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GENERAL DETAILS
The Connaught Bowls Club is based in Station Road, adjacent to the Recreation
Ground in the growing market town of Attleborough in the Breckland area
of South Norfolk. Attleborough itself is directly accessible from the
main A11 trunk road and can broadly be described as north of Thetford
and south of Wymondham.
The Club operates on a volunteer basis with a main Management Committee,
under the Club Chairman, overseeing all business matters. The Ladies Section
and the Short Mat Section have their own committee structures to deal
with the day to day detail in their respective areas but representatives
from these two sections are members of the Management Committee and report
to it.
The Club provides Short Mat Bowls in the winter and Outdoor Bowls (EBA)
in the summer. It is housed in a modern and comfortable pavilion whose
facilities include a fully-licensed members’ bar. The bar is run
by members on a voluntary basis and charges moderate prices. The pavilion
contains two mats for the Short Mat section. Outdoors the main facility
is the full-sized six-rink bowling green maintained to high standards.
Membership numbers vary from year to year but usually are within a range
of 135-160 if all categories are included.
Annual subscriptions
as due from 1 January 2008 are:
| Under State Retirement Pension age |
£35.00 |
| Over State Retirement Pension age |
£30.00 |
| Juniors (aged 16 and under) |
£12.50 |
| Social (non-playing) Members |
£10.00 |
| Life Members |
NIL |
Green and Mat Fees are also payable, as is usual with Bowls Clubs, at
a general rate of £1.30 per game effective from I January 2008.
With effect from 24 April 2004 the Club was recognised as a Community
Amateur Sports Club (CASC) by the Inland Revenue. CASC status recognises
the amateur, community-based focus of a sports club and brings certain
financial benefits, including a high level of mandatory rates relief and
some of the rights given to charities.
The club is open, for Short Mat or Outdoor Bowls as appropriate, for
seven days a week. The bowls available comprise purely friendly internal
matches, internal leagues and other competitions, and a wide variety of
friendly and competitive matches against other clubs. In the summer touring
teams from other parts of the country are often entertained and the club
also hosts Norfolk county matches from time to time.
Very family-oriented, the club prides itself on a friendly social atmosphere
and holds a regular programme of social functions (dinners, parties, quizzes,
theatre trips, seaside trips etc). The pavilion is sometimes hired by
members for private functions and is also used fortnightly by the Attleborough
Probus Club.
New members, for whom coaching is available, are always welcomed by this
leading Attleborough Sports Club. People new to the area will find the
Club, with its wide mix of local members, a good introduction to the town
of Attleborough itself. For anybody interested in joining and wishing
to find out more details, please complete the On-Line application form.
‘In The Beginning’
In 1982 a small number of members of the Attleborough Bear Bowls Club
thought the town warranted an EBA standard bowling green with a security
of tenure to allow a club to benefit from all efforts made by its members.
Willingness to work was there but no funds or land to make use of this
enthusiasm; it was a case of starting from scratch.
The only hope of obtaining a site was through the help of a generous
and understanding public body and this was obtained from Attleborough
Town Council who had purchased the former Goods Yard at Attleborough Station
from British Rail. This 3 acre site contained no area large enough for
a bowling green owing to the existence of 2 sectional concrete buildings
and a third red brick building which had already been acquired by the
local Football Club. With one of the group a member of the Council, we
were able to put our dilemma to its members who agreed to sell off one
of the buildings to make available the required area.
The site was derelict, having previously been a Goods Yard and during
World War II the railhead for for supplies to local American Air Bases.
The surface of tarmac and hardcore set a daunting task for the creation
of a bowling green but we were able to turn this to our advantage. On
reflection there have been a number of cases over the years where we have
turned adversity to advantage.
Five persons attended a site meeting on 17th April 1983 and agreed to
obtain a lease from the Council to enable the construction of a bowling
green and the formation of a club to be called THE CONNAUGHT BOWLS CLUB
(see notes below of that first meeting). The five present were Bill Adcock,
Gordon Briggs, Denny Gardiner, Colin Gibson and Roy West; with the co-option
of Graham Hobart these formed the construction committee for the project.
