September
Transcription
September
HOUSE OF ENGLAND www.houseofengland.org House of Pacific Relations 2191 W Pan American Rd, San Diego, 92101 President Fran Weekley 619-262-5512 Balboa Park, San Diego, CA NEWSLETTER- September 2014 [email protected] Vice-President Rachel Adams 858-354-1871 [email protected] 2nd Vice-President Hosting coordinator Eileen Ford 760-940-8835 [email protected] Secretary Hilary Lafoe 858-703-4941 [email protected] Treasurer (Assistant Webmaster) Melvin Weekley 619-262-5512 NEXT MEETING: Tuesday September 2, 2014. This will be held at the HOUSE OF HUNGARY, by kind permission, as the Hall of Nations is being worked on by the City. Meeting will start 6:30pm with light refreshments, followed by the business meeting and then a Dahlia presentation by David and Sharon Tooley. LADIES’ AUXILIARY LUNCHEON: Wednesday September 10, 2014, noon, hosted by House of Philippines- also being held at the House of Hungary. Men invited too. Cost is only $4 per person. It is always a great meal and good fellowship. NOTE: October luncheon will be hosted by the House of England. Selina will be catering for us. Let’s all attend and enjoy a lovely English meal. We need five volunteers to help serve-see Fran. MEMBER NEWS Meeting minutes: The July minutes have been mailed or emailed with this newsletter to save time. Please read so that they can be approved (with any corrections needed) at the September meeting (There was no business at the August picnic-only fun!). [email protected] Trustees Steve Gonzales 619-260-8178 Arya Zeighamnia 619-584-7555 [email protected] Membership Terry Carpenter [email protected] HPR Delegates Fran Weekley Mel Weekley HPR Alt. delegates Rachel Adams Arya Zeighamnia Linda Stolliker Webmaster Richard Steadham Birthdays for September: Steve G., Betty, Bob, Roy, Richard, Kent. Volunteer needed…..to host at the October meeting. We reimburse expense of food and offset this with food donations at the meeting. Please let Fran know if you are able. Fourth Tuesdays at the cottage: We open every month from noon to 3pm as part of the Free Museums for locals program. Come host with Fran and chat with the visitors. Always good fun! Next one is September 23rd. (Visit a museum for free in the morning while in the park!). Sunday Hosting at cottage: We voted at the Feb 2014 meeting to award a free Christmas party ticket to anyone doing 8 hostings a year. Check you status! Please volunteer so you will be eligible. Nominating committee needed: September is when we form the committee so that a slate can be presented at the October meeting and voted on in November. Please let Fran know if you can serve on the committee and/or you would like to run for office in 2015. Website updated: Check it out! Thank you Mel for many hours spent working on it. Accomodation needed: Terry Carpenter has an elderly Brit friend needing a 1 BR or Studio to rent for Sept/ Oct. She has a lhasa apso dog. Call Terry at 619-697-5607 if you can help. [email protected] Assistant Webmaster Jennifer Bridges [email protected] Newsletter Editors Frances & Melvin Weekley Annual Audit of the Treasurer’s books: DONE! Big thank you to Shirley, Maureen and Meegan who completed the audit on August 22. Articles for the newsletters: Please contact Fran if you would like to see a special subject addressed or have an article/photo you would like to share. HMS VICTORY: ….coming to the cottage. Fran will explain at the October meeting! Page 1 of 12 HOSTING AND HOSTESSING AT THE COTTAGE Thank you to our volunteers. Call our hosting chairperson, Eileen Ford to volunteer for future dates. 760-940-8835 Commitment is from 12 noon to 4PM, providing light refreshments and milk (teabags and sugar are provided) and chatting with the visitors. Donations are accepted for upkeep of the cottage. (Cottage must have the doors open a minimum of 4 hours between 12:00 noon and 5:00pm) Aug 3 Aug 10 Aug 17 Aug 24 Aug 31 Steve/ Sharon, Fran/Joanne Fran/Charlotte, John/Emma Fran, Gabby Roy and Eileen Dottie/Fran, Paul/Chris Sept 7 Sept 14 Sept 21 Sept 28 Steve/Sharon, Fran OPEN Aileen/Meegan, Fran OPEN PLEASE VOLUNTEER-CALL EILEEN! Fran will work with anyone hosting for the first time to show how we do it! Reminders: It is acceptable to take $10 per host from the donations towards cost of milk and food- just let the Treasurer know for accounting purposes. Also, please let Fran know if you notice that any supplies need replenished. House of England Lapel Pins: These are on display at the cottage. If a visitor donates to obtain one, please let Mel know when turning in the donations money. (Pins are $4 each). Interested in joining House of England? Print a membership application from the website (www.houseofengland.org/member) or get one at the cottage on a Sunday afternoon and mail with check for $12 made out to the House of England to membership chairperson, Terry Carpenter, 3955 Violet Street, La Mesa, Ca 91941. THE SMALL village on Anglesey in North Wales with the longest place name in Britain is famous. Yet few people know how it came by its tailor-made name of Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch! At the beginning of the last