POYNINGS VILLAGE SIGN
Several dozen villagers and well wishers gathered at
Cora’s Corner on a rare sunny Saturday morning back in
soggy June to watch the new Village Sign being
dedicated.
The sign, which was hand made and painted by
Malcolm Johnson, had been set on an oak post set 4 ½ feet in
the, very hard, ground a few weeks before.
West Sussex Councillor Peter Griffiths, who
had helped the Parish Council secure a grant of £1000 towards
the cost of the sign, made a short speech before Margaret
Cuttress untied a red ribbon from the sign.
Champagne, provided by Bob Powell and
Malcolm, was duly handed round to mark a special village event
which had brought together all ages from toddlers to those in
their eighties.
A photographer from the Mid-Sussex Times was
on hand to record the moment, and the paper ran an article the
following week with a fine group photo of all those present;
the event also got coverage in The Argus and South Downs Living
magazine.
Someone from the Village Sign Society (yes,
there is one…) spotted the feature in the magazine and wanted
details for their publication ‘Village Sign Times’, so, all in
all, our new sign is well and truly on the map.
What’s on the Sign?
Most locals have no trouble in recognising
the story spelt out in the centre panel of the sign; the legend
of the Devils Dyke. A few, though, have asked me about the
shield which sits as the centrepiece at the top, thinking it
must be the “Sussex Shield”. It is actually our very own piece
of heraldry; the shield of the Poynings family, who were the
ancient Lords of the manor.
There is a version, carved in stone, set over
the church porch door, which I photographed to make sure I got
the design right. For the technically minded, the bands across
the shield are known as ‘Bars’ and the diagonal is a ‘Band
Dexter’. To find the correct colours, I did some research on
the Internet and found a photo showing it as one of the roof
bosses of the cloisters at Canterbury Cathedral.
By co-incidence, I paid a visit to Canterbury
recently and so made a point of trying to track down the shield
at the Cathedral. I was surprised, and pleased, to find not
just one but several; either on their own or joined with the
shields of other families. Poynings was clearly once a great
name in the land.
Just for the record, the cockerel on the sign
is a ‘Speckled Sussex’, the oldest of the Sussex breeds. The
oak leaves and acorns are there as another link to the past,
when the county was one huge forest and oaks were known as ‘the
Sussex weed’. The wheat sheaf commemorates not just our local
farms but also the fact that the village once boasted not one
but two mills.
Malcolm Johnson
The Village Sign
opening Video
The sign is now up and it was
well worth the wait. It must be the best village sign in Sussex
if not the whole world or even the Universe!

Tea Break

Did you have a meccano set
when you were a boy?

It looks straight to
me!

Don't scratch it!

I reckon I could do this on my
own.

This ladder doesn't go
anywhere.

Don't let go, it takes 28 days
for the concrete to go off!

How many men does it take to
get it straight?

I think it should go 1mm to
the left.

If you want it moved, move it
yourself.

Great job
The Grand Opening

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