Read more about Pistachio & Pickle on their website for more info: www.pistachioandpickle.com
Their twitter feed: @PistachioPickle London
Address: 237 Liverpool Road, N1
Their cheese bombs make for a great Christmas gift!
Read more about Pistachio & Pickle on their website for more info: www.pistachioandpickle.com
Their twitter feed: @PistachioPickle London
Address: 237 Liverpool Road, N1
Their cheese bombs make for a great Christmas gift!
30 November 2011 in Food and Drink | Permalink | Comments (0)
I came across your website about Thornhill Square and saw a little mention about the Huntingdon Street bombs in 1940 from . My great great Grandmother, great grand Aunt & either my great great or great great great Great Grandfather (we're still working on that part of the family tree) as well as various other members of my family/family friends also died. I'm working on the whole list - but I have heard stories of the bombing from my granddad who heard them from my great grandmother. I can definately say one of the houses was 55 Huntingdon Street and that my great great Grandmother Annie Hislop did survive only to die later that day (the story goes that the ambulance people nearly dropped her and she died of shock - not too sure if that's true but that's how the family story goes). And unfortunately for my Hislop family members - they had been moved from Lyon Street (in the only house left standing!) to Huntingdon Street - persuaded by my great grand Aunt Emily McEllhatton (nee Hislop)! The family left stayed in Islington (and merged with the Busbys on the marriage of my great grandmother) and the Barnsbury area in general until fairly recently. I could probably ask a bit more about the Huntingdon street bomb when I next see my granddad and uncle (who has the death certificates of some of those who perished)>
I know residents of 55 & 56 were on the Islington Civilian Roll of Honour, and I think someone in 57 was on the list too but I don't remember seeing it when I was searching it. And I know for definite that 7 members of the Graham family, Nellie and Frank Howell, Annie M R Davies plus my great great grandparents Annie & Cornelius Hislop & great grandaunts Violet Hislop & Emily McEllhatton were the members of 55 who didn't survive - so if anyone recognises the story or names - they can check the commonwealth war graves commission. I don't mind if you put these up now, I have the general gist of the story and if I get anything extra from my grandfather or uncle when I go down to see them tomorrow, I will most definitely email you back with any extra details!
Lisa Connell.
19 November 2011 in Thornhill Square facts and history | Permalink | Comments (0)
Hello. I am so excited, having just today find your site. I am the great great grandaughter of Mr George Sydney Smith Williams who built the square and dozens of other streets, and his wife Mary nee Fallover. Please can I see the document from which you found him? Sadly, Mary died in 1850 aged just 30. GSSW was very successful, at some stage (when?) he retired to Hove with his second wife Catherine and younger daughter Frances, where they also brought up their grandson/my grandfather Henry, whose mother Annie had died when Henry was aged just one. At the age of nine, Henry boarded at 'first' school in Hove with Winston Churchill. Henry;s first wife was distantly related to Churchill, so I think that they must have met at Churchill's family home or some such. So you can see that Mr GSS Williams was a very successful Victorian businessman: his children and grandchildren continued to prosper. Sadly, my father, who, like Henry, attended public school and Oxford, turned against all that! While I was still a toddler, he threw away everything that the family had worked for over several hundred years! Mr GSSW secondly 'married' Mary's sister Catherine. (See the Deceased Wife's Sisters' Act. ) As you know from the last paragraph on the history of Thornhill Square, he is the master builder who built the square. Not just that, but he then moved to live in the square with his wife Catherine. Most of his second set of children were born there. I have sent one letter to 32 and 32a Thornhill Square, asking for further information on the house. I hope they pass it to each other and respond to me. Please will you also? I am not clear from where or source what the info about my Mr GS Williams reached you. Do you have some documents that I could see please? I have further info on my family that you might like to know re the building company. For now: number 32 was the company headquarters and my family's home also. My gt gt grandfather built it as it is so that his clients and employees could turn right into the office (now 32 a) and the family could turn left into their home (32). The clients'servants, horses and carriages could use the mews behind (now off Matilda Street).
10 November 2011 in Thornhill Square facts and history | Permalink | Comments (0)
Dear Jennifer
I have just read your web site with great interest. My late mother Kathleen lived at both 19 and then 29 Thornhill Square until her marriage and susbequent move to Scotland in 1947. She was then Kathleen Giltrow and along with her mother May lived at number 29 in a ground floor flat throughout the 30s and 40s. My Grandmother lived on in the Square until about 1970. I really enjoyed the account of life in the Square written by Charles Humphreys as many things he wrote about were similar to stories told to my sister and myself by our mother when recounting her childhood memories. I wonder if they knew each other?
We often spent summer holidays in London alas not in Islington but at our Great Aunt's much larger house in Ealing.
