Walthamstow Folk
Walthamstow Folk
Every Sunday from 7:30pm
The Plough Inn, london E17
Tel.07740 612 607

 


Archive for the ‘Waltham Forest’ Category

Sunday 13th – William Morris Hall

Saturday, December 5th, 2009

Here’s a heads up about an event happening on Sunday afternoon (the 13th December).

We’ll be providing a scratch band so if you fancy bringing an instrument and joining in let me know.

Appropriately enough our guest that night is a huge admirer of William Morris and one of the best songwriters in the world – the fabulous Leon Rosselson

A centenary celebration for a building

The William Morris Hall

Somers Road E17

Sunday 13 December
Assemble at 2 pm
Music and words,
then walk to Ye Olde Rose and Crown for more celebration

William Morris

Tuppence a brick (old money)

On 13 December 1909 artist and socialist Walter Crane opened the William Morris Hall: bringing to joyous conclusion six years of fundraising, preparation and hard voluntary labour.

In 1903 the brothers Ben and Charles Buck started the idea of a home for the socialist, radical and trade union people of Walthamstow. Funded by workers buying a brick for 2d (old money), sponsored bike rides and social events, the collective organisations of the Social Democratic Federation, Walthamstow Socialist League, the William Morris Club, the Clarion Cyclists, the trades council, anarchists, suffragettes and many more, the hall was built by volunteer craftsmen on Sunday mornings on squatted land.

The William Morris Hall for the 30 years was the centre of political and cultural life in the town. Amongst the many speakers who came over the years were: dock worker’s leader, Ben Tillet, the Countess of Warwick, H M Hyndman, Will Thorne, new Labour MP for West Ham South (1906), Sylvia Pankhurst, George Bernard Shaw, Victor Grayson, lion tamer, adventurer, folk hero, firebrand independent socialist MP and Walthamstow’s own Val McEntee. From day one it housed the Socialist Sunday School, where over a hundred children each week come together in secular fellowship to learn the socialist 10 commandments.

In the early 1920s the William Morris Brass Band and the William Morris Orchestra were formed. One for street marching and open air meetings, the other for concerts and dancing. The Hall had its own choir. In 1923 Charles Buck started a theatre group; performing plays by Ibsen and Shaw.

The building is a now home to the Limes Community and Children’s Centre. The inside has changed but most of the bricks are the same. I want to celebrate it’s 100 years with words and music. The pioneers who campaigned for a fairer, different world did it with verse and song, as well as marches and struggle. Let’s celebrate the building, the Buck brothers and countless others, but most of all let’s celebrate our past into the future.

Please bring banners

A radical walk through Walthamstow

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

Our friend Roger Huddle is conducting one of his famous walks through the radical history of Walthamstow on behalf of the Antiscrap campaign to protect culture in the borough.

It’s on Sunday 13th September starting at St Jame Street Station at 1pm and Roger says he’ll make sure he finishes in plenty of time to get to the sublime Dana & Susan Robinson at the club that evening!

“Guided by Roger Huddle this walk is unashamedly biased towards the radical, the socialist and arty past of Walthamstow – from Industrial syndicalism to the William Morris Orchestra from the Clarion Cyclists to Art Settlements.
Sunday 13 September start at St James Street Station 1pm
Finish at William Morris Gallery approx 4pm depending on weather and fitness.”

A radical walk through Walthamstow

Blackhorse Morris at the Sweeps

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

The Waltham Forest Guardian has a nice piece about our friends the Blackhorse Morris cutting a dash at the Rochester Sweeps festival.

http://www.guardian-series.co.uk/news/wfnews/4346478.WALTHAMSTOW__Morris_dancers_enjoy_sweeps_festival/