The Aegies Associates News & Blog Section
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Jun 18
2012
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Cycle Team Takes To Road In Fundraising EffortPosted by: admin in Client Area |
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A team including people linked to North East financial advisers Carterbar took part in the Coast to Coast cycle ride to support efforts to help young people in Middlesbrough.The sponsored team comprised Arthur Dornan, Managing Director of the Billingham company, Gary Cox, husband of Operations Director Suzanne Cox, and Dave Wherritt, husband of Senior Administrator Gill Wherritt.
They were part of a team of 14 people tackling the 150-mile route to raise money for the youth groups at Sue and Gill’s church, the Ecclesiastical Parish of St Mary the Virgin Nunthorpe, in Middlesbrough.
The women help run the groups, which provide activities for more than 100 young people in the Nunthorpe area. The work also reaches out into local schools. The ride raised more than £4,000 for the groups.
The cycle route was opened in 1994 and runs from Whitehaven on the west coast of Cumbria to the North East coast and has an average of between 12,000 and 15,000 cyclists completing it every year. The team finished at Hartlepool.
Arthur Dornan said: “I have not cycled regularly since my youth but was persuaded to take to the saddle again for this good cause. The reason we took on the challenge is to support the excellent work done by these community groups. I was inspired when I heard the work that they do and everyone taking part was keen to support them.”
If you would like to support the team, you can do so at http://www.justgiving.com/nunthorpepcc
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Apr 06
2012
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THE HOUGHTON PASSION PROVES AN EMOTIONAL EXPERIENCEPosted by: admin in Client Area Tagged in: Passion Play , Houghton-Le-Spring , Diocese of Durham , Client Work , Church of England , Church , Aegies Associates
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More than 200 people took part in a Passion Play today (Good Friday) as a 19th Century graveyard in a North East quarry was transformed into Jerusalem at the time of the Crucifixion. The Houghton le Spring Passion Play will be staged at Houghton Hillside Cemetery in the Wearside town at 11am on Good Friday (April 6) and the audience will be encouraged to make up the crowd, jostling for a view of Jesus as he drags the Cross.
The Houghton le Spring Passion was staged at Houghton Hillside Cemetery in the Wearside town at 11am with local people in the key roles, supported by a rock band and with the audience playing the part of the crowd.
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Mar 30
2012
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Easter is a time of great renewal for all Christians and I feel that more strongly than ever this year. This is my first Easter as Bishop of Durham and I am thoroughly enjoying the challenges that come with the job and finding myself inspired by the people I meet.
Perhaps the thing that has encouraged me most is the impact of the prayer campaign that I launched just after becoming Bishop. The idea behind Prayer for the People was to invite people to join me in sharing their hopes and dreams and prayers for the region.
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Mar 29
2012
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BISHOP OF DURHAM ADDS VOICE TO REGIONAL POVERTY CAMPAIGNPosted by: admin in Client Area Tagged in: Poverty , North East England , Justin Welby , Diocese of Durham , Client Work , Bishop of Durham , Aegies Associates
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The Right Revd. Justin Welby, Bishop of Durham confirmed today (March 29th) that he will be the Patron of the North East Call to Action on Global Poverty and Climate Change (NE-CAP).
Speaking about the announcement Bishop Justin said: " I am delighted to have been asked to continue to support this worthy initiative as was the case with the previous Bishop of Durham The Right Revd Tom Wright.
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Mar 27
2012
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ROYAL INVITE FOR FLOWER ARRANGER NORMANPosted by: admin in Client Area Tagged in: York Minster , Royal , Queen , Maundy Money , Diocese of Durham , Diamond Jubilee , Client Work , Church of England , Church , Buckingham Palace , Aegies Associates
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A veteran flower arranger from Tow Law, in County Durham, has been honoured for his community service by being invited to the Royal Maundy Service is at York Minster.
Norman Deacon, 79, has been invited to represent the Diocese of Durham when the Queen distributes Maundy Money at the Minister on Thursday April 5.
Norman, who has always lived in Tow Law, is being rewarded for many years of service to the local community. A former stonemason who became a builder, and built the house in which he and wife Betty MBE, live, he has a number of passions, including flower arranging.
He became interested in the pastime when the then vicar of St Philip and St James in Tow Law, The Reverend Anthony Driver, asked him to organise a flower festival in the church in the mid-1980s. The event coincided with a conference in Durham which celebrated the church’s most famous vicar, the Reverend Thomas Henry Espinell Compton Espin, a noted astronomer who was born in 1858 and died in 1934, aged 76. The conference coincided with the visit of some of the world’s leading stargazers to Durham.
Norman said: “I had always enjoyed growing flowers. I showed the likes of Chrysanthemums and won some prizes - you have joy and sorrow when it comes to entering shows. However, I had never taken part in flower arranging, although I had seen the work that some of the women did and admired the skills they showed. When I was asked to organise the flower festival, I set out to learn.”
He did that by attending classes at Bishop Auckland Technical College and went on to to teach flower arranging classes both at the College and all over the County.
Norman said: “I like the creative element of flower arranging. It’s a challenge each time. You have to come up with something new and original with each arrangement.”
He is looking forward to the Maundy Thursday event, where he will be accompanied by Betty, who was awarded the MBE in 1997 for 51 years’ of service to the Post Office.
Norman, who has been a church warden at St Philip and St James for 18 years, said: “It was a real surprise to hear I had been invited to the service and I am looking forward to it.”
