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AnnouncementsNewsEasyfundraising for CCPGThursday 13 March 2008
There’s now two easy ways for you to help raise funds for Craven Community Projects Group! easyfundraising is a shopping directory listing some of your favourite online stores including Amazon, NEXT, Debenhams, John Lewis, Toys R Us, HMV and over 500 others. Just use the links on the easyfundraising site whenever you shop online and, at no extra cost to you, we'll receive a free donation of up to 15% from every purchase you make. It really is that simple! It’s completely FREE to register and you won’t pay a penny more for your shopping when you use the easyfundraising site. In fact you can even SAVE MONEY as many retailers offer discounts, special offers and even 'e-vouchers' exclusive to easyfundraising. If you shop online anyway then why not raise valuable extra funds for us by using this scheme. All you need to do is visit http://www.easyfundraising.org.uk/ccpg and when you register, select Craven Community Projects Group as the organisation you wish to support. When you search the Web with easysearch, you’ll raise around 1p for us with every search you make! Just like easyfundraising it is completely free to use and if you make just 10 searches a day, you could raise £25 a year - or more - for us, just by switching to easysearch. Check out our unique easysearch page at http://ccpg.easysearch.org.uk and use it every time you search the Web. Sponsorship from Tarmac LtdSunday 17 February 2008
Craven Community Projects Group has received sponsorship from Tarmac Ltd. This invaluable support will enable the group to develop outreach work with volunteers in the district of Craven Tarmac has a long and proud tradition of charitable and community support and is committed to helping and improving the communities in which we operate. Our vision, mission and values Our Values - Reliable Our values are not empty promises. They help us to carry out our work day in, day out; they guide us in our dealings with each other and with our customers and stakeholders; ultimately they are the bedrock of the culture of our company. Society Tarmac in our Society Communication Understanding Support
For further information please visit www.tarmac.co.uk
Gritstone ComputersSunday 17 February 2008
Gritstone Computers is proud to provide Craven Community Projects Group
with all their IT needs and support
Helping our volunteers to see IT clearly For a proactive and friendly service visit Tel: 01756 730030 The Fleets, Fleets Lane, Rylstone, Skipton, BD23 6NA
Skipton Building SocietySunday 16 December 2007 Craven Community Projects Group is proud to be supported by Skipton Building Society
Skipton Building Society is the UK’s sixth largest building society. Founded in 1853, Skipton enjoys a national presence represented by its 79 branches, covering Aberdeen to Plymouth, with over 600,000 customers. An innovator in the field of mortgage and investment products, the Society stands apart from its counterparts as the parent to 19 subsidiary companies, many of which operate in the financial market. Why Mutual Matters Doing it for the right reasons matters Being able to have your say matters Offering a better service matters This enables us to run on much lower costs and offer cheaper mortgages and better rates of interest on savings than banks. The smallest of differences matters This is called the net interest margin and, as of 31 December 2006, Skipton’s was 0.72% - one of the lowest in the industry. Most building societies operate on margins of less than 1.5% whereas banks tend to have margins above 2%.
As a mutual organisation we recognise the importance of supporting the community. Through Skipton Building Communities, we support numerous types of good causes throughout the country, not only through financial support and sponsorship, but through staff volunteering and fundraising. It’s all about giving something back to the communities in which our members live and work. Craven Community Projects Group is indebted to Skipton Building Society for their support since November 2006, which is helping to train and support our volunteers to work with people in the local community For further information, please visit www.skipton.co.uk CRAVEN'S PART IN THE GREAT WAR - A MAJOR UPDATE FOR REMEMBRANCE DAY 2007Saturday 10 November 2007 Our initial plan for the project was based on the information provided in the commemorative publication Craven’s Part in the Great War (Craven Herald, 1920). From this we extracted the basic information on 1,555 servicemen (including, at that time, one nurse) from the Craven area who had either given their lives for their country between 1914 and the Armistice of 1918, or had died as the direct result of their service during the immediate post-war period. Craven’s Part in the Great War was therefore the inspiration and the starting point for our project: but we always knew that this was just the beginning. In the introduction to the data on the website we have provided a fairly detailed explanation (to which the reader is referred) of our subsequent progress and our rationale for the development of the data collection. First and foremost we needed to verify the basic information provided in Craven’s Part in the Great War by extracting the relevant entries from Soldiers Died and the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Throughout we have been at great pains to clear up discrepancies regarding the name and the precise status of the serviceman at the time of his death, i.e. his (or her) final regiment, battalion, division and rank, and to this end we have made extensive use of the information provided by additional sources