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CONTENTS
Page
Notices 2
Reviews 4
Books and Publications 10
Conferences and Courses 11
Lectures and Events 12
Exhibitions 14
Affiliated Society Meetings 14
NOTICES
Newsletter: Copy Dates
The copy deadline for the following issue of the Newsletter is 28 March
2014 (for the May 2014 issue). Please send any items for inclusion to
Laura Schaaf, 15 B Alexander Road, London N19 3PF or you can email
me at [email protected].
****************
LAMAS Lecture Programme
Unless otherwise stated, meetings take place in the Clore Learning Centre
at the Museum of London on Tuesday evenings at 6.30pm –
refreshmentsfrom 6pm. Meetings are open to all; members may bring
guests, and non-members are welcome. Please note: non-members are
asked to donate £2 towards lecture expenses.
14 January 2014
The Cheapside Hoard, Hazel Forsyth, Senior Curator, Museum of
London
11 February 2014
AGM & Presidential Address: Anglo-Saxon and Norman Royal
Palaces: the evidence of London, Westminster and Winchester, Prof
Martin Biddle, Emeritus Fellow, Hertford College, Oxford (6.15pm,
refreshments from 5.30pm)
11 March 2014
The More: Rickmansworth’s Royal Palace, Dr Heather Falvey,
Lecturer in Local History, Institute of Continuing Education, Cambridge
8 April 2014
From Coal Sacks to Treasures: Roman Small Finds from
Excavations in the Walbrook Valley, Michael Marshall, Senior
Specialist, Museum of London Archaeology
3
13 May 2014
686 Roman Hairpins from London, Glynn Davis, Archaeology
Collections Manager (Volunteers), London Archaeological Archive and
Research Centre, Museum of London
****************
LAMAS 158th
Annual General Meeting & Presidential Address
Tuesday 11 February 2014
Notice is hereby given of the LAMAS 158th
Annual General Meeting and
Presidential Address to be held on Tuesday 11 February at 6.15pm in the
Clore Learning Centre at Museum of London, London Wall. Light
refreshments will be available from 5.30pm. The AGM will be followed
by the Presidential Address by Professor Martin Biddle, entitled Anglo-
Saxon and Norman Royal Palaces: the Evidence of London,
Westminster and Winchester. Minutes of the Special General Meeting
and 157th
AGM, held on 12 February 2013, will be available.
The 158th
AGM Agenda is as follows:
1. Apologies for absence
2. Minutes of the Special General Meeting held on 12 February 2013
3. Minutes of the 157th
AGM, 2013
4. Annual Report and Accounts
5. Election of Officers and Members of Council
6. Appointment of Examiner(s)
7. Election of President
8. Any other business
Council would welcome nominations of anyone interested in becoming a
member of Council. These should be addressed to the Chair at the
address given on the back page of the Newsletter, or by email to the
Secretary ([email protected]) to arrive no later than Tuesday 14
January 2014.
****************
LAMAS Local History Publication Awards 2013
It is ten years since LAMAS introduced the annual prizes for historical
publications by affiliated societies. The intention was that the annual
prize would act as a stimulus to the production of new research and
written histories London and Middlesex. Since 2011 the publications
have been divided between individual free standing books and societies’
journals, with separate prizes of £100 being awarded for each. A huge
volume of work has been produced and lodged in the LAMAS library
over the years and in the last three years seventeen of the affiliated
societies have submitted between them fifty-six publications.
4
This year eight societies submitted seventeen separate publications. The
prize in the books section went to the first ever submission by the Friern
Barnet & District Local History Society for The Friern Hospital: The
History of a Victorian Lunatic Asylum, by David Berguer. In the journal
section the prize went to Hornsey Historical Society, a regular contributor
and a previous winner, for their annual Hornsey Historical Society
Bulletin 53, edited by Albert Pinching. The prizes were announced and
presented, as usual, at the Local History Conference in November (for the
full conference report see p. 8).
John Hinshelwood
****************
Transactions Volume 63
Did you receive your copy of Transactions (63)? If not, it may be because
you have underpaid your subscription over the last two years through not
updating your standing order from the old rate. If you think this applies to
you, please contact the Membership Secretary: 22 Malpas Drive, Pinner
Middx HA5 1DQ (020 8866 1677) or [email protected]
REVIEWS
LAMAS London Heritage Conference: 28 September 2013
This was the first such conference to be organised by the LAMAS
Historic Buildings & Conservation Committee - which acts as the London
agent of the CBA (in its role as a National Amenity Society dealing with
Listed Building Consent applications) and considers over 700 cases
annually from all over London. Jon Finney, the Committee Chairman,
took the chair. The morning sessions were arranged chronologically
Harvey Sheldon spoke first on the Roman Londinium Wall. Charles
Roach Smith saved a part found in 19th
century from demolition by the
City. More has been found since including the riverside wall – with a
good dendrochronological end date from its wooden piles, of 275AD. The
landward wall is poorly dated, and Harvey thinks the whole wall was a
single project. The design is consistent, Kentish rag footings (over piles
where needed), Cotswold sandstone edging to a plinth, then ragstone
walling with tile layers at intervals. It was capped with a limestone
wallwalk and external parapet. From a European viewpoint London was
an important centre for organising food supplies to north Germania, under
considerable threat in 3rd
century. The bastions came later, eastern ones
5
by the Romans, the western ones probably medieval; northern bastions
are lacking.
Dr Justine Bayley spoke next on Two Middlesex Barns, at Ruislip and
Harmondsworth. Both had Saxon forebears but were handed on by the
Normans to French abbeys who controlled them to the end of 14th
century; Ruislip barn being rebuilt c.1300. King’s College, Cambridge
acquired the Manor in the mid-15th
century, only selling the farm and
barn in 1931 to the Council (now in Hillingdon). The barn is Grade II*
Listed and has recently been restored and adapted as a meeting hall.
Harmondsworth Manor became an endowment for Winchester College,
which rebuilt the barn in 1426-7. It stored wheat, barley and oats, and has
three threshing floors. It is the largest timber-framed building in England
(Grade I Listed). It was, and is, threatened by Heathrow expansion; after
the first threat EH restored it. They now own it; but the Friends of
Harmondsworth Barn, of whom Justine is secretary, run it.
The Fields of St Mary Spital, between Bishopsgate and Brick Lane were
developed for housing from the late-17th
century. Alec Forshaw said that
Fournier Street first became a Huguenot centre for silk weaving (beyond
the reach of City Guilds). At its west end Hawksmoor built Christ Church
- No.2 was the Rectory. No.4, of five bays, was grander than the terraces
beyond which are three storey, three bay Georgian houses with basements
and attics. Silk weaving did not survive mechanisation, and poverty set
in. A Jewish community took over, flourished and moved on to be
followed by a Bengali community. Then development threatened, some
buildings were lost, but, having many original features, refurbishment
won and brought gentrification. The immediate area is protected, but the
setting is encroached on all sides by big developments.
