One of the more
modern public buildings in Bourne is the Darby and Joan Hall that stands on the edge of the Wellhead Gardens. The date over the entrance suggests that it was opened in 1959 but this is incorrect although building work did start in that year.
The official opening took place on Tuesday 12th July 1960 and was performed by the Earl of Ancaster, accompanied by the Countess. He was president of the Darby and Joan Club that had until then been meeting
in rented accommodation, mainly at the Vestry Hall in North Street. The new hall however, owes its existence to Mrs
Ida Pick, a local councillor, who recognised the need for a permanent meeting place for the old people of Bourne.
Shortly after the end of the Second World War in 1945, she was crossing the Market Place
one morning when she saw a number of old men
sheltering from a winter storm near the steps of the Town Hall but obviously enjoying each other's company as they stood gossiping about the issues of the day. Mrs Pick stopped to talk to them and discovered that they had no close relatives and fended for themselves but met regularly at the same spot for a few minutes of chat and sociability. It was at that moment that the conception of the Darby and Joan Club was born.
She
immediately began organising regular meetings for the dozen or so people that turned up, usually in borrowed or rented accommodation such as the Vestry Hall
in North Street and the former National School, now the Conservative Party
headquarters, and in 1950 the Darby and Joan Club was founded, only the second
in Lincolnshire after Stamford.
Temporary accommodation remained the meeting place until 1958 when the possibility of a permanent home became a reality. Bourne United Charities offered the land for a new hall on the edge of the Wellhead Gardens, once occupied by the carpentry business run by Frederick Baldock of Baldock's Mill with the riverside studio of the photographer Ashby Swift nearby and the premises of Johnson Brothers who ran a shoeing forge and implement works behind. The money was to come from fund-raising and donations with a target of £5,000 but the local authorities promised generous grants and so construction started in February 1959.
The next few months were devoted to raising the necessary money to finance the project with a variety of schemes, notably a Tudor village display at the Corn Exchange over the weekend April 30th and May 1st with stallholders and helpers in period costume. Most of the principal organisations joined in the fund raising and a committee was formed to spearhead the drive consisting of Mrs A Burchnell and Mr C T Burchnell as joint organisers, Mrs J Lee (secretary) and Mrs I M Williams (treasurer).
Donations started rolling in, from business, industry and individuals, ranging from several pounds to a few shillings. There were also a variety of events to raise money including dances, parties, and competitions and even a film show. By October, the total had reached £4,208 with another £2,000 to go for the completion of the scheme and by January the following year, £4,775 had been raised.
Membership of the Darby and Joan Club had already risen from 12 to 99 and by the
following summer, the total cost of the project had gone up to £6,500 (£90,000 by today's values) and all but £1,400 had been raised. Mrs Pick, who had been appointed chairman of the club, told the gathering: "Although there is still an overdraft, we have that wonderful feeling of nearly owning our own house." Mrs Pick also received a cheque for £25 from Mrs E Couzens, chairman of the ladies auxiliary of the Bourne Licensed Victuallers Association and another £5 "from a grateful member". Messages of goodwill flooded in from the local M P Mr Kenneth Lewis, the member for Rutland and Stamford, from the Over-60 Welcome Club at Deeping St James, the Old People's Club at Stamford and from Mr J W Laxton, the club's oldest member who was about to celebrate his 101st birthday.
The official opening was held on Tuesday 12th July 1960 by the Earl of Ancaster, then
Lord Lieutenant of Lincolnshire, accompanied by the countess and the Rev W G Marsden Jones, minister at the Baptist Church in Bourne. In his address, Lord
Ancaster recalled that the project had begun five years previously and had been encouraged with a £1,000 grant from the King George VI Memorial Fund. Local councils and welfare organisations had assisted but a great part of the work and the bulk of the money had come from the people of Bourne and from former townspeople now living elsewhere. Mr Cecil
T Hodgkinson, deputising for the honorary secretary Mr P K Duerden, said that the new centre would cater for the physically handicapped as well as the elderly and he expressed thanks for all who had assisted in bringing the project to fruition. A vote of thanks to the Earl and Countess and all helpers was proposed by Mrs Kath Neale and a bouquet was presented to Lady Ancaster by Mr J Rimmington, who was 80 years old, and a spray to Lord Ancaster by Mr R Tyler who was 89 years old.