century it was called simply Llanfairpwllgwyngyll, meaning “St. Mary’s Church in the hollow of the white hazel.” Then a local tailor, well-known for his pranks, suggested lengthening it in order to attract tourists. The name of the tailor whose inspiration put the village on the map has been forgotten; but his skill in threading together words lives on in “St. Mary’s Church in the hollow of the white hazel, near a rapid whirlpool and the Church of St. Tysilio, near a red cave.” Page 2 of 12 HOE SUMMER PICNIC 2014 Page 3 of 12 Page 4 of 12 THAT PIANO IN THE COTTAGE: In 2012, we talked about getting rid of the piano in the cottage but, thanks to a passionate appeal by Shirley, the piano was kept and moved into the main room of the cottage. Thank goodness! Here are some of the many visitors that come by and play the piano. They always get applause and appreciation. Page 5 of 12 Shakespeare's Corner Shoppe & Afternoon Tea: (Tea Room, British Restaurant, Specialty grocery store) 3719 India Street, San Diego, CA 92103 Open 10am to 8pm 619-683-2748 Room Room British ·a · Restaurant · Specialty Grocery Store Everything you love from Britain without the weather.! British and Irish imports shoppe stocking all your favourites from across the pond. Also serving a daily Afternoon Tea or Cream tea on their delightful patio. (On site is their English bakery where they cook up old favourites like sausage rolls, Scotch eggs, pasties of numerous names, pies, scones and cakes) Afternoon Tea served seven days a week. We always start at noon but last sitting times vary please call 619 683 2748 to make a reservation. British owned and ran specialty shop helping ex pats feel less home sick and everyone else the chance to try and continue to indulge in our great foods. We love when you stop by for a chat. Page 6 of 12 Proud to have Selina, owner, as a member of House of England and the catering person for our events. Page 7 of 12 Meegan went to visit BUM again-in Scotland! Pat and Meegan were in Edinburgh in 2008 for the unveiling of BUM and visited BOBBY as well. ( Lovely to ‘see’ Pat again here). EDINBURGH’S GREYFRIARS BOBBY & SAN DIEGO’S BUM in Edinburgh BUM and BOBBY -life-sized bronze statues are in the garden of the William Heath Davis House Park at San Diego’s Gaslamp Quarter. Greyfriars Bobby was honoured in 1873 by the erection of a statue adjacent to Greyfriars Kirkyard where for 14 years he lay close to his master’s grave. This inspired the legend that lives today in films and books. In 1998 funds were collected to create an exact copy of the original Bobby statue which was presented as a gift to San Diego. The San Diego/Edinburgh Sister City Society then determined to return the favour by creating two statues of their beloved dog Bum so that these important historic symbols could be together in both San Diego and Edinburgh as a testament to the friendship between the two cities. ‘Bum’ A St Bernard/Spaniel mixed breed puppy, arrived as a stowaway aboard the steamship ‘Santa Rosa’ in 1886 and was soon adopted by the town of San Diego. Though cared for off and on by a Chinese businessman, Bum preferred a free and independent life. Because he belonged to no one, he became everybody’s dog. Bum enjoyed many adventures during his life, including racing alongside the horses pulling the fire engines on the way to a fire. Acting as an observer at parades, greeting visiting dignitaries, including President Benjamin Harrison, and overcoming a bout of alcoholism (yes Bum did enjoy his tipple). Bum was so respected that he would have an afternoon nap in the middle of the street and wagons would drive carefully round him. Restaurants would attest to the quality of their food by placing signs in the window announcing that ‘Bum Eats Here.’ Bum was a survivor, he was struck by a train in 1887 on the Santa Fe Railway when he was severely injured and lost his forepaw and part of his tail. He also survived a broken leg after being kicked by a horse. He was so loved by the citizens that the City Fathers bestowed upon Bum a special order, a ‘Life-time Dog Tag’ exempting him from requiring a dog license. He was also declared ‘San Diego’s Town Dog’ and his likeness was put on Dog Tax receipts of 1891. When Bum died aged 12 years on November 10th 1898, the children collected pennies for a proper funeral. Page 8 of 12 Del Mar resident Zandra Rhodes named a ‘Dame of the British Empire’: (Born Chatham, Kent on Sept 19, 1940) Damehood — the female equivalent of knighthood — has been awarded to fashion and textile designer Zandra Rhodes, a resident of Del Mar and London. Britain’s Queen Elizabeth bestowed the Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) status upon Rhodes as part of her annual Birthday Honors list. The award recognizes Rhodes’ contributions to the fashion industry and specifically for founding Britain’s Fashion and Textile Museum in London in 2003; for her charitable work as breast cancer ambassador for London’s Mayor Boris Johnson; and for her role as Chancellor of the University for the Creative Arts, which has campuses in Kent and Surrey, England. The official title will be given to Rhodes, with the DBE