Kirsten Walker spoke about the Horniman Conservatory. John
Horniman (1803-1893) founded, and prospered in, the eponymous tea
business. On retirement he built himself Coombe Cliff Lodge at Croydon,
with a conservatory as large again. Messrs MacFarlane of Glasgow, a
foremost cast iron manufacturer, provided the material. John’s son,
Frederick, built the Museum, vesting it with the LCC, and it opened in
1901. Frederick then sold Coombe Cliffe. The conservatory was Listed
Grade II in 1972, the GLC pressing for its retention. After a fire in the
house the conservatory was dismantled in 1979, and stored. Agreement
was reached to re-erect it at the Horniman Museum. Some parts had to be
recast, and an entire wall made where the conservatory had butted onto
Coombe Cliff. It opened in 1989 and is seen by 750,000 visitors a year.
John Allan spoke on the Grade I Listed Finsbury Health Centre. Ten
years before the NHS, Finsbury established a municipal Health Centre.
6
The architect was Lubetkin (1901-1990) who had trained in revolutionary
Russia. He came to London in 1931, and set up the Tecton architectural
practice. A demonstration project for a chest (TB) clinic led on to the
Finsbury Health Centre, which opened in 1938. A welcoming central
foyer had medical wings on either side and a lecture theatre upstairs. It
was seen as a beacon of hope in a deprived area. After the war it lacked
maintenance and the NHS proposed demolition. However restoration was
agreed in 1988, with John Allan soon doing the most urgent work. With
the launch of the Finsbury Health Centre Preservation Trust in 2012, he
can do more to recreate the original appearance.
In the afternoon Jon Finney introduced three significant large area sites,
each with modern developments which threaten their heritage.
Dr Mike Heyworth, Director of the CBA, spoke about Convoys Wharf,
which is to be redeveloped for housing. This, the CBA had no quarrel
with, but the site had been the Deptford Dockyard (1513-1869) with John
Evelyn’s house, Sayes Court, beside it. The CBA wrote a strong
argument for sympathetic redevelopment (British Archaeology, May June
2012, p65). It mentions highlights such as shipbuilding for the Armada
and the knighting of Frances Drake on the Golden Hind. Dominant on
site are the Grade II Listed Victorian slipway covers, but other remains
could be displayed to indicate the Dockyard’s extent. Lewisham have
received three proposals: two highly unsympathetic; and now a slightly
better one by Terry Farrell. Final plans should not be considered until
archaeological results are issued in 2014. The proximity and mutual
importance of the Greenwich Maritime World Heritage Site and the
Dockyard were stressed.
St Paul’s, Covent Garden, built a poor house in 1775-6 in a field by the
western boundary of the St Pancras parish. It is now known as the
Cleveland Street Workhouse. It has seen the Middlesex Hospital come,
been its Annexe, and seen it go. Only the Chapel and one Hospital façade
remain. Dr Ruth Richardson, a historian, told us how she helped save
the Annexe building, as a surviving workhouse and as a piece of
Dickensian heritage. Dickens lived nearby in 1828-31, knew it when still
a workhouse, and in her view makes several (disguised) references to it in
Oliver Twist. The Workhouse is now Grade II Listed, but related
buildings around it are not, and a fight to retain them continues. Ruth
Richardson covers more in her book: Dickens & the Workhouse, (Oxford
University Press, 408pp, ISBN 9780199645886 at £16.99).
Jon Finney referred to the Stanley Buildings and the major developments
around St Pancras Station. He then introduced David Jackson, Senior
Architect at John McAslan & Partners to give the final talk about King’s
7
Cross Station. The station was built in 1852, St Pancras following in
1868. With growing passenger numbers a concourse spread out in front in
the 1970s. This has been replaced by a larger semi-circular concourse (for
50 million passengers a year) between the station and the Midland Hotel,
its spectacular roof following the curve of the hotel, but also blending
well with the original station. A new pedestrian bridge, with lifts,
connects directly to the platforms; but the much loved old bridge has
gone (to the Bluebell line). Otherwise the Grade I Listed station, with
some Victorian architecture as good as at St Pancras, has been splendidly
refurbished - its walls paramount, and its principal façade revealed.
Richard Buchanan, LAMAS Historic Buildings and Conservation
Committee (a full report of the conference will be published in a
forthcoming Transactions)
****************
LAMAS 48th
Local History Conference: 16 November 2013
The River and Port of London
The conference began with Gustav Milne, Director of the Thames
Discovery Programme, giving an overview of 1900 years of London’s
early river-related history: A Changing Port in a Changing World:
London’s Harbours from the 1st to the 18
th Century. Change was very
much the theme of his talk, underlining that London’s ports and harbours
at different periods shared little in common beyond the river Thames.
Whereas the Romans traded from man-made quays in what is now the
City, the Saxons ‘stranded’ their ships on the shore, near what is still
known as ‘The Strand’. This was a masterly overview, taking the
audience through the return to the City, and the expansion of trade in the
medieval and Tudor periods leading to London’s growth as a mercantile
port, complete with customs houses and monopolistic trading companies.
The talk was informed by the extensive archaeological investigations that
took place around Upper and Lower Thames Street in the 1980s and
1990s, all of which yielded rich new evidence about the way London
organised and handled its sea-borne trade in the past. This was a
stimulating and authoritative start to the day.
The next talk by Chris Ellmers, Reinvention and Change: the Port of
London from 1790 – 1938, looked at the later history of the Port of
London. Chris Ellmers is the founding director of Museum of London
Docklands and we were able to partake of his great knowledge about a
more complex topic than hitherto assumed. Docks were not constructed
necessarily for the greater good but for individual companies like the
West India and East India docks, both granted monopolies for 21 years in
1806. This led to the displacement of workers who then had to be
8
compensated by public funds and fresh docks built. A pamphlet war
against monopolised docks ensued. Legal quays suffered the loss of trade.
The profits built on slave trade working the plantations tend to be
airbrushed out of history but after the emancipation of slaves and the
demand for free trade the monopolies were not renewed. New docks
such as the Royal Albert and Royal Victoria were constructed in place of
the monopoly docks and new warehouses replaced the former quayside
buildings. In 1909 the Port of London was created with authority to
acquire conservator and licensing powers and improve the docks such as
Tilbury and this was the state of play up till 1938.
John Hinshelwood introduced the LAMAS Local History Publication
Awards 2013 (see pg. 3) and the awards were presented by Eileen Bowlt.
