Friday, 30 December 2022

Our December coffee morning


Festive stories – our December coffee morning

Family Christmases, festivities with friends, solo celebrations and scuppered trips... we all had tales to tell and art, theatre and TV recommendations to swap at this month's impromptu (and lovely) café choice Music & Beans Shoreditch.

After coffee, a group of us went on to the Museum of the Home to see its Winter Festival room sets and displays.

Wishing all of our members and friends a happy and healthy New Year. Look out for our next blogpost to see what's coming up in January.

Main group photo by Alison Denning

Friday, 16 December 2022

Our December meeting

Crafts, celebration and chat – our December meeting

On an icy Winter day, we met for a warm evening of crafting, making festive wreaths from a fantastic selection of materials, catching up, swapping stories and discussing the WI resolutions for voting early next year.

And the crushed cork? Well, that was the result of a bottle of bubbly in no hurry to be opened, some teamwork and an idea.

A huge thank you to Sally for the creative fun, and to Heather, Alison and Sally for the refreshments.

Our craft evening was hot on the heels of East End WI serving hot drinks and good cheer at the Tower Hamlets Christmas Tea Dance at Mile End Art Pavilion.

Coffee and Museum of the Home – Friday 30th December 10:30am

Meet at Hoxton Overground station entrance.

We'll find a café for coffee, then visit the Museum of The Home to enjoy its Winter Festival displays.

Wishing all of our members, their families and our communities a lovely festive season.

Tuesday, 13 December 2022

Our December walk








Cranes and boats and planes – our December walk

Our monthly walks take us to all sorts of urban places, wild, watery, green, historic and built. 

This month's walkers have explored Canary Wharf and Docklands, with their gleaming towers, boats, planes flying over from City Airport and clues to the docklands' industrial heyday. 

These pictures (thank you, Bridget and Heather) tell of much to see, everyone has knowledge to share and our walks are a wonderful chance to chat. 

Sunday, 4 December 2022

Coming up in December

 


A ramble, wreath-making and coffee at the museum – what's on in December

A Canary Wharf ramble: Saturday 10th December – meet at 11.00am, at South Quay DLR station

This month, we'll explore Canary Wharf at Christmas. The walk can ramble via Millwall Inner Docks up to Heron Keys and over the water to Canary Wharf, visit the Crossrail Roof Garden (pictured) and take a look at the Elizabeth line. DLR, Jubilee, Elizabeth line and plenty of bus routes

Seasonal wreath-making at our Christmas meeting: Thursday 15th December, St Margaret’s House, 21 Old Ford Rd, Bethnal Green, London E2 9PL – 7 for 7.30pm 

Seasonal wreath making - enjoy a glass of bubbly - some nibbles - and a chance to decorate your own Christmas wreath. If you have any spare “crafty bits” that you think might be suitable to go on the wreaths please bring them along, otherwise all materials supplied

We also plan to discuss this year's WI resolutions. For more information, take a look at the WI website or WI Life magazine.

If you're coming to one of our meetings for the first time, please contact us for 'How to get here' information.

Coffee and Museum of the Home, Kingsland Road, E2: Friday 30th December – Meet at the museum at 10:30am

We'll enjoy the museum's Winter Festival displays and have coffee – café to be confirmed, as the museum's café is currently closed.

Monday, 21 November 2022

November sport


Goal! East End WI goes to the football

Three newbies, a family of football fans and an Arsenal member… 

In an addition to our usual monthly meet-ups, we've had a sporting trip to watch Arsenal women v Manchester United women.  

For those of us new to football matches, there were lots of surprises – the family atmosphere, the applause for good play, the pitch being sprayed at half time, that at women’s matches, fans are not segregated, and the sousaphone (pre-match brass band).

We chanted, we shouted, we laughed, we joined in with a Mexican wave… Manchester United won. But a good time was had by all.

Many thanks to Natasha for organising.

Friday, 18 November 2022

Our November talk



What is cabaret?

This month, Canadian actor, singer and voiceover artist Debbie Bridge gave us the fascinating and entertaining story of cabaret, from its origins to today.

Debbie took us through the difference between cabaret and music hall, its experimental performance, the mixture of art forms involved, how the small venues were often run by women and how different the styles of cabaret were in Europe and in the speakeasies of the States.

We heard how cabaret became an escape from hard times and a place where people could be themselves.

We saw how the art of posters tells us about how cabaret was presented and about the attitudes of the day.

Laughs were had with Debbie’s wry version of Memories and we heard her operatic voice, in Italian.

We learned how cabaret faded as TV and rock ‘n’ roll grew – then about how it was growing again until the challenges of lockdown.

Looking at modern London, Debbie gave us the inside story on where cabaret still thrives, and the value now of shows in small venues. 

In an evening with chat and questions throughout, we rounded the talk off with a lively Q&A.

A huge thanks to Debbie for an enjoyable talk – and particularly for stepping in with such style at the last minute.

Find out more about Debbie’s work, talks and workshops here.


Monthly Coffee Morning - Friday 25th November 10.30am, Queen Mary Café

81 Mile End Road. E1 4UJ. Part of Queen Mary, University of London, they also welcome all comers. Bus routes 25 and 205, nearest tube Stepney Green on the District line.

