Dorchester Dorset.com Blog

Archive for September, 2010

From Time to Time

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010
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From time to time by Julian Fellowes

From time to time by Julian Fellowes

Athlehampton House is a beautiful stone built manor house set in the heart of Dorset.  At first sight of this resplendent privately owned manor home you immediately struck by its grandeur.

The History of Athelhampton House

Dating back to 1485, this 160 acre manor was built by Sir William Martyn.  The house remained in the Martyn family for the next 4 generations when the house was then passed to four daughters, the shares of the house were not re-united until 1848 and through successive owners the house was eventually purchased by Alfred Cart de Lafontaine in 1891, who set about restoring the house and creating the formal gardens we see today.

Despite five centuries passing, timing has not withered the appeal of Athlethampton House, so it’s no surprise that this magnificent house was the setting for the film From Time to Time film by Julian Fellowes.

Based on the book Chimney’s of Green Knowe by Lucy M Boston the book is set just after the 2nd World War where a young boy, Tolly is sent to stay with his estranged grandmother – enter Maggie Smith.

Young Tolly, begins to see, and then participate in scenes from the past, which in turn throws up mysteries from the family’s past.

Much of the film was filmed in the house itself, but also takes in Puddletown and West Stafford and the surrounding Dorset countryside.  It stars the redoutable talents of Maggie Smith and Timothy Spall.

Here is a film review by the Times website

As of 23 September  2010 you can watch the film in the House itself.

Althelhampton House is also showing the movie on Mondays, Tuesdays & Wednesday at 7.30pm

And a Sunday matinee at 2.30pm

Athelhampton House the beautiful backdrop for Time to Time

Athelhampton House the beautiful backdrop for Time to Time

Opening Times for Athlehampton House

March to October
10.30am to 5.00pm (Closed Friday & Saturday)

November to February
Sundays only
10.00 til dusk

Admission charges
Adult – £9.25
Senior – £8.75
Children – Free
Discounts available online.

Directions to Athlehampton House

Here is where to find Athlehampton House

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NoFit State Circus comes to Dorchester

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010
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Getting ready for the No Fit State Circus performance

Getting ready for the No Fit State Circus performance

The circus came to Dorchester last week and what a performance the NoFit State Circus guys put on last Sunday.

Having seen lots of Dorchester locals getting involved – even school children took part in Circus activities – we were all waiting excitedly for the Sunday evening performance.

By 7.30pm the sun had just gone down and Maumbury rings was packed out! The great thing about this venue is that the circus took centre stage right in the middle of the ring – so the audience could look down on the amazing spectacle.

And what an amazing show! Everyone we spoke to throughly enjoyed themselves – and it is amazing that it was all put on for Free!

We captured a few sections of the 1.5 hour show on a small handheld video camera – so apoligies for the quality. But hopefully you get an idea of the atmosphere and audience participation.

Congratulations must go to the organisers, the No Fit State Circus and all the Dorchester locals that took part in the show.

If you were at the show let us know your comments.

No Fit State Circus Video Clips at Dorchester 2010

No Fit State Opening Scene

Air Ball – NoFit State Circus at Maumbury Rings, Dorchester 2010

Finale of the NoFit State Circus, Dorchester 2010

Closing Ceremony at The NoFit State Circus in Dorchester 2010

It has been a great Summer for outdoor Dorchester events (I can only think of a couple that suffered from the rain). So if you want to see even more next year let us now

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Park Life in Dorchester

Friday, September 17th, 2010
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Sunday 19 September, 7.30 (pre-show and finale show)
14 to 18 September open rehearsal and taster session.

Unicycling in Dorchester?

Unicycling in Dorchester?

Our very own ancient Maumbury Rings is transforming itself into a modern day circus venue for the Park Life show.

As part of the Inside out Festival, Nofit State, a Welsh contemporary Circus group shall be bringing their unique take on the Circus to Dorchester.  Part playground, part bandstand, NoFit State takes the tent of its circus for a celebration of the secret life of parks.

Part of the wonder of the show is that the public can take part.

Dorchester local have been invited along for taster sessions, which have been held all week in the run up to the show on Sunday 19 September.

The finale performance will be on Sunday at 8.00pm with the pre show at 7.30pm and picnic in the park from 6pm.

NoFitState’s mission is – “to be the circus everyone wants to join”.

