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Art and Culture Community History Palmers Green Uncategorized

Enfield’s special Constable

Enfield’s rare pencil drawing by Constable

Enfield Council is to display a rare pencil drawing by John Constable as part of a new exhibition opening on Saturday.

Enfield Life, at the Dugdale Centre, is a permanent local exhibition about Enfield’s history  and will tell the chronological story of people who have lived or worked in the area or shaped its development through a mix of objects, pictures and room sets. Alongside will be an exhibition called People and Places which will include paintings, drawings, photographs and prints featuring places in the borough and people who are linked to the locality.

Though from Suffolk and most famous for his paintings around Dedham Vale, John Constable (1776-1837) had some family connections with the area.  We know from his letters that in at the age of 20, in 1796, he stayed at the house of his uncle Thomas Allen, who lived in Church Street Edmonton. This is also possibly when he met painter, engraver and antiquary John Thomas Smith aka Antiquity Smith (1766 to 1833). Smith apparently gave him advice about his career on the lines of ‘dont give up the day job’ (more about Smith, his Life of Nollekins, and his connections with the area coming soon).

The new exhibition will be open daily from 10.00am to 5.00pm Mon-Sat and 10.00am to 1.00pm on Sundays.

More information

http://www.enfield.gov.uk/news/article/653/rare_constable_drawing_back_on_display

 

 

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Art and Culture Community History Palmers Green Shops Uncategorized

Memories from before the war

Following on from her wonderful account of growing up in the Town Hall, we asked Betty Wright (nee Walton) to tell us more about what Palmers Green was like when she was growing up in the 30s and 40s.

Palmers Green was always known as a ‘high class area’ to live.

We had some lovely shops, one of my favourites being Evans and Davies,  a large store at the beginning of Alderman’s Hill…it was a general store, selling furniture etc as well as a very good toy department.  I remember looking at a china doll in the window for weeks and weeks and wishing I could have it, it cost 8s.11p. (43p) and I was hurt to find my younger sister had been given it for her 6th Birthday, but when I told my mother “I wanted that doll” she said “Oh Betty, you’re far too old for dolls.” (I was 9).  It’s funny how things ‘stick’.

All our shops were good class shops, Sainsbury’s (no help service)…Woolworth…during the hot weather some of the workers in the Town Hall would ask me to go over to Woolworth and buy them ice cream cornets (one and a half pence each). I used to have to buy about six and run back before they melted.  I never told anyone that I used to have a lick from each on the way back (despite being given one!).  My Mother used to shop at the Home and Colonial, for groceries.

Grouts opened in 1914. Here is an image from www.palmersgreenshops.com showing how it looked in around 2004 (site no longer maintained)

Then there was a shop called Grouts (in Green Lanes, opposite Hazelwood Lane)…this shop sold materials, underwear, school uniforms, elastic, ribbons, knitting woods etc. etc.  I loved this shop because when you paid, the money was put in a little pot and then it was carried (I expect by electricity) to the top of the shop, where a lady sat in a little cubicle and she took the money and returned your change and receipt in the little pot.

Palmers Green had two cinemas.  The Palmadium and the Queens.   The Palmadium was the ‘best one’…the Queens never had the good films.  There was also a Dance Hall above one of these cinemas, but I can’t remember which one.

We also had the Intimate Theatre which produced some brilliant plays with well known actors.

Then, of course, we were lucky enough to have Broomfield Park.  I spent most of my childhood in this park.  It was not only a park: it had a boating lake, a really good play area with several swings, slides and roundabouts; a place to be quiet…with a Remembrance Garden (where we children were only allowed to go on a Sunday with our parents); a full size running track and best of all the house, which held a museum as well as a restaurant to buy refreshments on special occasions!

Things changed when war was declared.  Broomfield House was taken over by servicemen who had been wounded or suffering an illness. Air raid shelters were appearing everywhere, especially in Broomfield Park. We would still go to the cinema (we called ‘going to the pictures) but many the time the film would stop and the Manager would appear on stage and say “The Air Raid Warning has just sounded; you may leave the cinema if you wish”.  Some people would leave but then the film would continue.

I remember running home from being out with my friend and the sirens sounded… I wanted to get home, I didn’t want to go into a shelter because I knew my mother would be worrying.  However, the shrapnel from the ack ack guns was falling all around…and someone pulled me into a door way until it was safe to carry on running.  It sounds so exaggerated, but believe me, every word is true.

Another amusing (??)  story: I used to visit my friends Josephine and Mary Hulme (their Dad was a very famous footballer)…they lived in Riverway.  When I left their house in the dark (it was really dark, because of the blackout), I borrowed a carving knife and ran all the way home ‘stabbing at the dark’ in case I met one of these ‘nasty men that my mother was always warning me about). I did this on more than one occasion and when one of my brothers came home on leave he was horrified to hear how I ‘travelled home’, because I could have murdered some poor innocent person. He warned me never to do it again (I was about 13 or 14).

Of course food was rationed, but Mum managed to feed us good meals, lots of steam puddings and she was very clever at making our rations go a long way. It took a long time for me to realise that she often went without to give us children a little more.  I remember saying “Don’t you like eggs Mum?” (when we were lucky enough to get some) and she said “No, I never have liked them”. This, I discovered later, was completely untrue.

We then heard that the greengrocers had some bananas  – this was towards the end of the war – and we had not had a banana for years.  Each family could have four bananas by producing their ration books. We had, at that time, 9 ration books (my grandma was living with us) so Mum said, “Take four ration books to one grocers and get four bananas and then the other 5 books to the other greengrocer and get a further four bananas”.  I thought this was cheating, so said to Mum “No, that’s cheating, each family can only have four bananas”.  For the very first time that I can remember my Mother slapped me around the face, saying “I am doing for the chance to give you all some fruit, not for me but for YOU”.  I could understand her thoughts: “Why should a family of two people get 4 bananas and only four, for a family of 9”.