Saturday, 12 November 2022

Our November walk


A Spitalfields wander – our November walk

Places of learning, places of worship, the comings and goings of communities, art, façadism, fabrics and reformers... our November walk took us through Spitalfields' layers of history and labyrinth of stories.

Our sociable café stop was at The Buxton.

Many thanks to Heather and Sally for researching this walk and arriving with maps and books at the ready.

Monday, 7 November 2022

Coming up in November

 

Cabaret, exploring Spitalfields and clever coffee... all coming up in November

Saturday November 12th – Monthly Walk  11.00am 

Meet 11.00 outside the Bishopsgate entrance to Liverpool Street station and we will move onto to Spitalfields and its surrounds. Plenty of bus routes and various underground and overground options for travel. Combining routes from Walk East, Tower Hamlets Walk for Health and a lovely little book, On foot in the East End. The route gives a chance for coffee breaks.

Thursday November 17th  Monthly Meeting  St Margaret’s 7.00 for 7.30pm

With a last minute change to the programme as the Co-op are unable to join us for their talk, join us this month to greet Debbie Bridge, actress and voiceover artist who will entertain us with a talk What is cabaret? – cabaret from its origins to today. We will have the usual selection of drinks and nibbles.

Friday 25th November  Monthly meet-up for coffee  10.30am

On the recommendation of one of our members at October’s coffee morning, this month we will meet at Queen Mary Café, 81 Mile End Road. E1 4UJ. Part of Queen Mary, University of London, they also welcome all comers. Bus routes 25 and 205, nearest tube Stepney Green on the District line.

Saturday, 22 October 2022

Our October talk



Our October talk – community cohesion and financial literacy with Pat Clough from Minority Financial Inclusion

Social entrepreneur Pat Clough from Minority Financial Inclusion started her talk by telling us how her own experience of becoming a carer and not knowing where to find help had informed the work she is doing now.

One person pointing her at the local carers’ centre had made all the difference. In turn, Pat wanted other people in minority communities to feel comfortable finding help, telling their GPs that they’re carers and mixing with people from other backgrounds and faiths. In Pat’s community cohesion work, drumming and other arts activities are used as a way to get people talking about each other’s cultures.

Pat also runs financial literacy sessions in schools, often as part of a maths lesson. The sessions build the knowledge, skills and attitude to manage money. The topics that Pat covers include peer pressure, the difference between need and want, budgeting, saving, working and earning. There are meetings with financial institutions too, to encourage them to go in to schools.

A lively Q&A brought our members’ working knowledge, community experiences and family perspectives to the discussion. And there was a deceptively-tricky quiz. 

A big thank-you to Pat for her insightful and informative talk, hello to the two potential new members who came along, and snacks always being a welcoming part of our meetings, thanks also to Heather for the delicious (and photogenic) mini Victoria sponges.


Monthly Coffee Morning

Friday 28th October, 10.30am, Stepney City Farm

The nearest stations to Stepney City Farm are Stepney Green Underground on the District Line, and Limehouse DLR, (both around 10 minutes' walk). Bus 339 stops outside the farm (St Dunstan’s stop) and 309 stops behind the farm (Stepney Green School stop). 

Saturday, 8 October 2022

Our October walk


A Wapping walk through East End history  

Graham Barker from Walk East, who gave our September talk, very kindly offered to lead us on an informal walk from the City to the river. 

London trading history, the Co-operative, the German church, theatres working and lost, Seamen's missions, public art by Hamish Mackie, Gordon Young and Wendy Taylor, street art by Jonesy, words and a memorial garden... it was a walk packed with interest. 

A bonus sight was watching Tower Bridge raised for a party boat, a vintage paddle steamer.

A big East End WI thank-you to Graham. For more walks, visit the Walk East website.

Top picture by kind permission of Graham Barker, who has looked up Jalap, a word in Trading Words, the artwork at our feet – apparently, it is a purgative drug obtained chiefly from the tuberous roots of a Mexican climbing plant. Join the WI; learn stuff!

Monday, 3 October 2022

Coming up in October



Saturday 8th October 
Monthly walk - 11.00am 
Aldgate East to Wapping, with Graham Barker from Walk East
Graham Barker from social enterprise Walk East has kindly offered to guide us on an informal walk this month. Graham entertained us last month with his amazing knowledge of Victorian Bethnal Green so this promises to be a gem of a walk. His suggested route is as follows: walk from Aldgate East to Wapping via Goodman’s Fields, London Dock, St Katharine’s Dock and finishing with a coffee and/or a bite to eat at the Turk’s Head in Wapping. It will be a relaxed walk with a few historical snippets along the way.
Meet outside Aldgate East Station. Once through the ticket barriers, turn left to exit the station. Our meeting point is at the westernmost entrance, at the top end of Leman Street, outside the Aldgate Tower office building. 

