Art morning (2-7 years): Saturday 25th February 2023
Nursery & Pre-Prep: Wednesday 1st March 2023
Prep School: Saturday 11th March 2023
Book a place on our Open Morning to find out more about Sandroyd School.
All Open Morning visitors have a one-to-one meeting with our Headmaster, Alastair Speers, as well as having the opportunity to tour the school and meet with pupils and staff.
Please call our Admissions Registrar Dinah Rawlinson on 01725 530 124 to book your place. Alternatively, book a personal visit at a time that better suits your family.
Thorngrove Garden Centre’s EmployMyAbility (EMA) campus is expanding to offer more opportunities to young people with special needs
Working in the Secret Garden Cafe
Regular visitors to Thorngrove and readers of our BV column will be aware that our garden centre and café also function as a campus for young people with special educational needs and disabilities. They study across a number of programmes and gain valuable work experience in our hospitality and retail sectors of the business. Our unique learning environment allows them to build confidence and skills in a real-world scenario, as they complete their qualifications and prepare for adulthood.
EMA students enjoy real-world placements at businesses such as Cranborne Chase Cider
This academic year we’ve made additions to – and continue to develop – the Thorngrove campus, to allow for a much wider scope of opportunities for the young people who join us. One of the most exciting developments is the imminent arrival of animals – starting with guinea pigs and rabbits! One of our external students even built a house for two female ferrets who will soon be joining us too. Working with the plants and retail stock, serving customers in the shop and in the café have previously been the key areas of vocational qualifications for our students, but soon they’ll be hands-on with furry friends for animal studies right here in Gillingham. This is a key factor in our vision for Thorngrove as ‘more than a garden centre’, and we’re proud to offer these kinds of courses and diverse environments for young people as they gain experience and look to employment in the community in future.
Animal studies will be a popular new course at Thorngrove
Our students and social care day service users also venture out on external work experience placements to brilliant businesses in the wider community such as The Ancient Technology Centre, Cranborne Chase Cider, Dorset and Somerset Animal Rescue, the Walled Garden café at Castle Gardens, and one budding journalist, Maddie, writes for the very magazine you’re reading right now (see Maddie’s column on P.92)! Working in partnership with these businesses proves beneficial both for them and for the young people. If you’re a local business interested in working with us at Employ My Ability and think you might be able to offer work experience to our students, please don’t hesitate to get in touch. We love to show the progress on our website and social media too, which always brings such positive comments and feedback from those who follow our story.
The BV first featured Barry Cuff’s collection in The Gardener with 10,000 postcards in April 2022. Each month the local postcard collector shares a selection of rarely-before seen images from his archive. This month Barry has picked local photographer Clarke & Son from Stalbridge.
What is now the A357, just along from Sturminster Newton bridgeStalbridge High Street is still recognisable todayNash in MarnhullThe Jubilee Oak crossroads at Stourton Caundle.
Photographer Clarke & Sons printed their location as Sturminster Newton and Stalbridge on the reverse of the cards. They are listed in Kelley’s 1895 directory as being in Stalbridge, but there is no entry for them in the 1910 directory. All four of these cards are marked 1905 to 1907. Two were never sent in the post, and one was not posted locally.
St Andrew’s Primary School, Fontmell Magna, returned triumphant after competing in the Dorset Athletics tournament at Gillingham School. On Tuesday 17th January, St Andrew’s Primary pupils participated in a physically demanding competition that required them to compete in numerous athletic events that tested their agility, strength and fitness as well as their perseverance and courage. The tenacious young people endeavoured to succeed in events including relays, speed bounce, triple jump, long jump, vertical jump, obstacle course, chest push and javelin; and were delighted to emerge victorious! Headteacher Debbie Brown said ‘Watching our young people thrive in this competitive environment was an absolute pleasure and highlighted so many talented individuals – many of whom lacked confidence and doubted their own capabilities. Yet they prevailed!’ Winning the Dorset Athletics tournament propels the children of St Andrew’s into the County Athletics final, hosted at Purbeck School later this year. They cannot wait to shine once again!
Fairmead School transforms the lives of young people aged between 4 and 19 years with additional learning needs (MLD and ASD).
We are seeking to appoint enthusiastic and dynamic Classroom Teachers who have the flexibility to teach a range of curriculum subjects across the school. Successful candidates will be self-motivated, creative, fun and inspirational teachers who have a desire to build meaningful and positive relationships with all the young people they encounter. They will need to approach curriculum subjects in a purposeful, age appropriate and exciting way, engaging young people through first hand experiences. They will have high aspirations for our students and will be committed to, and passionate about, preparing them for successful, independent and happy futures in adulthood.
The successful candidates will join our committed, passionate and dedicated staff team and play an integral role in building an exhilarating future for our school community.
We welcome applications from teachers with all levels of experience and from a range of education backgrounds in both mainstream and special sectors.
Successful candidates will benefit from:
Joining a strong and committed staff team with a bright future.
Excellent CPD opportunities.
