Care Together

Cambridgeshire County Council has collaborated with a number of partners to produce an interactive app that can help people who are looking after others living in the community.
Posters are being prepared for South Cambridgeshire and I will be posting them out to community locations to display on their noticeboards and community spaces in the meantime, I have attached the pdf version for you to take a look.
Kind regards

Leneva Nwachukwu

Commissioner

 

Adults, Health & Commissioning

Cambridgeshire County Council

 

Commissioning Directorate

Adult Social Care

Stanton House, Stanton Way,

Huntingdon PE29 6XL

Telephone – 01954 286002

The Library Presents:

 

We have been asked to share the library presents spring brochure of up coming events across Cambridgeshire.

There is also an opportunity to choose what you would like to see at your local library or chosen location this Autumn – selection closes 2nd May.

All information and box office for reasonable ticket options can be found at www.library.live/the-library-presents

Please get in touch with the LP team  if you have any questions.

Best wishes

Sarah

Sarah Freeman

Community Connector – South Cambridgeshire Place Team

Communities Service – Strategy and Partnerships

Cambridgeshire County Council

Tel: 07836 334843

Email: 

www.cambridgeshire.gov.uk

Robert Henry Chapman of Whittlesford – Killed D Day – 6th June 1944

ROBERT HENRY CHAPMAN of Whittlesford

killed D Day    6th June 1944

Robert Henry Chapman was a Marine aged 19 years and 1 month when he died on D-Day, 6th June 1944.  His name is on the new British Normandy Memorial in France and this year, the 80th anniversary of the landings, a new plaque will be added which will tell his story and can be seen on the following link:                https://www.britishnormandymemorial.org/normandy-story/robert-henry-chapman/

The plaque at the British Normandy Memorial, France, with the QR code which tells his story.

The British Normandy Memorial is the only memorial in Normandy listing all the names of the 22,442 British military personnel who died on D-Day and during the Battle of Normandy.

This year from 21st April to 31st August 2024, the British Normandy Memorial in France together with “Standing with Giants” are displaying 1,475 silhouettes of soldiers to reflect the number of British servicemen who lost their lives on D-Day itself.

 

Robert was born on 2nd May 1925, the son of Reuben Arthur and Louisa Emma Chapman nee Day.  Louisa was born in Hildersham.  Robert was the youngest of 4 children having 2 sisters, Millicent Louisa and Olive May who both later married and left the village. Sadly, his older brother William Arthur George died in 1948 aged 28. His parents and brother are buried in the village cemetery.  His father’s sister was Alice who married Percy Overhill, who was killed in WW1.  Alice and Percy’s son Geoffrey joined the RAF and was killed in 1943 so of the 8 village residents who died in WW2 these 2 came from the same family.

Robert’s family had moved from Radwinter, Essex between 1861/71 and initially lived in Orchard Terrace in Whittlesford.  In 1890 Robert’s grandfather Reuben purchased “Sheads” in the High Street where the family were still living at the outbreak of WW2.  In the book “Whittlesford Recalled” originally published in 1977, there is a photograph of the house, and it states that this is “where the first Co-op was started by Reuben Chapman”.  The earliest Chapmans were blacksmiths but according to the 1939 Register, Robert’s father Arthur Reuben was a farmer and carrier in addition to being a Special Constable and Robert was a 14-year-old newspaper boy.   He attended the village primary school, now William Westley School, from 16 September 1929 leaving on 29 July 1936 to move to Sawston Village College where he is commemorated on a memorial plaque outside the college offices.  At the time of his death, he was too young to vote as the age for voting was 21 years.

 

Robert had his 18th birthday on 2nd May 1943 and joined the marines soon after.  He had previously worked at Pearce Mill in Kings Mill Lane, Great Shelford, a small water mill producing flour, grinding corn from local farmers and supplying shops etc.  Robert’s job there is unknown.

 

THE WAR

At first Robert was posted to HMS Copra, a shore-based frigate used for admin purposes for men who had not yet been assigned to a ship. As planning for D-Day increased he was posted to HMS Turtle, another shore-based frigate, but one that was used for training personnel who would be part of Operation Neptune, the seaborne assault phase of Operation Overlord. Once his training was complete, he was posted to 698 LCM Flotilla.  The LCM (Landing Craft Mechanised) could carry a tank, up to 100 men or a large quantity of cargo. Due to its size the LCM would have made its own way across the Channel rather than being carried on one of the larger landing ships. The flotilla was part of Force G which landed troops on Gold Beach.

The landing time for the British troops on D-Day was set at 7.30am, one hour after the Americans at Omaha Beach.

According to the eye-witness report of 2 survivors Robert was on LCM 193, part of the 698 Flotilla. At approximately 9am on 6th June 1944, they were approaching King Red Beach, part of Gold Beach, and whilst trying to run onto the beach to unload beach roadway the craft hit a mine and sank. The crew were taken off the LCM by an LCA (Landing Craft Assault) and whilst trying to get clear the LCA blew up and Robert was injured. He died of his wounds later in the day. Initially he was buried in Ver-sur-Mer but was reburied in Bayeux Cemetery on 3 February 1945. Grave XIV.L.13.    British Normandy Memorial Location – Column 1.