Thursday 20th October
Monthly Meeting - 7 for 7.30pm 
Pat Clough from Minority Financial Inclusion
Pat will be telling us about this social enterprise. Minority Financial Inclusion's mission is to help minority groups achieve financial inclusion. They offer training and help to transform the financial services systems in order to alleviate financial disharmony and inequality. Pat plans an informal session with the chance for questions. We will have our usual refreshments available: teas, coffee, fruit teas, some wine and a few nibbles.

Friday 28th October
Monthly Coffee Morning - 10.30am 
Stepney City Farm
The nearest stations to Stepney City Farm are Stepney Green Underground on the District Line, and Limehouse DLR, (both around 10 minutes' walk). Bus 339 stops outside the farm (St Dunstan’s stop) and 309 stops behind the farm (Stepney Green School stop). 

Photos above by kind permission of Graham Barker
Sketch of Stepney City Farm by Lydia Thornley

Thursday, 22 September 2022

Our September meeting and coffee morning



Bethnal Green history, coffee and cake – our September talk and social

For our September meeting, Graham Barker of Walk East brought us some of the shocking, charming and curious stories of the buildings, communities and people of all ages in Bethnal Green. Illustrating with one of his community projects, Victorian Footprints, Graham showed how he had guided participants to focus on an area which we perhaps think we know well (our own knowledge was tested at the outset with a few landmarks of the borough!), and to develop research techniques through newspapers, old maps, photographic records, and some chance discoveries, to find and reveal the unique and the ordinary experiences that make life extraordinary.

We considered what the boundaries of Bethnal are and were; what 'Life on the edge' was like for so many in this populous borough living in multigenerational homes; how philanthropists engaged in building dwellings, hospitals and schools; the many churches and their influence; the slow advance of sanitation and clean water services, and how this all contributed to the shockingly short average life-expectancies of different groups of workers; the entertainment in the music halls. It left us with much to marvel at and change in Bethnal Green to reflect upon. Some things remain constant, however – the picture of parents being called in to explain the absence of their children from school was a poignant glimpse of continuing challenges. 

Some may be tempted to experiment with some local research, perhaps even search the maps ourselves to check out whether our own dwellings featured at any time in the 'vicious' and nearly criminal areas or if they survived away from 'Life on the Edge'! 

Graham generously distributed copies of the 'Victorian Footprints' booklet, so we can follow up so much more in our own time. If you were not able to attend, you will have to ask someone to lend you their copy – they have become like gold dust! He also offered to share with us some recent walks he has prepared, so we look forward to following more of his 'footprints' in some of our monthly walks.

It was a thoroughly enjoyable and engaging evening. Look out for publicity for his future community projects – they are great fun and develop all sorts of research, photography, journalism and editing skills, to create a publication to be proud of.

Also pictured above, our cake for WI day, a national celebration of all things WI, and our September coffee morning at Clarnico Club, in the Olympic Park.

What's up next? Look out for our 'Coming up in October' post to find out.

Friday, 2 September 2022

Coming up in September


Coming up in September

Saturday 10th September, 11.00
Monthly Walk – Mile End Park

Meet by the 'water feature' at the edge of Mile End park, opposite side of the road to the Guardian Angels Church. This will be very much a see who arrives and then do what we fancy affair – a number of our regulars will be away so if there are just very few of us, please yourselves – and walk north, south, east or west. Lots of opportunities for cafés if that takes your fancy, maybe a canal walk or admire the green spaces in Mile End Park itself.
Pictured: a sketch from Mile End Park drawn on one of our walks.

Thursday 15th September 
Monthly Meeting, St Margaret’s House, 19.00 for 19.30

We will welcome Graham Barker form Walk East, a social enterprise group.
Bethnal Green was transformed during Victorian times. New housing, schools, churches and parks were created and social reformers made their mark too.
This particular project explores research by a group of local residents during the Victorian Footprints community heritage project.

Covid measures in place, hand gel on entry. We will keep the door open. 

Friday 16th September is National WI Day

National Federation are asking members to flood social media with #WIproud saying why you are proud to be a member of such as amazing organisation; is it that you are proud to be part of one of the organisations that brought about votes for women, that supports local businesses and community, or maybe that you support some of the WI’s wide ranging campaigns. We will be celebrating with a special cake at our monthly meeting the day before. So let's flood East London Social media with #WIproud.

Friday 30th September
Coffee, 10.30

This month we will be meeting in Thingy Café and garden! We are not making this up... it's a hidden garden and café in Hackney Wick. This will be a new venue for all of us (unless our newsletter editor gets a chance to pop by in the next few weeks!)
1 Trowbridge Road E9 5LD – the café is located in Arbeit Studios. Bus routes 339, 276, 488 or Hackney Wick overground station.

Friday, 19 August 2022

Our August meeting


Our August meeting: Summer sketching and treasures to take home 

A table of East End WI members, garden produce, art materials – and a caterpillar putting the ‘live’ in live sketching... Summer sketching was our relaxed meeting in the quiet of August

The session was led by our very own Lydia, a graphic designer, creative director and sketcher. We heard from Lydia about drawing as part of her work, her late career homecoming to sketching, her lockdown project Dispatches from a Small World and how she uses drawing as a way of looking at things. Then, with a smorgasboard of drawing materials and waste paper, we drew, chatted, shared stories and swapped knowledge.