Mrs Pick concluded the opening ceremony by announcing that due to the increased accommodation, they were able to accept more members and therefore the minimum age for membership would go down from 70 to 65.
Gifts of fittings and furniture to equip the new centre had already started coming in including a clock, a piano and stool, a reading room table, easy chairs and a television set that had been bought with money raised by customers at the Crown
Inn in West Street.
By the end of 1960, a total of £6,000 had been raised to finance the project and
the balance of £500 was paid off during the following year. In 1975, when the
club celebrated its silver jubilee, membership had reached 150 and the hall was
being used by a number of organisations including the Blind Association Good
Companions and the Physically Handicapped Club. At the anniversary meeting on
Monday 17th February, Mrs Pick retired as chairman and was presented with an
inscribed silver salver in recognition of her work.
The hall has been in continual use ever since for meetings and activities by the
elderly and for a variety of other outside events, even the occasional
commercial sale on a Saturday.
The club marked its golden jubilee during the weekend of
14th-16th July 2006. This was not the correct date, the club having been
formed in 1950 and not 1956 as officers believed, but arrangements for the
celebrations had already been made before the error was pointed out by local
historian Rex Needle and after a hurried conference, it was decided to continue
as planned. The anniversary weekend was opened on the Friday afternoon by
special guest Baroness Willoughby d'Eresby, whose father, the Earl of Ancaster,
had officially opened the hall in 1960, and there were stalls, exhibitions,
music and a display of flower arrangements over the following two days. "It was
an enjoyable and rewarding weekend, one to remember", said organiser Mrs Mary
Holmes. We had a steady flow of visitors over the three days and everyone had a
wonderful time."
In 2009, a major £70,000 programme of renovation for the
deteriorating roof of the hall, the replacement of the windows and other
associated work, was undertaken with grants from the Len Pick Trust (£20,000),
WREN - Waste Recycling Environmental Limited (£35,000) the Ancaster Trust, Bourne United Charities, Warners Midlands plc and fund raising by members (£15,000). An official
re-opening was held on Friday 23rd October to mark the completion of the work
when club chairman, Mary Holmes, thanked everyone who had helped. "Apart from
the work of the roof, large amounts of money have been spent on the hall over the
past few years, including the renewal of the kitchen and toilet facilities and
now we have a hall that meets all of the requirements for the 21st century", she
said.
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The bronze plaque on
the wall at the entrance to the hall (left) commemorates King
George VI (1895-1952) and the fund in his memory that contributed
£1,000 towards the building costs. The date on the stone tablet over
the entrance (right) is incorrect because the hall was actually
opened by the Earl of Ancaster in July 1960. The picture below
shows the hall as it is today. |
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The platform party at the official opening on Tuesday 12th
July 1960 were (left to right) the Rev W G Marsden Jones, minister
at the Baptist Church in West Street who gave the blessing, Mr
Cecil Hodgkinson who spoke on behalf of the Darby and Joan Club,
the Countess of Ancaster, Earl Ancaster making his speech, Mrs Ida
Pick, club chairman, Mrs Kath Neale, who proposed a vote of thanks
to Lord and Lady Ancaster and helpers and an unidentified guest. |
MAJOR REPAIRS IN 2009 |
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By 2009, the hall was in need of extensive repairs, mainly to the roof
which had begun to leak, and in July, workmen began a major refurbishment
programme to replace it entirely as well as installing new windows and lowering the ceiling inside.
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The re-opening of the hall after the £70,000
project to replace of the roof was completed took place on Friday 23rd
October 2009.
In the picture - left to right: John
Freear (vice-chairman of the Len Pick Trust), Adrian Smith (chairman of
the club's management committee), John Winslow (representative of
WREN),
Mary Holmes (chairman of the Darby and Joan club), Margaret Sismey
(chairman of the club's trustees) and Marion Moody (club treasurer). |
The hall after the refurbishment project was completed |
See also Ida Pick MBE
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