Author Archives: Backstreeter

Abingdon Heritage Open Day 2017

Heritage Open Day
As part of Heritage Open Day it was good to see cars made in Abingdon – still going strong although the MG factory closed in 1980. They don’t make them like that anymore. Bob Frampton, in the picture, is writing a book on MGs called Made in Abingdon.
Heritage Open Day
At 11 am the Town Crier, Tony Legge, announced the Mayor of Ock Street Mr Harry Knight who opened the day with a short speech.Heritage Open Day
Harry then led out the Abingdon Traditional Morris Dancers to perform some traditional Abingdon dances.
Heritage Open Day
The main feature of the day was the fifteen open properties. Here at St Ethelwolds House is Richard who gave two talks about the history of the house.
Heritage Open Day
Christ’s Hospital Hall was very busy with lots of visitors throughout the day. They had an exhibition about the wharf and St Helen’s Mill in times gone by.
Heritage Open Day
The Mayor of Abingdon, Councillor Jan Morter, also went round some of the open properties, and received a new picture ‘Made in Abingdon’ produced for this event – sponsored by West Waddy ADP.

The Mayor’s Civic Service is at St Helen’s Church this Sunday at 10:30. You are all invited.
Heritage Open Day
Ride and Stride was also happening with over 500 churches and chapels open in Oxfordshire including St Helen’s Church. This annual event always coincides with Heritage Open day, during the 2nd weekend of September, and ensures the churches are open for two good reasons.

More pictures on the Abingdon Blog Facebook Album.

New Bus Shelters near Morland Gardens

New Bus Shelters
From Scott …
“Can I draw your attention to some idiocy by Oxfordshire County Council. They have put a bus shelter on the cycle path / pedestrian walkway just past the Morland Garden developments going out of Abingdon. This is very dangerous in my opinion. It forces bikes back onto the road, something the cycle path was put there to stop.”
New Bus Shelters
From Philip …
“… From the people responsible for this infrastructure there seems to be no understanding that an inadequate cycle path is often worse than none at all. When cyclepaths make a route unsafe the obvious response is to use the road. However this often results in ‘punishment passes’. I’ve been the target of aggressive driving on several occasions when choosing to avoid this cycle path …”
New Bus Shelters
A shelter has also been added on the field side where there is room. I remember a few years ago that a bus shelter + seats were not allowed by the Foyer (opposite the war memorial) because there was not enough space.

A Floral Walk through Abingdon’s history – 8th-10th September

A Floral Walk
At the Abbey Buildings this evening the Abingdon Flower Club were putting together A Floral Walk through Abingdon’s history. The exhibition runs between 8th and 10th September and is part of Heritage Open Days.
A Floral Walk
There are about 20 decorations, and tableaus in all. They would be very glad to see lots of visitors over the three days.
A Floral Walk
There are displays upstairs and downstairs. They were still working downstairs when I looked round but had finished this tribute to sixty Abingdon medals for bravery 1914-1918.
A Floral Walk
Also at the Abbey Buildings, in the Unicorn Theatre, Jackie Oates and Megan Henwood were performing. The audience had a sneak preview of the floral walk during the interval.

Doomed Mill

Doomed Mill
SIR, – Old watermills, though less “regionalised” as to distribution and much less publicised, might be classified with windmills as dead or dying relics of rural industry.

Earmarked for demolition in the very near future is the watermill at Abingdon which has soon to make room for the building of a block of flats. The adjoining white house in the photograph was formerly the miller’s but is now the Vicarage. Left, and behind, rises one of the most famous chimneys in England, the thirteenth-century stack from the Prior’s House of Abingdon Abbey, a feature much copied by Victorian revivalists of Gothic details.

Watermills are an older invention than windmills. All the “mills” in the Domesday survey are watermills: none was a windmill.

A.B. Grist
Berkshire

(Letter published in the Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News 30 August 1961)
Doomed Mill
Find out more about Abingdon’s Heritage this coming Heritage Weekend.

Apologies that the talk on local brick making has been postponed due to the ill health of the speaker.

But on Friday, you can still come and hear  A History of Morland’s Brewery – A talk by W T Mellor Head Brewer 1982-1994 – at St Nicolas Church.

There are still places for the tour of the Guildhall – 10:00, 11:00 and 12:00 on Saturday 9th September. Book by e-mailing enquiries@abingdon.gov.uk .

If you go into the Community FreeSpace, as part of the Made in Abingdon exhibition, the newly commissioned map showing Abingdon Industry has arrived.

Abingdon then and now – a floral walk through Abingdon’s history at the Abbey Buildings between 8th and 10th September. Put on by the Abingdon Flower Club. etc…