• Feb 15, 2020 from 10:30am to 4:30pm
  • Location: Bruce Castle Museum, Lordship Lane N17 8NU
  • Latest Activity: Feb 14, 2020

Time to discover more about Haringey’s wonderful history and community heritage at the annual Haringey Local History Fair at Bruce Castle Museum and Haringey Archive.

A chance to get involved, network and browse stalls from different local organisations from around the borough, as well as an all-day talks programme, showcasing the area's wonderful heritage. You can visit the Searchroom, see films and special displays from the archive and museum collections and talk to our staff to find out how to use the Archive Service and undertake research.

Please note the new earlier start time: the museum doors will open at 10.30am, for extra time to browse the stalls and network, before the talks programme begins.

All-day Talks Programme

  • 10.50am: Alexandra Palace Theatre - Did it Roar in the 1920s?
    A hundred years ago the Alexandra Palace Theatre was dark after its requisition during the Great War. Re-opening to the public in 1922, how did it fare in the Roaring Twenties? Nigel Willmott and Patricia Brearey (co-authors of the Drama at the Palace books (external link) will talk about this historic theatre.
  • 11.25am: Exiled: Sixty Years Since the Arrival of Oliver Tambo
    2020 marks two significant anniversaries in the history of the Anti-Apartheid Movement - sixty years since the exile of Oliver Tambo, later ANC leader, and thirty years since the release of Nelson Mandela, the first democratically elected President of South Africa. This talk by Nico Blackstock, of University of Southampton and a local resident, focuses upon how these two events link to the local history of Haringey, the place where Tambo spent his exile in Muswell Hill and where Mandela came to visit his friend on multiple occasions. Using archive photographs, letters and accounts, the talk aims to illustrate a global history in our own local context.
  • 12 noon: The NHS at 70: The Story Of Our Lives
    The NHS has been a part of all our lives for more than 70 years now: it's where many of us are born, where we work, and where we go when we need healing and care. The NHS at 70: The Story of Our Lives (external link) project is collecting stories from across the country to reflect the journey the NHS has been on and the ways it touches everyone. Patients, porter, policymakers and politicians; doctors, dentists, nurses, surgeons, drivers, carers, paramedics, cleaners and admins - and those who use the NHS to stay healthy or in times of illness - we've interviewed all of these, and we're still going. In this talk, Peter Mitchell, one of the project's co-ordinators, introduces you to some of the stories we've found, what we've learned, shares some local NHS histories and where we're going next - perhaps your story?
  • 12.35pm: The 1840 Revolution: Rowland Hill’s Uniform Penny Post Delivered 180 Years Ago
    It is 180 years since the world’s first postage stamp - the Penny Black - was created. Introduced by Sir Rowland Hill of Bruce Castle - former headmaster of Bruce Castle School and Great Britain's postal reformer - the Penny Post system was revolutionary, transforming how we send letters. Join Jack Zhang, postal historian and author of 'The Origin of the Penny Black', ('解密黑便士') - the first book to be published in Chinese about the Penny Black - as we hear how the world got stuck on stamps.
  • 1-2pm: Lunch break
    During the break, enjoy our collection of short films to include: Looking Back 80 Years: Food Flash - The Ration Books are Coming; the recently-digitised HRH’s Own Hospital! (1932) - the new wing at the Prince of Wales Hospital in Tottenham; and The Farm: Narratives of Home a short documentary film made by Wendy Charlton (external link), a local social practice artist, with a Broadwater Farm estate resident.
  • 2pm How the Poll Tax was Defeated in Haringey and Across the UK 30 Years Ago
    Mass non-payment, non-cooperation and protests rendered the Government's controversial new local tax unenforceable in 1990. A look back at possibly the most widespread and effective grassroots campaign in history, in which the people of Haringey contributed greatly. What exactly happened locally, and what inspiration can we take from this today? Find out from those that were there - Dave Morris and other former activists from Haringey Anti-Poll Tax Union.
  • 2.35pm Two Hundred Years in the Baking: The Freemans - North London Bakers
    Baking in North London since 1820, the Freemans are a family of Master Bakers - now in their sixth generation. Landmark Dunn’s of Crouch End is their family-owned bakery, set up by Christopher and his wife Christina. Christopher’s great-great-Grandfather, Robert Freeman, came down from Brackley, Northamptonshire in 1820 on a hay wagon and started work as a baker in South Grove, Highgate. Join David Winskill, of Hornsey Historical Society, as he gives us a taste of this local family’s baking heritage.
  • 3-3.30pm: tea break
  • 3.35pm: Having a Nose for It: Political Lampooning in the ‘60s
    Sharing his jokes from 60 years ago, Councillor Sheila Peacock and Deborah Hedgecock (Curator) look back on the humorous artwork of ‘Nosey Parker’ - a set of six political cartoons commissioned locally from the 1960s onwards, with some dating from the Harold MacMillan premiership. The cartoons have recently been donated to the collections of Bruce Castle Museum. Come and find out who the cartoonist was and how he got his name.
  • 4.05pm: Cheers! Serving Pints for 170 years: The Antwerp Arms, Tottenham
    What was the Bruce Castle area in Tottenham like in 1850? Looking at original evidence of this still rural and village-like landscape, we discover a beerhouse in this growing community. Join curator Deborah Hedgecock as she charts the history of this pub through the records, flourishing from its beerhouse origins to the much-loved local, the Antwerp Arms - still serving the community 170 years on.

