
Monday, 24 March 2025
C. A. CHEW - Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve

Monday, 11 September 2023
Tough Assignment - A TESTIMONIAL
Dr. Sangster used to say that Margate was a nice place to pass through. I thought the same about Eton Wick when I came to live at Windsor and took my first bicycle ride to Burnham Beeches. When the old Eton Bridge was open to traffic, I could cycle from Windsor to Eton Wick in eight minutes.
Through coming on to the Methodist preaching plan I found I
had to terminate my journey at Eton Wick. It was wartime. Most of the young men
were away. I was too young, though I eventually joined the Home Guard and two
ARP's!
At that time there was a group of teenage youngsters at Eton
Wick. There was also a lady called Sylvia Chew, who I considered to be very
gracious, and who called the kids together on a Friday night. It was called a
fellowship, though most of the attenders were girls. Today I suppose you would
call it a House Group. For some reason I attached myself to this group. There
was something rather unique about it, and one could learn so much about the
Christian faith in so short a time.
Most people will know that Eton Wick is a favourite port of
call for local preachers. In earlier times the pulpit was conveniently
centralised so that one could see the whole congregation. Now one operates from
the corner, sometimes using the raised platform, sometimes not. But there is
still that "specialness" about your Church. Its people are not
reluctant to pray, and the atmosphere remains warm and friendly. Harry Carter,
another local preacher, used to say: "You'll have a good time at Eton
Wick." I didn't like the phrase, but I knew what he meant. The loving
attention and attitude of the congregation always assisted the preacher so
much.
My first preaching appointment at Eton Wick was on January
30th 1944. Your membership has doubled since that date. May you
continue to grow in strength and into the avenue of God's Kingdom and may this
anniversary year give you good heart for the great times still to come. And may
you never lose that special warmth which makes a visit so pleasurable.
PETER WRIGHT
The Eton Wick History Group is most grateful for the kind permission given by the Eton Wick Methodist Chapel to republish this history, Tough Assignment on this website.
This is the final excerpt from Tough Assignment. The original published price when it was published in 1986 was £1.95.
Monday, 7 August 2023
Tough Assignment - Steward's Epilogue
I see Thee not, I hear Thee not
Yet art Thou oft with me
And Earth has ne'er so dear a spot
As where I meet with Thee
These words, written for the Methodist Hymn Book one hundred
years ago, express the feelings of one man for the church he loved and for the
place where he had learnt his trust in God. They echo the determination of our
society at Eton Wick to survive beyond a century with a chapel that has become,
for us, a powerhouse of prayer and a springboard of service and mission.
The Primitive Methodist Chapel was built in 1886 as an act
of faith by dedicated souls believing that many would come to hear the Word of
God preached and take the love of God into their hearts. It was the direct
result of a great groundswell of the movement of the Holy Spirit in that generation
which produced many such Bethels throughout the land. They brought Christ
nearer to the people, nearer to their lives and nearer to their ways of
thinking. They brought challenge and response to young and old.
The story starts with one woman and her vision which was
transmitted to others. The simple fellowship of Sunday School, House Meetings
and Camp Meetings created the demand for a chapel and so the vision became a
reality. Always since its birth the chapel has struggled to thrive and grow
with the village and its 'New Town' image. Always the chapel met demand and
opportunity - expanding, consolidating, re-equipping, and re-presenting itself
to every generation until the present day one hundred years on.
Although this booklet is about the history of a building it
is really about the lives of people associated with it. As such, many events
must remain untold, but the story cannot end without reference to one hidden
thread that binds our heritage. It can be found in the simple list of
Ministers, allotted for brief spans of their time to shepherd the flock at Eton
Wick. They above all others have welded the fabric to the fellowship and
provided the impetus for our enterprise and the focus for our acts of worship.
They have listened and advised, served and led through happy times and sad.
Their glory is unsung, but their presence is felt within these pages. The
ministers together with the never-failing band of local preachers have formed a
corner stone in building up spiritual life and nurturing the continuity of
faith. Without these evangelists our story would be about a struggling
organisation instead of flourishing church.
We the Stewards and Officers of Eton Wick Methodist Chapel
have raised this document as a remembrance and a memorial to the century that
has passed - for all the life that has been dedicated here, for the worship in
hymn and prayer, for the word that has been continually preached, for all the
love and the care shown, for the teaching given and the guidance received. All
this work has been accomplished in the name of Jesus Christ. The assignment has
sometimes been difficult, but the reward has been in knowing that this place
has always been a haven of blessing to many.
The achievement of any church is not measured merely in the
size and quality of its building, or the number and popularity of its
membership, but by the influence which its congregation has upon the
surrounding area and in the lives of others. We hand on to the next hundred
years, with its fresh faces, new ideas and rapidly changing lifestyle, the same
tough assignment, and the same challenge for outreach. Whatever circumstances
may arise and whatever the fashion or mood of the times, we pray that this
chapel will meet the need and answer the call.