One of the joys of drawing together is how differently everybody sees and makes marks. Some beautiful work was produced. And we went home with treasures – herbs, fruit, flowers and handmade goodies from our 'bring and buy' table with all proceeds raising funds for East End WI.

See more of Lydia’s sketches on her Instagram feed @lydiathornley.

If you fancy some outdoor sketching in the industrial and natural landscape of the Channelsea river, Lydia will be guiding a free drop-in sketching session for Surge Co-op on Saturday 27th August from 11am-1pm at the Long Wall Ecology Garden, off the Greenway, in celebration of the launch of 'London Nature Trails', four new green walking routes through Brent, Camden, Lewisham and Newham.

August coffee morning: Clarnico Club café, Olympic Park

Friday 26th August, 10.30am, Tandy Place, East Wick and Sweetwater, London E20 3AS.

A new venue for us, adjacent to Here East on the edge of the Olympic Park, served by Hackney Wick station, 388, 276, 339 and 488 buses or free Here East shuttle bus from Stratford bus station at Westfield or next to Stratford International DLR station. Clarnico Club café is independently owned and provides training and jobs for local youngsters with special needs.

Look out for our next What's On blogpost to see what's coming up in September.

Saturday, 13 August 2022

Our August walk



Street art, green corridors and human history – our August walk to Tower Hamlets Cemetery Park

Shade was the theme of our August walk – and on a heatwave Saturday, we were glad of the dappled light on a fascinating stroll through art, nature and East End history.

Our route took us through Endangered 13, a mural project raising awareness of endangered species. The sculpture of panels pictured above is actually a materials test to encourage plants to grow on built structures.

We saw part of the green corridor joining up green space to give wildlife safe passage.

In the Cemetery Park, as we wandered, we heard from Heather, our President, about the park's volunteers, its conservation and heritage work and some of this beautiful place's human stories told by the graves and memorials, including the Barnardo's Memorial above. To read some of the stories and find out more about events, tours and volunteering, visit the Friends of Tower Hamlets Cemetery Park website.

Fancy coming on one of our walks? Look out for news in our next 'coming up' blogpost and if you're an East End WI member, our newsletter.


Monday, 1 August 2022

Coming up in August


Coming up in August

August walk: Tower Hamlets Cemetery Park

Saturday 13th August 10.30am

We’ve chosen Tower Hamlets Cemetery Park for this month as there is plenty of shade should it be a hot, sunny day.

Meet at the water feature pond near the Green Bridge, Mile End Park, opposite Guardian Angels Church, Mile End. Transport: Central line, plenty of bus routes.

We'll stroll down Mile End Park, crossing into Ackroyd Drive with its reclaimed areas and murals, into Tower Hamlets Cemetery Park and we'll decide how to explore.

Our coffee options are Blue Daisy, the mini coffee and patisserie truck in the park or nearby cafés. Toilets in the visitor centre if open, sports pavilion or cafés.

August meeting: Sketching with Lydia and 'bring and buy' craft and produce sale

Thursday 18th August, 7pm for 7.30 at St Margaret’s House, 21 Old Ford Rd, Bethnal Green, London E2 9PL, 7 for 7.30pm. Entrance via gated passageway to the left of the Gallery Café.

Draw, chat and enjoy the luxury of looking, at our relaxed sketching session with our very own Lydia, graphic designer and live sketcher. Materials provided – or if you have favourite materials to draw with, you're welcome to bring your own. Lydia will bring some flowers and foliage from her garden. 

If you have gorgeous gourds, comedy carrots or other wonderful goodies for the produce sale, we can draw that as well! Our crafters are invited to bring some makes for the craft sale. 

All proceeds will raise funds for East End WI.

August coffee morning: Clarnico Club café, Olympic Park

Friday 26th August, 10.30am, Tandy Place, East Wick and Sweetwater, London E20 3AS.

A new venue for us, adjacent to Here East on the edge of the Olympic Park, served by Hackney Wick station, 388, 276, 339 and 488 buses or free Here East shuttle bus from Stratford bus station at Westfield or next to Stratford International DLR station. Clarnico Club café is independently owned and provides training and jobs for local youngsters with special needs.

Friday, 22 July 2022

Our July talk






Recouping otherness – Madge Gill, outsider artist in the East End 

We knew a bit about Madge Gill. Some of us had seen her work on art trail The Line, been to the exhibition at the William Morris Gallery or been interested by her otherness as an outsider artist.

But our July speaker, Rosie Murdoch, has context, and hands-on experience of researching and curating Madge Gill’s prolific body of work.

Rosie ran the View Tube, then the Nunnery Gallery for six years, where her first project was a triptych of exhibitions on Madge Gill. Moving to Newham, Rosie volunteered for its archive, which turned into work for Newham Heritage Service. Rosie also works for UCL East on Trellis, which brings academics and artists together, and has been doing some consultancy for the Royal Docks team.

