Village Hall full for its 70th Birthday Party

What a fantastic afternoon! Around 100 people of all ages packed the Village Hall on Saturday afternoon to pay tribute to the place that this wonderful building holds within our community.

We had tea, sandwiches and cakes, an exhibition of recent and past history, an audiovisual slideshow of what has been going on at the hall in the last ten years, entertainment from The Nightingales and the opening of the refurbished kitchen by Alan Page.

Huge thanks to the hall management committee for funding the event, to the Bellingdon Belles for catering and to everyone who helped by lending us equipment for the slideshow as well as photos, articles and other artefacts for the exhibition. Particular thanks to Jane Edmunds for her sterling efforts in hammering pins into a particularly unwilling backdrop! And of course to Helen Harding for marshalling the whole thing even when it looked like climbing Everest might have been easier.

We’d love to hear what you thought of the event so please do let us know – either by talking to a committee member or by emailing us. We’re having a think about what else we can do to keep people coming to the hall so if you have any ideas – bingo, coffee morning, film night, karaoke etc – do let us know as well!

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Village Hall 70th: THIS SATURDAY 10th November 4-7pm

Don’t forget to let us know ASAP by email (contact@bellingdon.com) or phone (758901) if you’re planning to come on Saturday tea time to celebrate our wonderful community hall. We’ve had a fantastic response so far, and it would really help with catering to know how many people we’re expecting.

Please do feel free to dress in vintage clothing, bring along photographs etc of your memories of the hall – we’ll be having a “memory wall” where you can share your reminiscences so that we can record them for future generations.

Cyber Resilience Week

From Thames Valley Police

Today marks the beginning of Cyber Resilience week. Organisations across Buckinghamshire are raising awareness of how members of the community can become resilient when surfing the net.

Each day will have a different topic of focus. Today the topic is exploitation of children and young people – ensuring the public, including young people, are staying safe online.
The internet is an amazing resource which enables children and young people to connect, communicate and be creative in a number of different ways, on a range of devices. However, the internet is always changing, and being able to keep up to date with your children’s use of technology can be a challenge.

You may sometimes feel that your child has better technical skills than you do, however children and young people still need advice and protection when it comes to managing their lives online. Issues that your child may encounter on the internet will vary depending on their age and online activities.

Follow the SMART rules below for primary aged children:

Safe: Keep your personal information safe. When chatting or posting online don’t give away things like your full name, password or home address. Remember personal information can be seen in images and videos you share too.

Meet: Do not meet up with someone you only know online, even a friend of a friend, as they are still a stranger. If someone you only know online ever asks you to meet up, for personal information or for photos/ videos of you then tell an adult straight away and report them together on www.thinkuknow.co.uk

Accepting: Think carefully before you click on or open something online (e.g. links, adverts, friend requests, photos) and do not accept something if you are unsure who the person is or what they’ve sent you.

Reliable: You cannot trust everything you see online as some things can be out of date, inaccurate or not entirely true. Always compare 3 websites, check in books and talk to someone about what you find online.

Tell: Tell a trusted adult if something or someone ever makes you feel upset, worried or confused. You could talk to a teacher, parent, carer or a helpline like Childline 0800 11 11.

Heart: Remember to always be smart with a heart by being kind and respectful to others online. Make the internet a better place by helping your friends if they are worried or upset by anything that happens online.

Top tips for secondary children:
1. Protect your online reputation: use the services provided to manage your digital footprints and ‘think before you post.’ Content posted online can last forever and could be shared publicly by anyone.
2. Know where to find help: understand how to report to service providers and use blocking and deleting tools. If something happens that upsets you online, it’s never too late to tell someone.
3. Don’t give in to pressure: if you lose your inhibitions you’ve lost control; once you’ve pressed send you can’t take it back.
4. Respect the law: use reliable services and know how to legally access the music, film and TV you want.
5. Acknowledge your sources: use trustworthy content and remember to give credit when using others’ work/ideas.
If you have concerns around a child’s welfare there are also a number of organisations that can help such as Safer Internet Centre and Childnet.

There is also advice on the Thames Valley Police website.

Don’t forget to join our online Cyber Crime forum  on  Thursday 8th November between 7-9pm: http://thamesvp.coverpage.coveritlive.com/

“Silent Silhouette” tribute to the fallen

The eagle eyed among you will have noticed a new “resident” in Bellingdon.

Located opposite St John’s Church, the “Silent Silhouette” of a WWI Tommy serves as a timely reminder of the sacrifice of those who have served their country, and many of whom made the ultimate sacrifice to give us the life we have today.

 

 

The memorial in St John’s Church (pictured below) shows four names of servicemen who sadly did not return from the Great War: Frank Brown; Cecil Stanley Eldridge, Ralph James and George Ewen Sills.

The silhouette has been funded and organised by the Bellingdon & Asheridge Community Association and St John’s Church, Bellingdon. Any community groups who would like to make a contribution towards the cost are invited to contact us.

Some background on the “Silent Silhouette”, from The Royal British Legion:

To mark the final year of the World War One centenary, The Royal British Legion is inviting the public to take part in a movement to say ‘Thank You’ to the First World War generation who served, sacrificed, rebuilt and changed the nation. In support of the Thank You movement we are offering for donation a variety of silhouettes to symbolise the communities that took part in WW1, they shaped the nation as we know it today.

The silhouettes are near life-size and can be fixed to a wall or attached to an upright post in public or private spaces. In addition to the iconic image of a ‘Tommy’ (our original Silent Soldier) there are equally significant representatives of the members of the communities the nation says thank you to, including those who gave medical support, soldiers from across the commonwealth, RAF/RFC, Navy, munition factory workers and suffragettes who lead the fight for votes for women. They all helped makes us the nation we are today.

Community Pub Night: Friday 19th October 6:30-10:30

Come and celebrate the start of half term/harvest/start of autumn/nearly halloween (pretty much whatever excuse you can come up with really) this Friday, 19th October at Bellingdon & Asheridge Village Hall. We’ll have delicious home-cooked food, an array of ales, wine, bubbles and soft drinks.

All the usual games will be available – darts, table tennis, snooker, card games etc, plus a chance to meet up with neighbours and friends (and sometimes both) while enjoying our wonderful community hall.