Showing posts with label Website. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Website. Show all posts

12 February 2013

Let’s face it - they’re our Public Rights of Way!

Medway Council recently launched a useful Facebook page called ‘Medway Public Rights of Way’, to help promote local walking routes, and to highlight the excellent work done by many local people, and the local Council, to maintain our paths, bridleways and byways.


The site is very good and, being on the Hoo Peninsula, you’ll find many items of interest - with many parts of our rural area being highlighted in detail.

Well done to Medway Council and everyone responsible - a good job!

Take a look at the Facebook page by clicking here.
  

24 February 2012

Letter from America

Continuing my focus on some of the people who have recently been in touch to talk about their connections to the Hoo Peninsula, I am today looking ‘across the pond’ to the sunshine state of California.

I was contacted last week by Susan Cox (Sue), who lived in Hoo as a child in the late 1950s. Sue lived in one of the group of semi-detached houses next to Dr. Tilley’s surgery on Main Road. Sue says Hoo was lovely back in those days, surrounded as it was (and still is of course) by some beautiful countryside.

Main Road, junction with Tilley Close.

Sue’s father built a small boat for weekend jaunts on the River Medway and the river forts are imprinted in her memory from those trips. (Seeing these river forts up close is something I must try to do myself soon.) There was a meadow on the walk to the river, which Sue recalls was home to an enormous Suffolk Punch draft horse.




Her family had a housekeeper, who she thinks had many generations of family from Hoo. The housekeeper often used to take Sue and her sister to the Church graveyard to care for a family grave.


Sue also has fond memories of the old Post Office on Main Road, what is today Hoo Spice. Here is another photo from local resident Arthur Vidgeon’s website, as the building looked in 1915 - along with a photo taken a few days ago.




Thank you Sue for getting in touch and sharing your memories of living in Hoo.

Would you like to share your stories, memories or old photos of the area? Just get in touch via the contact page.
  

19 February 2012

It’s good to talk . . .

It’s always nice when people get in touch to say hello and give feedback about what they like on this website.


I’m often contacted by people passing on information and news about local events and activities, with others sharing memories and photographs of the area. But it isn’t just local residents who get in touch.

It’s nice when people from around the world do so too - who perhaps lived on the Hoo Peninsula once themselves, or have relatives and ancestors who lived in the area. I’ve also been getting quite a few messages from people who are thinking of moving to the area.

Please do carry on getting in touch via the contact page, especially if you have old photos or postcards of places on the Hoo Peninsula.

I will feature some of those who have recently made contact, in the coming week, including two former residents of Hoo.
 

4 September 2011

New website for Hoo St. Werburgh Parish Church

It’s really good to see a brand new website launched by Hoo St. Werburgh Parish Church. The site is very user friendly and contains lots of useful information about the history of the Church, forthcoming events, service times, contact details and much more besides.


Visit the website by clicking here.
 

14 August 2011

High Halstow Blog

Blogging away since February, High Halstow Parish Council is keeping residents up to date with news and views about local activities. Their excellent new blog is packed full of useful information, including an events calendar, an archive of the High Halstow Times (viewable online), details of local voluntary groups, clubs and societies and lots of information about the history of the village. Certainly worth a visit, just click here to take a look.


The site also includes details of formal business, a list of parish councillors and information about parish council responsibilities.
 

25 January 2011

Get In Touch!

Since launching this site last May, I have been contacted by many people with a connection to the Hoo Peninsula – people living here now, those with family links to the area and others with an interest in exploring our special landscape.

Lots of people have happily shared knowledge about local history and sent copies of old photographs, whilst others have emailed their Hoo Peninsula family history enquiries, provided information about community events, or given suggestions for good local walks.

Please keep getting in touch, via the Contact page, or by sending an email here.