhaps a new building?
View this aerial image on Multimap.com
Get directions on Multimap.com


THE LOCATION OF "GRANDAD GULLIVER'S" STYLE
This is where I remember him standing and watching the game around tea time (see comments in previous blog entry).
View this aerial image on Multimap.com
Get directions on Multimap.com


HOLLY CLOSE, HOME OF GRANNY & GRANDAD GULLIVER
Ah, this brings back memories. I always remember the garden being 'huge' and a great place to play, especially in the summer. There were grass paths that cris-crossed the garden (an exciting place to play when you were a small boy!). The vegetable and flower beds were beautifully dug and laid out. I don't recall ever being allowed to play cricket on the thin rectangular lawn that stood in front of both houses (with a garden tap sticking up in the middle)...although I may have done, I was probably too 'scared' to because I knew what would happen if any flowers were broken off! I wonder if Dad, Richard, David or Derek ever played cricket there?

Mr and Mrs Stevens next door sometimes kept pigs and the sty was at the bottom of their garden.

Chickens were kept by both houses: Grandad just outside the garden in the field and Mr. Stevens at the back of the house. I sometimes used to walk from Holly Close, through the chicken pen and out the back, over the hill to the cricket field and Rookhay Farm. It seemed like miles and miles then but looking at the photograph I don't believe it is actually that far! It's a bit hillier than the photograph shows though!

Today, the gardens have now been significantly reduced in size with the addition of some much needed new housing which can be seen on the photograph.

View this aerial image on Multimap.com
Get directions on Multimap.com


THE LOCATION OF THE OLD BELL INN
I believe this is the location of the old Bell Inn.
View this aerial image on Multimap.com
Get directions on Multimap.com

Tuesday 24 February 2009

Our First Follower!

I notice that we have a follower of the blog! Welcome creakyintheknees! I think I know who you are....!

See the right hand side bar. I would encourage as many of you as possible to join in the fun and to keep up-to-speed with what's going on.
KeithG

Second Response!

I have received a positive e-mail from Lalla Hitchings of the Broadchalke Parish magazine, hope to have the article included in the April edition which will be fantastic and fits in with what I hope will happen with the Bowerchalke Broadsheet.
KeithG

Monday 23 February 2009

Spelling Correction!

I've been referring to Rook Haye Farm in previous posts but it's actually Rookhay Farm. Apologies.
KeithG

Reference To Cricket In Collett's Village Newspaper...

This is very exciting! In the book titled "The Bowerchalke Parish Newspapers - Collett's Village Newspaper 1878-1924" by Rex L Sawyer (1989) there is a reference to cricket on pages 109-110 in the chapter titled Entertainment. I found my copy tucked away on my bookshelves upstairs (along with all my Shoot! annuals and Topical Times Football Books!).

Mr. Sawyer# writes: "...the chief sport was undoubtedly cricket. The first references come in 1900 with Collett...rather saddened that the Hindon Choir had travelled so far to play and yet lost the match. Attempts to form a village team on a permanent basis always foundered on the difficulty of obtaining a suitable pitch.

(John) Linnell, to whom cricket represented a lifetime's passion, recalled just before his death at ninety-two, that games had been played on Marleycombe, although such a sloping surface must have been highly unsuitable. Foyle, Hardiman and Williamson all loaned fields for a period but play would have been dependent on agricultural requirements and it was not until 1920 that the Beckley family, who followed the Hardings at Manor Farm, loaned the beautiful tree-lined field that enabled Bowerchalke to develop one of the best village sides in the Salisbury area..."


There are some significant pieces of information to emerge from these two paragraphs:
* The date of the first recorded cricket match in Bowerchalke (i.e. 1900) and the opposition (the Hindon Choir)
* The reference to more than one cricket field being used in the village (I wonder where the others were? The names of the field donors may give a clue)
* The year cricket was first played on what I've referred to as the old Bowerchalke Cricket Club ground (i.e. 1920) which means that there around 50 years of cricket history in the village to find out more about!

