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Cinema came to rural communities

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Dorset Council supported films in certain village halls, and these remained popular into the early 1980’s, says local guide Paul Birbeck.


In Shaftesbury, The Palace Picture House was at the bottom of the High Street, but was demolished in 1925. The Savoy Cinema opened on Bimport in December 1933 with “Maid of the Mountains”, starring Nancy Brown and Harry Welchman. It stood opposite the town’s largest church, which apparently caused some initial controversy. It closed in 1984, and was demolished in the same year to make way for what is now ‘Savoy Court’ residential flats.

Imagine a world with few domestic cars, telephones or television. No mobile devices, computers. internet or social media platforms. What would you do for entertainment? How would have spent your time and keep in touch with friends and relations?

Many people remember such times, some – those who hanker for a simpler, less complex lifestyle than we live today – with affection. My memories of growing up in the 1950’s are formed of climbing trees, playing sport, walking, cycling and exploring with friends. If the weather was poor we played board games and cards. The dark brown radiogram, record player and the crackly black & white TV in the corner of the lounge were the height of modernity. By the early 1960s, Saturday mornings often involved walking under the railway arches below Oxted railway station to the Odeon cinema, where eating popcorn and watching children’s films were more than satisfactory. Trailers for the adult blockbusters, screened in the afternoon and evening, only tempted young teenagers to unsuccessfully try and pass off as 18 years old to gain entry…

Early cinema in Dorset

In late C19th Dorset, early commercial cinemas, or picture houses, opened in Bournemouth and Christchurch and were the first to show short cinematic film programmes. By the 1930’s, cinema houses had started to open in most market towns and people began to ‘go to the pictures’

As the Hollywood film industry evolved through to the 1950s, Dorset’s town cinemas were supplemented by rural properties like chapels and village halls which were modified to enable the latest films to be shown. The film stars were the idols of the day.

Mobile cinema

In remote rural areas, travelling showmen provided Bioscope Booths at travelling fairs, enabling more people to see moving pictures for the first time. Mobile cinema units travelled around the county. These vehicles carried a self-contained generator and mounted projector which projected on a rear view translucent screen. In his book ‘A Century of Cinema in Dorset 1896-1996’, film enthusiast Peter Dyson describes evidence of such units touring the BV on a regular basis into the 1960’s.

In 1976 Dorset Communities Council supported a scheme which supported preferential booking rates for selected films in a number of village halls. These remained popular and well supported into the early 1980’s.
Today, cinemas had some success in fighting the competition of television, but they have never regained the influence they held in the 1930s and 40s, and audiences have dwindled. In the 1990’s we saw a boom in out-of-town multiplex cinemas, and the few remaining town cinemas invested in digital projection facilities capable of producing screen images that rival the sharpness, detail and brightness of traditional film projection. Only a small number of more specialist cinemas retained film projection equipment.

Now most people see films on television, via satellite or subscription on demand services. Streaming film content on computers, tablets and phones is common, proving more convenient for modern audiences and lifestyles. However, it is still possible to find evidence of the old movie houses in the towns around the Vale. For example, Sherborne once had four cinema facilities. Physical evidence has long disappeared, but posters, old photographs and contemporary personal memories are still shared on social media. In contrast, the Tivoli Theatre in Wimborne has survived and flourished to ensure the ‘Magic of film’ lives on.

by Paul Birbeck

A tale of two pubs – and an intoxicated postmaster! | Looking Back

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If you think our modern TV soaps are racy, you should have lived in north Dorset in the 19th century, says Roger Guttridge.


Fiddleford Post Office aka the Traveller’s Rest c1957. The people are (l-r) Connie Guttridge (née Ridout), Jane and Jim Ridout, relative Ann Minchell and (front) Lassie the springer spaniel and Roger Guttridge aged about seven

An editing error in last month’s Looking Back column affords me an excuse to indulge in an historical tale that is rather close to home.

The insertion of brackets around my first reference to the ‘former Traveller’s Rest’ in my story on the Dorset and Somerset Canal gave the impression that this long- lost pub and the present-day Fiddleford Inn occupied the same building.

