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Debts by Installment

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02/03/1897

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At the Peterborough County Court sitting of this day, a number of orders were made that give us a glimpse of the time. Charles Jenks, a labourer from Water Newton, had debts totalling £21 4s that had accrued due to his loss of work caused by illness. He offered to meet his debts to 8s 6d in the pound at the rate of 3s per month. An order was made allowing this situation. Daniel Monk, a labourer from Eye, was in deeper trouble with debts of £40 10s 4d. He was offering 9s in the pound on the debts - an offer accepted by the court and requiring him to pay at a rate of 6s per month. If my sums are right, that's five years of payments. Among the undefended cases we find that Charles Tebbs, butcher of Midgate, was seeking payment of £26 15s 6d from one W. Chapman of Robin Hood Chase in Nottingham. The claim was upheld and Chapman was required to pay the debt at 10s a month. Tebbs has to wait over four years for settlement of the debt - if he's lucky. (Peterborough Citizen)

Taken from The Peterborough Book of Days by Brian Jones, The History Press, 2014.

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New Catholic School Approved

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2020

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A new taxpayer-funded Catholic state school, believed to be the first in a decade, was approved after an appeal against it failed.The new primary school is due to open in the Hampton Water development in 2022 with 90 pupils with the aim it will grow to accommodate 630, and is part-funded by the local authority and will have the right to select wholly on religious grounds.

When free schools were introduced by Michael Gove a 50 per cent cap was placed on faith admissions for over-subscribed schools. In 2018 Damian Hinds, who was education secretary, made it easier for local authorities to open voluntary-aided faith schools, which historically have part of their capital costs met by the religious community. Voluntary-aided faith schools are not limited in the extent to which they can prioritise pupils by religion. They are also council-maintained schools and, under existing rules, new ones require the local authority approval. If the school is oversubscribed, it will make the selection 80% Catholic faith-based, with the rest chosen by proximity.

Peterborough city council is funding 10 per cent (between £1.1m and £1.5m) of Hampton Waters Roman Catholic School while the other 90 per cent (£9.9m - £14m) is coming from the Department for Education. Some councillors “called in” the council’s approval last month, believing the decision to be flawed. They urged it to reconsider but their appeal was rejected on Wednesday 12 February. The council approved plans for the school after a public consultation and said 83 per cent of respondents were in favour. The councillors who challenged the decision told the Peterborough Telegraph last month: “Of the 1,911 responses received, just 7 per cent were submitted from residents who live in the postcode where the school would be built, while only 7.2 per cent were identifiable as being from the wider area within Peterborough city council’s boundaries. We do not agree that these figures support the council’s conclusion that there is ‘very strong support for a Roman Catholic school’ in Hampton Water.”

Stephen Terry, chairman of the Accord Coalition, which campaigns for fair school admissions policies, said: “The decision of Peterborough council is a worrying backward step for integration, facilitating as it does further religious discrimination and segregation in the school system.”

A Department for Education spokeswoman said: “Voluntary-aided schools are among the best-performing in the country and are valued by parents for their strong and positive ethos. Priority was given to schools that support integration and inclusivity when considering applications to help fund new voluntary-aided schools.”

References:

The Times, 14 February 2020

The Peterborough Telegraph, 17 January 2020

BBC News 14 February 2020

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School , Roman Catholic

A Queen Street Wedding

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1881

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Miss Janet Hegney was a devoted member of the Catholic Church in Peterborough. She worked tirelessly for a decade as the schoolmistress and choir teacher, as well as devoting her time to the upkeep of the church too.

Upon her marriage to Charles McLachlan on Thursday 3rd February 1881 she received an engraved silver tea service from the congregation in addition to numerous kind words and thanks for her devotion to the church. The couple married at the Catholic Church on Queen Street, which was lost to the development of Queensgate Shopping Centre. Her wedding dress was made of white silk and accompanied by a tulle veil and a bouquet of orange blossoms. She had four bridesmaids and was given away by her uncle Mr Copeland.

References

‘Presentation and Marriage at the Catholic Church Peterborough’, Peterborough Standard, 5 February 1881, p. 7.

Image of orange blossom by Josch13 at Pixabay

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Roman Catholic Priest from Peterborough Executed

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1643

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Henry Heath was born in Peterborough in 1599. He attended St John the Baptist church with his family where he was christened a protestant. Being from a wealthy family, he was able to attend Cambridge University and went with the intention of becoming a protestant minister. However, whilst there he converted to Roman Catholicism, his father converting later in life.

At that time it was illegal to practice the catholic faith in England, so Heath travelled to France where he lived in a religious commune  until 1643, writing many books. During that year he travelled back to England with the hope of spreading the word of the catholic faith. However, he was arrested shortly after his return and thrown into the infamous Newgate Prison in London. He pleaded guilty to being a Roman Catholic Priest and was sentenced to death.

On 17th April 1643 Henry Heath was taken to the gallows at Tyburn, close to modern day Marble Arch, where he was hanged, drawn and quartered as a warning to others. Tyburn was the execution place of many Catholic Martyrs and a dedication was carved onto the wall of nearby Tyburn Convent in Hyde Park Place to remember all of the martyrs.

A legal request was first made for his canonisation in 1886 and he was successfully martyred in 1987 by Pope John Paul II.

References

'A Peterborough Martyr', The Tablet, 22 January 1887, p. 36.

Image of gallows by ServiceLinket from Pixabay

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