Monthly Archives: April 2017

Journalists descend on Abingdon Street

Abingdon Street Today
We happened to be in London today and saw a lot of journalists had descended on Abingdon Street.
Abingdon Street Today
They were in a big huddle but it looked as though the big news event had already happened.
Abingdon Street Today
The first clue to the news event was the presence of bookmakers giving odds for the winners of a general election. The PM had called a shock general election
Abingdon Street Today
She is likely to win by more than a head.

60 Years Ago On

60 years ago
Two ground crew stationed at RAF Abingdon were charged, 60 years ago this week, in connection with the crash of the RAF Beverley at Sutton Wick, just outside Abingdon, on March 15th 1957. The accident resulted from a valve incorrectly fitted to the fuel system, and killed 15 RAF men on board, and two civilians on the ground. The accident occurred soon after the plane took off from RAF Abingdon, heading for the Middle East.
60 years ago
At Trinity Church there was a good gathering to watch excerpts from The Messiah on Palm Sunday. Easter was even later in 1957 than 2017.
60 years ago
People were reminded not to forget to get their chest X-Rayed as part of a mass national campaign to catch Tuberculosis early. Everyone X-Rayed received a badge as they queued up in Abingdon Market Place. Back then the badge was a prize worth having.
60 years ago
Anybody celebrating their Diamond Jubilee could have got their wedding gifts from Beadles in Ock Street. Has anybody still got any such gifts from Beadles?
60 years ago
And you could have gone to the Cinema and watched ‘Three Men in a Boat’ and tried to see if there were any views of Abingdon. It can still be watched on Youtube.

In Jerome K Jerome’s original book ‘THREE MEN IN A BOAT (to say nothing of the dog)’ it says …

Windsor and Abingdon are the only towns between London and Oxford that you can really see anything of from the stream. All the others hide round corners, and merely peep at the river down one street: my thanks to them for being so considerate, and leaving the river-banks to woods and fields and water-works.”

“At Abingdon, the river passes by the streets. Abingdon is a typical country town of the smaller order—quiet, eminently respectable, clean, and desperately dull. It prides itself on being old, but whether it can compare in this respect with Wallingford and Dorchester seems doubtful. A famous abbey stood here once, and within what is left of its sanctified walls they brew bitter ale nowadays.”

Thanks to the Herald microfiche from the library for the old adverts, and the BBC for a still from a news real of the crash.)

Also to mention that I finished by sixty sixties blog this Bank Holiday morning.

Pay what you like day – Abingdon United

Abingdon United
Abingdon United hosted North Leigh at The Northcourt for the penultimate game of the season. If they could win this game, and the final game on Monday, then they would bounce back to the Hellenic League Premier Division.
Abingdon United
It was their first ever ‘Pay what you like day’ to thank supporters who had been supporting all season, and a chance to get new/lapsed fans to make a visit.
Abingdon United
Abingdon United have been sticking with a youth policy despite relegation last season. The first team seem to have got stronger as the season has progressed.
Abingdon United
They also have a development team and academy to which young players can apply to join.
Abingdon United
It was a sunny day, and Abingdon United won 7-0.

They now just need to win on Monday to secure promotion.