“The future of British circus…Cirque du Soleil without the Disney and the disinfectant..” The Guardian

The Circus Comes to Dorchester

Park Life Circus

Parklife – No Fit State Circus at Brighton – coming to Dorchester in September 2010 from Alastair Nisbet on Vimeo.

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Dorset Business Awards

Friday, September 10th, 2010
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Dorset Business Awards
If you are thinking about raising the profile of your business you could do a lot worse than enter Business Awards and in Particular I’m thinking of the Dorset Business Awards.
Entering awards is a great way to promote your business or a product.  It can offer an independent endorsement of achievements and recognition of your efforts.  It also helps boost staff moral.
Here are our top 5 reasons why you should enter the awards.
PR
Public Relations can be a dark art.  You might think you have a great business idea and you want to tell the world about it.  But sometimes it appears the world does not want to listen.
Winning an award or being short-listed can raise your business’ profile because the event is usually well promoted and are affiliated with a newspaper or trade journal.
Employee Morale
At it’s most basic the award night could be a good Jolly for the staff attending.  On the other hand there could be a sense of pride associated with working for an award winning business. Don’t be short-sighted.  Losing an award will have the opposite effect.
The prize
Some awards have a cash reward.  Good news for the cash-strapped business.
Meeting People
Networking is an important part of any business.  So imagine a room filled with competitors, bankers, entrepreneurs, journalists, Business Link advisers.  So get your talking hat on and make new contacts.
Some other awards to Consider
This autumn sees a large number of awards opportunities. Here are a few:
Virtual Business of the Year Awards – Opens in a new window
 – Early stage companies that have used the web to be lean, efficient and competitive. Submission deadline: 15 September
Growing Business Awards – Opens in a new window
 – The elite of British entrepreneurs. Submission deadline: 17 September
The Internet Business Awards – Opens in a new window
 – For the UK’s most excellent online business-to-business website experiences. Submission deadline: 30 September
International Trade Awards – Opens in a new window
 – Recognises the success of exporters, importers and those trading overseas. Submission deadline: 26 October to 11 January
The Queen’s Awards for Enterprise – Made annually by HM The Queen for achievement by businesses in innovation, international trade and sustainable development. Submission deadline: 29 October
The Sunday Times Top 100 Companies to Work For – Opens in a new window
 – A prestigious list of companies by size. Benchmarking for participants. Submission deadline: Late October
offers a great way to
There are awards for businesses to win at every level from high profile national industry accolades through to recognition from your local town chamber or borough council. Some awards – such as The Queen’s Award for Enterprise – are designed to encourage and recognise a wide range of businesses that are doing well. Other awards are set up to reward only one winner with a substantial cash prize.
They are excellent
Dorset business awards
Dorset Business Awards

Dorset Business Awards

If you are thinking about raising the profile of your business you could do a lot worse than enter Business Awards and in Particular I’m thinking of the Dorset Business Awards.

Entering awards is a great way to promote your business or a product.  It can offer an independent endorsement of achievements and recognition of your efforts.  It also helps boost staff moral.

The closing date for the Dorset Business Awards is 17 September.

Here are our top 5 reasons why you should enter the awards.

PR

Public Relations can be a dark art.  You might think you have a great business idea and you want to tell the world about it.  But sometimes it appears the world does not want to listen.

Winning an award or being short-listed can raise your business’ profile because the event is usually well promoted and are affiliated with a newspaper or trade journal.

Employee Morale

At it’s most basic the award night could be a good Jolly for the staff attending.  On the other hand there could be a sense of pride associated with working for an award winning business. Don’t be short-sighted.  Losing an award will have the opposite effect.

The prize

Some awards have a cash reward.  Good news for the cash-strapped business.

Meeting People

Networking is an important part of any business.  So imagine a room filled with competitors, bankers, entrepreneurs, journalists, Business Link advisers.  So get your talking hat on and make new contacts.