The book prize was awarded to The Friern Barnet and District Local
History Society for The Friern Hospital: The History of a Victorian
Lunatic Asylum by David Berguer and the journal prize went to Hornsey
Historical Society for their annual Hornsey Historical Society Bulletin.
The first talk after lunch was Local History and the Environmental
History of the Thames 1960-2010 by Vanessa Taylor, Research Fellow
at the Greenwich Maritime Institute, who outlined the interaction of
organisations and stakeholders upon the Thames environment. The
matters to be dealt with are many; water supply, drainage, flooding,
pollution, sewage, navigation, recreation, eco-systems, and more. By way
of illustration, our speaker instanced the effect of summer heat, which can
produce a temperature of 21 degrees at the water’s edge; the discharge of
too much sewage at the LCC Modgen Works in 1963; a disastrous
leakage of awful effluent at Purfleet in 1969; proposals for an airport in
the estuary. Since the river cuts across, at the same time as it connects,
over twenty-four local authorities, the question of which authority or
interested party should make a particular decision gives much scope for
further problems. Efforts to construct a regional board of management, be
it Thames Conservancy, Thames Water Authority, National Rivers
Authority or other, always face the charge of threatening local
democracy. Protection and conservation societies press for their concerns
to be taken into account, societies like those for the Rivers Darenth and
Kennet, wildlife defenders, residents’ associations, dockland and
development groups. It is a constant balancing act to take all these aspects
into consideration. A new website to keep the general public informed is
coming.
The second speaker after lunch was Robert Jefferies, curator, Thames
Police Museum. His talk was entitled ‘Primus Omnium’: the world’s
first modern police force. In the 1700s the Upper Pool of London was
9
extremely busy with at least 1,000 ships docked at the legal quays at any
one time. The ships were unloaded by men known as ‘lumpers‘ and a
great deal of theft took place during unloading. It was estimated that a
half a million pounds worth of cargo was stolen every year. Patrick
Colquhoun, a magistrate in Westminster wrote about this in his treatise on
policing the Metropolis and Captain John Harriott, master mariner,
magistrate and Justice of the Peace suggested a plan for tackling the
thefts. A meeting took place between the two men and Colquhoun gave
Harriott’s plan a structure and hierarchy, turning it into a police force.
The West India Quay merchants and plantation owners funded the
salaries of the police constables. The police force began on 2 July 1798 in
Wapping and at first only dealt with West India Quay. The watermen
police constables supervised the ‘lumpers‘ and were in turn themselves
supervised by ‘surveyors‘. The new police force was highly successful
and the service was extended from Blackfriars to Deptford. In 1878 the
original police headquarters needed extending and an old navy hulk
became the first ‘police station‘.
Dr Mark Jenner of the University of York entertained the audience with
an amusing talk on a serious subject - The Thames as a Provider of
Drinking Water c.1500-c.1830. Access to the river was obstructed in the
urban area by buildings and where readily accessible, involved much
labour in lifting and carrying, until Peter Morris’ water wheels were
placed under the northern arches of London Bridge in 1582, and had
sufficient power to pump water over St Magnus church. The populace
preferred to drink beer, some women actually claiming cruelty against
husbands who forced them to imbibe water. Subsequently waterworks
companies from Shadwell to Chelsea supplied water for domestic use.
Boulton & Watts engines increased efficiency in the late 18th
century and
23,419 London houses were receiving piped river water by 1804. Was the
water potable? Although privies and sewers discharged into the Thames
the water in the centre of the river was thought to be purified by the sun’s
glow and the agitation of the stream. The invention of water closets and
building of gas works added to the pollution and salmon numbers crashed
in the 1820s, but Thames water was comparable in quality to rainwater
collected in water butts that was always jet black owing to the dirt and
soot on the roofs.
The day ended with a talk by Mireille Galinou, formerly Curator of Art
at the Museum of London, who spoke about The Thames Beautiful – the
artist’s perspective. This fascinating talk began by outlining some of the
difficulties early artists faced in depicting London with its river. The
standard view point for early panoramas was the tower of St Mary
Overie, now Southwark Cathedral, but a lot of artistic licence was
10
required if the view was to accommodate both Westminster and the
eastern side of the City. This produced an imagery bend in the river,
which appeared in many prints and paintings despite not existing, artists
merely reproducing previous views. This was another masterly overview
which also included the day’s most beautiful images: from Canaletto’s
stunning set-piece of the Lord Mayor’s show at a time when it took place
on the river; through to the work of Danish film-maker Nikolaj Bendix
Skyum Larsen, whose reflective extract from ‘ Portrait of a River ‘(2013)
ended the day. In between came many glorious images of the Thames,
underlining the point that without this astonishing piece of natural
landscape at the heart of the city, artists’ engagement with London would
be much impoverished.
Accounts of the 48th
conference by LAMAS Local History Committee
members: Eileen Bowlt, Patricia A. Clarke John Hinshelwood, Cathy
Ross, Eleanor Stanier and Diane Tough
BOOKS AND PUBLICATIONS
Around Pinner Through Time, by Pinner Local History Society (2013),
Amberley Publishing, 96pp, £14.99, ISBN 978 1 4456 1888 3
This attractive book starts with that most essential ingredient for a local
history publication – a clear map marking the location of the places
mentioned in the text. Well done Pinner! All Amberley ‘Though Time’
publications depend upon the pictures and the collection here does not
disappoint, including among the early photographs a tinted Edwardian
postcard of the Waxwell and several paintings in full colour, one showing
the lower part of the High Street in 1820. There is a dramatic picture in
the Chalk Mines and another of what appear to be very high haystacks at
Headstone Manor, partially cut away as blocks of hay had been taken out
and sent to the London markets. A touch of humour appears with a
photograph of Dawson Billows outside the Queen’s Head with his bear
around 1912, matched by one of the present landlady with her dog in a
similar pose.
An introduction explains Pinner’s development from an important
settlement, with a church and fair, within the Archbishop of Canterbury’s
Manor of Harrow in medieval times, to a leafy Metroland suburb in our
own. Informative captions supply details of the various estates and tell us
something of the lives of the rural population.
Eileen M. Bowlt
****************
11
Harefield Through Time, by Geoffrey Hewlett (2013), Amberley
Publishing, 96pp, £14.99, ISBN 978 1 4456 0727 6
Geoffrey Hewlett has written a very compact history, from the earliest
times, which is then amplified by five illustrated walks around Harefield.
By-passed by systems of modern transport, Harefield remained a real
village until after World War Two. The river and canal, which kept
Harefield surprisingly industrialised until the early 20th
century, are now
important to its leisure activities. A strong link with Australia was forged
during World War One, and the continuing local celebration of this is
well brought out.
This book does not follow the usual format of Amberley’s ‘Through
Time’ series, - a sequence of loosely paired pictures, one old, the other
more recent, and in colour, with a concise historical introduction, and
depending heavily upon the captions for most of the information.
