Bourne Town Bowls Club
One of the best known local sporting organisations, the Bourne Town
Bowls Club, occupies land on the far corner of the Abbey Lawn and is now
the only bowls club in the town. But it was not always so.
The origins of organised bowling in Bourne date back to 1921 when John
Robert Arnold MBE set up the Congregational Sports Club which was involved
with both bowls and tennis, on grass and hard courts. It was based in
Manning Road on land adjoining the old Bourne Water Works and owned by a
local businessman, Mr William Castledine, who rented it out at £1. 5s 0d.
a year. The arrangement continued until 1942 but activities ceased because
of the Second World War from 1939-45 and the club's assets were sold at
auction and the funds donated equally between the Congregational and
Methodist Sunday Schools.
Meanwhile, another organisation devoted to the sport, the Bourne Abbey
Lawn Bowling Club began in 1922 when volunteers started preparing a new
green on the grassland close to the church. Work went ahead with great
enthusiasm and the club was opened the following year by the vicar, Canon
John Grinter, a keen bowler himself who had also lent a hand with the
preparations and who had been instrumental in the negotiations to lease
the site to the club for a peppercorn rent of £8.50 a year.
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Volunteers preparing the green for the
Bourne Abbey Bowling Club on the site of the former Abbey House in
1922, pictured above. The club was opened the following year by
the vicar, Canon John Grinter, who also lent a helping hand with
the preparations and can be seen here on the right with his foot
on a spade. Members are pictured below after a championship match
on the greens, circa 1925. The members were mainly wealthy and
influential tradesmen and the club was considered to be rather
exclusive and out of the reach of the working man who was not
welcome to play there. |
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The two pictures above show the vicarage bowling green from the
church tower taken by Trevor Brodrick |
The club continued to prosper for more than 60 years until the Church of
England decided that Bourne needed a new vicarage and that the bowling
club's green was the right place for it to be built. There were angry
protests and the issue went to a public inquiry.
The club's president at that time, Jimmy White, who had been a member for
21 years, said: "The green belongs to the church but it would be a tragedy
if we lost it. The club currently has 60 members, a third of them old age
pensioners, and so we may not only lose our club, but also the many
friendships that have been built up over the years." He added that losing
the land would mean searching for a new site and laying a new green that
would cost them around £30,000 which they could not afford.
But despite their pleas, the inspector decided in favour of the new
vicarage and the bowls club was forced to close down and its members were
left without playing facilities.
The Bourne Town Bowls Club was their salvation. It had been formed in 1953
as the Abbey Road Bowling Club with just 20 members and the land on the
Abbey Lawn was rented from Bourne United Charities to provide just four
rinks but they were only able to play friendly matches.
Many of them joined and this has helped the town club flourish to become
one of the best in the county with 130 members now playing on a regular
basis. A wooden pavilion was added in 1969 after being purchased for just
£30 from Northorpe Cricket Club when it disbanded and can still be seen at
the far corner of the green, complete with its original verandah.
This ancient building was replaced with a modern, brick built pavilion
that was completed in 1977 and two years later the club changed its name
to the Bourne Town Bowls Club with a total of 130 members playing there on
a regular basis.
In 1967, the green was extended to six rinks with the co-operation of
Bourne United Charities who own the land. Between 1965 and 1967 the club
had one team which played in the Stamford League but withdrew in 1968 to
join the Spalding League. A B team was added two years later, also playing
in the Spalding league, and a ladies' section was formed in 1973 with
fifteen members, although now much larger.
The story of the club since then has been one of slow progression and
improvement, both with the club facilities and with the playing status.
Two more teams entered the Stamford League in 1984 and a new surface was
laid on the greens in 1995 at a cost of £13,000, financed with the help of
a £10,000 grant from South Kesteven District Council. The club now fields
between ten and twelve teams a week in various competitions and other
matches but the committee is always anxious to attract more members to
their sport and many members feel that the formation of a new club in the
tow might provide much needed competition, and perhaps an indoor rink.
"Another club would also increase the competition and an indoor green in
Bourne would mean that we would no longer need to travel to Spalding or
Stamford to play in the winter months", said one member
Meanwhile, in the autumn of 2010, club member Robert Kitchener financed
the provision of a bowling mat and all of the necessary equipment to
start a Short Mat Bowling Club which will meet at the Abbey Church hall in
Church Walk on Friday evenings. "Such a generous and public spirited
gesture deserves support and will provide an opportunity for anyone, your
and old, to have a go", said former chairman David Wynne.
BOURNE MAN’S BOWLING HONOUR
Reproduced from the Stamford Mercury, Friday
3rd August 2007 |
A Bourne man has become the new president of
the Lincolnshire County Indoor Bowls Association.
Russell Needle, aged 78, who plays for Bourne Town Bowls Club, was
elected to serve for 2007-08 during the annual general meeting of
the association which was held at Lincoln on Tuesday. "It is a great
honour", he said. "I am looking forward to the new season with
tremendous enthusiasm."
He has served for some time on the executive committees of all the
county bowls associations and became chairman of the Lincolnshire
EBA Vice-Presidents Association in 1993. |
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In the Millennium Year of 2000, he was elected
president of the Lincolnshire EBA County Bowls Association and he
frequently bowls for the English Bowling Association Presidents‘
team in representative matches.
Mr Needle, a retired project manager with an international
construction company, lives at Morton, near Bourne, with his wife
Jean. He has been playing bowls since he was sixteen, encouraged by
his father, the late John Needle, who played for more than 60 years
and eventually won a place in the Northamptonshire county team. "He
encouraged me from the moment I took up the game at 16", said Mr
Needle.
Apart from bowling for Bourne Town, he also plays regularly at the
indoor complex at Stamford and is a founder member of the Stamford
and District Indoor Bowls Association. In the past two years, he has
also been elected to the Lincolnshire Imps for services to the game
of bowls. |
PHOTO ALBUM |
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Continual rain during the early summer in 2012
brought difficulties for the club because the greens were either
waterlogged or even flooded on several occasions making play
impossible. |
REVISED JUNE 2012
See also The Vicarage
The Abbey Lawn
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