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Community History Southgate

Meet the lawyer who played with matches

joeLocal storyteller and City of London Guide Joe Studman heads out on the streets of Southgate this Sunday to tell the story of the town’s gradual emergence from two villages, and some of the characters who have lived there and shaped its history

Joe will be introducing the owner of the first motorcar in Southgate, the lawyer who played with matches and got burnt, and telling the story of the Walkers and how they shaped the area.

The 90 minute walk is being run in association with the Southgate District Civic Trust. Meet at Southgate Tube at 2pm. £5.00 £3.00 Concessions. For more information about Joe’s walks visit http://www.jaywalks.co.uk.

Highly recommended!

 

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Palmers Green springs to life

Now that the sun has arrived, there are a flurry of events coming up in Palmers Green in the next few days. Time to get out and about.

Car Boot Sale flyerIf you are thinking of a spring clean and therapeutic de-junk, there are still one or two pitches left at Hazelwood School’s car boot sale on Sunday – or just go along for a chance to have a leisurely chat with your neighbours over coffee and cake, and snap up a bargain. Doors open at 9.30 and early birds pay a pound, otherwise entrance is free from 10. Further details re pitches from becky@themuswellflyer.com.

The Broomfield Park conservatory is open every Sunday afternoon from 2.30 til 4.30 (as well as Wednesday afternoons) and this weekend there is a chance to hear live music from Marc Harris. You can also see the shortlisted entries from the recent Broomfield Park Photographic Competition, and cast your vote for the picture you think deserves to be the overall winner (if you can’t pop along this weekend, you have time – viewing is until 5 May). There is also a new free weekly Tai Chi session in the park starting next week, designed particularly with older people in mind. The sessions will be held near the bandstand at 11am on a Tuesday – call 020 8379 3762 to register.

We have endlessly sung the praises of the Space Art Gallery in Southgate; it is truly amazing that we have such a wonderful place within walking distance, ready to champion genuinely interesting and challenging art. This month’s exhibition is by John McKie and there are a few more days to see it if you haven’t already been along. Mckie makes his pictures on cardboard, wood or paper, with collage, ink, oil crayons, acrylic paint and pens.  He says of his work

I like contrasts, juxtaposition and silliness, although my pictures are often tinged with seriousness close to the surface. My motivations vary but I suppose current events, mindless celebrity culture, mainstream brainwashing media are influences.

Finally, if you are reading this post today, you might just be able to snap up a ticket to see O Brother Where Art Thou this evening at the Fox. If not, your next chance for a dose of the Coens by virtue of Talkies Community Cinema is only just over a week away – A Serious Man is the first of the First Thursdays series at the Dugdale Centre in Enfield. For details of both, see http://www.talkies.org.uk/

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John McKie’s ‘large animal…’ (c) John McKie – see his show at the Space Art Gallery

 

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Grab your Dapper Dan

The next film from Talkies is the Coen brothers’ wonderful O Brother, where art thou, to be screened at The Fox on 24 April. The evening starts at 7 and there are still a few tickets left if you move swiftly.

obrothersquareStarring George Clooney, the story is loosely based on Homer’s ‘Odyssey’, as a backdrop for the adventures of a trio of escaped convicts that steer their way through a sea of strange characters. Among them sirens, a cyclops, a KKK lynch mob and a blind prophet, who warns them that “the treasure you seek shall not be the treasure you find.” The soundtrack is also cracking.

If that isnt enough Coen brothers, 2 May sees the beginning of Talkies First Thursdays events at the Dugdale Centre, bringing cinema back into the heart of Enfield for the first time in many years. The season kicks of with the Coens’ A serious man.

You can book both, and the films in the rest of the First Thursdays season here: http://www.talkies.org.uk/future-events

 

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Art and Culture Community Food Shops Wood Green

Have your cake and eat it

There is an opportunity to celebrate the highest of art forms – which, though I should not have to spell it out to you, is cake – at the Big Green Bookshop on Sunday.

The bookshop will be host to the Clandestine Cake Club, the idea to ‘Bake, eat and talk about CAKE. Arrive as strangers leave as friends’.  The theme will be “Sweet Reads” and you are invited to choose your favourite book, author or story book character, and bring along an appropriate cake.  Do you like Winnie the Pooh? Then bake a honey cake, and bring in along. Prefer Roald Dahl? Then it’s chocolate all the way…I have no idea what you should bring along if your favourite book is by Irvine Welsh but perhaps you had better just chose another favourite.

Remember to bring enough to share, and bring a container so you can take some cake away with you (if it doesn’t all get eaten). The event is from 2-4, and more details can be found on the Clandestine Cake Club website. www.clandestinecakeclub.co.uk

 Even if you don’t like cake, the bookshop has a great selection of books and is doing wonderful things for Wood Green and the surrounding community. Why not wander along soon anyway? http://www.biggreenbookshop.com/

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Art and Culture Community History Palmers Green Planning and open spaces Shops Southgate Uncategorized

Carnival day Palmers Green 1931

Huge thanks to Nick Cox who alerted us to this wonderful video of carnival day in Palmers Green in 1931.