They definitely did not, although I confess that the BV editor is not the first to make this assumption.
I have read similar claims elsewhere, including in promotional flyers published by the Fiddleford Inn itself. Although I say it myself, no- one is better placed than I to unravel the story of Fiddleford’s pubs.
The present-day Fiddleford Inn was not a pub at all until the late 1960s, although it was a brewery in the 19th century and probably also the 18th.

It features in one of the family legends told to me by my maternal grandfather, Jim Ridout, about our smuggling ancestor Roger Ridout.

The story goes that Roger beat up an Excise officer who dared to inquire about the contents of a jar that the gang leader was carrying from the brewery to his home in Okeford Fitzpaine. It actually contained fast-acting yeast and the smuggler shook it vigorously, pulled out the stopper and directed it into the officer’s eyes.

Smugglers outwit the law

Roger Ridout’s mother, Susannah Appowell, was a Fiddleford girl, and the smugglers stored their contraband at Fiddleford Mill.

As to the brewery, this was owned by the Adams family for much of the 19th century, and they substantially extended it, adding an archway which gave wagons access to the back yard. During my childhood, the arch was still there, closed to the road by a large green gate.
The outline of the arch can still be seen around the Fiddleford Inn’s front door.
The building was a private house, known as Archway House, until about 1967, when it changed its use to become the Archway House Hotel.
I was 17 then and living next door in a house called Woodview.
This is now Forest View, though I can’t imagine why, as the wood that provides the view has not become Piddles Forest. This property hosted Cressey’s tannery in the mid-19th century.


Archway House (now the Fiddleford Inn), probably the 1930s

The Archway House Hotel was initially unlicensed but acquired a liquor licence within two or three years and became the Fiddleford Inn in 1972.
It was Fiddleford’s first licensed hostelry since the closure of the Traveller’s Rest almost 90 years earlier.
The latter pub was set back slightly from the main road, a couple of doors along from Archway House.
The house is known today as Traveller’s Rest but in my childhood was a village shop called Fiddleford Post Office, run by my great-grandparents and grandparents from 1894 to 1965.

The pub that wasn’t…

My great-grandfather, Colour Sergeant James Hilliar Ridout, was working as a racecourse steward in Dublin in 1894 when a relative wrote to say that the Traveller’s Rest had become vacant.

The former Scots Guardsman famously enjoyed a tipple and thought he was on to a winner, so he upped sticks and moved his large family (plus hens and rooster!) to Fiddleford.

He thought he was taking over a pub so imagine his disappointment when he arrived to find that the Traveller’s Rest had lost its licence a few years earlier.


The Portman Hunt outside Archway House, now the Fiddleford Inn

Thus thwarted, James and wife Harriet instead opened a shop and two years later added the Post Office. James returned to his native Okeford Fitzpaine when he wanted a drink, and was often heard singing Onward Christian Soldiers as he staggered home to Fiddleford after a pint or five. He was once cautioned for being intoxicated while on Post Office duty but behaved himself after that.
The Traveller’s Rest was previously called the Bell and dates back at least to 1753, when the landlord was William Dawson.
Fiddleford had two pubs at that time. Widow Ann Churchouse ran the Royal Oak, though the exact location of this hostelry is unknown.

by Roger Guttridge

The Old School Tie | Then and Now

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The Old School house in Sturminster Newton reflects fascinating local history, some of it personal, says Roger Guttridge.


Declaration of the poll at the Old School, Sturminster Newton, 1910

It’s a private house today, appropriately named The Old School, but the building in Penny Street, Sturminster Newton, has seen more than its share of uses across almost 200 years.

My ‘then’ picture above dates from 1910 and shows a crowd gathered outside for the declaration of the poll to elect the MP for Dorset North.

There were two general elections that year, both won in Dorset North by Conservative Sir Randolph Baker with a majority of 149 in January and 32 in December.