Of the six two had professional construction skills, one had the machinery
and transport and the others, together with the handful of members joining
the newly-created club, provided the essential enthusiasm and hard labour,
all freely given and setting a pattern that has continued. The lease which
the Town Council granted was for 25 years with the option to extend at
the end of that period and the first five years were rent free.
The Council contributed half the cost of hiring a tracked machine to
excavate the estimated 2,000 tons of spoil to reach the clay subsoil into
which land drains were laid. A grader from the local gravel pit was hired
to grade the stone from the hardcore which provided 400 tons of stone
on site. Much of the other spoil was deposited behind the Football Club
to provide the base for their training ground. More stone was donated
by a local vegetable packer; we only had to provide transport and then
purchase 60 tons of pea shingle to place on top of the larger stone drainage
layer. Our good fortune continued as the Attleborough A11 Bypass was being
constructed at that time and we were given all the topsoil we required
by the contractors, only having to provide the transport for the estimated
400 tons we needed. By the autumn of 1984 the construction and seeding
of the green were completed.
To establish a team and entry into the EBA League, we were indebted to
Harling Rec Bowling Club who allowed us to use their green and play as ‘Harling
C’ whilst our green was getting established. We played there for
3 seasons and began playing at the Connaught in 1987. Throughout this
period fundraising events were held and with interest free loans from
members we were able to pay for all essentials. Apart from the site clearance
grant from our Town Council, the only other grant during construction
of the green was one of £600 from Breckland towards the cost of
fencing the site.
Our ‘Clubhouse in these first few years was a donated builders
hut, which was made very cosy by our ladies, and toilet facilities located
in the station Premises where British rail allowed us to bring back into
use an abandoned lavatory. The Mayor of Attleborough, Mr Keith Martin,
officially opened the green on 2nd May 1987.
In the early years both E.B.A. and Federation Bowls were played with
teams entered in local leagues in both Associations. With membership building
to just over 100 the club flourished, the green was well used and a warm
and friendly atmosphere established which has carried on up to the present
day.
It was essential to have a clubhouse suitable for a club of this size
and thoughts were given as to how this could be achieved .We were delighted
when the Town Council, seeing the efforts made to build the green, agreed
to pay for the shell of the building, floor walls and roof, if the club
would finance the interior work. A challenge we were pleased to accept
even though we had very little by way of finance.
Plans were produced and fortunately for the Connaught, Short Mat
Bowls was beginning to take off and the building was designed with this
game in mind. Application for grants were made to various bodies but the
only one obtained was that of £4000 from Breckland District Council
leaving the club to find the remaining £10,000. A loan of £6,000
was obtained from the Sports Council with the provisos that 10 members
act as guarantors and the loan be repaid by April 1994.
Construction of Clubhouse began in May 1988 by local builder E Amos and
immediately faced a problem for our building is on the same spot as a
former agricultural merchant’s wooden premises and the foundations
for that building caused problems in building foundations for the new
Clubhouse, Older members who lived locally will remember the merchant
that operated from those premises, Brooks (Mistley) Ltd. It may be of
interest at this point to record the history of our site.
When work began on our green the ground level was that of the entrance
path with a gradual slope towards the Scouts building. It was not until
the site was excavated down to the subsoil that the red brick wall and
evidence of a rail track were exposed. A track ran parallel to the main
line finishing at buffers situated in what is now the Club machinery store;
examination will reveal a classic example of L.N.E.R. construction. A
short distance in front of the buffers we found the remains of a turntable
and parts of a track in front of the red brick wall, evidence that in
the past goods wagons would be brought along the siding and turned at
right angles to be positioned along the wall where the goods could be
wheeled off the wagons straight into the merchant’s store. The goods
in question were such things as animal food stuffs and fertilisers destined
for local farms.
By the spring of 1989 the Clubhouse was built and furnished, complete
with licensed bar, and officially opened on 28th April at a match between
Presidents and Captains teams. Members of Attleborough Town Council were
invited to view our joint venture on 11th May at a Social Evening.
Short Mat Bowls flourished and kept the Club in use all year and that,
together with fund raising events and bar income, enabled all loans to
be quickly repaid and funds provided to build an enclosed veranda during
1991. It soon became obvious that more space was needed so plans were
drawn up and submitted for Town Council and Planning Consent in 1995.
