Received Demolition of rear lean-to and erection of a two storey and single storey sunroom extension, Barn Garth House, Barn Garth, Cartmel. For Mr Craig Johnson. Rear conservatory extension, 7 Briery Bank, Arnside. For Mr Keith Radcliffe. Application for a Lawful Development Certificate (proposed) for replacement front elevation windows, Storth Ltd, Burtlands, Moss Lane, Burton-in-Kendal. For Jodi Looker-Storth Ltd. T2 - Ornamental Cherry - Fell, T1 & T3 - Conifers – Fell, Hillfoot, Fernleigh Road, Grange-over-Sands. For Mrs Emma Miller. Loft conversion with dormer window to rear, creation of terrace and alterations to rear balcony to include glazed balustrade, 52 Priory Lane, Grange-over-Sands. For Bryan Lowrie.
All planning application submitted to South Lakeland District Council
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The country s oldest competitive festival Menu TO MANY local musicians, spring is heralded by the Mary Wakefield festival. Founded in 1885 by the daughter of Kendal’s leading banking and gunpowder manufacturing family, it is the country’s oldest competitive festival. Mary was a stout jolly old maid of 32. She and her sister Agnes Argles of Eversley House, Heversham, held the first choir festival on the tennis court of Sedgwick House, the Wakefields country house. In 1887, the venue moved to St George’s Hall in Kendal - where the impression that the festival was on ‘the behoof’ of parish churches was counteracted by the affirmation that it was open without ‘distinction of class or creed’. Even so, the committee was composed mainly of gentry and half gentry who recruited their own staff and tenants as competitors. But they did their best awarding prizes for good attendance at practices and reimbursing travel costs.
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ROGER BINGHAM HISTORY COLUMN ‘HERE S two or three jolly boys all in one mind, we’ve come a pace egging, we hope you’ feel kind ‘ran a rough chorus sung at Eastertide by local youths as they, performed a drama in retuned for pace eggs. The boiled hens’ eggs, not the over wrapped chocolate confections of today, were supposed to symbolise new life which sprung from Jesus’ Resurrection on Easter Day. Hence, ‘pace’ is said to derive from ‘pasque,’ a Latin name for a feast. The eggs were generally dyed with bright cloths but at Heversham they were boiled in daffodil leaves which produced a marble effect.
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