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Janet Wright disagreed when council leader Clyde Loakes said Walthamstow needed "a kick up the backside". The kicks came thick and fast as the council slashed gallery and museum opening hours, closed a library, threw out qualified staff, sent books to the incinerator, condemned the one remaining theatre -- and threatened to stud the town with tower blocks. Janet Wright is a local author who wants Waltham Forest council to stop kicking Walthamstow. More to the point, Walthamstow is a wonderful town with an enviable character and community life, well worth defending, and is the star of this blog.
Walthamstow’s photographic society, founded in 1894, isn’t just one of the oldest in the country, it’s also one of the most successful. Its free annual exhibition is on this week at St Mary's Welcome Centre in Walthamstow village: weekday evenings and all day Saturday 1 November.
Why was I up at midnight last week, cutting out fake book covers into shapes that would never fit a book? I was working on “Pulped Fiction”, my contribution to the State of the Borough exhibition, on the E17 Art Trail.
A beautiful listed building has been damaged and is being left to decay, putting the safety of its users at risk. Don’t worry, you may say, the council can order the owners to maintain it. Tough luck, it’s Waltham Forest Council’s own flagship library in Walthamstow town square.
Walthamstow dog track looked like a symbol of the whole town, the day it closed.
Is there anything this council won’t do to avoid consulting the public?
St James Street open-air library could be the most popular spot in Walthamstow for readers this Saturday. The nearest official library, at Walthamstow Central, has been closed since a fire last week. And if you’re going to say that saves the council taking books to the incinerator again -- don’t be so cynical!
Staging open-air shows in England is, as some joker said about second marriages, a triumph of hope over experience.
Would you believe a bunch of actors and music-lovers strolling down Hoe Street one day noticed a pub to let and said, “Hey, let’s do the show right here”? In the finest tradition of stage musicals, that’s pretty much what happened at the Rose & Crown.
What have churches, pubs and cafes got in common with grass verges and the pavement outside closed public buildings? Answer: they’re just some of the spots Walthamstow’s resourceful musicians have found to play in, as venues are closed down or priced out of reach.
The weather may be up and down, but it looks like being a long hot summer for Waltham Forest council. Local people have already held two demonstrations against its anti-Walthamstow policies in the past two weeks. And there are likely to be more ahead.
I love Walthamstow. I love the old Warner terraces and the new houses built on Second World War rubble, the marshes and the forest, the William Morris Gallery and the noisy old market.
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