Once more we look to the future with a vision of hope. God
bless us all.
Who puts his trust
In God most just
Has built his house
He who relies
On Jesus Christ
Heaven shall be his securely most surely
The Eton Wick History Group is most grateful for the kind permission given by the Eton Wick Methodist Chapel to republish this history, Tough Assignment on this website.
Monday, 10 July 2023
Tough Assignment - Do You Remember?
In the story of any society there are numerous incidents too trivial or fleeting to fit into the more formal history. Yet they too are part of the rich tapestry of events and deserve to be recorded, if only because we still sometimes think back and laugh once again.
... the services of not so very long ago when every woman
wore a hat - and the children who loved to try and fill the hat brim of the
lady in front with matchsticks?
... Eli Carter and Charlie Wilkins and other local preachers
who made the journey to Eton Wick on cycles in all weathers.
... Mr Clifton, a Baptist preacher, who visited the
Sisterhood in the 1930s? He had a fantastic imagination and kept his audience
in fits of laughter, much to the consternation of Mrs Chew - though just before
the end of his talk he would remember to include the requisite spiritual
message.
... the local preacher whose false teeth used to chatter, or
the occasion when one local preacher pulled a handkerchief from his pocket -
and also his false teeth which clattered down the pulpit steps?
... the speaker who came to talk to the Band of Hope
bringing with him a piece of diseased liver in a glass tube?
... Mr Frank Styles who played the organ for services, but
who could also make it sound like a hurdy gurdy?
... Ken Clifton and the hilarious times enjoyed by all at
the fund-raising socials when he was fed blind-folded with cold custard?
... the gas lamps on either side of the pulpit and the
disastrous effect of those preachers who tried to make a point by flinging wide
their arms?
... the morning when torrential rain kept us all from going
home and the spout of water that gushed through the wall near the spot where
the present pulpit stands?
... the 1947 floods and how Eton Wick was cut off from the
outside world for almost a week, except for one phone in Chantler's Stores? The
Salvation Army Concert arranged to be held at the chapel had to be cancelled.
... the oil stoves which were used to supplement the heating during the 2nd
World War, and how, on at least two occasions, clouds of thick, smelly smoke
billowed out of the chapel front door when it was opened for morning service?
The services were held up until the smoke had cleared.
... the time when one young lady came to preach and entered
the pulpit clothed in a scarf, balaclava, mittens and a coat. A voice from the
back of the congregation asked in a stage whisper " Is she stopping?
"
... the long serving Sunday School official (who does not gamble)
who bet one his scholars that he couldn't get his father to come to chapel ....
and lost!!
... when the fusebox began to smoke last year and how the
organ had to be replaced by the piano until the offending fuse had been
replaced.
... when Moore's Lane was so narrow that coaches could not
turn the corner from Alma Road. This meant that the coaches had to reverse into
Inkerman Road and then back towards the chapel.
... that just after World War II when funds were low the
Sunday School children had to choose between prizes and a Summer Outing?
... the old negro penny savings bank which belongs to the
Sunday School and is still loved by the youngest children?
Ladies Club Cowboy Supper 1967
Monday, 12 June 2023
Tough Assignment - Memorials
Over the hundred years there have been many, many gifts to the chapel of money and items. Each and everyone has been appreciated, but neither the minute books nor the memories of the members can supply a complete list, and thus those shown below, although all are in use today, are but a small proportion of the total.
Some have been given in memory of chapel members. These
include:
Electric light installation 1948
Archibald and Clifford Chew
Organ 1966
Annie Chew
Flower vases 1973
Phillis Hutchinson
Curtain behind the communion table 1980 Sylvia Chew
Bibles 1983
Marjorie Morris
Other gifts were given simply because they were needed, such
as:
Flower vase 1943
Muriel Badder
Piano c1955
Mrs Rye of Woodlands Park
Lamp outside the chapel c1960
Leslie Hogg
Flower stand c1965
Eva Sibley (nee Lane)
Bibles for the Sunday School 1982
Katherine Lewis
The Eton Wick History Group is most grateful for the kind permission given by the Eton Wick Methodist Chapel to republish this history, Tough Assignment on this website.
