Events

From High Salvington Mill Trust
Revision as of 12:01, 28 May 2021 by WikiSysop (talk | contribs) (Extracted Barn Dance to its own event page)

Annual Mill Events

This page lists annual mill events from the point of view of Mill Trust Directors or volunteers responsible for organising or assisting in running them.

Book Sale

Annual Summer Fete

Organiser: Events Team

Date: Second Sunday of July

Summer Fete

The Summer Fete is the main annual fund-raising event for High Salvington Mill Trust Limited. The usual date is the second Sunday of July. In 2020, due to the Covid-19 pandemic, for the first time in decades, the event had to be cancelled. The date for the 2021 event was postponed until August.

The Fete features a traditional mix of stalls and games. <<STUB TEXT -- Needs rewrite/expansion>>

Classic Cars Open Day

Organiser: Ann English

Email: car4mill@btinternet.com

MG Owners Open Day

Until 2009 this was the MG Owners Open Day. After several disappointing years and a tendency for the MG Owners to not interact overmuch with visitors, and with an offer from a Morgan owners club to operate a better event, the Mill Trust chose to offer them the opportunity. From 2010, Ann and Quentin English took on responsibility for running the newly named Classic Cars Open Day. While predominantly showing off Morgan cars, Ann and Quentin happily accepted applications for a slot from other interested classic car owners and they regularly attracted a small number of motorcycles to round out the display. With enthusiastic owners engaging with visitors to talk about their well-presented cars, the Classic Cars Open Day has become a firm favourite, and is often the second-most well-attended event, after the Annual Fete.

Classic Car Day 2010

Sadly, Quentin English passed away on 23rd June 2020. Due to Covid-19 all public open days and events at the mill had been cancelled for the year, but Ann was keen to resume running the Classic Cars Open Day event in 2021, after restrictions had been lifted.

Table Top Sale

Autumn Rural Crafts Fair

The Autumn Rural Crafts Fair was an event proposed by Bob Potts and Peter Casebow. The aim was to showcase rural crafts skills with relevance to restoration and maintenance of the mill so as to attract people with similar skills and interests who might be persuaded to join our team of maintenance volunteers.

Pole Lathe

Christmas Bonfire Carols

Bonfire before lighting

The Christmas "Carols around a Bonfire" event is run every year on a Friday before Christmas, with a collection in favour of the St. Barnabas House and Chestnut Tree House hospices.

The Secretary books the current vicar of St. Peters, a year ahead, or an alternative if he/she is unavailable. Peter Hill, former chair of Sussex Mills Group, has acted as MC in the past. The publicity team advertises the event, to local people only, as the intention is to thank neighbours for their forbearance during the year.

The work team prepares a bonfire near the East hedge, after first cutting out a circle of turf and rolling it up to store safely under the hedge. They hang the strings of external coloured lights from the Long Barn guttering, and if another string is available, the gatehouse guttering. They hang floodlights out of a port side spout floor window of the mill. They will then wind to shine the floodlight towards the bonfire and they may put out floodlights on the field to light up the mill. If winds are strong from the wrong direction then they may need to use a different window to make sure the mill cannot be tail-winded.

Mince pies and hot chocolate are acquired for the kitchen. The carol sheets are currently stored by Jeff Best, who will check and print/staple extra copies, as required. Volunteer money collectors need to be recruited, along with kitchen volunteers, and a couple of volunteers to hand out and collect carol sheets. Hazel Marsden, as Treasurer, currently stores the collection buckets.

Coloured Lights on Long Barn
Bonfire

After the event, once all the wood has burnt to ash and everything cooled down, a magnet is used to remove any ironware that was attached to the wood used on the fire. The turfs are then carefully replaced. The floodlights and strings of coloured lights are taken down and stored.

For many years, Peter Hill conducted this event, until 2009 when heavy snow made it impossible to get over to Worthing. The local Findon vicar with responsibility for St. Peters was invited to officiate that year, and has been conducting ever since. Technically, the Carols event counts as a service, so the Trust does not require a Temporary Event Notice, and this is easier to argue if the conductor is from the church.

Floodlit Area Around Bonfire