The reference to cricket on Marleycombe is intriguing! It seems so definite I wonder where it was? Does anyone have any ideas?
KeithG
# he was my old headteacher at Wilton Middle School!!

The Bowerchalke Parish Newspapers - Collett's Village Newspaper 1878-1924 by Rex L Sawyer (1989) published by Alan Sutton Publishing, Brunswick Road, Gloucester. ISBN 0-86299-579-5

First Response Received!

I have had a reply from John Withers of the Bowerchalke Broadsheet. It may be possible to get something into the April edition, fingers crossed!
KeithG

Sunday 22 February 2009

Family Members Contacted

I've also written to a few members of the family who I hope will be able to help generate some interest.
KeithG

Parish Magazines Contacted

I have written to each of the parish magazines for villages in the Chalke Valley (i.e. Coombe Bissett, Stratford Tony & Bishopstone, Broadchalke, Bowerchalke and Ebbesbourne Wake & Alvediston) asking if they would consider including the article set out in my previous post. Fingers crossed...
KeithG

Friday 20 February 2009

Text For Parish Magazines

This is the text I plan to send to the contacts at each of the Parish magazines (Coombe Bissett, Bishopstone, Broadchalke and Bowerchalke). I think it's best to keep it as short as possible with a pointer to this blog and the e-mail address, although that might exclude those without Internet access. So, I need to give that some thought...Also, need to make sure M&D are OK with receiving any mail for us!

The Old Bowerchalke Cricket Club
Do you remember the old Bowerchalke Cricket Club that folded in the early 1970s? If so we'd be very interested in hearing from you. Although neither of us played for Bowerchalke (we both lived in and played for Bishopstone) we have a keen interest in finding out more especially as so many of our family played there down the years. So we've set out to do just that. With the Chalke Valley Cricket Club planning to move to its new ground in Bowerchalke soon there seems no better time than to look at the history of the old club to record stories, memories and memorabilia and provide a link with the past.

We're interested in finding out about any of the following but please don't limit yourself to this list if you have something which may be of interest to us which you'd like to share:

* Stories and memories about games you may have watched or played in, players who played for the village, the cricket field, some of the characters who watched, the old Bell Inn, amusing stories, anecdotes and so on.
* Have you kept any old Bowerchalke village Cricket Club memorabilia such as: fixture cards, photographs, newspaper clippings, notebooks, scorebooks, trophies or medals?
* Did you ever play against Bowerchalke for another village team? If so we'd like to hear from you too about your experiences, home or away!

If you do have anything you think we might be interested in please feel free to contact us at the following e-mail address: bowerccmem@btinternet.com or alternatively write to us at: ENTER ADDRESS HERE. We will get back to you.

Our intention is to capture as much of the history as we can digitally so anything physical would be scanned or photographed, acknowledged and returned. With that in mind we have set-up a website at the following address so you can find out a bit more and follow our progress: http://bowerccmem.blogspot.com/

Many thanks! We look forward to hearing from you.
Keith and Stuart Gulliver, February 20th 2009

Thursday 19 February 2009

The Old Bowerchalke Cricket Club Ground

I've been doing a bit of searching around on Google Maps and I have identified the location of the old Bowerchalke Cricket Club ground, see below. It's the larger area of grass in the bottom half of the picture.


View Larger Map

Zoom in using the toolbar and you can see that the old entrance to the field is clearly visible (in the North West corner of the field just below the row of cottages) and amazingly you can still see what looks like the concrete base of the old cricket pavillion (towards the South West of the field, just inside the boundary, alongside the two cottages)! Rook Haye farm buildings can be seen (in the North East corner of the picture). There are some cows in the field too (to the South of the field)!
KeithG

The Gullivers and Bowerchalke Cricket club

The Gulliver family had a long-standing association with Bowerchalke Cricket Club and of course with the village itself. Indeed, members of the family still live there today. Gullivers continued to play cricket for other clubs and villages in the Salisbury area and beyond. For example: Bishopstone, Broadchalke, Cranbourne and South Wilts.