NB Talks sometimes subject to change.

The Fair will have stalls run by local organisations and authors in the Compton and Coleraine Galleries showcasing a range of heritage, art and cultural work from around Haringey to include:

Antwerp Arms Association; Edmonton Hundred Historical Society; Friends of Alexandra Palace Theatre; Friends of Bruce Castle; Friends of Finsbury Park; Friends of Tottenham Marshes; Goodbye Coppetts Wood Project (with Sense of Locality); Hornsey Historical Society; London, Westminster and Middlesex Family History Society; Markfield Beam Engine and Museum; New River Action Group; the NHS at 70 Project, Noel Park Residents’ Association; Radical History Network for North East London; Steve Amor - Artist; Tottenham Hotspur Foundation and Tottenham Civic Society.

Information, films, leaflets, artwork and publications on local topics and local history will be available from many stalls, alongside the following authors, available to talk about or sign their books: Geoffrey Barton - ‘Tottenham Outrage’; Jenny Brown - ‘Front Door to the Past’ (about Vartry Road); Paul Collier’s soon-to-be published book ‘Harris Lebus: A Romance with the Furniture Trade’ and sports author Mike Donovan with his new book ‘The King of White Hart Lane: Alan Gilzean’

The Tudor Tower will be open too, with artwork by resident art group Art2View.

The Café in the Old Kitchen will be selling teas, coffees, sandwiches and cakes all day.

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  • This is a really interesting annual event, and if you have not been there, Bruce Castle (actually, a Tudor manor house) is a lovely place to visit!
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Events and Activities


from 13 April 2024

 

Plant sales in April at Broomfield Park.


April Jazz every Thursday evening at Karamel, 4 Coburg Road, Wood Green.

Saturday 13 April – Learn how to do scrappy patchwork at Stitch crafts, 2 Hazelwood Lane Palmers Green, 1.30-3pm.

Saturday 13 April – Collage Kids presents: Old McDonald and the Three Pigs Plus at Karamel, 4 Coburg Road Wood Green, 2-4pm.

Saturday 13 April – London Vegan Mixer at Karamel, Coburg Road Wood Green, from 7pm.

Wednesday 17 April – Movement and Ease: Alexander Technique with Tanya at CUFOS, Top of the Avenue N10 2QE, 11-12pm.