Some other awards to Consider

This autumn sees a large number of awards opportunities. Here are a few:

Virtual Business of the Year Awards – Opens in a new window
 – Early stage companies that have used the web to be lean, efficient and competitive. Submission deadline: 15 September

Growing Business Awards – Opens in a new window
 – The elite of British entrepreneurs. Submission deadline: 17 September

The Internet Business Awards – Opens in a new window
 – For the UK’s most excellent online business-to-business website experiences. Submission deadline: 30 September

International Trade Awards – Opens in a new window
 – Recognises the success of exporters, importers and those trading overseas. Submission deadline: 26 October to 11 January

The Queen’s Awards for Enterprise – Made annually by HM The Queen for achievement by businesses in innovation, international trade and sustainable development. Submission deadline: 29 October

The Sunday Times Top 100 Companies to Work For – Opens in a new window
 – A prestigious list of companies by size. Benchmarking for participants. Submission deadline: Late October

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Free Parking in Dorchester

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010
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Free Parking in Dorchester

Free Parking in Dorchester

From November, All West Dorset District Council car parks in Dorchester will be free after 6.00PM, overnight until 8.00am in the morning and ALL DAY SUNDAYS!

Spanning the next two years, the scheme looks to encourage extra trade into the town centre.

Scratch cards available for issuing to their over night guests allowing them an extra hour (8.00-9.00am) in the morning no more rushing out before 8.00am to the car park to avoid a parking fine!

Phil Gordon, Project Manager for Dorchester Bid said:

A lot of work has gone into this and if it works, WDDC, have suggested that after the two year trial it may become permanent.

I would like to thank all the businesses that helped encourage our efforts in this important area and I would also like to personally thank WDDC for their foresight and assistance in making this happen at a time when it is most needed.

A note to retailers

Lets make the most of this opportunity, make sure that your business is one that benefits from it by opening on Sundays and perhaps even by trying a later finish on on or two days of the week at key times of year.

Visiting Dorchester

If you fancy the idea of some late night shopping in Dorchester, here is a list of the car parks in Dorchester.

P.S and don’t forget you can park your car overnight in Dorchester without having to worry about collecting it, and in the morning phone Ringo and keep it parked remotely without having to get out of bed early to collect….How’s that for progress!!!

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The Dorset Shepherd

Friday, September 3rd, 2010
Tags: , , , , , , ,
Dorset Shepherd plack

Dorset Shepherd plack

Dorchester Dorset

Most local residents are familiar with the Thomas Hardy Statue set back from the road at the ‘Top of Town’ roundabout but there is also a less well know bronze sculpture of The Dorset Shepherd inspired by a William Barnes poem located in Durngate Street in the town of Dorchester.
Bronze sculpture inspired by Williams Barnes
The statuesque ‘The Dorset Shepherd’ sculpture was inspired by William Barnes’ poem, The Shepherd o’ the Farm. William Barnes was recognised and admired as a great poet by some of the foremost literary men of his time, including Thomas Hardy who regarded him as an equal. John Doubleday, made the sculpture in 2000 and sees it as a tribute to quiet heroism and wisdom and said “We look back at the values of a past age, to men who were intelligent, wise and interesting people. They were in harmony with the seasons and the natural world and probably had more to teach us than we could possibly teach them.”
Who was Williams Barnes?
The Dorset dialect poet was born in 1801 at Bagber near Sturminster Newton into a farming family. Even though his formal schooling finished at 13 he went on to work for Solicitor Thomas Coombs in 5 South Street, Dorchester, as an Engrossing Clerk until 1823, when he became a schoolmaster at Mere, Wiltshire. During this time he studied many subjects including sciences, history, archaeology, philology and languages. He was a gifted, intelligent and self educated man, who learned to play several musical instruments and mastered painting and engraving, as well as writing poetry in standard English and the Dorset dialect. In 1823 William Barnes opened a school at Mere in Wiltshire, and after his marriage to Julia Miles in 1827, the couple later moved to Dorchester and ran a boarding school – it closed early due to economic and rural poverty. William Barnes would have witnessed the unrest in the countryside with the Crown Court in Dorchester used as the setting for the 1834 trial of the “Tolpuddle Martyrs,” a group of 6 brave men from the nearby village of Tolpuddle who protested against pay cuts by wealthy landowners.
In 1835 the Barnes family set up a school in Durngate Street, Dorchester. The large property housed ten boarders, twenty five day students (boys) as well as the Barnes’ four children, two servants and a trainee schoolmaster. It was also during this time that he started studying for his Divinity Degree with St. John’s College, Cambridge. Studying mainly from home over a ten year period, he was awarded the degree in 1850. He was ordained in 1848 and was appointed curate at Whitcombe near Dorchester. Barnes died in 1886.
Poems of rural life
His first poem was published in the Dorset County Chronicle in 1834 with a full collection of poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect being published in book form in 1844. Barnes drew inspiration from rural life and was one of the founder members of the Dorset Field Club, which established the Dorset County Museum.
His wife’s death, in 1852, affected him deeply with many of his poems describing his love for her. He left, for our enjoyment, poems that paint a picture of the life and language of rural Dorset which had almost disappeared at the time he was writing. The Collection at Dorchester Reference Library contains most of his published works and is available for reference only.
With Barnes’ close association with Durngate Street, having lived and worked there, this area is a fitting location for ‘The Dorset Shepherd’ sculpture. This statue is a poignant reminder of Dorchester’s on-going role as a market town with strong historic links to sheep farming and the wool industry.
Sculpture Trail
When next in Dorchester why not follow the Sculpture Trail to discover more of Dorchester Town’s secrets and historical past. http://www.dorchesterdorset.com/secrets.php
Dorset Shepherd plack