During recent years the family has managed to get together a team to play a well-known cricketing family from another village in the Salisbury area (the Mouldings at South Newton). There have been three matches in total all played at South Newton.

These games are normally great social gatherings, with loads of people attending from both families and fantastic fun. Quite often of course Bowerchalke Cricket Club comes up in the conversations as quite a few people played for or against the village. So I thought it would be appropriate to post a couple of photographs here.

Game One - early 1990s (possibly August 1990)
The first picture is from the early 1990s comprising completely of players with the surname Gulliver. I think The Mouldings won this game. Do you remember any of these players?

Back row: David*, Kevin, Nick, Robin*, Daniel, Richard*, Steven
Front row: Brian*, Stuart, Keith, Nigel, Terry*, Derek*
* = played for Bowerchalke



Game Two - August 2006
The second picture is from 2006 where other members of the extended family have been added to boost the numbers (and add some potential runs to the total score)...there is one additional Gulliver as well. As you can see the older generation has all been boosted by a few extra pounds of blubber and become a little bit less hairy on top too. This game was a tie.

Back row: Mawgan Lewis, Nick, David*, Kevin, Robin*, Keith, Gordon Lampert*, Richard*, Tim Lampert, Alex, Brian*
Front row: Steven, Daniel, Andy Bundy, Jamie Bundy, Stuart
* = played for Bowerchalke



Game Three - mid-1990s (possibly May 1996)
There was at least one other Gullivers versus Mouldings game played in the mid-1990s, if anyone has any photographs from that game let me know! I'm sure there were some photographs taken that day but I don't seem to have any in my collection (it was on the late May Bank holiday I think because Stuart was still at Uni and missed the game because he had an exam the next day - a fine excuse). I think this game was a draw.
KeithG

Wednesday 18 February 2009

Time Team Comes To Wiltshire

Introduction
I've spent just half-an-hour or so racking my brain and scribbling down a list of all the things I think I can recall about Bowerchalke Cricket Club. It didn't take long for the page to fill-up. I guess that's the equivalent of 'putting in a trench' to see what The Time Team can unearth in some ancient site (my brain)! I hope I've not mixed-up too many memories from other places which confuse matters (the cricket memory equivalent of unearthing a Roman vase in an Anglo-Saxon battle field). You know how it is, one memory leads to another and then another and so on. It's easy to get things muddled up. Of course, I was only a small boy back in the late 1960s/early 1970s (yes, really!) and so I can't really remember anything about the cricket at all! However, there's so much I think I can recall, I'm sure if I've got anything wrong I will soon be corrected.

Getting to the ground
To get to Bowerchalke cricket ground you could approach it from a number of different ways. Driving up through the Chalke Valley (from Bishopstone/Broadchalke) as you arrived in Bowerchalke you could take a right-hand fork and follow the narrow road up the hill and past Rook Haye farm, taking a left-hand turn as the road wound round and finding the ground's entrance on the left just past some houses that backed-on to the ground*. Or alternatively as you arrived in Bowerchalke you could drive up through the village on the main road#, past The Bell Inn on the right, the Church on the left, the School~ on the right and take a turn right up the hill at the village shop arriving at the ground on the right hand side.
* Google Maps shows that this is called Quidham Street
# Google maps shows that this called Church Street
~ now the village hall

The ground
The ground's entrance was a farm gate and cars drove into the field and parked in and around the pavillion area.