Here, the illustrations, though plentiful, take second place, and are
smaller than usual (the maps are too small to be of use except for the clear
and coloured outline of the walks). They are not always sufficiently
captioned. One wonders sometimes which building is referred to. Is the
interesting row of brickworkers’ cottages still there? And for some
pictures we are given no detail beyond the location. Read it primarily as a
history.
Patricia A Clarke
****************
London 1100-1600: the Archaeology of a Capital City, by John
Schofield (2011), paperback edition, is being offered once more at a 25%
discount. Orders may be placed online at www.eqinoxpub.com. Enter the
code LONDON (in capitals) at the checkout when prompted and your
order will be discounted from £25 to £18.75.
CONFERENCES AND COURSES
The City Lit
Archaeology Courses
Non-accredited archaeology courses for the Winter and Spring terms are now
available. For further information visit the City Lit website, www.citylit.ac.uk, or
contact Humanities on 020 7492 2652.
14 January - 1 April 2014
Archaeology: Key Archaeological Sites of Great Britain
Course code: HAY02. Tuesdays, 10.30am-12.30pm
Explore archaeological case studies from the Stone Age to the recent British past.
12
29 April – 1July 2014
Archaeology of London
Course code: HAY03. Tuesdays, 10.30am-12.30pm
Explore the archaeology and history of London through class-based sessions and
fieldtrips.
7 June 2014
The Medieval port of London 1200 – 1500
****************
Museum of London
Accredited Ten-Week Adult Courses
For more information about costs and how to enrol call 020 7631 6316; email:
[email protected] or see the Museum of London website:
www.museumoflondon.org.uk/London-Wall/Whats-on/Adult-courses
13 January – 24 March (spring term) and 28 April – 7 July 2014 (summer term)
Anglo-Norman London
This course covers the history of London during and after the Norman Conquest.
Course codes: FFH1325H4ACB (spring) and FFH1325H4BCB (summer) CB (CATS
points: 15; Level 4). Timings: Mondays, 6.30-8.30 pm. Location: Museum of London,
in partnership with Birkbeck College. Advanced booking required. Cost: variable
from £175.
28 April – 14 July 2014
Everyday Life in Medieval London 1000-1500 AD
Course code: FFHI174H4ACB CE (CATS points: 15; Level 4). Timings: Mondays,
6.30-8.30pm. Location: Museum of London, in partnership with Birkbeck College.
Advanced booking required. Cost: variable from £175. To enrol, visit the Birkbeck
website: www.bbk.ac.uk
LECTURES AND EVENTS
British Archaeological Association
Lecture Series 2014
Meetings are held at 5pm in the rooms of the Society of Antiquaries of London,
Burlington House, Piccadilly, London W1V 0HS. Tea will be served at 4.30pm. Non-
members are welcome to attend occasional lectures but are asked to make themselves
known to the Hon. Director on arrival and to sign the visitors’ book.
2 January 2014
‘The Labour of a Thousand Ants’: Gerard Baldwin Brown and the Conservation
Movement in Britain, Malcolm A Cooper
5 February 2014
The Romanesque Portal as Performance, Professor Manual Castineriras
5 March 2014
Late Medieval Beguinages in the Low Countries: A ‘Poor’ Architecture for
Semi-Religious Women, Thomas Coomans
13
2 April 2014
The Staffordshire Hoard Project: the Current State of Knowledge, Chris Fern
****************
Church Monuments Society
Saturday 10 May 2014
An Excursion to Hertfordshire and Middlesex
The excursion will start and finish at Radlett Station (10am-5.30pm). Visits will be
made to: All Saints, Kings Langley; St Lawrence, Abbots Langley; The Church of the
Ascension, Bedmond; St Lawrence, Little Stanmore; St John the Evangelist, Great
Stanmore and St John the Baptist, Aldenham. The fee for the day is £30 for CMS
members and £35 for non-members. Further details and an application form are
available on www.churchmonumentssociety.org website.
****************
Institute of Archaeology & British Museum
Medieval Seminar Series
All meetings are held at the Institute of Archaeology, Gordon Square, Room 612 at
5.30pm. Further information from Martin Locker: [email protected]
21 January 2014
Anglo-Saxon Graves and Grave-goods of the 6th
and 7th
Centuries – a New
Chronology and its Implications, Dr Alex Baliss, Professor John Hines, Professor
Chris Scull
4 February 2014
Carolingian Brooch Fashions and the Construction of Social Identities in Late
Anglo-Saxon England, Rosie Weetch
4 March 2014
Aqueducts and Water Supply in the Post-Roman Towns of Spain, Javier Martinez
Jimenez
6 May 2014
Runestone Images and Visual Communication in Viking Age Scandinavia, Dr
Marjolein Stern
4 June 2014
Lecture to be confirmed, Professor Wendy Davies
****************
London Society for Medieval Studies
Meetings are in the Torrington Room 104, Senate House, 1st floor, 7pm-8.15pm.
Visitors are welcome. Contact the Secretary, Sarah Waidler, at [email protected], to
be added to the mailing list and see our website at
www.history.ac.uk/events/seminars/130.
21 January 2014
Speaker tbc
4 February 2014
The Classic Versus the Bible: Theodolus’s Eclogues in French, Tony Hunt
14
18 February 2014
Old Icelandic, Richard North
4 March 2014
Medieval Spanish, Rosa Vidal Doval
18 March 2014
Script Imitation: the Shock of the Old, Julia Crick
EXHIBITIONS
Museum of London
The Cheapside Hoard: London’s Lost Jewels
11 October 2013 – 27 April 2014
This major new exhibition investigates the secrets of the Cheapside Hoard. The
extraordinary and priceless treasure of late 16th
and early 17th
-century jewels and
gemstones – displayed in its entirety for the first time in over a century – was
discovered in 1912, buried in a cellar on Cheapside in the City of London. Through
new research and state-of-the-art technology, the exhibition showcases the wealth of
insights the Hoard offers on Elizabethan and Jacobean London – as a centre of
craftsmanship and conspicuous consumption, at the crossroads of the Old and New
Worlds. It also explores the mysteries that remain, lost among the cataclysmic events
of the mid-17th century: who owned the Hoard, when and why was it hidden, and
why was it never reclaimed?
