Saturday and Sunday saw the annual Ghost and Gourds Weekend at Rowallane. It was a scary Hallowe’en day out for all the family, with over two thousand people of all ages visiting Rowallane on the Saturday alone! Children carved pumpkins and went round the scary Ghost Trail.More photographs can be found here, but be warned, please do not follow the link if you are of a nervous disposition! |
Members of Saintfield Town Regeneration Committee (STRC) and their friends, in cooperation with Tidy Northern Ireland, organised a Litter Pick in Saintfield on Sunday morning (7th October). All areas of Saintfield within the 30MPH speed zone were tackled.
Tidy NI provided thick gloves, long-handled pickers and plastic bags in which to collect the litter. Twelve yellow bags of general waste were collected, together with 5 blue bags of waste suitable for recycling. The Downpatrick Street car park was also cleared of litter and overhanging shrubs cut back. Down District Council will collect the waste for disposal. More details and photos can be found here. |
The new DDC address is:
Down District Council,
Downshire Civic Centre,
Downshire Estate,
Ardglass Road,
Downpatrick,
BT30 6RA.
The DDC telephone number will not change. For further information please telephone 028 4461 0800 or visit www.downdc.gov.uk/The-Big-Move.aspx
Saintfield Heritage Society produces a small book on local history and heritage every four years. The book sub-committee is starting to put together Book 9 and invites articles and stories about Saintfield people and events. Please contact info [at] discoversaintfield.com if you have an idea for an article or are willing to write one.
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WHAT IS MARA?The aim of the MARA project is to improve the health and wellbeing of rural dwellers in Northern Ireland by increasing access to services, grants amd benefits by facilitating a co-ordinated service to support rural dwellers living in or at risk of poverty and social exclusion. |
MARA aims to:
Increase access to home improvement schemes particularly energy efficiency grants
Increase access to full benefit entitlement checks
Increase access to a range of local services
Increase access to a range of regional/universal services
Increase access to community transport
Groups entitled are:
Fishermen
Farmers
Lone/single parents
Ethnic minorities
Carers
Elderly
Others at risk
If you or someone you know would benefit from the project, contact:
County Down Rural Community Network,
Ballymote Centre,
40 Killough Road,
Downpatrick,
BT30 6PY
Tel: 028 4461 2311
The MARA Project is an inter-departmental regional project funded by the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (DARD) and delivered by the Public Health Agency (PHA). The MARA project was officially launched on Thursday 15th March 2012 by both the Minister for Agriculture and Rural Development, Michelle O’Neill and the Minister for Health, Edwin Poots. |
The digital TV switchover is the process of turning off the UK’s analogue TV signal and replacing it with a digital signal. To keep your TV service, you will need to convert your TVs to digital before Northern Ireland’s switchover date. The switchover commences on 10th October 2012 and will be completed on 24th October.
Are You Eligible For Help?You can get help to convert your TV to digital if you:
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You can check if you or someone you know is eligible by using this online eligibility checker.
If you are not sure if you are eligible for help, call free on 0800 40 85 900 or e-mail info@helpscheme.co.uk
Or, you can vist the website of the Switchover Help Scheme.
General information on the switchover, including details on re-tuning your TV, can be found here.
The African Children’s Choir will be performing at First Presbyterian Church Saintfield on Saturday 20th October. The concert will begin at 7:00 pm, and further details can be obtained by contacting the Church Office on 97519883.
Since 1984 over one thousand children have toured as members of the African Children’s Choir. Their message of hope has touched audiences around the world, and changed the lives of hundreds of thousands of Africa’s most vulnerable children and families.
The African Children’s Choir is just one program run by Music for Life. The tour raises money to support educational and humanitarian programs across East and South Africa. Music for Life currently works in seven African countries: Uganda, Kenya, South Africa, Rwanda, Nigeria, Ghana, and South Sudan.
Doug Robertson of Stittsville, Ontario, Canada has contacted us as he is tyring to document his family history.