Madge Gill was born in 1882 in Walthamstow to a single mother, fostered, then in care at Barnardo’s. She was repatriated to Quebec but aged 18, came back to London, where she moved back in with her aunt and mother. She began work as a nurse at Whipps Cross hospital. In 1906 she had her first baby, Laurie, while single and 1907 married Tom Gill, her first cousin. In 1910, she had her second son, Reggie, who died in 1918 of Spanish flu. In 1919, she had a stillborn daughter, then received treatment for cancer of the eye. Treatment in 1922 started a long correspondence with a woman doctor, now deposited at the Society for Psychical Research. In 1926, Laurie published Myrninrest the Spheres, [my inner rest], a paper describing Madge Gill’s mediumistic processes. 

1932 saw Madge Gill exhibiting for the first time at the East End Academy, at the Whitechapel Gallery. A year later, her husband died, she moved to Plashet Grove in East Ham and the family seems to have come into money – she could afford to focus on her art. There were a number of artist groups of workers and others from non-formal backgrounds, the exhibitions ran alongside mainstream shows and they got press attention – though Madge Gill was billed as a “housewife from East Ham”… In 1950 she lost another son and in 1954, wrote that after 35 years she still hadn’t finished the work she started.  She suddenly stopped entering the annual shows and turned down an offer from a West End gallery but did put work into a Soviet aid exhibition at the Wallace Collection.

Madge Gill died in 1961, aged 79. Laurie left her collection to a local archive. 

There are shoeboxes of daily drawn postcards that had been kept under her bed. For the Nunnery exhibitions, artist Jack Hutchinson pledged to draw a postcard a day for 30 days, a challenge that made him understand Madge Gill more. Paul Johnson asked to see personal items and was shown her album – her own selection of her work. Sarah Carne installed her 'I love Yugo' drawing alongside Gill's work. And the project involved looking at massive calico scrolls, so long that Laurie had built a mangle-like mechanism to enable paper to be rolled either side of the work in progress.

The legacy and stories of Madge Gill’s work continue. There is a book by Sophie Dutton. Outreach work has included textile workshops with ELTA and ‘drawing with Madge Gill’ workshops. Her work can be seen on The Line art trail. Slightly less edifying is Madge Gill Way car park…  but there is a blue plaque, ready to go up on 37 Plashet Grove when the time is right.

Just as the talk finished, the projector, moved for packing up, shone Madge Gill's work onto the walls of the meeting hall – our very own, fleeting, exhibition. It's nice when that happens.

A big thank you to Rosie Murdoch for a fascinating talk.


Our July coffee morning, Friday 29 July, 10.30 at Root 25

Join us at Root 25, 116B Bow Road - Bow Church DLR, Bus routes 25, 276, 488, 108, Bow Road Underground. Root 25 is a coffee shop & community space where all profits go to Restless Being's charity projects. It made it to The London Evening Standard's Best coffee/ Bookshop list, so a hint there that a coffee can be combined with some book browsing!

For what’s next at East End WI, look out for our August bulletin.

Sunday, 17 July 2022

Our stall at the East End Canal Festival



A stall with a view and huge amounts of cake – East End WI at the East End Canal Festival 

Our first tea and cake stall since before the pandemic has been a big one... two days at the lively, popular East End Canal Festival. In a heatwave, we had an airy spot at The Art Pavilion with a waterside view, a swan family entertaining us between rushes of visitors.

A massive thank you to everyone who baked, helped, transported, organised and generally got the show on the road, and to the event managers and crew, ready with help and good cheer.

Thank you, too, to the visitors who came back to the stall to tell us how much they loved their cake – and who came back for second helpings.

Saturday, 9 July 2022

Our July walk

Our July walk – Trinity Buoy Wharf

This month, we explored a curious and constantly-changing corner of East London. 

Starting at Canning Town, we crossed Bow Creek to City Island, home to English National Ballet, where there was bonus art... we had popped in to ask about classes and were invited to look at its exhibitions. Also on City Island, the newest work on The Line art trail, Rana Begum's piece No.1104: Catching Colour

Onward towards Trinity Buoy Wharf, there was fascinating industrial, scientific, seafaring and social history to be found. We had sweeping Thames views over to the O2, a lunar clock, historic working boats, sculpture to explore, and a snack stop at the Orchard Café.

Our last stop was East India Dock, with a diversion for views from the newly opened dry dock.

If you'd like to join our relaxed, friendly walks full of chat and discovery, look out for our 'what's on' posts.

Monday, 4 July 2022

Coming up in July


Coming up in July

Our July walk – Trinity Buoy Wharf and East India Dock, Saturday 9 July

Meeting point: Canning Town station at 10.30am (Jubilee Line, DLR, numerous buses) Bow Creek / City Island exit We’ll walk across the footbridge to London City Island, where there is a new artwork on The Line sculpture trail, through to Trinity Buoy Wharf, where the Lea meets the Thames, for industrial history, outdoor artworks, historic working boats and views across to the O2. Café and loos at Trinity Buoy Wharf. We can then walk on if we fancy, to East India Dock for even more views and the Virginia Settlers’ monument.

For onward / home journeys: DLR at East India, the D3 bus towards Canary Wharf and onward to Bethnal Green or walk back to Canning Town.