Monday, 15 May 2023
Tough Assignment - Chapel Officials in 1986
|
|
Church Stewards |
Messrs Michael Tierney |
|
Peter Morris, |
|
Vernon Wigmore |
|
Mrs Joyce Stevenson and |
|
Miss Daphne Hogg. |
Property Stewards |
Miss Daphne Hogg and |
|
Mr Neville Thorman |
Communion Stewards |
Mesdames Pat Allanach, |
|
Margaret Ball and |
|
Valerie Morris. |
Secretary |
Mr Philip Clack |
Treasurer |
Mr John Gidney |
Organist |
Mrs Kathleen Wigmore |
Assistant Organist |
Mrs Joyce Stevenson |
Class Leaders: |
Mrs Mabel Reynolds, |
|
Mr Neville Thorman, |
|
Mrs Beulah Tierney |
|
Mrs Ivy Hogg |
|
|
Sunday School Superintendent |
Miss Betty Ison |
Treasurer |
Mr Peter Morris |
Secretary |
Mr Neville Thorman |
Teachers |
Mr Philip Clack |
|
Paul Morris, |
|
Miss Betty Ison, |
|
Mrs Valerie Morris. |
Helpers |
Jane Dowell, |
|
Bill Brown |
Sisterhood President |
Mrs Joyce Stevenson |
Treasurer |
Mrs Hilda Paice |
Secretary |
Mrs Edie Harman |
Thrift Club |
Mrs Margaret Ball |
Sick Visitor |
Mrs Yvonne Webb |
Women's Work Secretary |
Mrs Edie Harman |
Treasurer |
Mrs Joyce Stevenson |
Home Missions Secretary |
Neville Thorman |
Overseas Missions Secretary |
Mrs Joyce Stevenson |
JMA Secretary |
Mrs Laura Clack |
Ladies Club President |
Miss Betty Ison |
Treasurer. |
Mrs Anne Mitchener |
Secretary |
Mrs Laura Clack |
5.50 Youth Group Leaders |
Mr Vernon Wigmore |
|
Mrs Kathleen Wigmore |
Mums and Tots Club Leader |
Mrs Laura Clack |
Pastoral Committee Secretary Mrs Beulah Tierney
Representative Mrs
Margaret Ball
Family Committee Mesdames
Esme Slade and
Representatives Edie
Harman
Neighbourhood Committee Mesdames
Laura Clack and
Representatives Pat
Allanach
Caretaker Mrs
Elizabeth Ansell
Chapel Membership - 43; Sunday
School Scholars - 24
The Eton Wick History Group is most grateful for the kind permission given by the Eton Wick Methodist Chapel to republish this history, Tough Assignment on this website.
Monday, 17 April 2023
Tough Assignment - Chapel Officials in 1961
Chapel Officials in 1961 |
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||
Society Stewards |
Mrs Annie Chew |
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|
Miss Daphne Hogg, |
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|
Messrs Harry Cook and |
|
||
Ernest Drake |
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||
Assistant Society Steward |
Mr Leslie Hogg |
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|
Chapel Steward |
Mr Harry Cook |
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Trust Secretary & Treasurer
|
Miss Sylvia Chew |
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|
Poor Stewards |
Mrs Sophie Chamberlain |
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and Miss Nancy Banister |
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|
Organist |
Mr Tom Dally |
|
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Assistant Organist |
Miss Joyce Chew |
|
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Cradle Roll Secretary |
Mrs Lily Bye |
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|
Class Leaders |
Mrs Annie Chew |
|
|
|
Mr Tom Dally |
|
|
|
Miss Marjorie Morris |
|
|
|
Miss Sylvia Chew |
|
|
Sunday School Superintendent |
Miss Marjorie Morris |
|
|
Treasurer |
Miss Sylvia Chew |
|
|
Secretary |
Mr Peter Morris |
|
|
Register |
Mr John Foster |
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Teachers |
Misses Mable Woolhouse, |
|
|
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Sylvia Chew, |
|
|
|
Marjorie Morris |
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|
|
Messrs Peter Morris and |
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|
Leslie Hogg. |
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Helpers |
Miss Muriel Cleary and |
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|
|
Mr John Foster |
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Sisterhood President |
Miss Dorothy Banister |
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|
Treasurer |
Mrs Annie Jacobs |
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|
Secretary |
Mrs Hilda Paice |
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Thrift Club |
Mrs Daisy Morrell |
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Sick Visitor |
Mrs Cresswell |
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Women's Work Secretary |
Mrs Hilda Paice |
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Treasurer |
Mrs Ivy Hogg |
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Home Missions Secretary |
Miss Marjorie Morris |
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Overseas Missions Secretary |
Miss Sylvia Chew |
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JMA Secretary |
Mr Peter Morris |
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Youth Club Leader |
Miss Daphne Hogg |
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|
Helpers |
Mr John Foster |
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|
Misses Muriel Cleary |
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||
and Nancy Banister |
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||
Ladies Club President |
Mrs Hilda Paice |
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Secretary |
Mrs Edna Nelson |
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Treasurer |
Mrs Mary Betchley |
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Chapel keeper |
Mrs Daisy Morrell |
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Chapel Membership - 31 |
Sunday School Scholars-74 |
|