About Broad Town Women's Institute

The Broad Town WI are a friendly group of women. We meet in the village hall on the 3rd Wednesday of each month, apart from December when we meet on the 2nd Wednesday. We start with our speaker so please arrive promptly at 7.30pm for a talk or activity which may be educational, inspiring, amusing and energetic.  After the talk we have time for socialising and refreshments.  This is followed by a short business meeting.  We also arrange visits to gardens, pubs, local attractions, and go on summer walks.  With a membership of 27 and growing we are keen to welcome new members. We have had a stall at the Broad Town summer Big Gig for the past few years supplying the festival goers with hot drinks and delicious homemade cakes.

We are affiliated to the Wiltshire federation of WI which in turn is part of the national WI allowing us to make a difference to campaigns such as reducing supermarket packaging, influencing the price of milk at the farm gate and accurate labeling food with the country of origin.  Current campaigns are helping to alleviate loneliness, improving hospital arrangements for carers of people with dementia, helping to reduce plastic waste and trying to end food poverty. 
 
There is also a dedicated college of further education; Denman college in Oxfordshire, offering the widest range of courses allowing WI members to learn new skills or further existing ones.
 
If you would like to meet some new friends in the village, have an opportunity to learn something new and maybe influence a national campaign why not come along one evening soon?  Visitors are always welcome and you can try us out without any obligation.
Broad Town Women's Institute - Events and Plans
15

Our speaker this month was local historian and author Richard Broadhead who gave a very interesting talk on ‘Soldiers of the Great War’.

Richard has written several books about the soldiers from Wiltshire towns and villages. He gave us an insight into their backgrounds and family life; such a contrast once they had enlisted in the army. Many young men did not survive their first few days in battle; five out of every nine men were casualties.

Families often never found out what had happened to their sons and husbands. Many of the men named on the war memorials did heroic and selfless acts, but sadly little is remembered of their bravery. Many have no memorials at all.

Richard through the society ‘Finding the Forgotten’ has been trying to rectify this situation by finding the graves of these forgotten war casualties.

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