Abingdon’s H. Samuel store to close

Samuel store to close
Jewellery chain H. Samuel will not be renewing the lease on their store in Abingdon. They have been at 25 Bury Street since 1984. A sign says, ‘Sorry we’re leaving. This store is closing.’ The other sign in the window saying ‘Make Valentine’s Day last forever.
Samuel store to close
The company commented recently on similar closures in Bridlington, Hereford, and Llandudno, ‘We continually re-assess our portfolio of stores on a store-by-store basis, particularly when individual store leases come up for renewal.’

There remain about 300 H Samuels nationwide. Four jewellers will remain in Abingdon.

Hft Milton Heights – Closing and handing back services

Hft (previously Home Farm Trust) opened up a centre for people with learning disabilities in 1982 at Milton Heights, near Abingdon. It comprised several houses, and a day centre. Since then Hft has become the gold standard in supportive independent living in this area. Many of us know people who use the services there.
Hft Milton Heights
(Thanks to Google Maps for the satellite view)

According to independent research commissioned by Hft the number of social care providers who say they have been forced to cut support for vulnerable adults has doubled in the last 12 months as a direct result of financial pressures.

Billy Davis, Public Affairs and Policy Manager for Hft, said: ‘A lack of alternatives has left providers with no choice but to make decisions culturally at odds with the way they want to run their organisations, such as handing back services and, ironically, shedding staff in the midst of a sector-wide recruitment crisis.’

That is just what is happening at Milton Heights now. Hft are having to hand back services in a way that is culturally at odds with the way they want to run their organisation. They have announced Milton Heights is to close and are shedding staff after a recruitment drive. The day centre is to close in May 2020, the houses in April 2020.
Hft Milton Heights
The Flexible Support Day Centre at Milton Heights provides support for many individuals. Flexible means there a lots of different activities available in different areas: music, computers, art and craft, cookery, pottery,  a larger room for any number of activities such as dancing and drama. The activities encourage people to learn new skills and live as independently as possible.

About 25 individuals also live in houses at Milton Heights.  Hft / Home Farm Trust was originally a charity set up by parents to provide supportive homes for their offspring when they were no longer able. Some parents thought they were assured a place for life.

It is considered best practise these days to move people into independent houses in the community rather than have larger groupings. Hft has been doing that as opportunities arose.  They have a number of houses in Abingdon, and in Didcot and Harwell.
Hft Milton Heights
A recent opportunity to move people out from Milton Heights went sadly wrong. There is a  development next to the site on Milton Heights. The land was once owned by Hft and they got outline planning permission for 48 dwellings, and five Home Farm Trust residential units. But I hear that after Hft sold the site to a developer, that developer then sold the site to another developer and that developer, Matthew Homes, asked to be released from that commitment to build five Hft homes (See http://www.whitehorsedc.gov.uk/java/support/Main.jsp?MODULE=ApplicationDetails&REF=P18/V0386/FUL ). The Vale of White Horse District Council say they could do nothing but comply on planning grounds.

The Hft services on Milton Heights are being handed back to Oxfordshire County who have a team of social workers reassessing people and working hard to look for placements. It is all happening very quickly. An action group, mostly made of parents, is calling for a stop to ensure this is done in a way that does not harm individuals. If you can imagine being super-sensitive to change, and then suddenly every bit of your life changes all at once. That is what it is like for some of the supported people. Others may be able to cope but are still finding it very upsetting to loose a place where they have known so many people for so long.

From what outsiders can tell, the closure must have been planned at Hft central office in Bristol, and must have had the knowledge of Oxfordshire County Council Social Services. Nobody else locally knew until January 13th. Staff, service users and their families were shocked by out of the blue announcements.

We, who live in Oxfordshire, know how Oxfordshire County Council has been affected by cuts in their central government grant. Educational support services have been slashed, children’s centres closed, bus subsidies stopped, elderly day centres and services cut, and now we are losing the gold standard services provided by Hft at Milton Heights.

Hft say they cannot continue to run Milton Heights at a loss – which they put at several thousand pounds a week. Oxfordshire County Council say they cannot afford to pay more. The Action Group are looking to do what they can but have not been made privy to the finances. So we will have to wait and see whether there is any chance of reprieve and whether any of the services and staff can be saved. If not the best things is to make the transition for the people involved as smooth as possible.

An article also appeared in the Oxford Mail giving a more personal picture of the some of the people involved https://www.oxfordmail.co.uk/news/18218179.devastated-families-fear-hft-milton-heights-day-centre-closure/.

When the curtain falls

This is from one of the members of Abingdon Drama Club …

I want to ask if you could put something about Charlie Birks in your Blog.
Move-out Mayor
Charlie has turned up at the “move-out” after every show we have put on at the Unicorn since he’s been Mayor. Unasked and unexpectedly, he has rolled up his sleeves and worked like a Trojan to help us clear the Theatre, strike the set and load everything onto Ray Carter’s lorry for transport back to the Clubhouse.
Move-out Mayor
We are all tremendously grateful to him for his generous help. To my knowledge he is the only Mayor ever to have done this – in spite of the Mayor being our Patron – and we would like his kindness and generosity to be known around the Town.

Could you give a grateful mention to Ray as well? He helps us with every move-in and move-out, and also deserves recognition!
Move-out Mayor
This seems a good place to say that now is the time to get tickets for the Mayor’s Charity Evening. It will be an enjoyable evening and also a chance to help the Mayor raise money for his charities: The Abingdon Bridge and Shift.

Our Lady of Abingdon

Our Lady of Abingdon
It is said that Abingdon should make more of St Edmund of Abingdon, whose name is part of the Catholic Church of Our Lady and St Edmund in Abingdon. It might also be said that Abingdon should make more of Our Lady of Abingdon.

St. Edward the Martyr and St. Dunstan, Archbishop of Canterbury, both encouraged pilgrimages to the shrine of Our Lady of Abingdon, according to the Catholic Encyclopedia included in the New Advent website. Our Lady of Abingdon was as famous in medieval times as our Lady of Walsingham is now.

So was Our Lady of Abingdon lost for ever like most of the Abbey?

When the ‘Sow and Pigs’ public house, in Culham, was demolished in 1913, a large stone was found. It was subsequently recognised as a Madonna and Child and given to Our Lady and St Edmund’s Church in 1949.  For eight years the headless and armless statue stood on a chapel floor.

According to one source, Canon Sexton, the parish priest, traced it to a shrine visited by many people on their way to a Sunnyg’s Well (Sunningwell) where people went hoping to be cured of blindness.
Our Lady of Abingdon
In 1957 Canon Sexton had the statue restored with the help of sculptor Philip Lindsay Clark and the advice of a Benedictine monk / medieval art expert. It is not richly adorned like Our Lady of Walsingham and looking up to heaven, but modest and looking down to people in the church.

The church website https://www.ourladyandstedmund.org.uk/brief-history says the statue was originally a part of the once great Abbey of St Mary at Abingdon, and was defaced and removed during the dissolution of the monastery and hidden away in a cottage wall.

The statue does not usually feature on Abingdon tourism guides or in history books. So are we all missing a local treasure?