Marie Curie Great Daffodil Appeal in Cuckfield, West Sussex

March is traditionally the month of the daffodil and Cuckfield florist Belinda Campopiano has kick-started a national charity initiative which promotes the British grown flower.

Marie Curie is running the Great Daffodil Appeal next month; it will be the 30th anniversary of the appeal. Florists wrap the beautiful yellow flower, add a Marie Curie seal on it with a ribbon and it’s a lovely gift for Mother’s Day. 

Shane Connolly, the florist for William & Kate’s Royal Wedding, commented: “No-one truly appreciates the extraordinary work of Marie Curie Cancer Care until they experience it in their own lives. It’s the duty of British florists to make the public more aware of British grown flowers. To be able to do this, and help raise funds for Marie Curie at the same time, is an opportunity not to be missed.”

Belinda’s daffodils will be on sale at Wealden Stores over the weekend 5/6th March and the following weekend at the Cuckfield Local Market on 12th March – subject to availability, last year they sold fast! 

On this basis Belinda would like to appeal for anyone who may be able to help wrap the 2,000 or so daffodils on Wednesdays 2nd and 9th March please. If you can help she’d love to hear from you (07811 892644). 

Cuckfield Museum - new exhibits - shoes!

By Phillipa Malins    

Cuckfield Museum re-opened on 13th February with a new display looking at footwear from the last 250 years.  The village had its own shoemakers, the best known being Newnham’s in the High Street (right) founded in late Victorian times and which carried on until after WW2. 

One of the oldest shoes in the collection is an C18th woman’s latchet tie shoe, part of the cache of deliberately concealed objects found under the attic floor in 1 Church St in 2002. Perhaps because the shoe bears the imprint of the wearer’s foot, they have always been associated with superstition – in this case it is thought the objects were a form of protective magic to safeguard the house. This cache was hidden near a chimney where harm could enter. The other cache shoes date from the second half of the C19th (right).

We also have a pair of pattens dating from the C18th – these were wooden soles fixed on top of a metal ring and worn under the shoe with a strap to keep them in place. The patten served to raise the shoe out of the mud at a time when skirts were worn to the ankle and there were no made-up roads to walk on. Interestingly, we have been loaned two metal patten rings which were found tied up in a chimney – again probably a form of protection for the house (top far right).

Worthing Museum has generously loaned us some little silk boots from the 1830s, which would have been worn by a gentlewoman in the house. We have been struck by how tiny women’s feet were in the past and how very narrow (middle right). 

This narrowness is a feature of a recent gift to the museum of a pair of women’s boots dating from around 1916 – modern women, used to wearing open sandals and flip-flops, would find it impossible to wear them (above). We were able to date these boots with the help of Worthing Museum and an advertisement for an almost identical pair, dating from 1916 (right). 

What a contrast with the shape of these shoes bought recently from a shop in Brighton – they may be outrageous but they have width and could actually be worn (far right)! 

Other shoes in the display include a pair of workhouse child’s boots, steel-rimmed with neither a left nor right, a Polish aristocrat’s pre-war boots from his London bootmaker, some beautifully made wartime utility shoes and a pair of dizzingly high velvet platform soles which have been made into a set of bookends!

The display will run until June. Opening hours: Wed 10am-12.30pm, Fri and Sat 10am-4pm. More details at www.cuckfieldmuseum.org

Cuckfield featured on BBC Radio Sussex

BBC-radio-sussex-radio-car-in-cuckfield

The BBC Sussex Radio Car was in Cuckfield today (Wednesday 27th January 2016) when, as part of the stations Winter Warm Up Tour, it ventured along the A272 and stopped in the village to find out about village life from various people in Cuckfield. Roving reporters met with members of the community and recorded their stories, which were then broadcast out during the Breakfast Show with Neil Pringle, and also on the BBC Sussex Drive show later that evening.

Here's a few extracts from the broadcasts...