medal, at a formal luncheon at Buckingham Palace with a choice of three dates later this summer. “I do hope it will be the Queen giving the honors,” said Rhodes, “but it might be Prince Charles.” Rhodes has designed for the late Diana, Princess of Wales, and continues to dress celebrities, including Kylie Minogue, Sarah Jessica Parker and Paris Hilton. She is renowned in California for her dramatic opera set and costume designs, and is now on the board of the San Diego Opera. She has helped raise $40 million for the Sulpizio Cardiovascular Center in La Jolla, including donating artwork for the past 18 years of fundraisers. She has also done numerous charity fashion shows, such as “Go Red For Women,” which raises awareness to help prevent heart disease in women, and more. Some of Rhodes’ closest American friends feted her at a luncheon at La Jolla’s Herringbone Restaurant when the Dameship was made public. Organized by Dixie Unruh and Rachel York, the group of women — Iris Strauss, Erika Torri, Joyce Butler, Sally Stiegler, Marion Ross, Fiona Tudor, Chetna Bhatt and Valerie Cooper — sported pink wigs in homage to Rhodes’ signature cotton candycolored bob . “I got there a little early and the waitress complimented me on my hair,” said Unruh, “I explained that it wasn’t my own hair, but a wig. Then Zandra arrived and the same waitress complimented her on her wig, and she said, ‘It’s not a wig, it’s my own hair.’ So we all laughed about that.” Article suggested by Maureen Flores Page 9 of 12 Tower of London bleeds red to commemorate war dead: In 2014 the Tower of London is commemorating the centenary anniversary of the outbreak of the First World War through a major art installation, in collaboration with ceramic artist Paul Cummins with stage setting by Tom Piper. The Tower's dry moat is being filled with 888,246 ceramic poppies -- one for each British fatality during the war. Volunteers are installing from now until Armistice Day on 11 November, to complete the project. Each of the poppies in the Tower of London moat took three days to make. They will later be sold for 25 pounds ($42) each, and sent to the buyers after Armistice ceremonies in November. The money will go to British charities such as the Royal Legion and Help for Heroes, which serve British veterans. Page 10 of 12 British Coins Arranged into ‘Royal Coat of Arms’ by British Designer Matthew Dent Page 11 of 12 Ever wondered about a plaque under a tree on the lawn of the International cottage dedicated to Arthur E Vest? NEWSPAPER ARTICLE: Wednesday, May 12, 1943, Paper: San Diego Union Birth: Nov. 25, 1845 Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA Death: May 10, 1943 San Diego, San Diego County, California, USA FALL PROVED FATAL TO A.E. VEST, 97, G.A.R. POST COMMANDER Veteran Fought In 18 Battles; Wounded Twice Veteran of 18 battles of the Civil War, Arthur E. Vest, 97, commander of Datus E. Coon post, G.A.R., died yesterday at the naval hospital as the result of a fall on Good Friday at his home, 4076 Ohio St. San Diego, CA. A native of Cincinnati, Mr. Vest was a sergeant in the 57th Indiana Volunteers and was wounded twice. He had resided in San Diego 36 years. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Anna E. Vest, a daughter, Mrs. Leora Case, of San Diego; two sons, Joseph LeRoy Vest, of Van Nuys and Ralph Levi Vest, of Pasadena; a granddaughter, Mrs. (Dr.) Frazer MacPherson, a great granddaughter Mrs. Hie Thompson, and a great great grandson, Tarry Thompson, all of San Diego; and two grandsons, J.A. Case of Corcoran, Calif, and Edward Case. Another Civil War veteran, James Dickson, 95, suffered an injury from a fall on the same day Mr. Vest fell and was taken to the naval hospital at the same time. The only other San Diego Civil War veteran older than Mr. Vest is Thomas C. Shelly, of 4136 FiftyFourth St., San Diego who will be 100 next December 27. (Burial was at Cypress View Mausoleum and crematory, San Diego). The Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) was a fraternal organization composed of veterans of the Union Army, US Navy, Marines and Revenue Cutter Service who served in the American Civil War. Founded in 1866 in Decatur, Illinois, it was dissolved in 1956 when its last member died. Linking men through their experience of the war, the GAR became among the first organized advocacy groups in American politics, supporting voting rights for black veterans, lobbying the US Congress to establish veterans' pensions, and supporting Republican political candidates. Its peak membership, at more than 490,000, was in 1890, a high point of Civil War commemorative ceremonies. It was succeeded by the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War (SUVCW), composed of male descendants of Union veterans. The National Woman's Relief Corps, Auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic, Inc., is a patriotic organization whose express purpose is to perpetuate the memory of the Grand Army of the Republic, as we are their auxiliary organized at their request on July 25 and 26, 1883 in Denver, Colorado, and incorporated by Public Act of the 87th Congress on September 7, 1962. Page 12 of 12