Category Archives: Events

Redbourn Festival Chorus Concert: Fantasia on Christmas Carols

St Mary’s Church, Redbourn, Saturday 7th January 2017 at 7:45pm          

David Beaman, Conductor

presents a candlelit evening of festive music from the folk tradition.

Fantasia on Christmas Carols by Vaughan Williams

Giles Davies baritone solo

And a selection of folk carols written down by the likes of Paul Sartin of Faustus and Bellowhead with musicians from Redbourn Folk Club

Admission free

Followed by a cash bar in aid of the Friends of St Mary’s.

This wonderful concert from the Redbourn Festival Chorus will explore how a great deal of our beloved Christmas music was passed down to us through the folk tradition.

They will sing the delicious Fantasia on Christmas Carols by Vaughan Williams, based on folk carols that he and Cecil Sharp collected in southern England. Alongside this will be folk settings of carols from other parts of the British Isles, as written down by the likes of Bellowhead’s Paul Sartin and others.

The Festival Chorus will share their concert with Redbourn Folk Club who are certain to add a surprise or two.

Time & Talents Fair

The Time & Talents Fair held after this morning’s 9.30am service was a wonderful display of the many and various ways in which members of the St Mary’s community volunteer their time and talents.

The fair was both a showcase for the many activities, groups and services which are on offer, but also an opportunity for us all to get involved and consider how we might be able to offer our own time and talents to one or more of these areas.

Represented were:

  • Lifts to Church
  • Flower Arranging
  • Common Round Distribution
  • Church Cleaning
  • Sunday Coffee
  • Churchyard Team
  • Friends of St Mary’s Committee
  • Sound System
  • Bible Reading
  • Parochial Church Council
  • Ancillary Buildings Committee
  • Coffee on the Common
  • Junior Church
  • Mini Church
  • Charities Committee
  • Bellringers
  • Pastoral Visiting
  • Bereavement Care
  • Traidcraft Stall
  • Mothers’ Union
  • Marriage Preparation
  • Spotlight Groups
  • Website & Social Media
  • Teddy Tots
  • Choir

How could you get involved?  Please don’t wait to be asked!

“Volunteers are not paid, not because they are worthless, but because they are PRICELESS”

We Will Remember Them

It is always dangerous to single out a single person – whether in a classroom, a business or an organisation. What about the rest? But forgive me if I do just that, and share something about Len Fisher, a Redbourner typical of so many who gave their lives 100 years ago on the Somme.

leonard-george-fisherLeonard George Fisher       

Private, 9821, 2nd Battalion, Bedfordshire Regiment

Died 12th October 1916, aged 23, Battle of the Somme.

Born in Batford, Harpenden, Hertfordshire

Son of William and Emily Fisher (nee Chapman)

William was a farm worker and Len was the second eldest of six children.  He was educated in Harpenden then Ayot St. Peter, and a resident of Redbourn, living at Flamsteadbury until being enlisted at Hertford in 1911 for service in South Africa, before being transferred to Belgium on 7th Oct 1914.

The following article offers an insight into the conditions he faced there:

Herts Advertiser 23rd January 1915

REDBOURN. “Bed’s” Terrible Losses

Redbourn Man’s Account of Very Hot Work

Mr. W. Fisher, jun., Flamsteadbury Farm, Redbourn, has received the following letter from his brother Len, who is in “D” Company, 2nd Bedfordshire Regiment:-

“January 9th. – I am serving with a battalion which all Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire people should be proud of. Our first engagement was at Ypres, where we had it very stiff. Our division was outnumbered by the Germans nine to one, but anyhow, we held them back for three weeks till we got reinforcements up. My battalion was in reserve for the Infantry Brigade, and we had a very hot job to do to keep the other battalions reinforced. We had to advance in daylight under very heavy shell fire, and my platoon and another had to go to the Scots Fusiliers, as they were getting cut up terrible. We reached their trenches all right with only a few casualties, and there was a fine sight to see. The Germans were advancing to our trenches about a half-a-mile off, and they were just like flocks of sheep coming towards us. We were firing rapidly for about two hours, but still they came in swarms, and by this time it was getting dark, and still they were advancing, and they got within two hundred yards of our trenches, and they charged us with the bayonet and we had to retire in to a wood. But we all formed up and did a counter-attack and drove them out of our old trenches at the point of the bayonet. And I must say they are a poor lot of chaps to face the cold steel. I could tell you a lot more, but I have not the time to write. I am sorry to say that all that came out of the firing line of my battalion were one officer and three hundred men out of 1,100.”

He survived 2 years in these appalling and hostile conditions, and having been hospitalised in 1915, he returned to the front in August 1916 and was killed in an attack on Gird Trench near Eaucourt l’Abbaye (Battle of Le Transloy). He is remembered with Honour at the Thiepval Memorial, France and commemorated on the Redbourn War Memorial and on a plaque in St. Mary’s Church.

Will you come and join me in remembering Len and all who gave their lives for our liberty?

Will

With grateful acknowledgement to Jonathan Sinfield (Len’s great-nephew) for the information above


 Sunday 13th November 

10.50 am THE ANNUAL ACT OF REMEMBRANCE

At Redbourn War Memorial

Members of the uniformed Groups and Organisations will gather at the Cricket Pavilion in order to parade to the War Memorial for the service which will be followed by refreshments at ChristChurch, Fish Street