Applications for grants were made and we were fortunate enough to receive
(£7,000) from the Lottery Sports Fund and (£6,000) from the
Foundation for Sports and the Arts.
With an extension added in 1995 more room was available for playing Short
Mat and a comfortable Bar Area built, once again with a lot of input from
members. That extension established the dimensions of the Clubhouse as
seen today, but the Club is always conscious of maintaining and upgrading
to high standards. Since 1995 and the extension there has been “dull” but
necessary work on such things as barge-boarding, wiring and plumbing.
The increasing rigour of Health and Safety legislation has necessitated
constant work on the kitchen, including a complete refurbishment in 2006/2007.
A disabled toilet has been added, the central heating system has been
renewed and storage areas extended. The 1991 verandah has been upgraded
to a viewing conservatory with a new roof and double-glazed doors and
windows. Windows and doors also have been replaced in the main building
and double-glazed as necessary throughout. Changing accommodation has
been improved with the addition of good-quality portakabins at one end
of the clubhouse. A major feature outside has been the refencing of the
premises; the Town Council paid for some of the cost of this work. The
one disaster since 1995 has been a burst water pipe in October 2003, which
caused extensive damage to the Clubhouse and contents, including the short
mats. Fortunately the insurance policy offered good protection and the
Club suffered inconvenience rather than financial loss.
A volunteer workforce looks after the green with consultation and advice
available from the Club’s supplier of soils and fertilisers. Capital
and maintenance expenditure on the green and on associated equipment is
considerable but the Club is determined to apply good standards and not
to neglect then green in anyway. Volunteers also look after the borders
and shrubberies surrounding the green; these borders and shrubberies are
quite splendid but sadly are largely unknown to the citizens of Attleborough!
After some debate the Club decided in 2006 to launch perimeter advertising
around and near the green. A good response was obtained from local firms
and the result has been a welcome boost to income without real detriment
to the appearance of the Club.
The Connaught Bowls Club today is the envy of many others and is a shining
example of co-operation between a local authority and enthusiastic Club
members willing to work for the benefit of all.
(The Club is very grateful to Roy West, one of the founder members, for
writing this Club history up to the year 1995.)
Minutes site meeting: On Sunday April 17th 1983 at 11am , a site meeting was held at the old
Railway Station Yard, Adjacent to and at the rear of, Attleborough Football
Club's Pavilion, Station Road , Attleborough.
Those Present were Mr Roy West, Mr Denny Gardiner, Mr Colin Gibson, Mr
Bill Adcock and Mr Gordon Briggs.
The purpose of the meeting was for Mr Roy West to point out the area
of land that Attleborough Town Council had agreed to Lease for the purpose
of constructing a 42-yard 6-rink E.B.A. bowling green , together with sufficient
land for the erection of bowls club pavilion.
The decision to lease the land had been taken at a council meeting held
on Monday 11th April 1983 .
All of the above persons at the meeting agreed unanimously that the construction
the green and the forming of a proper constituted bowls club should go
ahead, Roy West was asked to become chairman of the five man working committee,
he agreed to do so, Gordon Briggs agreed to act as secretary, Denny Gardiner
would be in charge of construction, with Bill Adcock's assistances.
It was decided that Mr Briggs should immediately enter into correspondence
with all likely bodies i.e. Sports Council, Breckland Council etc, with
a view to obtaining cash grants. A first estimate of the overall cost is
believed to be in the region of £10,000.
Mr West proposed that at the earliest date a meeting should be called
at the Connaught Hall, inviting all interested parties to attend in order
that the plans could be could be explained, and an estimation of potential
members could be obtained, by which time it was hoped that some idea of
available grants would be to hand.
At a suitable time a full steering committee would be formed, which was
to include Ladies, it was felt that at appropriate time a small registration
fee should be sought from prospective members, to provide working capital
for stationary advertising etc. Monies in excess of one hundred pounds
have been guaranteed to help launch the project, to be repaid at a later
date.
It was decided that the club should be called the Connaught Bowls Club
, and Mr Gibson stated that he would open a Banking account in that name.
The meeting closed at 12:15pm
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