These free online wellbeing courses are not organised by The Federation, but are by a WI member.
They may be of interest to you.
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These free online wellbeing courses are not organised by The Federation, but are by a WI member.
They may be of interest to you.
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The Lady Denman Cup Competition is a long running, prestigious competition, attracting a high level of interest from members year after year. The current lockdown situation maybe challenging for many, but its the perfect opportunity to encourage members to develop or learn new skills and take part in activities which wouldn’t have perhaps normally captured their interest, or been able to give the time to.
For this reason, a creative writing competition could be the perfect way for people to ‘escape’ and let their imaginations run wild and I am pleased to confirm that the Lady Denman Cup competition will continue this year. However, a decision has been made to extend the competition timescale; following discussions with a number of federations, we are aware that some federations have had to furlough staff, which would mean administering the competition would either be very difficult or impossible. By extending the timeframe, the competition not only becomes open and fair to all who wish to take part, but it also helps reduce the pressure off everyone involved.
The theme for this year’s Lady Denman Cup is “What I heard on the bus”
Using no more than 500 words, WI members are invited to submit a piece of writing, either comical, serious, fact or fiction, based on a conversation they have overheard, or imagined they had heard, on the bus.
To allow a fair and standardised competition timescale across all WIs and federations, the NFWI has set a closing date of Friday, 18 September 2020 for members to submit their entry to their Federation office.
After this date, federations have until Friday, 16 October 2020 to select up to three entries to go forward for national judging. Results will be announced by mid-December 2020.
A revised schedule, individual entry form and federation entry form will be available to download from MyWI shortly.
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Circumstances permitting, towards the end of May we will be sending the following to all treasurers:
There may be additional items so please check the contents letter which comes with the pack. If you are a treasurer and do not received any/all of the above, please contact the office urgently.
Many Treasurers are now working on the accounts from an Excel spreadsheet which includes a financial statement. If, however, you still require two A4 copies of the financial statement, please email the office info@surreyfedwi.org.uk and these will be posted to you.
Diane Sanderson, Federation Secretary.
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A tide of emotions: but there must be Hope
Having experienced great relief on our return to the UK in early March, after surviving a once-in-a-life-time sandstorm and a COVID-19 outbreak at a nearby hotel, I was looking forward to a full diary of WI events.
Normality was the order of the day. I attended Elstead WI’s very special 100th birthday celebration and enjoyed, with around 40 Surrey members, the Spring residential weekend at Denman. I drafted my May column, a light-hearted missive, focussing on the celebration of May Day: Maypoles, Morris Dancing and Monty Modlyn, and even a little licentiousness and debauchery (relating to the origins of May Day celebrations, I assure you). I then moved on to address the VE Day commemorations, the role of WI members in WW2, their significant contribution to the war effort and post-war, as they looked to the promised future with an aim to change the world. I finished with an exhortation to members to support climate change initiatives, that have “rallied the population in a way that has not been seen since WW2” (Caroline Lucas MP, March 2020). I find it very hard to believe that I wrote this as late as mid-March!
Can you recall your last ‘normal’ WI encounter? On Wednesday, March 11, I went to a very well attended Emlyn Down Group Meeting, and what a very special day it was. We made a mosaic for the garden, engaged in relaxed conversation, shared a fish and chip lunch and participated in a very well organised meeting — thank you, it was a lovely day. Even a few hugs were exchanged. Maybe the last for some time, for some!
Over the next few days disbelief set in as the implications of COVID-19 struck, like a tsunami. Our world was turned inside-out, or rather, outside-in. Only four days later we were cancelling the Annual Council Meeting, then very quickly the demise of very many Surrey WI events, including Worplesdon WI’s Centenary and Bronzefield Bees’ 10th birthday, followed by a torrent of cancellations which included all Surrey WI and SFWI events until the end of June.