The playing surface at Bowerchalke was behind a fenced-off area and surrounded by an often-used cow field, rough pasture essentially and part of the working farm. Cows were never there on match days however unlike some grounds in the New Forest where horses and cows roamed in and around the grounds at will. There was a sharpe contrast between the short-cut grass of the playing surface and the long, thick, clumpy grass of the surrounds. There were four very large, square wooden posts in each corner of the fence which formed a large square shape (I can remember those large posts still being there quite a few years after the club folded). The surrounding fence was made of metal wire joined to wooden stakes set out at regular intervals. The pitch had a metal farm gate as an entrance just to the left and in in front of the pavillion. This was opened-up before play commenced and closed again at the end of the day, to keep the cattle off I guess. I can remember running through that open gateway at tea-time to play with my bat and ball on the 'hallowed turf', although I'm sure that was frowned upon. Small boys were expected to play in the cow field, side-stepping the cow-pats either crusty or fresh depending on when the last bovine visit had been. If you managed to whack a ball over the fence and on to the field of play during the game, well you knew you had to dash on and off as quickly as you could to retrieve it, keeping low as you ran along in a vain attempt to avoid being seen!

Preparing the pitch
I remember driving-up to the cricket ground with my Dad during weekday evenings once or twice to watch him cut the outfield using a tractor from Rook Haye Farm. I guess there was some sort of volunteers rota to do this. He used to park the car (a rust-red Austin A40) there and drive the tractor round to the ground. I used to walk through the farm yard and across the field as he was doing this feeling annoyed that I wasn't allowed into the tractor. I can't remember if the mowers were at the ground already or were kept at the Farm. Can you remember?

Toilets
The 'men only' toilet facilities were slightly worse than basic, a few sheets of rusting corrugated iron, vertically erected in a discrete corner of the field did the job just to the right of the entrance as I recall but before you got to the pavillion. There was no door, just a gap in the iron. I don't remember there being a roof but there could have been. I seem to recall some sort of cow trough contraption inside but that maybe my imagine running wild. Inside it had a mud floor and used to stink to high heaven I seem to recall, especially if it was a hot day. But when you gotta go you gotta go...ladies had to keep their legs crossed or visit a friendly neighbour.

The pavillion
There was a little wooden structure that served as the pavillion, I think it was painted green and erected on a concrete base. Like a large garden shed really. It had a quite large door at one end that served as the only entrance and narrow, rectangular windows looking out on the pitch. I think the scorers mainly used to sit just inside the entrance on a wooden bench with metal legs peering out of the windows which could be opened. Sometimes I seem to recall the scorers sitting outside, having transported a table and chair closer to the action. The players' changing area was separated from the rest of the pavillion, where teas were prepared and laid out on trestle tables, by an old curtain or blanket hung from a metal rail. This was swept across on a rail to avoid any unecessary embarassment. I seem to recall that on opening the pavillion before each game the first thing that had to be done was to remove a petrol driven mower which was stored there for safe-keeping. I can't quite remember the scoreboard. Was it lent up against the pavillion?

The tea lady
Mrs Downs was the tealady who would turn-up at the ground as regular as clockwork for each home game, park near the pavillion and then offload the already prepared teas from the back of her car. I seem to recall it was like a station wagon but couldn't tell you the make of vehicle. I assume water was boiled using a gas cylinder and urn? Was I right in thinking that players' wives took it in turn to assist with the teas?

Grandad Gulliver
Just before the tea intervals my Grandad (Harold Gulliver) would often appear at the style on the other side of the cow-field and stand there watching the game before trudging back down the hill to Holly Close where he and Granny Gulliver lived. I do wonder if he'd been over to Rook Haye Farm to collect milk in his small, metal urn before arriving. I guess he had Goldie the dog with him and was probably smoking his pipe.

Retrieving the ball
Next to the ground was a large house owned by Mrs Beckley and sometimes during the game the ball used to get hit over the high wall that separated her garden from the ground. I can remember being dispatched with Paul Lampert (who also lived next to the ground and whose Dad played) to retrieve the ball which we invariably found, a bit worse for wear and dusty, after a bit of searching amongst the impeccably well laid out vegetable patch.

Not on the Sabbath
As I understand it cricket couldn't be played at Bowerchalke on a Sunday which was a stipulation of the farmer who owned the field (Mr. Beckley I think).