Although my mother lived in Scotland from 1947 until her death at the age of 85 in 2009 her 'home' was always London and in particular Thornhill Square. She loved her life there and although she lived through all the hardships of WW2 she recalled with fondness the community spirit of the householders supporting each other during the Blitz, dancing to the Big Bands at Covent Garden where she met my father ( who was at Sandhurst in 1945), and her beloved job at John Lewis in Oxford Street.
My sister and I visited the Square in 2008 and took many photographs to show our mother who unfortunately wasn't fit enough to accompany us. What a pity we hadn't come across the web site when she was still alive!
Kindest Regards
Gillian Napier
Ayr
Scotland
21 October 2011 in Thornhill Square facts and history | Permalink | Comments (0)
" Those were the days when milk was delivered by horse and cart the milk being dispensed from a churn to your own jug. Bread was delivered by handcart. The coalman came round twice a week, with a horse and cart, humping the sacks off and emptying them down holes in the pavement , which were covered by a cast iron lid, into the cellar. Many other goods were also delivered by horse and cart . Costermongers offering their wares from a barrow, included a seller of shell fish and a cat meat seller both of whom announced their arrival by ringing a hand bell and crying out."
"A corner shop sold provisions in small quantities e.g. a pennyworth of pickles put into your own cup ! Biscuits did not come pre wrapped in packets but were sold loose from large square tins with glass tops. Newspapers cost one penny which was also the price of the lowest tram or bus fare. Streets were lit by gas lamps, a lamplighter came round on his bicycle just before twilight with a long pole which he used to turn on each lamp returning the next morning to turn them off. Undertakers used elegant carriages drawn by plumed black horses."
I seem to have gone on rather but hope it is of interest. Glad to hear the Cally is still lively.
Leslie
PS
10 September 2011 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Message from Natasha Ascott:
If you are looking to get into perfect shape for the summer then you might want to consider joining our personal trainer on Highbury Fields. It is a women only exercise group on Tues (6.15am) and Thurs (6.30am) for one hour. It is a really excellent workout. There are currently four of us and we are hoping for it to be a group of 8. It is £10/ session and great fun. If you would like to get involved then please call or e-mail me on ascott.natasha@gmail.com or 07834 489 343.
13 July 2011 | Permalink | Comments (0)
I have been opening Barnsbury wood as a volunteer since I came to live in the square. This involves me offering up a couple of Saturday afternoons over the summer then, on those afternoons, opening the gate and letting visitors wander about while I sit on a camping chair and read my book. After two hours I check everyone's gone, lock up and go home - feeling better for a few moments of peace. The note below is a friendly request for volunteers, from Louisa Roscoe who is our lovely Nature Conservation Officer. This scheme helps Barnsbury Wood maintain its status as a public nature conservation area. Please respond to her directly.
Best wishes,
Jen
To open the wood to the public on Saturdays 2-4 pm through the summer.
Barnsbury Wood, the beautiful little nature reserve on your doorstep (Crescent Street) is only open to the public on Tuesdays 2-4 pm. For a number of years we have been able to extend this to include Saturday afternoons in the summer. This is only possible with the time and commitment of local residents who volunteer to staff the Saturday opening.
If you are interested please contact us.
Tel 020 7527 4383
Mob 07825098503
Louisa.Roscoe@islington.gov.uk
Louisa Roscoe, Nature Conservation Officer
Full induction provided for new volunteers, refresher for those who have volunteered before if they wish.
-------
And below is a cute little video that I came across on YouTube, filmed in the wood.
18 June 2011 in Barnsbury Wood, local shops and services | Permalink | Comments (0)
What are we being asked and why?
Transcript:
Dear Boys and Girls,
Congratulations on the new library, because it isn't just a library. It is a space ship that will take you to the farthest reaches of the Universe, a time machine that will take you to the far past and the far future, a teacher that knows more than any human being, a friend that will amuse you and console you---and most of all, a gateway, to a better and happier and more useful life.
Signed, 'Isaac Asimov', 1971. Written in an effort to attract as many youngsters to the premises as possible. The original is posted on this excellent blog: Letters of Note )
Now Islington residents are being asked to fill in a questionnaire as part of a consultation on Islington libraries. Councils are closing libraries countrywide, at the moment, In order to save money. Thankfully, Islington Council has pledged not to close any libraries this year, but cost cutting will inevitably mean library closures or reduced library services at some point.
Islington Council will use the consultation to guide/justify their decisions about which libraries/services will go. Therefore if we want to keep our libraries it is important that we each fill in this questionnaire to let our Council know how and when we use our libraries and how we see ourselves using them in the future.
Click here to fill in the form online, or pick up a hard copy from any library in Islington. The deadline for submission is 31 July. Tip: Allow around ten minutes to complete the form online, and to move on through the questions click the 'Next' button at the bottom each page.
A Public meeting
There will also be a public meeting on 21 June at Finsbury Library 7p.m (map below)
15 June 2011 | Permalink | Comments (0)
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