Page 37 - br-jan-2020
P. 37

January 2020                         January 2020

 What you can do    Pairs knock out Winners Shaun Eastwood And RusselL French
    Keep moving   Consistency Trophy for 2018 went to Tristan Gale

 Try not to sit still for more than one hour at a time. Even if just move your arms and   The most improved player of 2018 was won by Tristan Gale
 legs, it'll help keep you warm.
       And as always voted for by all the ROGS the very coveted players player of 2018
    Eat well   went to Josh (beef) Eastwood
 Aim for at least one hot  meal every day  as well as warm  drinks throughout the   I must thank everyone who made the day and evening such a great success, a
 day.   special mention for my Vice Captain Matt March and his lovely wife Heidi who
       did a great job relieving you of cash for the four ball and prize draws.
 Having nutritious and varied food is important for good health and wellbeing,
       A huge thanks to everyone for their generosity. We raised an amazing £655.00 for
       my chosen charity which is The Speedway Riders Benevolent Fund who look after
       riders  who  have  had  career  ending  injuries  and  also  the  bereaved  families  of
 BERE REGIS HISTORY SOCIETY   riders.
       Very much looking forward to my term as ROGS captain and look forward to our
       first game of 2020 at Ferndown Golf Club on the 6th March first tee 10.30
 Our November meeting was held on the 27th at the Village
 Hall.  We  began  with  the  story  of  the  find  of  our  first  gold   Captain Middlo
 Roman  coin  in  the  parish.  This
 was  a  very  late  Roman  coin,

 minted  toward  the  end  of  the
 Empire  in  the  East  Empire,  but
 how  it  came  to  be  lost  at  Bere  Regis  can  only  be
 guessed.

 Various new finds were shown and discussed and the
 discovery  that  a  members'  finds  from  about  20  years
 ago  are  almost  certainly  connected  to  another
 Roman Villa in the parish. The Archaeology Section has
 found  almost  800  things  since  the  last  meeting
 including roof tiles and imported pottery of the first Century.
 Our  main  discussion  was  of  the  English  Civil  War  of  the  1640s  and  included  the
 national  story  followed  by  what  happened  in  Bere  Regis  in  those  years.  The
 burning down of the Turberville Manor House and the manufacture of pistol lead
 shot in the Rye Hill area at that time was explained together with the probable
 manufacture of gunpowder in an, as yet, unknown location.

 We had a number of new donated items to show, particularly from the First World
 War, including a warning poster of Allied and German aircraft, an electrical test
 box probably used to test telephone lines after repairs, and, more personally, a
 miniature set of playing cards used by troops at the more quiet times of the War.
 If  you  haven't  attended  before,  please  do  come  along  and  join  us  in  our
 continuing study of the history of our village.

 John Pitfield, Project Secretary

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