Beer matches
I seem to recall that if a game finished early then a second impromptu game was quickly organised (probably because The Bell Inn hadn't opened). These were known as Beer Matches, were of limited overs and often the normal batting order would be reversed. I seem to recall seeing one or two of these games being scored in the back of the normal scorebook. I guess it was like an early type of Twenty20 match, with plenty of slogging by lower order batsmen who wouldn't normally get a bat and a chance for some of the batsment to have a bowl. Did you ever play in one of these games?

Players
Here's a few players I can remember off the top of my head: my Dad (Brian) of course but also Morris Lampert (who kept wicket), Chris Harding (who had a beard and was captain), David Holmes(?), Reggie Clough, Nick Gurd(?) and David Tate (who drove sports cars and kindly used to share his empty cigar boxes with me for my collection!). I'm sure there were many more...

The Bell Inn
Finally, I can just about remember The Bell Inn and sitting outside at the front in a grass garden with Mum and Dad, at a wooden bench drinking coke through a straw and eating crisps. I'm not sure if that was after a game or something which happened at another time but I'd like to think the former.

KeithG

Tuesday 17 February 2009

My Planning Notes...

I've finally added the picture...take a look on the left hand side bar! Don't try and 'decipher' the notes, even I have trouble reading my own handwriting!
KeithG

Monday 16 February 2009

The E-Mail Address...

...has now been set-up. The e-mail address is: bowerccmem@btinternet.com

Look forward to hearing from you!
KeithG

Thursday 5 February 2009

Where To Start?

Welcome
Finally, this blog is up-and-running: a brand spanking new, shiny piece of digital space on the Internet! Something that would probably have been incomprehensible to those people back in the 1950s, 60s and 70s whose weekends during the summer months were taken up with playing cricket, a game they loved and were very good at, in the beautiful, rural setting of Bowerchalke village. But something which we can use today to try and capture as many memories of those times as possible from people anywhere in the world: the global village.

I have to say that moving on from the scrappy piece of A4 paper I've been carrying around with me for weeks now is a sad but significant moment. I shall miss the scribbled lists, the diagrams, the arrows shooting across the page: my thoughts essentially. This project* (because that's what it's become) has suddenly stepped up a gear but it had to if it was going to go any further. Hey, what the heck! I'll digitise that piece of paper too and stick a picture of it up here so you can all see what I'm talking about!

Starting Point
So, where to start, where to start...? Well, setting up this blog was the first thing (big tick!). I'll ask Stuart to just 'proofread' the details suggest changes and so on and then check with James at CVCC to make sure he's happy and then we'll really kick it off.

Getting The Word Out
The next phase is communication: start communicating with people to generate some interest. I've already got the contact details (e-mail addresses) for the local parish magazines in the Chalke Valley villages of: Bowerchalke, Bishopstone, Broadchalke, Coombe Bissett and Ebbesbourne Wake. Thanks to Helen Gulliver and Mum for that info! I'm planning to write a very short piece and send it to them for inclusion in their next publications, pointing at this blog. Writing that piece will be the next task!

Alternatives?
As the initial approach will be to focus on the villages, I do wonder if there might be other places to generate interest as well such as village hall and church notice boards? The pubs? The schools? The bus stops? will need some help on-the-ground with that. Of course the villages have websites too! See links on sidebar.

I'm sure the powers of Facebook, Twitter et all will also prove useful communication vehicles.

Any other ideas?

Eventually, something through the Salisbury Journal might be appropriate too, especially to gather thoughts from those who used to play against Bowerchalke CC for their own village teams.

E-Mail Address
I also need to set-up an e-mail address for this project which I'll do as soon as possible. Watch this space!

What Else?
I've got lots of other ideas as well, for example: writing down my own 'small boy thoughts and memories', look on Google maps for the old ground, do an images search online (I found one yesterday for The Bell Inn) and I think it would be worth sharing some of the stuff I've still got relating to The Gullivers versus Mouldings cricket matches, afterall a lot of those people used to play for Bowerchalke CC and that's where a lot of memories have been shared in the past when we've all gathered together. So much to do!
KeithG
*goodness I may need a project plan too!