See more at: http://www.museumoflondon.org.uk/london-wall/whats-on/exhibitions-
displays/cheapside-hoard-londons-lost-jewels
AFFILIATED SOCIETY MEETINGS
Acton History Group
Events on the 2nd
Wednesday in the month at 7.30pm in St Mary’s Church Hall,
admission £2. Contact Secretary David Knights, 30 Highland Avenue, Acton W3 6EU
(020 8992 8698); email: [email protected]; website: www.actonhistory.co.uk
8 January 2014
Acton High School, Past and Present, Maureen Colledge and Guy Fiegehen
12 February 2014
London’s Lost Rivers Including the Stanford and Bollo Brooks, Stephen Mears
12 March 2014
Southall Manor House and Martinware Pottery, George Twyman
22 March 2014
Walk through East Acton Estate, Phil Portwood (venue and time to be announced)
Barnes and Mortlake History Society
Meetings are held at the Sheen Lane Centre, Sheen Lane, London SW14 8LP at 8pm.
The meetings are free for members (£2 for visitors). For further details please contact
the Hon. Secretary on 0208 878 3756 or visit us at www.barnes-history.org.uk.
15
16 January 2014
The City Livery Companies, James Loch
8 February 2014
Origins of the Barnes Workhouse Find, Miranda Ibbetson (meeting to be held at the
hall of Barnes Methodist Church, Station Road, London SW13 0NH, 2.30pm)
20 February 2014
The Buildings of Richmond Park, Max Lancaster
20 March 2014
The History of Fulham Palace, Keith Whitehouse
10 April 2014
The History of Hampton Court Palace, Suzannah Lipscomb
Barnet and District Local History Society
All meetings are held in Church House, Wood Street, Barnet at 3pm on Mondays
(opposite the Museum). Contact Barnet Museum, 31 Wood Street, Barnet EN5 4BE
(020 8440 8066) or visit: www.barnetmuseum.co.uk for more information.
Bexley Archaeological Group
All meetings are held at Bexley and Sidcup Conservative Club, 19 Station Road,
Sidcup, Kent and excavations are carried out at the weekends (Mar-Nov). For further
information contact the Chairman, Mr Martin Baker, 24 Valliers Wood Road, Sidcup,
Kent DA15 8BG (020 8300 1752); email: [email protected]; website:
www.bag.org.uk
Brentford and Chiswick Local History Society
The society meets at the Chiswick Memorial Club, Afton House, Bourne Place,
Chiswick W4, starting at 7.30pm, on the 3rd
Monday in the month, from September to
May inclusive. For further information please contact the Hon. Secretary, Tess
Powell, 7 Dale Street, London W4 2BJ or visit: www.brentfordandchiswicklhs.org.uk
Camden History Society
The society normally meets at 7.30pm on the 3rd
Thursday of each month, except
August. Venues vary; non-members welcome (£1). For further information please
contact the Hon. Secretary, Mrs Jane Ramsay (020 7586 4436) or visit:
www.camdenhistorysociety.org
16 January 2014
The Walbrook and its Tributaries, Stephen Myers (Local Studies Library, Holborn
Library, 32-38 Theobalds Road WC1X 8PY)
20 February 2014
Primose Hill, the History of a London Hill, Martin Sheppard (Burgh House, New
End Square, London NW3 1LT)
20 March 2014
Who Lies in Highgate Cemetery?, Joint meeting with Friends of Highgate
Cemetery, CHS members (Highgate Society, 10A South Grove, Highgate, N6 6BS)
16
13 April 2014
‘The Story of Belsize‘, Part II, David Pearcy (Burgh House)
Chadwell Heath Historical Society
Meetings are held at 7.30pm on the 3rd
Wednesday of every month from September to
June. All meetings are held at Wangey Road Chapel, Wangey Road, Chadwell Heath,
starting at 7.30pm. Enquiries to 020 8590 4659 or 020 8597 1225; email:
City of London Archaeological Society
The society’s meetings are held at St Olave’s Parish Hall, Mark Lane EC3R. Doors
open at 6.30pm for a 7pm start. Light refreshments are available after the lecture.
Non-members’ admission: £2 (please sign the visitors’ book). For further details,
visit: www.colas.org.uk; email: [email protected]; text/voicemail: 07964694128.
17 January 2014
Archaeological Investigations at Kings Cross Goods Yard, Rebecca Haslam
21 February 2014
Art and Archaeology, Roy Stephenson
21 March 2014
Coins in Roman Britain and What They Tell Us – have you a coin from Roman
London, if so bring it along, Ian Franklin
25 April 2014
Lions on Kumulua: Excavation of the Early Bronze Age and Iron Age Periods at
Tell Tayinat, Hatay, Turkey, Dr Fiona Haughey
16 May 2014
The Kings Yard: Archaeological Investigations at Convoys Wharf, Duncan
Hawkins
20 June 2014
Lecture to be confirmed
Cuffley Industrial Heritage Society
The Society meets at Northaw Village Hall, 5 Northaw Road West, Northaw,
Hertfordshire EN6 4NW, near Potters Bar and Cuffley. Talks start at 8pm (doors
open7.30pm). Talks are free to members (£3 for visitors). For more information,
contact David Freeman, 18 Homewood Avenue, Cuffley, Herts, EN6 4OG (01707
875481); email: [email protected]
The Docklands History Group
Meetings will be held on the 1st Wednesday of every month in Museum of London
Docklands, No 1 Warehouse, West India Quay, Hertsmere Road, London E14 4AL, at
5.30 for 6pm (£2 for visitors). For further information and membership details, please
visit www.docklandshistorygroup.org.uk
17
Edmonton Hundred Historical Society
Talks are free to members (£1 for visitors), and are held at Jubilee Hall, 2 Parsonage
Lane, Enfield; at the Charity School Hall, Church Street, Edmonton N9 and at Bruce
Castle, Lordship Lane, Tottenham N17. Further details from Enfield Local Studies
Centre & Archive, Thomas Hardy House, 39 London Road, Enfield EN2 6DS (020
8379 2724); email: [email protected]; website: http://n21.net/edmonton-
hundred-historical-society.html
Enfield Archaeological Society
Meetings are held at the Jubilee Hall, junction of Chase Side and Parsonage Lane,
Enfield, starting at 8pm (doors open at 7.30pm). Visitors: £1 per person. For further
information please contact Ms Val Mundy, 88 Gordon Hill, Enfield, EN2 0QS. Email
[email protected], www.enfarchsoc.org
Friends of Bruce Castle Museum and Park
Evening talks are last Wednesday of the month, 7pm for 7.30pm start. Munch and
Listen talks are on the 4th
Monday of the month, 12pm for 12.15pm start. Talks are
free and open to all (tea/coffee is available for a small charge). All meetings are held
at Bruce Castle Museum, Lordship Lane, Tottenham, N17 8NU. Details of the
programme are available from www.haringey.gov.uk/brucecastlemuseum or the
FoBC Secretary at Bruce Castle Museum (020 8808 8772). Car park on site.
