Cuckfield blog

A look back at Cuckfield Life after reaching 100 issues

The man himself, David Tingley

The man himself, David Tingley

By David Tingley

It is not without a little pride that I happily recognise the fact that we have reached the 100th issue milestone for Cuckfield Life. And I say ‘we’ because creating and building a magazine like this from nothing is very much a team game! But more of that later.

Cuckfield Life was, in all honesty, a test-case. I had been publishing a village magazine in Lindfield for a few years and with CL I was trying to establish whether the format would work somewhere else.

I didn’t have a lot of prior knowledge of this community, and so I recall setting up a number of coffee meetings with folk from various groups and organisations in the early days. Most were happy to embrace the concept and even local businesses got on board – with the exception of one retailer who told me it wouldn’t work!

Thumbing through the back issue library has provided some highlights. For instance, issue number one may have only been 20 pages but had a great feature on the recently completed reordering works at Holy Trinity Church. The Independent State of Cuckfield were on page six with a piece on Lindy Elphick’s victory at the mayor’s election in 2012. And we started our recipe tradition early as the apprentice chef at Ockenden Manor provided two soup recipes for readers to try out.

It’s also worth noting that five of our original cohort of advertisers are still with us eight years later. Honourable mentions (and thanks) go to Lucy Locksmith, Helme & Hallett, Cuckfield Local, Gielgud Academy and Norto5 Kidz. As I’m sure you understand, this product is only free because businesses like these pay to be seen on our pages – and so, our readers using their services in return is crucial to our success.

In issue 12 (back in 2013), it’s interesting to note HHRFC celebrating the approval of plans for their new clubhouse at its Whitemans Green site. While in the following month’s copy newly elected mayor Mike Schlup begun our tradition of that post-holder writing a monthly column for us.

Two years in and we included an article showing some superb photography of the Tour of Britain as the cycle race passed through Cuckfield.

In September 2015 we begun including special content for Bolnore village, which makes up a considerable area of our door-to-door distribution. By 2017, the magazines had grown in size making our first 48-page edition.

Our Village People interviews have always been a strong part of what we do, and I’m delighted that we continue to find fascinating people whose stories we can share. Thank you to all who have taken part.

I do need to thank the team, who have come and gone over the last eight or so years, but who I am tremendously grateful to for their service. Claire Cooper with whom I started CL, Matthew Buss, Natasha Hannah, Simon Yeend, Elaine Goodwin, and the incredible Jacqueline Elmore and Emily Billson who continue to make it happen every month. Not forgetting the behind the scenes support of Justin and Ella with layout, proofreading and social media.

Here’s to the next 100. We know there’s plenty of life left in Cuckfield!

Ansty Village Hall into a new Antsy Village Centre

Ansty Platoon of the Home Guard, thought to be taken outside village hall in1943

Ansty Platoon of the Home Guard, thought to be taken outside village hall in1943

By Bradbury Williams

With exactly a century of service behind it, the old Ansty Village Hall is coming to the end of its unique innings at the heart of a thriving Mid-Sussex community. The official grand opening back in January 1921 was largely managed by the new Women’s Institute, one of the first in the country.

They ensured the new hall was equipped to a good standard, fully furnished, with oil lamps, a coke stove and curtains made by their members. But in just a few months time the historic old hall will finally be demolished to make way for the new £1.25M Ansty Village Centre.

“There’s no doubt it’s the end of an era,” said Maureen Gibson, of the Ansty Village Hall Trust. “I can’t count all the village fetes, cream teas and Christmas parties…there’s been a lot of happy memories and a lot of village history.”

For the last 100 years the hall has been a community centre and home to a social club and a highly successful cricket club, that’s grown ever stronger over the decades.

Before reaching Ansty the beloved hall had an earlier role in the First World War. It is thought to have provided troop accommodation for the Canadian Expeditionary Force on the Western Front in France. In August 1920, the Ansty Village Hall Committee had bought some land from the Sergison Estate for £20, but it had decided it couldn’t meet the estimated £542 for a new brick building.

Within months they found a solution, having jumped at the opportunity to buy an army surplus hut. It would arrive by train at Haywards Heath station as a flat pack, at a cost of just £250. During the interwar years, Ansty continued to grow with lots of new housing between the long established country homes. It had the relatively new St. John’s Chapel just next to the village hall, built in 1905 on the site of an old mission house. Also there was a village shop, a post office, a market garden, a blacksmith and a forge, now a Shell garage, plus a very well used pub, called The Green Cross, later the Anstye Cross.

Read more about the history of Ansty Village hall, including multiple sporting clubs, churches, and more in Feb’s issue of Cuckfield Life.

Cuckfield community garden project

Cuckfield-community-garden.jpg

Keen volunteers have been working hard through the summer months to breathe new life into a long neglected and abandoned patch of land adjacent to Warden Park School in Cuckfield. The aim: to create a peaceful sanctuary for flora, fauna and humans alike.

Plans include a community garden growing fruit and vegetables all year round, a wildlife pond, orchard and wildflower garden, a classroom for outdoor learning and space for a Forest School to help engage young people with their natural surroundings.

Work will continue into the winter months including clearing away thickets of brambles that have been allowed to run rampant, building and lining the pond, planting over 550 trees (including 25 small oaks, 12 beeches and limes, and 24 cherry, apple and pear trees), and instigating a management program to encourage a wide variety of beneficial plants and flowers to grow. This will encourage insects, bees, butterflies and birds to the land, to create a harmonious, self-sustaining ecosystem that local people can enjoy.

Volunteers of the Mid Sussex Community Garden have an ambitious aim and are hoping to welcome their first visitors in the spring-time. Their first phase of crowdfunding for the new trees went live in October. To find out more about how you can help please visit https://bit.ly/369xmED or email mscommunitygarden@yahoo.com for more information on how to get involved.