Latest news with #EssexAirAmbulance
Yahoo
18-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Coggeshall Art Group's annual exhibition to return for late May Bank Holiday
A COGGESHALL art group will host their annual exhibition over the late May Bank Holiday weekend after last year's event attracted hundreds of people to the area. Sue Fraser is the exhibition committee chair of the Coggeshall Art Group which was formed more than 30 years ago with the purpose of helping people exchange ideas and artistic technique. She said last year's three-day event saw around 500 people attend the event, including residents and visitors from outside the area. Sue said: 'We have National Trust properties here and there is also a scarecrow trail over that bank holiday weekend which attracts people. 'Also, not all of the artists live in Coggeshall as it is open to people in the surrounding area'. For the second year, the exhibition will take place at The Keys Room in the Coggeshall Village Hall. The group also meets once a month for 'most of the year' in Christ Church in Stoneham Street to take part in demonstrations and talks about arts. Sue said the group would be 'delighted to welcome new members and visitors for particular sessions' including getting more young artists involved. Sue also said that 'at least' 200 artworks had been submitted to the deadline date this month with the group still counting the submissions. Sue said about half of these would be framed and hung with other works being displayed in folios - which are bound volumes. The artwork submitted includes paintings, mixed media, pastels, water colours, glass work, and collages. Admission to the event is free with the exhibition opening from Saturday May 24 to Monday May 26 from 10am to 5pm each day. Each year the Art Group make a collection during the exhibition for a charity, and the voluntary donations this time will go to Essex Air Ambulance. The Hall is accessible by the public car park which is a free with ticket for up to two hours, £1 for 2 to 4 hours, and £4 all day. The Hall is also close to various bus stops as well as cafes and pubs. For more information, please visit


BBC News
16-05-2025
- Sport
- BBC News
'You are my heroes' - Antonio meets people who saved his life
Content warning: This article contains discussion around suicide and depression "Meeting these people who saved my life has been very humbling."West Ham striker Michail Antonio's near-death experience has changed him, compelling him to engage with a recovery process containing mental and physical 35-year-old was involved in a car crash almost six months ago that resulted in him spending over three weeks in hospital with a broken leg, facing a gruelling journey back to is now up and walking, continuing his rehabilitation programme, after shattering a thigh bone when his Ferrari skidded off the road and struck a tree in Epping Jamaica international had been on his way home from is looking back in an effort to move forward. He spent time with BBC One's Morning Live, retracing moments that not only threatened his career but his life, and met those who responded to emergency calls on 7 December."I want to say thank you," he told Essex and Herts Air Ambulance paramedics Rob Moon and Dr James Moloney, "because obviously I wouldn't be here if it wasn't for you guys."You saved my life, so you guys are basically my heroes." 'We immediately knew who you were' Antonio, who previously explained he has no memory of the accident, crashed and was trapped in his car. He was freed by crew from Essex County Fire and Rescue Service who left him in the care of ambulance Ham, in an initial announcement about the crash, said their "thoughts and prayers" were with seriousness of the accident is not lost on the former Nottingham Forest said of the paramedics: "I don't remember their faces at all. It's crazy because of how important you guys were to me."Moon explained how he and Dr Moloney knew who they were treating: "There was one clue - there was a West Ham shirt in the passenger seat with Antonio on it."Antonio asked if he was speaking after the incident, and Moloney told him: "Yes, you were incredibly repetitive, but that happens when people bump their head."We kept asking about your football, who your manager was, whether you are enjoying your football. From our point of view, you were talking which was really reassuring for us."The paramedics explained Antonio was discovered on the back seat of the car and "quickly assessed" to have had fractured his was given pain relief, strapped to a board and put in an ambulance to shield him from the cold and crash came as Storm Darragh battered the with paramedics are offered after life-threatening incidents to help patients rationalise what happened to was able to ask questions, including querying whether he was taken to hospital by air clarified: "Whenever we can, we fly to hospital because it is quicker, but on the day the pilot quite rightly said no [because of the storm]."Antonio was driven to the Royal London Hospital in a previous interview with Morning Live in March, Antonio said: "I've always been a fan of sports cars, but I can't lie to you, sports cars are not my friends. So right now, I have a Mercedes people carrier and my brother is my driver."For now, anyway, I'm staying far away from sports cars." 'Family probably experienced it more than I did' Antonio also met Trish Burton, a member of the patient and family team for the air ambulance, and told her how his loved ones "probably experienced the incident more than I did"."They've gone to the hospital, they've come to see me, they've seen how I was. I don't remember my face being cut or anything... and going down for surgery the next day, I don't remember doing that," Antonio said."But they were all in the hospital, they have those memories, they lived it whereas I didn't live it as much as them."Antonio has previously explained he "almost wasn't there" for his children and how the crash affected his 13-year-old eldest in particular. Antonio talks trauma with Carlisle Antonio said earlier this year it was "horrendous" for him to see a change of manager at West Ham during his lay-off, as Graham Potter replaced Julen contract expires in June and because of injury he has had no opportunity to impress Potter on the pitch, which Antonio said has affected his mental has been a public advocate for therapy since talking to the High Performance Podcast in May 2024. Past counselling sessions have helped to equip him for his latest met with former Leeds, QPR and Burnley defender Clarke Carlisle, who explained how a serious knee injury in 2001 led him to alcoholism and how he made three suicide attempts between 2003 and said: "The first time when adverse mental health came into my consciousness was in 2003 because I went into alcohol rehab. It is interesting timing because I got a knee injury in 2001 at QPR, which kept me out for two years."I was told I was going to walk with a stick and never play again at 21 after I had just broken into the England Under-21s."Even though that had happened in my life, and the club knew about it, we didn't treat it like a mental health thing that needed addressing. I didn't do anything about it until 2010 until I was officially diagnosed with depression."It took two further suicide attempts in 2014 and 2017 for me to actually take action on my mental health."Carlisle said he had been raised with the message that "you do not talk about our business outside this house".He added: "I didn't want to engage with any of the resources out there but that's changing now."Antonio has previously explained he used to "push down" his emotions and could not celebrate West Ham's Uefa Conference League success in 2023 because of his mental health struggles."When I was talking to Clarke I definitely identified with the culture side of things, not to put your business out to the world," Antonio said."I definitely could feel what he was saying because that's what I had to experience when I was younger." Visit BBC Action Line for more information on issues raised in this article