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Devastating news on Broomfield bid

The sad saga of Broomfield House looks set to continue following news this week that the Heritage Lottery Fund bid to restore the 16th century building has been turned down.

According to reports from Enfield Today this evening, the refusal was due to HLF’s concerns about the scale of the restoration project, the level of the grant which had been requested (£4.175 million), and the long-term sustainability of the project, combined with the sheer number of applications received in the current round.

The fear is that, without support from the fund, it will now be almost impossible for the restoration to proceed.  The question: what next for Palmers Green’s oldest building?

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History Palmers Green Uncategorized

The origins of Broomfield

One of the many varieties of brome grass Image: preferredseed.com

Broomfield House, Broomfield Park…but why “Broomfield”?

The origins of the name Broomfield was one of the subjects tackled by Peter Brown of Broomfield Museum Trust as part of his fascinating talk  at Trinity at Bowes last week.

The wife of Sir John Spencer, who owned Broomfield from 1599 to 1610 was born Alice Bromfield, but that doesn’t seem to have been it, he mused.

I mentioned Bromefield as a surname, but how do we explain it in Palmers Green? The answer is, I can’t!

There may have been a family called Broomfield in the area but we don’t know.

In a map from 1600 there are 9 Broomfields in the parish of Edmonton.

Is it to do with brome grass, which grows in woodlands, and has seed heads which bend over at the top? Horses eat brome grass but cows don’t touch it. Broomfield may have been land used for grazing horses.

But it also might be broom, of which there are 70 varieties.

It grows near the round pond. Some years ago, the Friends of Broomfield Park planted six broom bushes with the permission of Enfield Council.

If you sit on the Centenary Seat, you can enjoy the sun and, in the season, the glorious display of broom in front of you.

But I doubt if one person in a thousand thinks “Hmm … Broom … Broomfield!!!”

But that’s the connection.

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Community History Palmers Green Uncategorized

Broomfield House – decision expected soon

News is expected this week on the outcome of the four million pound bid to the Heritage Lottery Fund to restore Broomfield House to its former glory.

The bid was submitted in October by Enfield Council, in partnership with the Broomfield House Trust and Friends of Broomfield Park, with the aim of returning the house as faithfully as possible to its nineteenth century appearance, without the mock Tudor facade which was added in the 1930s. Latest indications are that there may be just a few more nail-biting days before we know more on how the bid has been received.

For further information about the house and the bid visit www.broomfieldhouse.org.

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Community Palmers Green Planning and open spaces Uncategorized

Un’bird’en yourself!

Have you got an hour to spare on Saturday or Sunday?

This weekend people all over the uk will be taking part in the annual RSPB Big Garden Birdwatch. To get involved all you need to do is make a note of the largest number of each species you see at one time in the period of one hour, and report your findings to RSPB. Not birds on the wing, we hasten to add– that way madness lies – but just those you spot in your garden.

Secretly we suspect that birds rather look forward to the Birdwatch weekend each January. Maybe a little more bird food gets put out, though its something RSPB advises we should be doing all through the year.

Up in the Northern reaches of Palmers Green, our birds like the usual bread, cake, suet, dried fruit, the odd leftover potato and rice. They turn up their beaks at niger seeds, which we optimistically put out in the home of luring in some finches.  And they will only eat apples on sufferance. Maybe they go off them after the autumn glut.

The real mystery is what birds will turn up during the course of a year.  In our first year in PG, we didn’t see a single sparrow or starling, only a standard lineup of robins, blackbirds, crows, jays, pigeons and various types of tit.  But since then we have seen greater spotted woodpeckers, green woodpeckers, and, once, a redwing. We still haven’t seen any parakeets, though once they arrive we will probably loathe them.

What is the most obscure bird sighting you have had in Palmers Green? And did you take a photo?

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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

 

 

Categories
Bowes Park Community Planning and open spaces Shops Uncategorized

The road that roared

Our neighbours in Bowes and Bounds Green awoke one day last week to find that it wasnt the birds that were tweeting (though we do not doubt the mellifluousness of B&B’s streets), but its roads.

So here I am, on twitter. But why am I here, after all I am just a road? Well I will tell you…

began Myddleton Road @MyddletonRd_N22  in its first tweet.

I am more than a road. I am the heart, the lung, the brain and the soul of a community. This may sound pretentious, but hear me out.

If you cut me do I not bleed? No, I am a road. But if I am hurt then a community shares my pain. If I am abused then we abuse ourselves.

And I have had enough. No more. I will share my secrets so that the people who live here, love here and rule here can see what is done to me

And maybe something will be done. Or maybe it won’t but at least people will know. Know what? Of the abuse that brings me down.

Subsequent tweets have formed a diary of hopes, indignities, disappointments and calls to action occasionally broken by a rhyme and proud boast about a swanky passing Ferrari. Near the knuckle, risky and often brilliant, its worth checking out.

Now PGJITN is no fool, and suspects, like our partner website Bowes and Bounds Connected, that it is not in fact the road which is tweeting, but a person.

But who are they? And what would Palmers Green’s roads say if they could only tweet? Are some twittering away already? Tell us!

The Myddleton Road tweeter