If you’d love the views and coffee but not the walk, meet us at Trinity Buoy Wharf for a coffee. We’ll be there at about 11.30 (keep in touch with one of us by phone / text for timings on the day). You can’t miss the café: it has a black cab on the top.

East End Canal Festival – Saturday 16th and Sunday 17th July, 11am - 5pm, Art Pavilion, Mile End Park and Regent's Canal

We're shining up our cake tins, ironing our aprons and unfurling our bunting for our stall at the fabulous East End Canal Festival. We'll be in the Art Pavilion and we’d love to see you there. This is our first money-raising opportunity since before the pandemic so please join us with family and friends and sample some of our lovely refreshments.

If you're a member and you'd like to bake or help on the stall – or both – let us know.

Monthly Meeting, Thursday 21st July – a talk about East end outsider artist Madge Gill

Usual venue – St Margaret’s House, 21 Old Ford Rd, Bethnal Green, London E2 9PL, 7 for 7.30pm. Entrance via gated passageway to the left of the Gallery Café.

This month we will be hearing from Rosamund Murdoch, cultural development consultant, about the fascinating story of Madge Gill's life and work.

Those who joined us for the Cody Dock walk will have seen the piece on The Line art trail (pictured above) Nature In Mind, featuring Madge Gill's work. 

Covid measures in place, hand gel on entry, masks till sitting down. We will keep the door open. 

Friday 29th July – coffee morning, 10.30am  

Join us this month at Root 25, 116B Bow Road - Bow Church DLR, Bus routes 25, 276, 488, 108, Bow Road Underground.

Root 25 is a coffee shop & community space where all profits go to Restless Being's charity projects. Its recent claim to fame is that it made it to The London Evening Standard's Best coffee/ Bookshop list, so a hint there that a coffee can be combined with some book browsing!


Saturday, 18 June 2022

Our June talk

Meet Tom, the police dog

At our June meeting, we heard from PC Neal Nightingale from the Metropolitan Police Dog Section at Chadwell Heath.  

London has five dog bases. A large number of officers handle two dogs, a general purpose dog and a specialist dog, which could be a drugs dog, an expo dog trained in explosives, a blood dog that finds forensic evidence, a passive drugs dog trained to sniff queues of people at transport hubs, or even a cyber dog trained to recognise digital devices. There are also urban search and rescue dogs, which search with the Fire Brigade, and Trojan support dogs, experienced, friendly dogs for tasks where they have to be passed from officer to officer. 

When they retire, dogs often stay with their handlers as pets.

Neal has been busy during the Jubilee, and his dog Tom, who is marine trained, often works on the river. They've been searching Clipper boats, cruise boats, foreign yachts visiting London and sugar boats delivering to the Tate & Lyle factory – Neal took us through how dogs are transferred safely from boat to boat.

We heard how officers have to give plenty of space to public order dogs working in volatile situations, as a worked-up dog won't discriminate between the public and officers.

We learned just how complicated the issues are around dangerous dogs, from different interpretations of breeds to different reactions from owners, from those keen to agree to the measures required to get their dogs back to those who leave them in kennels. 

Then Tom showed us some skills... Neal had taped something to find under one of our seats, sent Tom around the room to search and within seconds, he'd found it. Job done, Tom got his favourite tennis ball. 

A big thank-you to Neal and Tom for a fascinating evening and a special mention for Heather's marvellous mini Victoria sponges.

Our next coffee morning

Friday 24th June, 11.00 at The Hub, Victoria Park, East Side, right next to the children's playground, skate park and pools play area. Buses 276, 488 and 339. We also plan to explore the tree trail we mentioned at our AGM.

See us at the East End Canal Festival on 16 and 17 July!

We're very excited to be running a tea and cake stall at our first big event since the start of the pandemic. Get in touch if you'd like to bake or help and come and visit. We'll be at the Arts Pavilion in Mile End Park. More on the festival here.

Look out for more on our July events

Look out for our July newsletter for more on what's coming up, including our next talk, on artist Madge Gill.

Saturday, 11 June 2022

Our June walk

Our June walk – a City stroll

Meeting at St Paul's on a gloriously sunny Saturday, our June walkers wound their way through City landmarks Postman's Park, St Bartholomew's, Smithfield, Charterhouse Square and finally to the Barbican, for lunch.

Fancy joining us? Look out for details of our next walk in our July news.

Monday, 6 June 2022

Coming up in June


Coming up in June

Saturday 11th June - Walk: the wonderful City of London, London’s magical square mile 

Meet at 11.00 St Paul’s Station, the cathedral exit. Also well-served by buses 8, 25 and 56. An uplifting cityscape walk this time. Heather will not be there, but wishes you happy exploring. The City Information centre just to the South of St Paul's has plenty of info, maps etc. Turn right if you would like to just dip into the churchyard and admire the planting, the giant golden statue on a pillar and the fallen Beckett. Return to the tube entrance to go up St Martin Le Grand Street to visit the fascinating Postman's Park, on your left. Look at the extraordinary memorials to unknown heroes/ines. Nearby is the Museum of London, which will be closing soon to relocate. You can pre-book tickets; tickets are also available on the door each day. You may want to move on to the Barbican with plenty of refreshment and loo stop facilities.