Friern Barnet and District Local History Society
Meetings are held in St John’s Church Hall, next to Whetstone Police Station, in
Friern Barnet Lane N20, normally on the last Wednesday of the month, starting at 8
pm, free refreshments from 7:45 pm. Non-members are welcome (£2). For further
details, see, www.friernbarnethistory.org.uk or contact David Berguer (0208 368
8314), email: [email protected]
22 January 2014
Postcards of the Easter Rising, Edward Margiotta
26 February 2014
The Bayeux Tapestry, John Neal
26 March 2014
The Turin Shroud, Colin Barratt
23 April 2014
A View of the New River, Rachael Macdonald
28 May 2014
John Donovan Memorial Lecture: Live in the Big Company, Dr Stan Gilks
25 June 2014
The Foundling Hospital of Barnet, Yvonne Tomlinson
Greenwich Historical Society
Meetings are held at 7.30pm (doors open 7.15pm) on the 4th
Wednesday of the month
at Blackheath High School, Vanbrugh Park, Blackheath SE3 7AG. Non-members
18
welcome (donation of £3 per person). Enquiries: 020 8858 0317 or visit
www.ghsoc.co.uk
Greenwich Industrial History Society Meetings are held at The Old Bakehouse, Bennett Park, SE3. This is a small theatre in
the back of the Age Exchange Shop – which is in The Village opposite Blackheath
Station. There is no on-site parking – please do not park outside the Bakehouse, but
use the car park behind the station. Meetings start at 7.30 and non members are
charged £1. Information [email protected], 24 Humber Road, SE3.
Membership Steve Daly, [email protected].
Hayes and Harlington Local History Society
Most meetings are held at Botwell Green Library, Leisure Centre, East Avenue,
Hayes UB3 3HW at 7.30pm. The library closes to the public at 7pm and you are
advised to arrive by 7@25 for admittance and guidance to the first floor meeting room
Non-members are welcome. Further information from Mr Robin Brown, 107
Wentworth Crescent, Hayes, Middlesex UB3 1NP (020 8848 7959); email:
Hendon & District Archaeological Society
Lectures start 8pm in the Drawing Room, Avenue House, 17 East End Road, Finchley
N3 3QE. Buses 82, 125, 143, 326 & 460 pass close by, and it is five to ten minutes’
walk from Finchley Central Station (Northern Line). Non-members welcome (£1.00).
Tea/coffee and biscuits follow the talk. For further information, see the website:
www.hadas.org.uk
14 January 2014
The Naval Graveyards of Greenwich, Malcolm Godfrey
11 February 2014
To be announced
11 March 2014
The Sandridge Coin Hoard, David Thorold
8 April 2014
Restoring House Mill, Brian James-Strong
Hornsey Historical Society
Lecture meetings are held on the 2nd
Wednesday of every month at the Union Church
Hall, corner of Ferme Park Road and Weston Park, starting at 8pm. A donation of
£1.50 is requested from non-members. Refreshments are available from 7:40 pm. The
doors close at 8:00 pm and latecomers are not admitted. For further information
please ring The Old Schoolhouse (020 8348 8429); write to the Society at 136
Tottenham Lane N8 7EL; website: www.hornseyhistorical.org.uk
8 January 2014
Fight the Good Fight: The Battle for the Survival of the Muswell Hill Schools,
Janet Owen
12 February 2014
19
A View of the New River: 400 Years of Fresh Water for London, Rachael
Macdonald
12 March 2014
She Dared to be a Doctor: The Story of Elizabeth Garrett Anderson, Eleri
Rowlands
9 April 2014
Returning to Dickens’ A Christmas Carol, Dr. Tony Williams
14 May 2014
Treasures and the Tower of London, Garry Wykes
11 June 2014
A Virtual Tour of E J Lovegrove’s Late 19th-Century Estate, Jennifer Bell and
Lesley Ramm
Hounslow & District History Society
Meetings are held on Tuesdays at the United Reformed Church Hall, Chapel Road,
Hounslow, starting at 8pm, non-members £1.50. For further details contact Andrea
Cameron (0208 570 4264) or Liz Mammatt (020 3302 4036).
28 January 2014
Breweries Connected with the London Borough of Hounslow, James Marshall
25 February 2014
Victorian Millionaires and their Riverside Mansions, Keith Parry
25 March 2014
Jonathan Carr’s Bedford Park, Dr David Budworth MBE
29 April 2014
Brentford Old and New, Andrea Cameron
Islington Archaeology and History Society
Meetings are held at 8pm at Islington Town Hall, Upper Street N1. A donation of £1
is requested from non-members. Enquiries: 020 7833 1541; website: www.iahs.org.uk
Kingston upon Thames Archaeological Society
Meetings are held at 8pm at Surbiton Library Halls Ewell Road, Surbiton. Visitors
will be asked for a donation of £2 towards expenses. Enquiries to Hon Secretary
KUTAS, 21 Duffins Orchard, Brox Road, Ottershaw, Surrey, KT16 0LP, email
k[email protected], website: www.kingstonarchaeology.org
Lewisham Local History Society
Meetings are held at the Methodist Church Hall, Albion Way SE13 6BT, starting at
7:45 unless otherwise stated. Visitors welcomed, donation of £1 invited. For further
information please contact Gordon Dennington, 62 Park Hill Road, Bromley BR2
0LF; email:G[email protected]; website: www.lewishamhistory.org.uk
20
Leyton and Leytonstone Historical Society
Meetings are held at Leyton Sixth Form College, Essex Road, Leyton E10 6EQ and at
St John’s Church Hall, E11 1HH, corner of Leytonstone High Road and Church Lane.
For further details please contact Maureen Measure, Secretary, L&LHS (020 8558
5491); email: [email protected]; website: www.leytonhistorysociety.org.uk
London Natural History Society
Indoor meetings usually consist of talks, slide shows or discussions. Most indoor
meetings are held at Camley Street Natural Park, Camley Street, London NW1 0PW.
Visitors are welcome. For further information visit: www.lnhs.org.uk/program.htm
Merton Historical Society
Meetings are held monthly from October until April, on Saturday afternoons. For
further information please contact the Honorary Secretary, Mrs Rosemary Turner, 27
Burley Close, London SW16 4QQ; email: [email protected];
website: www.mertonhistoricalsociety.org.uk
Orpington & District Archaeological Society
Meetings are held in The Priory, Church Hill, Orpington, on Wednesdays from 8pm.
Non-members are welcome to attend, space permitting. For further information please
contact Michael Meekums or Janet Clayton (020 8302 1572); website:
www.odas.org.uk.
5 February 2014
The Repair of Windmills and Watermills, Gaelle Jolley
5 March 2014
The Green Man, Imogen Corrigan
2 April 2014
Excavations at Eynsford, Dr Brian Philp
7 May 2014
An East End Opportunity: Insights from a Victorian Pawnbroker’s Burial
Ground in Bethnal Green, Dr Rachel Ives
4 June 2014
Community Dig of the Roman Road, Newham and other ‘Discoveries’, Paul
Jardine-Rose
Pinner Local History Society
All meetings start at 8pm. Main meetings take place in the Village Hall, Pinner.
