CARE home residents in Halesowen helped to raise hundreds of pounds for a mental health charity with a Harvest Festival.
The celebrations at Gower Gardens, together with a similar event at a sister home in Kingswinford, raised £672 for the Birmingham Mind charity.
Quinton Methodist Church and St Peter’s Church delivered a joint church service for Gower Gardens’ residents, families, friends and members of the community.
That was followed by a ploughman’s lunch and dessert, live entertainment and photo booth sessions.
New Bradley Hall Care Home, which like Gower Gardens is part of Black Country Housing Group (BCHG), held a similar event.
Amanda Tomlinson, chief Executive of BCHG, said: “On behalf of everyone at Black Country Housing Group, I’d like to thank all those involved in making our Harvest Festival events so successful.
"Gower Gardens and New Bradley Hall are accessible to everyone and we’re so pleased that members of the local community came to join us and helped to raise so much money for this year’s chosen charity as well as donating food for the Wednesbury food bank.”
Birmingham Mind, the largest independent mental health charity providing services in and beyond the City of Birmingham’s boundaries, is not-for-profit organisation BCHG’s chosen charity this year.
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