Thursday 16th June - Meeting: a visit from police dogs and their handlers 

Usual venue - St Margaret’s House; 7 for 7.30pm. We're looking forward to meeting police dogs and hearing from their handlers about their work; we will also be acknowledging the Jubilee with perhaps some celebratory drinks and snacks. Do feel free to bring anything to share on the theme – perhaps you have made one of the prize Jubilee trifles; or bring along stories of street parties and bunting events!

Covid measures in place, hand gel on entry, masks till sitting down. We will keep the door open. No need for checking temperatures. 

Friday 24th June - coffee morning 

11.00 at The Hub, Victoria Park, East Side, right next to the children's playground, skate park and pools play area. Buses 276, 488 and 339. A chance to try their eclectic menu with delicious home made cakes and other goodies. You could visit the lovely English garden nearby and the tree trail we mentioned at our AGM.

Other WI news

Look out for our upcoming newsletter with information from local and National WI federations. And it's still not too late to sign up to observe the National Federation AGM virtually on Saturday 11th June. You can sign up from the main WI National Federation website. There are usually at least two high profile keynote speakers and there will be a vote and discussion on the resolutions put forward for the coming year. We have agreed to support the resolution, Women and Girls with ASD & ADHD – under-identified, under-diagnosed, misdiagnosed, under-supported.

Friday, 20 May 2022

Our AGM

We're 15! Our birthday AGM

With the garden at St Margaret's House looking lush for our AGM, we gathered for our official meeting of the year – and for celebration.

Our President Heather's review reminded us how even in challenging times, our members were carrying on quietly with a wide range of voluntary work and as a group, we were supporting local speakers, organisations and for our coffee mornings, cafés. When we couldn't meet in person, we supported our members with high quality Zoom events and coffee mornings. We kept our community garden growing. And even when we couldn't use our meeting and storage facilities actively, we continued to pay for them so that they'd be there for us.

Although our fundraising was restricted, we helped at the St George's Day tea dance and our Treasurer Celya reported that we'd emerged in good financial shape.

The cheery Liz Morrell and Fiona Doyle from Middlesex Federation came along to lead the business of the AGM. All of our committee were happy to stand again, Heater will be our President for one more year and there were unanimous votes for all.

There were candles – in numerical formation! There was champagne! There were delicious savouries by Natasha and cakes by Heather, who is also our queen of Victoria sponge! There was a pink quiz by Sally, following on from her excellent talk last Autumn on breast awareness. And there was a toast to our first President Niki Stevens.

It was lovely to hear everyone's stories about how they first met East End WI and the first meetings they'd come to – a joyous catalogue of friendship, fascination and fun.

Thanks to everyone who came along, thank you to Liz and Fiona for not just turning up but making a cracking quiz team as well and here's to another year of a WI we've all come to value all the more during the pandemic.

Finally, an enormous round of applause to everyone whose knowledge, skill, talent, energy, kindness and good humour have kept everything going and particularly to our President Heather, who has done a grand job with wit and wisdom.

Coming up

Our next coffee morning will be on Friday 27 May, 10.30 at Root25, next to Bow Church DLR. 

At our June meeting, we'll be meeting some police dogs and marking the Jubilee. 

And we're gearing up to help at the Canal Festival on 16 and 17 July.

Look out for more news in our Coming up in June blogpost.

Saturday, 14 May 2022

Our May walk


East End WI on a West Ham walk

Community garden Abbey Gardens was our starting point, for the ruin of the gatehouse of Stratford Langthorne Abbey, the story of the Plaistow Landgrabbers that inspired the garden's design and some fabulous flowers. Onward to All Saints Church for its abbey connection, patchwork of architecture and gnarly trees. Then, West Ham Park, to stroll in its greenery and ornamental garden, hear about physician and world-famous botanist Dr Fothergill and the park's Elizabeth Fry connection and pause for refreshments at the park's friendly snack shack.

I'll leave it to the lovely thank-you from our President, Heather to give you the flavour of the day: 

"Thank you for such a lovely Spring walk today! Just the right number of us to allow for the time and space to chat whilst on the move, and for our cafe stop. Great mix of history and humanity.  I really got the sense of continuity of the people and the buildings: from the old abbey underlying the Abbey Gardens ... up to the present mix of families, joggers, footballers, and cyclists peddling around in the sunshine. Such trees, such flowers, such colours!

Most impressed by the warmth and friendliness of the Kiosk staff, too. Will definitely go back.

It was lovely to be able to join up this part of 'Our Manor', to more familiar pieces of the jigsaw, and to gain some ownership by being able to make use of our recently experienced extension of 'walking distances'.

I am sure the others would agree that it was a wonderful day!"

Look out for details of our next walk in our June update.