Visitors are welcome for a donation of £2. For further information please contact Mrs
Sheila Cole, 40 Cambridge Road, North Harrow, Middlesex HA2 7LD (020 8866
3972); website: www.pinnerlhs.freeserve.co.uk
9 January 2014
Wren’s St Pauls at 300, Vivien Kermath
21
6 February 2014
The Underground at War, David Burnell
6 March 2014
Research Group Presentation
3 April 2014
Celebrating Shakespeare: How Anniversaries of Shakespeare’s Birth and Death
Have Been Marked, Richard Faulkes
22 May 2014
Followed by Frustrated Communication: a UK Charity, David Bays
Potters Bar and District Historical Society
Meetings are held at the Sixty Plus Room, Wyllyotts Centre, starting at 8pm prompt.
Vistors are welcome (admission £1). For further details please contact Sarah Bulling
[email protected]; websites: www.pottersbar.org/historicalsociety/index.htm
and https://www.facebook.com/pages/Potters-Bar-Museum/152855514809811.
28 March 2014
Samuel Ryder, Seedsman, Golfer and Friend of St Albans, John Cox
31 January 2014
Cromer: the Last of Hertfordshire’s Windmills, Robin Webb
25 February 2014
The Bayeux Tapestry – a Play in Three Acts, Gary Fisher
29 May 2014
Thomas Coram and Barnet’s Foundling Hospital, Yvonne Tomlinson
Richmond Archaeological Society
Meetings take place on Friday nights at Vestry Hall, 21 Paradise Road, Richmond,
commencing at 8pm. For further information please email
rihmondarch[email protected]; website: www.richmondarchaeology.org.uk
14 February 2014
The Origin of our Species, Professor Chris Springer
14 March 2014
The Tudor Mint at the Tower of London, Justine Bayley
11 April 2014
Roman Brooches Found in London and its Hinterland, Frank Pemberton
Richmond Local History Society
All meetings are held at Duke Street Baptist Church, Richmond, at 8pm (coffee from
7.30pm). Visitors: £2. Further information from the Secretary, Elizabeth Velluet (020
8891 3825); email: [email protected]; website: www.richmondhistory.org.uk
13 January 2014
Sir Joshua Reynolds and His House on Richmond Hill, Catherine Parry-Wingfield
22
10 February 2014
Ham and Petersham: a Visual History, Sir David Williams
10 March 2014
St Margaret’s and the Impact of the Building of Twickenham Bridge and The
Great Chertsey Road, Paul Velluet
14 April 2014
Spencer Gore (d. 1914) and His Work in Richmond, Helena Bonett
Rotherhithe and Bermondsey Local History Society
Unless otherwise stated, meetings take place at the Time & Talents Centre, The Old
Mortuary, St Marychurch Street, Rotherhithe and begin at 7.45pm. Non-members
welcome for a donation of £2. For more information visit www.rbhistory.org.uk
Ruislip, Northwood and Eastcote Local History Society
Meetings are held on Mondays at 8.15pm at St Martin’s Church Hall, High Street,
Ruislip. Visitors are welcome (£2 admission charge). For further information, please
contact the Society’s Programme Secretary on 01895 673299.
20 January 2014
A History of Harefield through its Maps, Keith Piercy
17 February 2014
Foreshore Archaeology and the Blitz, Gustav Milne
17 March 2014
‘There’s Nothing Like Dissecting to Give You a Appetite‘ – Dickens, Kevin
Brown
28 April 2014
The Royal Ordnance Factory at Hayes, Nick Holder
Southgate District Civic Trust
The Trust covers Southgate, New Southgate, Cockfosters, Palmers Green, Winchmore
Hill and Hadley Wood. Open Meetings are held twice a year at the Walker Hall,
Waterfall Road, Southgate, and Local History meetings are held five times a year at
the Friends Meeting House, Church Hill, Winchmore Hill. Non-members are
welcome. For further information, contact Colin Barratt (020 8882 2246); email
[email protected] or visit www.southgatedistrictcivictrust.co.uk
Southwark and Lambeth Archaeological Society
All lectures are held on Tuesday evenings at 7.30pm at The Housing Co-Op Hall, 106
The Cut, opposite the Old Vic (£1 for visitors). Light refreshments are served at 7pm.
For further details please contact Richard Buchanan, 79 Ashridge Crescent, Shooter’s
Hill, London SE18 3EA. For enquires please call 020 8764 8314.
14 January 2014
A Forgotten Treasure of Walworth – the Royal Surrey Zoological Gardens,
Stephen Humphrey
23
11 February 2014
Excavations at the Churchyard of St Mary Newington, Alexis Haslam
11 March 2014
Recent Local Archaeological and Historical Work, various speakers
8 April 2014
The Urbanisation of South London, Len Reilly
Spelthorne Archaeology and Local History Group
Unless otherwise stated, all meetings take place at the Methodist Church, Thames
Street, Staines and begin at 8pm. Members free, non members welcome (£2 please).
For further details please contact Nick Pollard (01932 564585); email:
nick.polla[email protected]; website: www.spelthornemuseum.org.uk
Stanmore & Harrow Historical Society
Meetings are held at the Wealdstone Baptist Church, High Road, Wealdstone, at 8pm
on the 1st Wednesday of each month (visitors welcome at a charge of £1). For further
information please contact The Secretary, [email protected];
www.stanmore-harrow-historical.org.uk
15 January 2014
RAF Hendon Museum, David Keen
5 February 2014
More Bygones, Jeff Nichols
5 March 2014
Three Women of Pinner, Pat Clarke
2 April 2014
The Secret East End, Diane Bernstein
Sunbury and Shepperton Local History Society
The Society meets at 8pm on the 2nd
Tuesday of the month from October to May in
the Theatre at Halliford School, Russell Road, Shepperton. The September meeting is
held in Sunbury. Non-members are welcome (£2). Any queries should be addressed to
‘Contact Us’ function of the Society’s website: www.sslhs.org.uk/?page_id=18.