Reality now began to kick in. Could this be happening? The amount of work involved in hibernating the Federation kept me focussed for the first month and insulated me from the reality of what was happening in the outside world. A new, strange vocabulary emerged, of furloughing (formally a leave of absence granted to a member of the services or a missionary) and of shielding and social distancing. Our personal challenge was to address protocols, to work out which category we, our family and friends fitted into, and to restructure our daily lives accordingly.
Reality has become uncertainty. Nothing is clear, nothing is definite. We are in a constantly changing world where the goalposts move daily. Even the familiar things of life have changed their function. My handbag has become a receptacle for keys. The front door has not been unlocked for a month, my car’s boot is where the delivery driver leaves the food, which I obsessively spray with disinfectant (a freebie from Hampton Court Flower Show) and leave to decontaminate.
Amidst all this has been the arrival of Spring, and with it hope, but also guilt. COVID-19 has given us the gift of time, and with it more of a sense of awareness. It been hard not to celebrate the idyllic breaking of spring. To walk in the garden, to hear the dawn chorus uninterrupted by the drone of traffic. The sunsets seem more perfect. Is this a direct result of the drastic fall in air pollution? When was the last time the trees burst into leaf, silhouetted against a sky devoid of vapour trails? Guilt then leads to a deep sense of grief — for those lost, both known and unknown. Grief in being isolated from family and friends.
Grief for time lost, never to be reclaimed. The yearning to hug one’s children and grandchildren, to spend time with those who are most dear to us, and the question, that sits in the shadows, when will we see them again?
Guilt re-emerges. Why them and not me? What can I do to make a difference? However hard it is, the single most important thing we can all do at this stage is to stay at home. Inaction seems the exact opposite of what the WI is renowned for, but for the moment this is by far the best thing we, as individuals, can do.
But there is hope; there must be hope. In the words of the 14th Century Dame Julian of Norwich (who you may be familiar with if you, like me, have been avidly reading Elly Griffiths’ books, inspired by her literary lunch) and who, even though she witnessed the ravages of the Black Death, believed that:
“All shall be well, and all manner of things shall be well.”
And finally, in the words of Queen Elizabeth II, a member of the WI for 77 years:
“We will be with our friends again;
we will be with our families again;
we will meet again.”
(April 5, 2020).
Take care and stay safe.
Carol A. Gartrell, Federation Chairman
The photo shows Carol in her garden, sitting in the willow dome she has created, after learning how to on a course at Denman
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Today Magazines, which publishes SWIN, has been unable to print this edition so it is only available on our website. Please bring it to your members’ attention, if only to bring a touch of normality to their lives! It would also be appreciated if members with printers could print off a copy (a) for your own archives and (b) for members who do not have internet access and who will welcome their regular SWIN.
In this online edition the Literary Lunch guest is named; there are details of an outing at Christmas to Brick Lane Music Hall; a picture special on the March Denman weekend as well as plenty of other interesting articles including ‘How you met the Lockdown challenge’.
It is available to view on your phone, tablet or computer here: May Surrey WI News.
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Thank you Wallington and Carshalton Women’s Institute
It started with a gorgeous cake made for Wallington and Carshalton’s (aka The Lavender Bags) 10th birthday. We liked it so much a tea towel in the same pattern was created and given as a present to each member at the party. A challenge was also thrown down:
Take the tea towel with you on your holidays, trips, outings or celebrations and get a picture of yourself proudly displaying it.
Travels With My Tea Towel has become a ‘thing’ and members have taken their gifts around the globe.
Joy Robinson
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The tale of Surrey’s lost village — found in a WI report
Sometimes a chance remark in a report sent in by a WI member catches the eye and warrants further investigation. That happened with a report sent in by Tessa Langmead, stating that a member active in Sidlow Bridge WI for more than 40 years told them about a historical connection with Duxhurst, Lady Henry Somerset and the Priory Museum at Reigate. They were trying to trace some artefacts connected to this time; the response was promising and a lot was learnt by members who were unaware of the connection.
That prompted me to want to know (a) what was Duxhurst and (b) who was Lady Henry Somerset. Thanks to the wonders of the internet, a fascinating tale unfolded.
