A new Ansty Village Centre

By Claire Cooper

Plans for Ansty Village Centre in Ansty have moved a further step forward.

Mid Sussex District Council has granted planning permission for a new community centre. With permission already in place for a single hall, this gives the village a choice of two replacements for the ageing and well-loved meeting place.

Ansty Village Hall was originally a First World War army hut, which was dismantled in Holland and sold to the village by the Canadians in 1921.

Although old, with no proper foundations and in desperate need of repair, the hall is still a hive of activity and is home to many village organisations, such as the Ansty Sports & Social Club (AS&SC) as well as a monthly Arts and Crafts Club, Friendship Group, Garden Club and Card and Games Group. There are also Zumba classes, ballet lessons and even a school for problematic pets!

Following a request from the Ansty and Staplefield Parish Council and Mid Sussex District Council, further plans were drawn up for a bigger community centre to incorporate the village hall and social club, and provide changing rooms for the cricket and football teams.

Now these plans have been passed, villagers are focusing their efforts on raising the £1m needed to fund the centre.

Members of the Ansty Village Hall Trust, Ansty Sports and Social Club and Ansty Cricket Club have been raising funds and are currently applying for charitable status for the Ansty Village Centre Trust (AVC).

An application submitted by the AVC for funding from Mid Sussex District Council was successful, resulting in a grant of £127k. A public works loan of £100k is to be taken out by Ansty and Staplefield Parish Council.

 

The AVC have until 2015 to raise enough money to fund the new Community Building. “We are desperate to raise the rest of the funds needed in order that we can build a modern energy saving, environmentally friendly community centre – especially as we have lost our Public House, Church, Village Shop and Post Office. The hall is the only place where the residents can gather.”

Members of the Ansty Village Hall Trust and the AS&SC have been raising funds for several years with events including race nights, auctions and pudding evenings, coffee mornings, cream teas and barbecues. In Cuckfield, members take part in the Mayor’s procession, the Cuckoo Fair and the Christmas Tree Festival in Holy Trinity Church. The next event will be the Ansty Village Multi Garage Sale, from 10am to 2pm on 26th April, when home owners in the village will be selling a selection of goods from the driveways of their homes. There will also be a sale in the village hall, plus coffee, teas and cakes!

Vice Chairman of the Village Hall Trust and event organiser, Marion Petitpierre explained: “We will produce a brochure with addresses and a map of everyone taking part, with a brief summary of items being sold. Brochures, which will also be entered into a lucky draw, can be bought for £1.50 at the village hall, where refreshments will also be on sale.”

Marion is also organising a second ‘200 Club’ lottery where, after 200 tickets are sold for £10, one lucky ticket holder will win £1,000.

Other events being planned will include a Summer Barbeque, Cream Tea, Bridge Drive, Village Fun Day on August Bank Holiday Monday and the annual sale of bacon butties to motorists and spectators from the Veteran Car Rally which passes through the village in November.

For more information, contact Maureen Gibson gibson50qqq@btinternet.com 01444 413061 or Marion Petitpierre marionpetitpierre@gmail.com 01444 453277. For the Village Fun Day contact Brian Fletcher brianfletcher@btinternet.com 

Dramatic Breakfast play in Cuckfield

News of the forthcoming Cuckfield Dramatic Society play has been released. The play is “Anyone for Breakfast” by Derek Benfield. It will be performed Wednesday 28th - Saturday 31st May in Queen’s Hall. 

Its a good old farce though not a la Brian Rix. It is extremely funny and fast moving with the inevitable lies, damned lies and confusions.

Tickets will be available from Saturday 10th May from Mansell McTaggart (initial sales at the Cuckoo Fayre stall).

Cast:

Shirley    Caroline Denholm
Jane    Kirsty Bishopp
Mark    Simon Perkins
Gilbert    Laurence Leng
Helga    Samantha Oliver
Roger    Paul Davey

Harriet Sheldon is directing and rehearsals are under way already. 

The Queen's Hall in WWI

Queens Hall Cuckfield

Cuckfield Museum reopened last month with a display looking at the effects of the First World War on those living in the village and how Cuckfield could be seen as  a microcosm for the country as a whole. The title comes from the book by Alan Miller, on sale in the Museum, which looks at Cuckfield in 1917 using local resources like the Mid Sussex Times of the day.

Parish magazines  show the changes in the village month by month. By March 1915, as in many other communities, so many men had volunteered that there was a shortage of labour on the land and parents could apply for labour certificates for their sons to leave school at 12 instead of 14.  By April 1916 a creche was being set up to allow women to help with farm work.

Many women who would before have gone straight from home to marriage, now had the chance to train for work.  We have photos from the album of Olive Turner, the daughter of a well known family, who became a nurse at the VAD hospital set up in the Queen’s Hall, Cuckfield. The photo (above) shows the hall entirely recognisable today but with beds down the side and tables in the centre.  

Read the full story on page 26 of the Mar/Apr 2014 issue.