Outstanding opportunities for pedagogical development, working with specialist practitioners and experienced leaders.
The opportunity to make life-defining differences for an amazing group of young people.
If you are interested and would like to know more about working in a special needs school, please contact Mrs Berryman on 01935 421295.
Closing Date: Thursday 16th March 2023 Interview Date: Thursday 23rd March 2023
NB: Fairmead School is committed to safeguarding the school community. All job applications must contain the disclosure of any spent convictions and cautions. The school will carry out pre-employment vetting procedures, which include the successful outcome of an enhanced DBS.
In this month’s Looking Back column, Roger Guttridge describes a disastrous – and yet miraculous – day in North Dorset’s memory
Flood damage in Wyke Bridge Street, Gillingham, proves a popular attraction for the townsfolk. Picture from the Barry Cuff Collection, published in Lost Dorset: The Towns, by David Burnett
To those who’ve suffered water damage recently it will be no consolation, but Dorset has rarely seen flooding like that which hit the county’s northernmost reaches 106 years ago. The event was both a disaster and a miracle – the latter because there was no loss of human life, although there were numerous narrow escapes. It all began at 6pm on 28th June, when the mother of all thunderstorms deposited 10 inches of water on Bruton in Somerset, and 5.75 inches on Bourton here in Dorset. The rainfall proved too much for the dam at Gasper Bridge, which held back 18 acres of water to form Stourhead’s lower lake. During the night of June 28-29th, the lake suddenly burst through, destroying both bridge and dam and releasing millions of gallons into the valley. Witnesses likened the roar of rushing water to ‘continuous thunder’. The force of the water gouged a 30-feet-deep chasm from the roads on either side, uprooted trees and washed out the foundations of Gasper Mill. As it entered Dorset, the flood first encountered Hindley’s Bourton Foundry, a former mill which traditionally manufactured heavy machinery. Since the outbreak of the First World War it had produced three million hand grenades known as Mills bombs. The Western Gazette reported that a ‘great wave’ swept through the workshops, causing ‘damage of a most extraordinary character’. Sheds and outbuildings were ‘swallowed up’ by the torrent, walls demolished, heavy machinery, a steam lorry and a 15cwt safe overturned, a large boiler swept from one workshop to another and 200 to 300 tons of coal washed away. A large cart was carried several hundred yards downstream along with fences, posts and other objects. The main part of a flatbed lorry was later found half a mile away. The water and mud were up to 10ft deep in parts of the foundry and the caretaker – the only person on site at the time – only escaped by climbing on to a roof.
The road to Bourton bridge on the day after the flood. Picture from Maggs and Hindley, by Robert Mullins
When pigs swim The bridge that carried the London to Exeter road over the river collapsed, but in doing so probably saved the life of one Bourton resident, a Mr Tufts. His cottage was flooded up to its ceiling but would almost certainly have been demolished had not the main force of water been released by the bridge collapse. Many other houses flooded to depths of three or four feet, including the police station. The impact on the community was ably described by Bourton Parish Council chairman B. Pope Bartlett in an appeal for money to help residents. He wrote: ‘In many cases their homes have been flooded out, their furniture, clothes and food washed away or destroyed, and their gardens and allotments, on which they had spent so much time, wrecked beyond repair.’ As it headed for the village of Milton, the floodwater continued to wash away ricks and freshly cut hay, poultry from their pens and even pigs from their sties, though some pigs swam to fight another day.
Locals survey damaged Bourton bridge from a temporary structure. Picture from Maggs and Hindley, by Robert Mullins
Evacuation At Gillingham, a supplementary drama unfolded at Plank House, which the Red Cross had taken over as a hospital for wounded soldiers from the front. Miss Brock, the night nurse, first noticed the rising water at 1.40am. It was only ankle-deep at that point but by the time Dr Farnfield arrived it was chest-high. As Miss Brock and Sister Jones continued to evacuate the downstairs wards, the doctor and two relatively-able patients raced to rescue others from shelters and summer houses. ‘Half-swimming, half-walking, one by one these three men rescued the helpless patients from the open-air shelters,’ reported the Western Gazette. ‘Only just in time were all rescued, for by 3am the flood had risen to a depth of 4ft 6ins in the house and 6ft outside.’ The water also washed away an oak tree and 16yds of stone wall. It flooded numerous houses, shops and other Gillingham businesses to depths of up to five feet. Grocer Mr Hayden and butcher Mr Toogood were among those hardest hit, along with Wilts United Dairies whose engine room was flooded and churns and equipment washed out of the yard. At Town Mills, the water reached one of the highest levels ever recorded. In the immediate aftermath, Gillingham Grammar School head Alfred Mumford loaded a 25lb joint of beef and all the trimmings on to a farm wagon and delivered it to Plank House to feed patients and staff. Repairs to many of the bridges and buildings took months but production of Mills bombs at Bourton Foundry resumed with lightning speed due to their importance to the war effort.
• In 2017, the Bourton Players performed a play that followed the fortunes of five women Mills bombs makers at the foundry.