The last line on the new plaque reads, “His memory is a keepsake”.  This is the first line of the inscription on his gravestone which would have been chosen by his family.

 

 

You can find out more about the British Normandy Memorial Trust, which has recently announced that the King has become its Patron, by logging onto:   www.britishnormandymemorial.org  where it also gives details of how to become a Guardian.

 

Written by Karen Wright

My thanks to all those people, both local and national, who have helped me find the story of Robert Henry Chapman

I can be contacted at:

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Mobile Library Service

We have a great selection of books for all ages including children’s books and large print items.

We also distribute free NHS hearing aid batteries and walking sick ferrules.

The Mobile Library visits Whittlesford on the Second Wednesday of each month as follows:

West End / Ascham Lane from: 11.40am – 12.00pm

Mill Lane from 12.05pm – 12.30pm

Royston Road from 12.35pm – 1.00pm

For general information on the mobile library services please email:

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Cambridgeshire & Peterborough Age UK

SAWSTON, WHITTLESFORD, PAMPISFORD, DUXFORD, HINXTON & ICKLETON COMMUNITY WARDEN SCHEME

Are you ages 60 or over ?

Would you like help to continue to live independently in your own home ?

The Community Warden Scheme is able to offer assistance by providing a daily phone call (Monday – Friday) and support such as :

Making drinks and light meals

A home visit

Collecting Prescriptions

Small items of shopping

A listening ear

Helping with paperwork and making appointments

Signposting to other services where appropriate

If you are interested in this servicer and would like more information

please call on : 07812 496004

or email :

There is a FREE 2 week trial and then a small weekly fee afterwards if you wish to remain on the scheme.

Neighbours Nextdoor – Your local neighbourhood hub

Sign up to eCops

A useful link to sign up to for local crime information

https://www.ecops.org.uk/

Welcome to eCops
Welcome to eCops – the email messaging system brought to you by Cambridgeshire Constabulary, and powered by Neighbourhood Alert.

By registering with eCops, you receive news and appeals, local crime information and crime prevention advice – direct to you as an e-mail. The service is completely free and works alongside Neighbourhood Watch, to bring you messages about your local area.  It also allows you to feedback information to your local policing team, to help us police your neighbourhood effectively.

Messages can include crime prevention advice, details of incidents and appeals for your help in reducing crime in the county.  So why not sign up to eCops for direct and easy access to your local policing team at a time convenient to you?

Neighbourhood Plan for Whittlesford

Where are we at with the Neighbourhood Plan ?

The Neighbourhood plan website will give you all the information you require

Stick to the Trothe!

Have you ever wondered why our village sign says the words…. STICK TO THE TROTHE?

A recently asked question by a parishioner, prompted me to learn the history behind the village sign.

It was a question that I could not answer, so I decided to do some research on it, and this is what we found……

Whittlesford Village Sign – Stick to the Trothe

 

Photograph by Marie Swann

 

Situated on the east side of North Road, opposite the Manor House, facing traffic approaching from Cambridge.

The Centre Panel – The important river crossing, one of several in the immediate area used by travellers from the very early times to the present.
Archaeological finds confirm that the Icknield Way was used by Stone Age man and the particular crossing near the Moat House has yielded Roman artifacts.

The Medieval Bridge – Is Intended to emphasise Whittlesford’s position on the River cam during later centuries.

The left-hand figure – Shows Nicholas Swallow, farmer and benefactor of the village, whose name is commemorated in the village charity along with others, including Lettice Martin, the benefactress from Chishill, who gave money for the aged and poor of surrounding parishes. She is now remembered in the housing estate on the Lawn ….. The Lettice Martin Croft.

The right-hand figure – Shows a Charity Schoolgirl and is intended to remind villagers of the gift of William Westley, the Cambridge grocer whose lands provided funds for the schooling of Whittlesford Children.

Below the sign – The village’s association with Roger Ascham, (tutor to the first Queen Elizabeth), who married Margaret Howe of the parish.
It is recalled by a quotation from his writings – Stick to the Trothe.

The Shield – Carries a Maunch – The heraldic emblem of a sleeve worn by ladies in the reign of Henry 1, having a long lappet hanging from the cuff, often awarded as a knightly ”favour”. This forms part of the armorial bearing of the present Lord of the Manor.

This sign was designed by Tony Carter, Resident of Whittlesford, carved by his father, Harry Carter – famous Norfolk sign carver, and then unveiled by the third generation, David Carter. David still maintains the sign to this day and has carved a few signs of his own in the other near by villages of Pampisford and Thriplow.

I hope the next time you pass the village sign, you will look up, and remember the history behind it.