Dorset Shepherd plaque

Most local residents are familiar with the Thomas Hardy Statue set back from the road at the ‘Top of Town’ roundabout but there is also a less well know bronze sculpture of The Dorset Shepherd inspired by a William Barnes poem located in Durngate Street in the town of Dorchester.

Bronze sculpture inspired by Williams Barnes

The statuesque ‘The Dorset Shepherd’ sculpture was inspired by William Barnes’ poem, The Shepherd o’ the Farm. William Barnes was recognised and admired as a great poet by some of the foremost literary men of his time, including Thomas Hardy who regarded him as an equal. John Doubleday, made the sculpture in 2000 and sees it as a tribute to quiet heroism and wisdom and said “We look back at the values of a past age, to men who were intelligent, wise and interesting people. They were in harmony with the seasons and the natural world and probably had more to teach us than we could possibly teach them.”

Who was Williams Barnes?

The Dorset dialect poet was born in 1801 at Bagber near Sturminster Newton into a farming family. Even though his formal schooling finished at 13 he went on to work for Solicitor Thomas Coombs in 5 South Street, Dorchester, as an Engrossing Clerk until 1823, when he became a schoolmaster at Mere, Wiltshire. During this time he studied many subjects including sciences, history, archaeology, philology and languages. He was a gifted, intelligent and self educated man, who learned to play several musical instruments and mastered painting and engraving, as well as writing poetry in standard English and the Dorset dialect. In 1823 William Barnes opened a school at Mere in Wiltshire, and after his marriage to Julia Miles in 1827, the couple later moved to Dorchester and ran a boarding school – it closed early due to economic and rural poverty. William Barnes would have witnessed the unrest in the countryside with the Crown Court in Dorchester used as the setting for the 1834 trial of the “Tolpuddle Martyrs,” a group of 6 brave men from the nearby village of Tolpuddle who protested against pay cuts by wealthy landowners.

Dorset Shepherd Statue

Dorset Shepherd Statue

In 1835 the Barnes family set up a school in Durngate Street, Dorchester. The large property housed ten boarders, twenty five day students (boys) as well as the Barnes’ four children, two servants and a trainee schoolmaster. It was also during this time that he started studying for his Divinity Degree with St. John’s College, Cambridge. Studying mainly from home over a ten year period, he was awarded the degree in 1850. He was ordained in 1848 and was appointed curate at Whitcombe near Dorchester. Barnes died in 1886.

Poems of rural life

His first poem was published in the Dorset County Chronicle in 1834 with a full collection of poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect being published in book form in 1844. Barnes drew inspiration from rural life and was one of the founder members of the Dorset Field Club, which established the Dorset County Museum.

His wife’s death, in 1852, affected him deeply with many of his poems describing his love for her. He left, for our enjoyment, poems that paint a picture of the life and language of rural Dorset which had almost disappeared at the time he was writing. The Collection at Dorchester Reference Library contains most of his published works and is available for reference only.

With Barnes’ close association with Durngate Street, having lived and worked there, this area is a fitting location for ‘The Dorset Shepherd’ sculpture. This statue is a poignant reminder of Dorchester’s on-going role as a market town with strong historic links to sheep farming and the wool industry.

Sculpture Trail

When next in Dorchester why not follow the Sculpture Trail to discover more of Dorchester Town’s secrets and historical past.

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