Wednesday 17 April – Talk/discussion: Seniors: Lively up yourselves! at Hornsey Parish Church Hall, Cranley Gardens (bottom) N10.

Wednesday 17 April – Is London Dying? London Assembly Election Hustings at Karamel/McQueens Theatre, Coburg Road Wood Green, 6.30-9pm.

Thursday 18 April to 2 May – Your Community Choir needs You! Try some taster sessions at Bounds Green School (upstairs hall), 6.45pm. Bowes Park Community Choir rehearses every Thursday, 7.15pm.

Thursday 18 April – Learn to use a sewing machine at Stitch crafts, 2 Hazelwood Lane Palmers Green, 7-9pm.

Thursday 18 April – Kaiyo 3 with Helena Kay at Karamel, 4 Coburg Road Wood Green.

Saturday 20 April – Sewing machine confiedence-boosting workshop at 2 Hazelwood Lane Palmers Green, 10.30-12pm.

Saturday 20 April – Patchwork workshop: learn to sew a Dresden plate at Stitch crafts, 2 Hazelwood Lane Palmers Green, 10.30-2.30pm.

Saturday 20 April – Muswell Hill Creatives Spring Makers Fair at St. James Square Muswell Hill, 10.30-5pm.

Sunday 21 April – Geekstraveganza: regular boardgame meetup on the third Sunday of every month at Karamel, 4 Coburg Road, Wood Green, 1-6pm.

Sunday 21 April – Crows at Bowes Park Folk Club, Shaftesbury Hall, N11 2QN, 2.30-5pm.

Saturday 27 April – Granny Squares workshop at 2 Hazelwood Lane Palmers Green, 1-3pm.

Saturday 27 April – Fortismere Community Choir and Orchestra Concert – All-Mozart Programme, at St. Andrew’s Church, Alexandra Park Road N10 (corner of Windermere Road).

Saturday 4 May – Introduction to blackwork embroidery at Stitch crafts, 2 Hazelwood Lane Palmers Green, 10.30-12.30pm.

Saturday 4 May – Learn to make a crochet basket at 2 Hazelwood Lane Palmers Green, 10.30-12.30pm.

Saturday 11 May – Puppet making workshp at Stitch crafts, 2 Hazelwood Lane Palmers Green, 12-3pm. 

Ongoing courses and activities

Geekstravaganza – regular boardgame meetup on the third Sunday of every month at Karamel, 4 Coburg Road, Wood Green, 1-6pm.

After School Sewing Club on Fridays at Stitch crafts, 2 Hazelwood Lane Palmers Green, 4.30-6pm. Term time.

Em Power fitness classes – Monday, Thursday and Friday mornings in OR Tambo Rec, 9-9.30am (term time only). The main focus is on core and legs.

Bowes Park Community Choir - Thursday evenings during term time at Bounds Green School, 7.15-9.15pm.

Life drawing sessions – alternate Saturday mornings at Rhodes Avenue Primary School, 10-12pm.

Zumba and fitness classes – Zumba is on Wednesday evenings, 7-7.50pm. All classes are at Bounds Green Bowls and Tennis Club, Goring road N11.

Salsa Wednesdays – Wednesday evenings at Bounds Green School, Bounds Green Road N11 2QG, 7-8pm. 

V&J Ensemble: Vocal group for ALL Singers on Wednesdays at St. Andrew's Church, Alexandra Park Road N10 (corner of Windermere Road), 6.50-8.30pm.

Enjoy your painting – Thursdays at CUFOS Community Centre (the old railway station), Top of The Avenue N10, 10-12.30pm or 1.30-4pm.

 

All Good Bookshop has many regular events - book groups of course, also music, writing, yoga - and special events .... at 35 Turunpike Lane.

Many Music and Art events are held at Karamel, including Collage Kids performance events on Saturday mornings at 11.30am. At 4 Coburg Road, Wood Green N22 6UJ.

 

 

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