* Norman also has a long association with Tow Law Football Club, including 35 years on the Committee.
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Mar 22
2012
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AUDIENCE TO PLAY A PART IN OPEN-AIR PASSION PLAYPosted by: admin in Client Area Tagged in: Passion Play , Houghton-Le-Spring , Durham , Diocese of Durham , Client Work , Aegies Associates
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A 19th Century graveyard in a North East quarry is to stage a dramatic open-air Passion Play in which the audience will be able to play a part as Jesus is led towards the Cross for his crucifixion.
The Houghton le Spring Passion Play will be staged at Houghton Hillside Cemetery in the Wearside town at 11am on Good Friday (April 6) and the audience will be encouraged to make up the crowd, jostling for a view of Jesus as he drags the Cross.
The Cemetery is in an 18th Century limestone quarry and the first graves date back to the 19th Century, with burials having stopped in the early 1970s. Today, it is a closed cemetery, which is part of St Michael’s Church in the town, part of the Diocese of Durham.
The Passion Play, which is its tenth year and was written locally, is usually performed in the church and this is the first year it will be staged in the open-air. The music is written by Stuart Clappison and the lyrics by Andy Slater; a group of musicians will accompany the event with instruments including guitars. Jesus will be played by the Reverend James Menzies, the Assistant Curator of neighbouring Hetton Lyons.
The Reverend Canon Sue Pinnington, the Rector of Houghton le Spring and the producer of the Play, said: “The Passion Play has been successfully produced in the church in recent years, but this year we are taking it outdoors for the first time. The cemetery, with its back-drop of cliffs, is a terrific ampitheatre and will create a great atmosphere.
“There will be a lot of movement during the Play. The narrator and members of the cast will move around the quarry and the audience will be able to follow the story, exactly as happened when Jesus was crucified. There will be guards in modern military dress, complete with guns, who will move people away if they go too near, to give it a realistic feel.
“The whole idea is to show that the story may be 2,000 years old but it is still relevant and contemporary. People will be able to experience what it was like for those people watching the crucifixion of Jesus. There will be an edginess to the show. People will be able to accompany Jesus on his last journey. It will be a living play.”
The crucifixion scene itself will provide a reminder of the area’s historic links with quarrying and mining because it will take place in front of the Miners’ Monument, a cross which commemorates the many miners whose bodies lie in the cemetery. They include some of those who lost their lives in the Houghton Colliery Disaster of 1850 when firedamp and coal dust were accidentally ignited by a safety lamp, killing 27 miners.
The Passion Play is supported by a number of local community groups, including the Friends of Hillside Cemetery who have worked tirelessly to restore the site over recent years. Local businesses and the local council have also supported the event. More information can be obtained from www.stmichaels.hls.org.uk
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Mar 22
2012
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CROSS OF AGES SPANS THE CENTURIESPosted by: admin in Client Area Tagged in: St Aidans CE Academy , Durham Cathedral , Client Work , Church of England , Aegies Associates
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A Cross made from centuries-old timber and celebrating the life of the northern Saint Cuthbert was blessed during a ceremony held at St Aidan’s Church of England Academy in Darlington. A team of students from Cuthbert House have worked with staff at the Academy in Hundens Lane to create the Cross from the wood they selected during a visit to the timber store at Durham Cathedral.
Students chose a piece of 16th Century oak that was removed from the fabric of the Cathedral in 1982, then worked with Academy staff to come up with designs for the Cross.
The Academy has plans for each of its four Houses to have a Cross made from historic timbers and Cuthbert is the first to have completed their project.
The Cross was blessed at a service in the Academy attended by guests including Father David Sudron, from Durham Cathedral, and Academy governor the Venerable Granville Gibson, whose idea the crosses were.
Granville Gibson said: “We plan to have four crosses made from historic timber, one for each house. Bede will have timber from Jarrow, Hilda from Hartlepool and Wilfrid from Ripon. The Cuthbert cross is the first one to have been completed.
“It’s fantastic to think that the oak tree from which it is made was hewn many centuries ago.”
Father Sudron said: “The cross establishes a tangible link between the Cathedral and the Academy and with the past. The wood is centuries old.”
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Feb 23
2012
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School Given New Look By Grateful CongregationPosted by: admin in Client Area |
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Members of a church congregation have helped redecorate the school, which gave them a new home when they had to move because an insurance company could no longer insure their Victorian building.
The Church of Saint Laurence in the Parish of Middleton Saint George, near Darlington, in the Diocese of Durham, moved to St George’s Church of England Voluntary Aided Primary School in the village after the insurance company withdrew cover in 2008. The decision came after several falls of roof plaster, some of which came down into the nave, and the porch was also deemed unsafe. Church Commissioners have since agreed that the church should be closed for worship.
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Feb 13
2012
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Valentines Wedding Renewal Service So Important For Couple Hit By Bad LuckPosted by: admin in Client Area Tagged in: St Giles Durham , North East England , Media , Mark Bryant , Durham , Client Work , Church of England , Church , Bishop of Jarrow , #Stilttalk
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“This is really important to me. It had taken all our lives to find each other and to have the ring blessed again by the Bishop will mean a lot. It means it will carry all those promises that Dave made on our wedding day.”
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Feb 07
2012
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North-East financial adviser Carterbar will be the ball sponsor for this Saturday’s big FA Vase Trophy game between non-league football club Billingham Synthonia and Bournemouth FC.