Made by Camera Craft, the footage was found in a skip by You Tube user Andyvalve100, who we are trying to contact now. He says of this amazing find

The Southgate featured here is the London Suburb and indeed it was while working in the area a few years back that I found this film amongst things being thrown away in a company clearout.

In fact, as you will see, it is all shot in Palmers Green, and gives a wonderful impression of what it might have been like to walk along Palmers Green’s streets over 80 years ago, when many of the buildings were 20 or 30 years old, the streets bustled and the cinemas were still with us.

It shows a wonderful procession of local trades, businesses and groups: the fire brigade, soldiers, nurses, local hospital groups, marching bands, penny farthing riders, peace campaigners (‘truth is the first casualty of war’), polo players, life savers, and a group of ladies with placards showing the evolution of women’s rights. There also seem to be riders from a local hunt.

Among the businesses are Express Dairy, Stapleton and Sons, Northmet, Clayton Homes,  John Eaton, a 1903 Humber car advertising a local garage, and a float from the Cock Forge imagining its own past in 1732. The Easiest Way and Easy Money are showing at the cinema.

The date of the film is September 26 and celebrates the ‘jubilee’ but for the moment I am stumped as to what jubilee this is. George V’s diamond jubilee was in 1935. Does anyone know?

Betty Wright (then Walton) remembers the day well, because it was her fourth birthday – in fact, her birthday often seemed to coincide with annual civic events .

The film taken from there, showing the beginning of Alderman’s Hill…showed where my ‘best friend’ lived…at No 3, above an Estate Agents…her parents were the Care Takers.  It’s a pity the Town Hall wasn’t shown….or at least I didn’t see it.  I feel certain my elder sister and brothers would have been in the Parade…they would have been 14, 15 and 18.

I do remember each year on my birthday (just a co-incidence) the Southgate Fire Brigade gave a display in Broomfield Park (or may be in the grounds at the rear of the Town Hall where the fire station was).  They put on a display of a burning building,  and firemen running up ladders to ‘save’ people.  They also used hook ladders, which my brother excelled at.  Unfortunately, shortly after my son joined the brigade and had set his heart on ‘being as good as Uncle Jack’ with hook ladders…they were banned because of ….yes, you guessed, ‘health and safety’.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MSH-R2fgiOk[/youtube]

Please show this film to your friends and relatives  – we would love to hear all your memories, of days like these, what life was like then, and Palmers Green’s people, shops and businesses.

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Art and Culture Bowes Park History Palmers Green Uncategorized

The truth about Truro

One of the most frequent enquiries we get on this website and in search engine referrals is about Truro House. Not everyone knows its name. Sometimes its the ‘old house on the corner’ or ‘old house opposite the Town Hall’. It seems like Truro house has always invited curiosity.

Friend of this website Betty Wright lived in the Town Hall from 1926 to the 1950s and has kindly sent us this press cutting from 1974. Back then Truro House, given that it was built around 1850 or 60, was not much older, relatively speaking, than many of our own houses today – just over 100 years. Even then it seems to have been a bit of a mystery.

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We seem to know the following. It stands on  the site of the Kings Arms pub – Oakthorpe Lane was once Kings Arms Lane.

Peter Brown of the Broomfield Museum Trust also tells us in his fascinating leaflet on Truro House that the land was once owned by Thomas Wilde (1782-1858) first Baron Truro who  lived at Bowes Manor and was Lord Chancellor from 1850-1852. The estate was then purchased by Alderman Thomas, and there was a Truro Cottage on the site in 1867’s ordnance survey site. However, neither Wilde nor Sidney appear to have lived there and it seems like the house may have been rebuilt or remodeled around 1890 when it was occupied by Frederick Colliver, a stock jobber, and his family.

From 1898 it was owned by the Davis family: Miss Charlotte Davis lived there from 1936 to her death in 1995 with her French housekeeper, Mlle Florence Zanotti. Peter tells us that while she was there, she allowed the Southgate Civic Trust Trees Group to inject the eleven elms which stood in the garden to try and save them from Dutch Elm disease – unfortunately without success. She also sold part of the land for the building of Honeysuckle House.

I have heard people say that Miss Davis liked to keep herself to herself, but I would love to hear from people who knew her. Graham Dalling used to tell the story of how, when the Enfield Local Studies Team were based in Palmers Green Library, he and David Pam went knocking on the door, only to be sent away with a flea in their ear.

The fate and more recent goings on in the house remain a bit of a mystery. Is it occupied? Currently there seems to be a small enclosure and the vegetation seems a bit more under control than usual, but perhaps that’s just the recent bad weather.

Perhaps most interesting is the call from writer of the 1974 article, one ‘Fuimus’ to consider the status of the house in the borough, a call which could have been made yesterday and has so far been unheeded. It and the Town Hall are the only buildings with open space fronting the New River, which celebrates its 400th anniversary this year, but which we hardly seem to make anything of in Palmers Green.

Truro House is a beautiful and sizeable  but not large building, with mature trees which have a tree preservation order. The gardens could be a wonderful public space, and the building may have potential as a community meeting place. I am just saying.

truro house