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Jan
2
Thu
Following government guidelines, Ticknall Art Group will meet regularly.
Jan
9
Thu
Following government guidelines, Ticknall Art Group will meet regularly.
Jan
16
Thu
Following government guidelines, Ticknall Art Group will meet regularly.
Jan
23
Thu
Following government guidelines, Ticknall Art Group will meet regularly.
Jan
28
Tue
The Pigeon – from the gods to the gutter. Dove of peace or rat with wings? A look at our perceptions and complex relationship with this remarkable bird throughout history.
Jan
30
Thu
Following government guidelines, Ticknall Art Group will meet regularly.
Feb
6
Thu
Following government guidelines, Ticknall Art Group will meet regularly.
Feb
13
Thu
Following government guidelines, Ticknall Art Group will meet regularly.
Feb
20
Thu
Following government guidelines, Ticknall Art Group will meet regularly.
Feb
27
Thu
Following government guidelines, Ticknall Art Group will meet regularly.
Mar
6
Thu
Following government guidelines, Ticknall Art Group will meet regularly.
Mar
13
Thu
Following government guidelines, Ticknall Art Group will meet regularly.
Mar
20
Thu
Following government guidelines, Ticknall Art Group will meet regularly.
Mar
25
Tue
This is a change of topic. The talk will be “Arming a Knight.” Jed Jaggard will give us a fascinating insight into how armour developed through the ages, with lots of artifacts and objects to see and handle.
Mar
27
Thu
Following government guidelines, Ticknall Art Group will meet regularly.
Apr
3
Thu
Following government guidelines, Ticknall Art Group will meet regularly.
Apr
10
Thu
Following government guidelines, Ticknall Art Group will meet regularly.
Apr
17
Thu
Following government guidelines, Ticknall Art Group will meet regularly.
Apr
24
Thu
Following government guidelines, Ticknall Art Group will meet regularly.
Apr
29
Tue
The Salvation Army – Danny Wells.
Catherine Booth was fortified with the spirit and convictions of early 19th-century rural Methodism of the Midlands. Having met a kindred spirit in William Booth of Nottingham, they were to take their pre-industrial Methodist creed into the religious and political fulcrum of the East End of London in the second half of the century.
The response of the Booths to the poverty, hunger, squalor and ‘sin’ that they observed all around them, was to create the Salvation Army as a ‘Way out of Darkest England’.
It became the fastest-growing religious movement of late Victorian Britain and is still a religious and social service agency of international importance today.