I often think of this when I buy a bunch of bananas nearly every time I go to a supermarket…

 

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Art and Culture Uncategorized

Is this the brightest thing in Palmers Green?

Leakbuster’s new van hums and glows in the New Year twilight. Have you seen any other retina burning sights locally? Send in  your photos!

 

 

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Art and Culture Bowes Park Health History Music Palmers Green Uncategorized

Some things to look forward to in 2013

Christmas may be over, the leftovers becoming a public health risk, and your Christmas tree droopy, but there is a whole New Year ahead….

2013 sees the 400th anniversary of the opening of the New River. Discovering London’s  Peter Berthoud will be leading a two-day walk along the full length of the river (which isn’t a river and isn’t new) in September.  It’s also the 100th anniversary of the opening of Grovelands Park – celebrations are planned in May – watch this space!

The Palmers Greenery café in Broomfield Park is hopefully due to open soon (check their Facebook page for updates) and we shouldn’t have to wait too long either to find out the result of the Heritage Lottery Fund bid for Broomfield House.

Annabelle Dawson’s Hampstead Ponds – exhibiting in February

The SPACE Art Gallery has its launch night this weekend, and looks set to be amazing. The programme of exhibitions and events already reaches into early 2014, and includes Ross Ashmore (currently on a quest to paint every London Underground Station), Russian painter Alexander Bessanov, Ann Lunden Jakoby, and Conrad Mecheski . In February there is a group exhibition of more local artists including Annabelle Dawson, Samantha Lesley and  Helen M Ryan. Meanwhile, the wonderful Southgate and Palmers Green  Open Studios and art trail event runs again on the weekend of 8-9 June.

The Talkies Community Cinema is going from strength to strength. The next event,  a showing of Strictly Ballroom, is sold out, but there are tickets on sale for the next event, Dan Ackroyd and John Belushi in The Blues Brothers at the Fox on 20 February. Give them some lovin’….

Peter Brown of the Broomfield Museum Trust will be giving a talk on Broomfield Park at Trinity at Bowes on 24 January at 2pm. Peter is a really fascinating man  – go along if you can.

If you are feeling energetic, or indeed sluggish, why not join the Grovelands park run every Saturday at 9. Its free, and a mixed ability group – just join them next to the lake opposite Grovelands House. More information (and registration for your bar code so you can track you times) at www.parkrun.org/uk.

Poetry in Palmers Green will meet again on 27 April with a line up that includes Grevel Lindop, Martha Kapos, Nancy Mattson, Graham High and Lynda How. The venue is St John’s Church and tickets are £5(£3.50 concs).Further details from  myrarschneider@gmail.com mail@katherine-gallagher.com

Finally, for you theatre goers, Finchley and Friern Barnet Operatic Society will be returning to the Intimate Theatre on 5- 9 March to perform Anything Goes.

Categories
Art and Culture History Palmers Green Uncategorized

Dr Alex’s unfortunate accident

Image: BBC

Palmers Green born author of Joy of Sex Dr Alex Comfort was the subject of a Radio 3’s Sunday Feature in December.

Presented by author Matthew Sweet, Stop Calling Me Dr Sex tells the story of Comfort’s remarkable career, and his ultimate sorrow that his rich range of work –  including poetry, broadcasting, political activism and pioneering work in the study of old age – were forever overshadowed by a book he had dashed off in just a few days.  Published in 1972, The Joy of Sex had sold 12 million copies worldwide by the time of his death.

At the beginning of the documentary, Comfort’s son Nicholas tells the story of a formative event in Comfort’s childhood, when young Alex lost the use of all but the thumb of his left hand following a schoolboy experiment in his back garden in Palmers Green.

It happened in the spring of 1935, he told presenter Matthew Sweet….

It was the weekend of King George V’s Silver Jubilee and my grandmother had grounded [Comfort] from going to the cinema. He and a school friend stayed home and started making  fireworks in the greenhouse that was attached to the back of the house…..

Their first effort produced a large crater in the lawn and my grandmother then sent his friend home. Dad, being a persevering type, kept going and he was working on getting everything into the tube when there was a stray spark and the whole lot went up, including the greenhouse.

The explosion basically destroyed his left hand. He was obviously in a lot of pain and while they were waiting for an ambulance he actually  rang his friend to say ‘please dont do this experiment, because the same thing might happen to you’.

Fortunately they got him into hospital and found an extremely accomplished surgeon, a man called Twistington Higgins, who managed to reconstruct enough of his left hand that he still had a workable thumb.

A film clip of Nicholas Comfort telling the story in the back garden of Comfort’s childhood home in Palmers Green and the full radio documentary are available on BBC iplayer: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01pd3nb. See also Improbably famous in Palmers Green: Dr Alex Comfort.

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Art and Culture Comedy History Uncategorized Winchmore Hill

If you go down to the woods…..

There’s nothing like a spooky tale or two at Christmas, and Joe Studman will have a few to tell on his Darker Side of Winchmore Hill walk on Saturday 22 December, including stories of old railway workers, black dogs and sinister doings in the woods.

The walk starts from Winchmore Hill Station at 7.30. Tickets are £5 a head from Hunter’s newsagents on Winchmore Hill Green, or direct from Joe on the night.

But two lucky winners can go along free by answering this simple question:

By what name is Elizabeth Sawyer, who was born in Winchmore Hill in the seventeenth century, better known?

As ever, the answer could be on this website. Entries by 5 pm on Wednesday 19 December to palmersgreenn13@btinternet.com