Lady Isabella Somerset was the estranged wife of Lord Henry Somerset. She was also President of the Women’s Temperance Association. She leased the 180-acre Duxhurst estate, three miles south of Reigate, containing a manor house and a farm, and set about building a village for the care of inebriate women of all classes (the nearest seller of alcohol was a mile and a half away). It was opened in 1895 by Princess Mary of Teck (later Queen Mary).
Aristocratic ladies and stage celebrities suffering from alcoholism were accommodated in the manor house.
Inebriates of the “middle” classes lived in another house on the estate.
For the rest, Lady Somerset believed they should be usefully occupied, but in a setting as far removed from their previous life as possible. So she built a collection of thatched cottages arranged in a horseshoe around a village green. Each could house up to eight women, many from very rough backgrounds. The village had a hospital, laundries, workshops, a dairy farm, gardens, greenhouses, lavender fields — even a pottery. By 1902 it was claiming a 45 per cent success rate in curing alcoholism.
War work for women relieved the loneliness and unhappiness which made many of them turn to drink, so in 1915 Duxhurst was requisitioned as a Red Cross hospital. When the estate was decommissioned in 1917, Lady Isabella turned it into a children’s village.
Lady Isabella died aged 71 in 1921.The children’s village closed in 1923 and Duxhurst was used as a home for gentlefolk until 1936 when it was purchased for use as an orphanage. In WWII it was requisitioned as a cadet training centre and later became a camp for Italian PoWs. After the war the buildings were left vacant; by the 1960s most had been demolished. Today Duxhurst is known as Surrey’s lost village.
I thought I knew my home county but all this was news to me (and is, perhaps, to you). Isn’t it amazing what treasures can be gleaned from a WI report!
June Green, Editor Surrey WI News.
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We are living in unprecedented times, certainly part of the history our grandchildren and their children will learn about.
The Surrey History Centre would like to hear from you…..
Share your experiences of life during the Coronavirus Shutdown by creating a diary for Surrey History Centre!
These are challenging and exceptional times. Few, if any of us have will have experienced such a seismic shift in our daily lives in so short a time. So, how is the present crisis impacting upon your daily life? What are your thoughts, feelings and concerns at this time of uncertainty and lockdown?
As well as preserving the official record of how local authorities have mobilised to manage throughout the pandemic, we’re inviting members of the public in Surrey to keep a journal of their experiences and challenges during these exceptional times and to deposit them for historical preservation with Surrey History Centre when the pandemic has passed and daily life has returned to some normality. We are also collecting photographs demonstrating how life has changed during the epidemic, from street notices about social distancing to shop queuing procedures.
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Watch out for details of our next great literary lunch.
We have booked a new venue, Glenmore House in Surbiton, and our speaker will be a very well-known crime writer whose work was adapted for a highly successful and award winning TV series.
The date will be Friday, 18 September.
All will be revealed in next month’s magazine and on the website when you will be able to apply for tickets.
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Would you like a once in a lifetime chance to see a Prince’s Treasure?
More than 120 remarkable decorative works of art have been lent by Her Majesty the Queen and relocated from Buckingham Palace to Brighton’s Royal Pavilion in an exhibition entitled A Prince’s Treasure, providing a once in a lifetime opportunity for visitors to see these magnificent items in their former home.
Many have not been on public display for over 170 years and are on loan while essential building works take place in the East Wing of Buckingham Palace.
Some were moved to Buckingham Palace and Windsor Castle by Queen Victoria in 1847 when it was thought that the Royal Pavilion might be demolished and have not been on public display for many years, having been in rooms not on the Buckingham Palace visitor route.
The items include the majestic 15ft high porcelain pagodas, originally commissioned for the Music Room, and the famous Kylin clock, an extraordinary golden extravaganza featuring turquoise Chinese lions, then often known as Kylins, which was originally made for the Saloon.
In case you would like to see what might be in store for you, why not have a virtual tour of the Royal Pavilion courtesy of Brighton Museums.
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