such as the National Archive Medal Cards and the divisional information given on the Long, Long Trail web-site. Of course, it had always been our intention to expand on the bare details on the servicemen that we found in Craven’s Part… Our first task, therefore, was to go through the pages of the Craven Herald (the local newspaper for this area) from August 1914 to our cut-off point of December 1921 (to coincide with the cut-off point for the First World War in the Commonwealth War Graves Commission database), and to extract and transcribe all articles that mentioned any of our initial 1,555 entries. In so doing we very quickly discovered that we were coming up with the names of servicemen and women who had not been included in Craven’s Part… Right from the outset we had always wondered what had been the criteria for the inclusion of a soldier in Craven’s Part…, as many appeared to have had only a tenuous link with the area – especially officers who may only have briefly attended one of the local schools (Ermysteds, Giggleswick, Sedbergh), and people described as ‘formerly of…’ Moreover, Craven’s Part… also contained soldiers who had been born and lived in the towns and villages of Wensleydale which has never been considered a part of ‘Craven.’ But both the Craven Herald and the West Yorkshire Pioneer regularly contained news from Wensleydale, as well as from Ilkley. As a result of this we therefore made the policy decision to record every serviceman or woman listed as a casualty by the Craven Herald and the West Yorkshire Pioneer – regardless of where they came from – as their inclusion in the newspapers implied some sort of connection with the Craven area. Many of the new names that we came across in the Craven Herald and the West Yorkshire Pioneer confounded us even further as they turned out to have been both born and resident locally but – for whatever reason – had not been included in Craven’s Part… When the site first went on line on our official launch date of the 11th November 2006 the total number of entries in our master database had risen from the 1,555 names listed in Craven’s Part… to 1,867 names. We started to refer to these additional 312 names as Craven’s ‘lost soldiers’ – but more was still to come… Twelve months on from the launch of the site our initial dataset of 1,555 names, as recorded in Craven’s Part…, has now grown to a staggering total of 2,615 entries. This means that we have located a total of 1,060 servicemen and women who were not (for whatever reason) recorded in the original Craven’s Part… We can now give a detailed breakdown of where we have found these additional ‘lost’ soldiers:–
Between August 1914 and December 1921 we located, scanned and transcribed 4,842 Craven Herald entries relating to 1,718 servicemen and women. 414 of these have only one article/entry each, whereas the remainder have from 2 to 13 articles/entries each, ranging from a brief notice of death or an ‘in memoriam,’ to a series of letters or a lengthy article on the circumstances of their death. Of these 1,718 servicemen and women 298 were names not recorded in Craven’s Part… Conversely 845 of our total number of servicemen and women have never been mentioned in the Craven Herald. In addition to the Craven Herald we have, to date, been able to locate, scan and transcribe 1,018 West Yorkshire Pioneer entries from August 1914 to December 1916. We hope to complete our survey of the West Yorkshire Pioneer (January 1917 to December 1918) in the next few months, and when we have finished this task we will provide statistics as we have done with the Craven Herald articles. Another part of our research was the job of linking the servicemen and women we had found in Craven’s Part…, the Craven Herald and the West Yorkshire Pioneer to local war memorials. Once we started looking at local memorials we soon discovered we were finding more names that had not appeared elsewhere. Many of the names found in Craven’s Part…, the Craven Herald and the West Yorkshire Pioneer were of lads from Wensleydale, from over the border in Lancashire and from the Keighley/Bradford area and were therefore commemorated on war memorials outside our ‘Craven’ area. Because we found that many of our local lads also appeared on Wensleydale memorials and, sometimes, vice versa, we decided to include all the Wensleydale memorials in our survey. In all the war memorials from 125 towns and villages in the ‘Craven’ and Wensleydale areas has yielded a further 471 names of servicemen who had lost their lives in the war. As with all other entries in the database every effort was made to flesh out their details with information from Soldiers Died and the Commonwealth War Graves Commission database, along with confirmatory evidence from the National Archive Medal Cards and – in a great many cases – from both the 1881 and 1901 Census records. A further 19 additional names were found on headstones or gravestones in local cemeteries, 2 were found by chance in the Commonwealth War Graves Commission database whilst searching for other soldiers, and 3 more came from miscellaneous sources. In an attempt to try and be really thorough about finding war fatalities in our area we decided to make use of the facility in Soldiers Died to search on places of birth and places of residence as a way of carrying out a final sweep of the available records. This has given us another 241 names. In cases of uncertainty the names were checked in Census records to determine whether there were definite links to the area. During our researches we have been fortunate enough to come across two additional sources of information. The first was the West Yorkshire Pioneer’s equivalent to Craven’s Part…, a 52-page, paper