On both occasions his sole opponent was Arthur Wills, who had first won the seat for the Liberals in a by-election in 1905 and retained it in a general election the following year. Sir Randolph was the defeated candidate in those previous elections.
The Old School, whose mighty buttresses tower imposingly above Penny Street, was built in, or a little before, 1835 by the Rev Thomas Lane Fox.
He wanted to educate ‘the poor boys of this parish’, many of whom would have transferred in 1835 from the mixed Church School in what is now St Mary’s Church Hall.

It later became the Secondary Modern School and in my primary school years in the late 1950s it doubled as the canteen for pupils of the Junior School in Bridge Street (now the William Barnes School).

Every lunchtime we would file along Church Lane to claim our ‘school dinners’, cooked in, and served from, the later extension to the L-shaped Old School building. I remember that a large portrait hung on the wall of the larger hall section, where we ate.

I’ve always imagined that this was a picture of William Barnes, the poet, but this may be my memory playing tricks.

Old School, Sturminster Newton now

What is now the Old School’s garden was the school playground in the ’50s and I recall that there were classrooms and offices around the perimeter, now all gone.
My mother, Connie Guttridge, worked in the canteen until recruited as secretary to headmaster, Stanley Tozer, in preparation for the move to the new Secondary Modern School in Bath Road, which opened in 1960 and became the High School in 1968.
For a few years after 1960 the Old School hall hosted social events such as meetings of the Silver Thread Club.

by Roger Guttridge

WOOD, Ken

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Passed away peacefully on the 18th March 2022 aged 75.

Much loved Husband, Father and Grandpa.

Add your Whats On Blackmore Vale event for FREE

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We’re excited to say it’s now totally FREE (and super-easy) for charity and not-for-profit events (and just a £10 flat fee for business and ‘for-profit’ events) to list on our new BV ‘What’s On’ calendar, making it easy for evryone to find Whats On Blackmore Vale events!

One of the things we’re asked most to publicise are local fundraiser events – and it’s always difficult to say ‘sorry, we don’t have room’. But of course we’re limited on space for free listings, and small charity events and fundraisers simply shouldn’t have to use their budget to pay for advertising. To solve this, we’ve made it so that EVERYONE can advertise their events on our website – and most of them for FREE!

Whats On Blackmore Vale in the BV magazine

🟢 Have an event you’d like to share with our thousands of readers?

If you’re a charity, or are running a free, not-for-profit or fundraiser event, then advertise your event for the Blackmore Vale on the BV’s What’s On page. Just add all the details here https://www.theblackmorevale.co.uk/add-your-whats-on-event/ , along with a picture. We’ll automagically add it to the calendar – and even add directions from Google maps for you.

🟢 Is your event for profit?

You’re still welcome!There’s just a small £10 admin fee.

🔴 Please note, we do not accept recurring (weekly or fortnightly) events that could be classed as an activity.

Whether you’re a local or simply visiting, you still want to know the upcoming Whats On Blackmore Vale events – if there’s a car boot sale on this weekend, a church jumble sale or a 5k fun run. Maybe you’re looking for a local comedy night, an amateur dramatics production, and let’s not forget carol singing or village fetes. What, when and where, how much it is, where to get tickets and even how long it’ll take you to get there too.Upload your event now – it couldn’t be easier!

add your Whats On Blackmore Vale event in the BV magazine

Self-made self- sufficiency

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“It’s all linked and never finished”. And Carl Mintern wouldn’t have it any other way now he’s discovered the joys of self-sufficiency, Tracie Beardsley reports in this month’s A Country Living.

Carl Mintern with a haul of wild oyster mushrooms from near his home

After restoring an old farmhouse in Lovington, local builder Carl found himself moving into it. His client had decided to rent the property rather than live there, and gave Carl first refusal and a significantly reduced rent. The house came with eight acres of land.

Four years on, Carl and his wife Jackie, along with their three teenage children, have created a self- sufficient lifestyle, living off the land as much as possible.