21 January 2014
Turner and The Thames Valley, Catherine Parry-Wingfield
25 February 2014
Old Photos of Sunbury and Shepperton
18 March 2014
Littleton History, Peter Maynard
22 April 2014
Cameras and Corsets: dating old photos, Jane Lewis
24
Borough of Twickenham Local History Society
Lectures are held at St Mary’s Church Hall, Church Street, Twickenham, at 8pm on
the first Monday of each month from October to June. Guests are welcome (there is a
small charge). For further information please contact the Secretary, Mr Rosemary
McGlashon (020 8977 5671) or visit our website http://www.botlhs.co.uk
3 February 2014
Suffragettes in Surrey, Irene Cockroft
3 March 2014
The Hampton Wick Train Crash 1888, David Turner
7 April 2014
Twickenham Pubs Part II, Ken Lea
12 May 2014
Caleb Whitefoord: the Man Who Made Peace with America, Dr David Allen
Uxbridge Local History and Archives Society
All meetings take place at Christ Church, Redford Way (off Belmont Road),
Uxbridge, starting at 7.30pm. For further information please contact Mr K.R. Pearce,
29 Norton Road, Uxbridge UB8 2PT; website: www.eddiethecomputer.co.uk/history
21 January 2014
The Great Barn at Harmonsworth, Justine Bayley
18 February 2014
Windsor Castle, Leslie Grout
18 March 2014
Vanished Pubs of Uxbridge, Tony Mitchell
15 April 2014
Old Photographs of Uxbridge
Walthamstow Historical Society Meetings are held on Thursdays at 7.30pm at the Trinity United Reformed Church, 55
Orford Road, London E17 9QU. Meetings are free to members, visitors are charged
£1.50. Website: walthamstowhistoricalsociety.org.uk
23 January 2014
Tower Hamlets – An Ever Changing Borough, Grahame Williams
13 February 2014
The Hugenot Silk Weavers of Spitalfields, Sue Jackson
13 March 2014
The Docklands Light Railway, Dr Peter Spence
Wandsworth Historical Society
Meetings held at the Friends’ Meeting House, Wandsworth High Street (opposite
Town Hall) on the last Friday of the month at 8pm until 9.15pm (followed by tea and
biscuits). For more information, visit the website: www.wandsworthhistory.org.uk
25
31 January 2014
New Discoveries from the Mithras Temple Site: the Archaeology of
Bucklersbury House/Bloomberg Place, Michael Tetreau and Jessica Bryan
28 February 2014
History talk to be announced
28 March 2014
Archaeology talk to be announced
25 April 2014
History talk to be announced
30 May 2014
Kings Cross Goods Yard: an Historical and Archaeological Approach, Rebecca
Haslam
27 June 2014
Streatham’s History Through its Built Environment, Brian Bloice
Wembley History Society
Meetings are usually held on the third Friday of each month at 7:30 pm. Meetings are
held at English Martyrs’ Church Hall, Chalkhill Road (top of Blackbird Hill, not the
Wembley Park Station end), Wembley, Middx, HA9 9EW. Car park at rear and buses
83, 182, 245, 297 & 302 stop nearby. Visitors are welcome. Enquiries: Hon Sec:
Linda Theobald (020 8200 0211); email [email protected]
West Drayton & District Local History Society
Meetings are held in St Martin’s Church Hall, Church Road, West Drayton, starting at
7.30pm. For further information please contact Cyril Wroth (Programme Secretary),
15 Brooklyn Way, West Drayton UB7 7PD (01895 854597) or website:
http://westdraytonlocalhistory.com
West Essex Archaeological Group
Meetings are held on the 2nd
Monday of the month in the Sixth Form Block,
Woodford County High School, High Road, Woodfood Green at 7.45pm. New
members welcome. For further information, please contact Anne Stacey, 20B Grove
Hill, South Woodford E18 2JG (020 8989 9294); www.weag.org.uk
10 February 2014
From Log Boat to Warrior: the Development of the Wooden Vessel in Northern
Europe, Elliott Wragg
10 March 2014
Presidential Address, Harvey Sheldon
14 April 2014
Local Military Archaeology, Guy Taylor
26
12 May 2014
Ice Age Art, Dr Jill Cook
9 June 2014
Roman Invasion: What It Did to Britain, Ian Leins
Willesden Local History Society
The Society meets on Wednesdays from September to June in St Mungo’s Pound
Lane Centre, 115 Pound Lane, NW10 2HU, opposite the Bus Garage. For further
information please contact the Secretary, Margaret Pratt, 51 West Ella Road, London
NW10 9PT (020 8965 7230); website: www.willesden-local-history.co.uk
15 January 2014
The Changing Face of Justice in Willesden, Elsie Points JP
19 February 2014
Making Music in Kilburn and Willesden, Dick Weindling
19 March 2014
The Beauty of Gothic Architecture in Willesden, Julienne McClean
16 April 2014
Willesden and St Paul’s Cathedral, Fr Andrew Hammond
21 May 2014
40 Years of Willesden History, Irina Porter
The LAMAS Newsletter is printed by Catford Print Centre, P.O. Box 563, Catford,
London SE6 4PY (tel 020 8695 0101; 020 8695 0566)
27
London and Middlesex Archaeological Society
Museum of London, London Wall, London EC2Y 5HN
Telephone: 020 7410 2228 Fax: 0870 444 3853
President Professor Martin Biddle
19 Hamilton Road, Oxford OX2 7PY
Chair of Council Laura Schaaf (020 7263 5441)
15 B Alexander Road, London N19 3PF
Honorary Secretary
Karen Thomas (020 7410 2228)
[email protected] c/o Museum of London Archaeology Service
46 Eagle Wharf Road, London N1 7ED
Honorary Treasurer
Martin Williams (020 7228 8261)
[email protected] 606 Lumiere Apartments, St John’s Hill,
London SW11 1AD
Honorary Subscriptions and Membership
Secretary
Patricia Clarke (020 8866 1677)
22 Malpas Drive, Pinner Middlesex HA5 1DQ
Acting Honorary Editors, Newsletter Colin Bowlt and Laura Schaaf (contact Laura
Schaaf, see above)
Honorary Director of Lecture Meetings
Cheryl Smith (020 7527 7971) [email protected]
Islington Head of Heritage
Honorary Publications Assistant
Karen Thomas (020 7410 2228) [email protected]
c/o Museum of London Archaeology Service
46 Eagle Wharf Road, London N1 7ED
Production Editor, Transactions
Lynn Pitts (01926 512366)
5 Whitehead Drive, Kenilworth, Warwickshire CV8 2TP
Honorary Librarian
Sally Brooks (020 7814 5588)
Museum of London
Archaeological Research Committee
Secretary
Jon Cotton (020 8549 3167)
58 Grove Lane, Kingston upon Thames KT1 2SR
Greater London Local History Committee
Chair
Eileen Bowlt (01895 638060)
7 Croft Gardens, Ruislip Middlesex HA4 8EY
Historic Buildings and Conservation
Committee Chair Jon M. Finney
65 Carpenders Avenue, Carpenders Park, Herts WD19 5BP
Publications Committee Chair & Reviews
Editor, Transactions John Schofield (0208 741 3573)
2 Carthew Villas, London W6 0BS