Doug’s mother is Jane Robertson (nee Mack) born in May 1932 in Belfast and who emigrated to Toronto, Ontario, Canada at age 24. She is now 80 years of age but remembers that, as a teenager, her Aunt Mary Mack as well as her Uncle George Best & Aunt Annie Best (nee Mack) used to take her to a Presbyterian church yard in Saintfield to visit the grave where her grandfather & grandmother are buried.
Doug’s grandfather was William Andrew Mack born June 9, 1901 and who died Feb 14, 1983 at the age of 81. He is buried in Roselawn Cemetery in Belfast. His wife (also buried in Roselawn Cemetery) was Margaret Mack (nee Kennedy) born September 1900 in Raphoe, County Donegal and who died May 8, 1973 at the age of 72.
Doug’s great grandfather, possibly named William Mack, and his great grandmother named Annie Mack are possibly buried in the graveyard of First Presbyterian Church in Saintfield. Also in the same grave are his mother’s Uncle John Mack (i.e. one of two sons of William and Annie), and her Aunt Mary Mack (i.e., one of two daughters of William and Annie). William’s and Annie’s other daughter, named Annie Best (nee Mack), married George Best of Belfast and is buried elsewhere.
Doug’s mother Jane remembers the grave being around the right side of a church building near the back of the building. She remembers it being on Saintfield’s main street where the shops are located and she describes a building with a long front walk much like that in front of First Presbyterian Church. She says that the ground at the grave was slightly elevated, the grave was surrounded by stone with a metal railing mounted on it and the grave marker was one of the large, horizontal-type stones laid over the top of the grave, like those that typically cover most of the grave but she can’t remember if it did actually cover the whole grave.
Any advice, references or information that you could give Doug would be greatly appreciated. Please contact us via:
info [at] discoversaintfield.com
Saintfield will come alive with the sound of music on the evening of Friday 28th September when the town welcomes the Dromore and District Male Voice Choir accompanied by world-renowned organ supremo Stephen Hamill. This will be the first concert on the new Phoenix church organ which was dedicated last November.
The highly-renowned Dromore and District Male Voice Choir will lift the roof with a much-anticipated packed musical programme. The local Male Voice Choir was formed in 1957 and consists of around 30 talented singers. The choir is directed by brothers Mr David Thompson and Mr Stephen Thompson and performs regularly at concerts and church services throughout the country.
Stephen Hamill, BSc LTCL, who will be accompanying the Dromore and District Male Voice Choir on the Phoenix organ, has taken an active part in musical life in Northern Ireland for over 30 years both as a soloist and an accompanist to several of Northern Ireland’s leading choirs. He has played with the Ulster Orchestra and has broadcast regularly on television and radio. Stephen has also given solo recitals in St Paul’s Cathedral in London and St Patrick’s Cathedral in New York. Stephen, a specialist in the Phoenix Organ system, installed the 35 rank organ himself in 2nd Saintfield Presbyterian Church and is looking forward to using his musical talents to show the instrument off to its full potential.
The concert is a non-ticketed event and a retiring offering will be taken in aid of the new church hall building fund. A flyer for the event can be downloaded here.
Norr & Brown, the new specialist chocolate, cake and ice cream shop at 1 Todd’s Hill in Saintfield, will be joining the Northern Ireland Hospice by hosting a coffee party on Thursday 20th September as part of Ireland’s Biggest Coffee Morning. This year the Northern Ireland Hospice will be celebrating the 20thbirthday of its annual Hospice Coffee Morning and they are keen to make it the biggest and best to date by encouraging their supporters to take a break for hospice. With your support, they can ensure that more patients are able to remain in the comfort of their own home surrounded by family.
Pictured is the owner of Norr & Brown, Ann McCandless, with John Daly from local radio station U105, as they gear up for the morning of coffee and treats on 20th September. Come along to Norr & Brown on Thursday 20th September! |
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