Carl explains: “Until that point, we had no intention of growing our own food. I’d grown a few carrots, and we’d kept a few hens for eggs but the idea of self-sufficiency and doing things to the level I do now just wasn’t in my zeitgeist.” That level includes producing as much of their own food as possible.
Their smallholding is home to a menagerie of hens, ducks, pigs, goats and sheep.
Feeding stock with the by-products of bakeries and fruit and veg shops that would otherwise
go to landfill reduces waste and their own carbon footprint.
“Every animal pays for itself,” Carl explains.
He makes his own cheese and ice-cream – enjoying 20 pints of milk a day from two goats. He even slaughters and butchers his pigs himself, having learnt how to do this from books and YouTube. His first pig took him three days to slaughter and butcher. Three years on, it’s gun- to-freezer in three hours.
“What became clear to me from the moment we moved in was that we shouldn’t waste this opportunity. I’d never had land before. I didn’t want our time here just being the same as what we usually did –
working, watching Netflix, going to bed. This desire was coupled with an immense sense
of custodianship of the land.”

A proud Carl showing off a success from his first time growing a vegetable garden

Hitting the ground running

The boxes were barely unpacked when Carl set to work. Within the first year, he’d created a vegetable garden, erected a polytunnel, bought in pigs and goats to rear, started digging a pond and learnt about bee- keeping.
He’d already taught himself how to forage and is now an expert, leading foraging courses across Dorset and Somerset and most recently writing a regular column on the topic here in the BV (see this month’s on page 56).
“I’d had a rural childhood – poaching trout and dabbling in foraging,” he explains “but I really got into it when I was diagnosed with testicular cancer. I couldn’t work for six weeks while I underwent chemotherapy so I immersed myself in mushroom foraging and went from becoming an enthusiast to an expert.

“Wild, edible plants are a ridiculously neglected amazing source of free food – absolute gems,” he explains as he shows me a kitchen shelf groaning under pots of dried foraged mushrooms and walnuts. “We’re not talking food miles, we’re talking food metres when you walk and forage.”
Carl shares his passion for self-sufficiency in a series of brilliantly informative podcasts – just look for the ‘self sufficient hub’ podcast to listen in.
“Wherever you live, whatever your lifestyle, you can grow some of your own food and be more self-sufficient than you are. I want to share my ideas and passion with anyone prepared to listen. Growing your own food is the Swiss army knife of sustainability. It improves soil health, it sequesters CO2 from the atmosphere and it tastes incredible! And when you sit down to a meal and literally everything on the plate is something you have helped produce – that’s a phenomenal feeling.”

Carl spending a moment with a one-day-old baby goat, born in his garden from his milking herd

Big plans and new adventures

Sadly, the ‘Good Life’ is drawing to an end in Lovington as the owner of the farmhouse is reclaiming her property. But Carl is determined to continue his self-sufficiency adventure. “I’m planning to buy a field where I can create a learning centre and set up the smallholding again.

‘’My vision is that I can teach people the skills I’ve gained – the principles of permaculture, how to grow your own food, to preserve, to forage, to compost, to make cheese, bake sourdough, master the art of fermenting. I want to pass on to others all the things I’ve spent the last four years immersing myself in – things I didn’t realise I loved until we lived off the land.”

Find out more about Carl at Self Sufficient Hub. Carl’s Foraging Courses in Dorset and Somerset are now available – full details are on Carl’s website here.

Carl harvesting wild oyster mushrooms which will feed his family (excess will be dried and preserved for use later in the year).

Quick-fire questions with Carl:

Favourite book?

The Encyclopedia of Country Living by Carla Emery; self- sufficiency learnt on the great plains of America, covering everything from milking a goat to midwifery.

Dinner party guest?

Sam Harris – neuroscientist and moral philosopher, master meditator – I’m a big fan of his.

What would be on the menu?

Something in season of course!

by Tracie Beardsley

Relief Milker Opportunity | Hemsworth Farm nr Blandford

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Opportunity for a relief milker on an organic farm near Blandford Forum.

This is a permanent position, but a part time job, mornings only.

Extra hours are available for assistance with calf rearing.

Immediate start.

