A local school near Carlisle has continued the charitable work carried out by one of their teaching assistants who sadly passed away just before Christmas.
Since 2006, Fir Ends Primary School in Smithfield, Cumbria, has been supporting the Great North Air Ambulance Service (GNAAS) by hosting collections of unwanted clothing.
The clothing is collected and recycled by GNAASโ Trading Company, with the money generated from the sales of the clothing reinvested back into the charity.
The collections at Fir Ends Primary School are organised by the parents, teachers, and friends of the school. Often a cattle trailer will be parked up before the day of the collection, and the school helps to publicise it and distribute the bags.
The school aims to have a collection three times a year, and usually fills the full van with clothing donations, which raises between ยฃ200-ยฃ300.

In recent years Angie Smith, one of the schoolโs teaching assistants, who was described as a โpassionate cheerleader for various charitiesโ took on coordination duties.
Sadly, she died suddenly before Christmas 2023 and now the baton has been passed onto the wider group, with their most recent collection accumulating 1,244kg of clothing.
Daryl Spencer, headteacher at Fir Ends Primary School said: โAngie had a lot of charities that she would fundraise for, but she particularly enjoyed the air ambulance collections – it was an idealย opportunityย to catchย up for a chat with everyone in the wider community when they were dropping off.
โApart from bustling about, marshalling cars, helping to empty boots and greeting the van when it arrived, she kept a spreadsheet of collection tallies and an excited email trail usually followed every collection. She took great pride in the success of ‘her’ collections and was the person who decided that we could probably fill three vans a year, and she was right. The collections will now act as one of the (many) moments in the year when memories of Angie, and her contributions within the local area, will be close toย people’s thoughts.โ

The school has raised thousands of pounds over the years and was treated to a flypast by GNAASโ newest helicopter Pride of Cumbria II in April 2021, before it started operating at the charityโs base in Langwathby, near Penrith.
Mr Spencer added: โIn a rural community like ours, the value of the air ambulance is appreciated,ย particularly by those whose work involves being in remoteย areas that a normal ambulance would be unable to reach. Many people within our community know or know of someone who has needed it. Becauseย of this, the collections are always well-supported.
โThe collections also bring together the whole community at key points in the calendar. The chance meetups with old faces from the school community – and beyond it – also mean that there’s a sense of community amongst everyone who drops off bags. The money raised is useful, but really it’s that thread thatย links and sustains our school community through contribution to a shared goal that keeps our collection going.
โArranging collections is easyย to do – and it’s something that’s easy for a lot of people to contribute to since most of us have clothes we don’t wear or need any more. One bag from everyone soon adds up.โ

Our Trading Company offer a collection service Monday to Friday, which allows people to book in a collection at a pre-arranged date and time.
This service is available across the North East, North Yorkshire and Cumbria and can be booked by filling out a short form on our website.
Alternatively, supporters can book a collection via GNAASโ Facebook page facebook.com/GNairambulance, or by calling 01325 308 139.
Donations can also be dropped off on-site at GNAASโ headquarters in the North East, which is Progress House, Urlay Nook Road, Eaglescliffe, TS16 0QB.
