Beech Court

The Roysse Room was the site of Abingdon School (then ‘Roysse’s School’) from 1563. Since moving to a much larger site, in Victorian times, near the Albert Park, the school continues to be developed. A new sports complex opened in 2008. A new Science block was added in 2015.
Beech Court
Hoardings have been showing pictures of the new Sixth Form, Library and Art Department that will be opening in 2018.
Beech Court
During development the emerging building has been encased in scaffolding – decorated by yellow and red safety walkways.
Beech Court
The scaffolding has now started to come down to reveal the new building – visible from Bath Street and the walled walkway between Bath Street and the Albert Park .

The new building will not only increase the space for the library and sixth form, it will free up space elsewhere for other departments, and students.

White Horse Pub and The Abingdon Arms

The White Horse
I noticed today that the sign at the White Horse Pub in Ock Street has changed from the head of a white horse to The White Horse – the ancient monument near the Ridgeway, after which the Vale of the White Horse is named.
The White Horse
The pub has been there since at least 1830, when mentioned in the Pigots Directory. It looks a typical Ock Street building and is one of only two pubs now along Ock Street. The Morris Dancers used to have far more to dance at.

I don’t know what sort of horse the original landlord of the White Horse intended. Wikipedia saysWhite Horse: the sign of the House of Hanover, adopted by many eighteenth-century inns to demonstrate loyalty to the new Royal dynasty.’

But in these changed times the new pub sign looks very nice to me.
The White Horse
Last week I was at Wantage and passed the prominent sign of  the recently refurbished Abingdon Arms. The latest comment on facebook says ‘Brilliant honest to goodness PUB! Does exactly what it says on the tin. Wish there were more places like this and not the Slug and Cucumber brigade!’

Mayor of Abingdon-on-Thames Charity Choir Concert

Charity Choir Concert
The Oxford Welsh Male Voice Choir were performing this evening at St Helen’s Church. They were there for the Mayor of Abingdon-on-Thames Charity Choir Concert. The event was raising funds for the Mayor’s Charities Against Breast Cancer and The Abingdon Bridge.
Charity Choir Concert
The Mayor, Councillor Jan Morter, a teacher of music, also invited the Oxford County Youth Choir – open to anyone aged 11-18 who loves singing.
Charity Choir Concert
The Oxford Welsh Male Voice Choir have been singing together since 1928 – originating with Welshmen drawn to Oxford to work at the Morris Car Factory. It is open for anyone who is Male, and now comprises half Welshmen and half men of other nationalities.
Charity Choir Concert
After an excellent evening the two choirs joined together for the final two songs. The Youth and the Men were led by Helen Swift, the musical director of the Oxford Welsh Male Voice Choir, singing Oh Danny Boy, and Mae Hen (The Welsh National Anthem).

Brendan Cox – More in Common (Friday 2 February 2018 at Fitzharrys School)

Thanks to Ray for this Report …
Brendan Cox
Fitzharrys School played host to a packed meeting at which Brendan Cox, husband of murdered MP Jo Cox, spoke about Jo’s life, the More in Common movement, and his recently-written book of the same name.

In June 2016 Jo Cox was shot and stabbed to death by a Nazi sympathiser who was angered by her support for refugees. Brendan explained how the book’s title came from Jo’s maiden speech in the Commons, in which she said ‘While we celebrate our diversity, what surprises me time and time again as I travel around the constituency is that we are far more united and have far more in common than that which divides us’.

The meeting took the form of an interview, ably conducted by Mark Thornton, former owner of Mostly Books in Stert Street, followed by audience questions. Brendan firstly described the traumatic effect Jo’s death had had on everyone, particularly him and the children – and the help they had in coping with it. The book, he said, was the unintended result of advice from a grief counselling expert for him to keep a diary of events and feelings so that, in later years, he could help both himself and their children understand what had happened.

Brendan went on to tell the meeting something of his and Jo’s history of working together for Oxfam, and their work and shared interest in humanitarian projects in Bosnia, Afghanistan, the Middle East and elsewhere. Their shared interests and moral standpoint on the confrontational nature of today’s world, formed the basis for the More in Common movement. This, and coping with Jo’s death, were boosted by Brendan’s firm belief that anger and hatred is the wrong reaction to any event – even his own wife’s murder.

The audience was completely enthralled by Brendan’s candidness and readiness to answer their questions on both emotionally difficult as well as more down-to-earth topics. The evening really was an emotional roller-coaster moving between humorous memories of life with Jo and heart-breaking moments of life without her. One particularly poignant story concerned Jo’s funeral – a private affair with just a handful of guests. When his son saw the crowds along the route, there to pay their respects, he turned to his father and marvelled, ‘I knew that people loved Mummy, but I didn’t know this many people loved her.’
Brendan Cox
Aside: Abingdon has its own More in Common group which focusses on actions we can take at a local level to connect our communities. They host monthly drop-in ‘Community-Tea‘ at St Ethelwold’s and are planning a second ‘Great Get-together‘ in June.