For more information, please contact Sophie on 07866 915305 or Email: [email protected]

He brings the gift of a Rose

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The equinox on March 20th is a sad day for star gazers as that’s when days become longer than the nights, says expert Rob Nolan. But there’s still lots of astral excitement to observe.

NGC2244

Well, we’ve certainly had some changeable weather this past month, ending with storm Eunice tearing through the south west on Friday the 18th Feb. Certainly not conducive weather for star gazing by any means! High winds have been a theme recently. Given that we’ve just celebrated Valentine’s Day, it seemed only fitting to give you all the gift of a Rose this month! Like many, though, mine is a bit late for the 14th February…
The Rosette (or Rosetta) Nebula’s appearance in optical light resembles a rose flower, or the rosette, the stylized flower design used in sculptural objects since ancient times, and the nebula was named after the design.

The nebula has earned the nickname the Skull because it also closely resembles the human skull. I much prefer to see it as a rose though.

A beautiful nebula

The Rosette Nebula (NGC 2237) is one of my favourite objects in the winter sky to photograph. It’s an unbelievably beautiful nebula in constellation Monoceros, the Unicorn. It has an apparent magnitude of 9.0 and is approximately 5,200 light years away from Earth.
The nebula is a large cloud of gas and dust that lies near a large molecular cloud and is closely associated with the open cluster NGC 2244, whose stars were formed from the nebula’s matter in the last five million years.

The surrounding gas that forms a ring around the dark centre is glowing because it is being blasted by radiation from nearby stars (I know, I’m destroying the rose romanticism now), making the Rosette Nebula an emission nebula made up of hydrogen gas, giving it a red colour when imaged.

This image is also my first mosaic composition, which was created by stitching four separate images together to make the overall image, providing higher overall detail. Each Panel of the mosaic contains two and a half hours of data. This was shot in January this year using a Skywatcher 200 PDS Newtonian Reflector Telescope and Cooled Astro Camera.

The Night Sky, March 2022 – Rob’s tips for your stargazing this month:

Winter officially ends in less than a month on the 20th March. At which point we will pass equinox, and the days become longer than the night.
The most exciting changes may happen in the southern skies at the moment, but now is a great time to have a look at some of the northern constellations that are visible every night of the year. Cassiopeia, Cepheus, Draco and Ursa Major and Minor are all visible and should be explored. Gemini in the Southern Skies plays host to the bright stars Castor and Pollox.

Castor is actually a family made up of six stars, with three pairs of stars all gravitationally bound to each other, which can be seen when observing them through a small telescope.

Pollux is cooler, and appears more orange, but it’s also not alone. A planet larger than Jupiter orbits Pollux, called Thestias.
Gemini is also home to a beautiful star cluster, M35, which can be seen with the unaided eye despite being nearly 2,800 light years away from Earth.

Praesepe – also known as The Beehive – is a swarm of more than 1,000 stars, visible as a faint misty patch in Cancer to the unaided eye, between Gemini and Leo. It was first distinguished as a group of stars by Galileo – grab a pair of binoculars or a small telescope to take a closer look.

Other events to enjoy this month start on the 8th of March, when the Moon is near the Pleiades.
As mentioned, on the 20th March, the Spring Equinox occurs, a saddening time for astronomers as it marks the beginning of the end of the few long nights we’ve enjoyed during the autumn and winter months.

On the 28th March, just before dawn, look low towards the south-east to observer Venus with the narrow crescent Moon below. If you have a pair of binoculars to hand, you can also see Saturn and Mars in the vicinity.

Most of the planets in our Solar System are only visible just before dawn during March, with the exception of Uranus, which is observable by binoculars or a telescope all night long.

by Rob NolanFind RPN Photography on Facebook here

Wanted: live-in qualified carer | Ashmore

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Live-in qualified carer required for 76-year-old disabled gentleman.

Shared rota including evenings, weekends, using hoists.

Some housekeeping duties.

Separate flat on-site, near Ashmore/Wilts.

Seeking DBS-checked non-smoker/driving licence.

Apply to: [email protected]