cover publication entitled the West Yorkshire Pioneer Illustrated War Record (WYPIWR). Like Craven’s Part… it consists of a listing of all the servicemen and women (a total of 1, 368 names) from the area who gave their lives in the War, along with 271 photographs that appeared in the pages of the Pioneer. Clearly the Pioneer’s attempt to ‘keep up’ with the Craven Herald’s commemorative publication the WYPIWR contains many more serious errors than Craven’s Part…, many of which must have been rather embarrassing and regretful at the time. As was the case with Craven’s Part…, we have simply transcribed the entry and added it to the database as it stands (with a few judicious editorial corrections of the more serious errors.) Our second extra source of information was the extremely handsomely produced Skipton and District Liberal and Conservative Clubs Roll of Honour. It was created by Shuttleworth (the man responsible for several of the more ornate and attractive local memorials) and consists of a beautiful hand-written roll of honour of all Members and their relatives (sons, nephews, grandsons, etc) who served in the war decorated by highly elaborate border work based on regimental insignia. It must, originally, have all been in colour, but the copy we had access to is reduced to greyscale with only the title page in colour (enough to give a taste of just how sumptuous it must once have been). From this we extracted 45 names (including one new entry) and all the relevant entries can be seen in the Additional Information section for individual soldiers. Both publications have been copied in their entirety and will soon be available on the site as browseable features like the original Craven’s Part… publication.
Throughout the process of linking servicemen and women to local war memorials we were constantly asking the question of what had been the criteria for including names on a local war memorial. Was it due to place of birth, place of residence or employment (or even, occasionally, enlistment), or merely an association like having attended a church or chapel, or being somebody’s relative? We have found numerous examples of all these criteria. We have now visited a grand total of 125 locations in the ‘Craven’ area and have photographed every extant war memorial and roll of honour we can find – so we think we have now found the names every serviceman and woman that there are to find. However, apart from the 471 ‘new’ names that we found, one of the most surprising things to come out of all this is the fact that we have found no fewer than 479 servicemen who are not commemorated on any of the local war memorials. Doubtless there will be many instances of men who were born in the ‘Craven’ area but who either moved away at an early age, or subsequently, are probably commemorated on a war memorial outside of our area. Needless to say, we would be delighted to hear from anybody who can tell us where these men are remembered. But we are still left with a significant number of men who were both born and resident in the ‘Craven’ area who do not appear on any local memorial. For example, we have 68 men who were born in Skipton but do not appear on any of the 19 memorials in Skipton. Many of these men turn out to have been resident outside of the area; but 6 of them were both born and resident in Skipton. Why are they not on local memorials? So, to conclude, after over 2 years of (sometimes) extremely hard and tedious work we have now reached the stage where we have completed the greater part of what we initially set out to do. Our work on the Pioneer articles continues, and we are also continuing to track down all relevant information from Divisional, Regimental and Battalion histories and diaries on the actions in which our men met their deaths. All the Craven Herald articles are being carefully checked (something we simply did not have the time to do prior to the launch of the site) to make sure that they are accurately linked to the correct servicemen and women. Many corrections have already been made and much new information – which initially was not noticed – has come to light which clarifies many previous uncertainties: but it is a slow and exacting job, so please bear with us… Most importantly though, we are still wanting to hear from members of the public who might be able to supply us with additional information on any of their relatives that they find on our web-site. We have already received a great deal of fascinating extra detail and much of this has now been incorporated into the site: but we need so much more to help us flesh out the lives of the local lads and lasses who made the ultimate sacrifice in that dreadful conflict, and whose names must never be allowed to fade from memory.
Craven's Part in the Great War always needs your helpSunday 09 March 2008
The course of the twentieth century was shaped by two world wars, and in particular by the changes to society that followed the Great War of 1914 -1918. In most communities there is at least one war memorial that commemorates the names of local men and women who fell during the conflicts. There are also more personal and tangible pieces of evidence - medals, photographs, letters and postcards sent back from the Front Line, and remnants of military uniform such as regimental cap badges. These clues, passed down through a family as heirlooms, or often still hidden in boxes waiting to be discovered in attics and cellars, can provide a gateway into the world of some of the individuals commemorated on this website. If you can provide us with any memorabilia or information, then please contact us on info@cpgw.org.uk or write to:
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