Monday, 2 May 2022

Coming up in May

Saturday 14th May - Walk: West Ham Park 

Meet at 11am at Abbey Road DLR station Abbey Gardens exit (also accessible on foot / bike via the Greenway, from Stratford or West Ham stations and via the 276 bus, Mitre Road stop).The walk will go to the park via Abbey Gardens, site of the gatehouse of the Cistercian Stratford Langthorne Abbey, West Ham Church and then up to the park, where the ornamental garden has an outdoor exhibition on its surprisingly-grand horticultural history. Coffee opportunities at Abbey Gardens, where there’s a new pop-up café, and West Ham Park, which has an outdoor snack shack and usually, an ice cream van. Public loos at West Ham Park. Routes home via Stratford, buses on West Ham Lane or back towards the start point. If anyone wants to join us at the park itself, we’ll be at the Portway South Gate at roughly 11.30.

Thursday 19th May - Meeting 

Usual venue - St Margaret’s House; 7 for 7.30pm This meeting we will be welcoming a member of Middlesex Federation to help us celebrate our 15th birthday, hold our AGM but more importantly of all have a bit of fun and a social catch-up. There will be the odd quiz or two, so hint: catch-up on pink and green items as well as facts and figures about the WI…….

Covid measures in place, hand gel on entry, masks till sitting down. We will keep door open. No need for checking temperatures. 

Friday 27th May - coffee morning

Root/25 at 10.30am - A chance to try out a new venue for us. 116B Bow Road London E3 3AA. Recently discovered by Heather who says ; “lovely welcoming people. They run it to support the charity Restless Beings - supporting various most marginalized groups. They have second hand books (and some new) on sale as well as other events. Nice pastries and meals/snacks.”

East End WI in the Middlesex Federation news

The WI is divided nationally into around 52 federations. We belong to Middlesex - which has approx 51 individual WI groups and a total of 2,000 members. Middlesex has a regular newsletter and in the latest issue there's a piece by our very own Celya about our recent talk on the women in Hackney history. More on the newsletter at Middlesex Federation's website.

Recruitment and Re-application for annual membership

This is a gentle reminder for members still needing to pay the bargain price (not increased this year in view of Covid) of £44 by cash, or cheque in person at the next meeting. It's such good value for money and a chance to join an inclusive, exciting organisation. Your committee are currently looking at ways to advertise our wonderful group with posters, flyers and on social media; all designed by own very own Lydia. If you feel you could distribute some of these or have ideas where we could post on social media please let us know.

More WI news

National WI meeting (virtual) Saturday 11th June: you can still sign up to view the meeting virtually, this year to be held in Liverpool. There are typically two high profile guest speakers who address the meeting for around half an hour each and an address by the NFWI Chair. Join up for free via The National Federation website.

Me, myself and I and WI - 9th - 15th May - Online. Launched last year in view of the possible effects of covid, isolation etc is back for a week of self care and wellbeing. Please visit the Main WI website on the 9th of May to access lots of activities, projects and helpful links to promote great self care. It coincides with National Mental Health Awareness week. One of the fun zoom sessions to join will be about the WI’s recent initiative based around walking netball!

Friday, 22 April 2022

Our April talk

Florence Nightingale's London

The Lady With the Lamp? Well, not quite the lamp that we imagine… Florence Nightingale’s iconic night light was actually a nifty enclosed concertina lamp that packed flat when not in use. 

Blue Badge guide Julie Chandler’s lively talk took us through all sorts of fascinating stories:

A name that was half inheritance story, half birth in Florence on a two-year Italian honeymoon. 

A wealthy childhood, in London, Derbyshire and Hampshire, a father keen on educating his daughters, a young woman presented at court – and a rebel, it turned out, against what she called her ‘gilded cage’. Florence Nightingale’s family despaired of her ever marrying, there was a succession of suitors, a religious calling and a then-shocking decision to become a nurse, at a time when nurses were thought to be blasphemous and notorious for drinking.

A leader, taking on her first hospital job only on condition that she could change things, recruiting a cohort of nurses for the Crimea and getting them there across Europe.

An innovator, using graphics to convince decision-makers that more soldiers were dying of preventable diseases than in action and introducing an influential ‘pavilion’ design of hospital, some of the design still visible at St Thomas’ Hospital. She was the first woman to be elected to the Royal Statistical Society.

A pioneer, recognising the importance of the hand-washing and ventilation we’ve come to know so well in the pandemic and setting up the first secular school of nursing, at St Thomas’ Hospital, now based at King’s.

A reformer, including the repeal of the Contagious Diseases Act, which punished any woman even suspected to be a prostitute.

A writer, her book Notes on Nursing aimed at carers as well as nurses, priced affordably and never out of print.

We discovered Florence Nightingale’s London places, including the German Hospital, Floris, Fortnum & Mason, the Burlington Hotel, The London Hospital, South Street, Mayfair and despite her insistence on a no-fuss funeral, the massive London turnout at and around St Paul’s, where there was a memorial service to mark the day when she was buried quietly on the family estate in Hampshire. 

And we heard of her important legacy of turning nursing into a respectable profession.

Florence Nightingale’s London, an A-Z of the Lady with the Lamp began as a lockdown project by Julie Chandler and Debbie Pearson, when walking tours and Florence Nightingale bicentenary events were cancelled. The book is available from the Florence Nightingale Museum



Our lovely venue

Spring – it’s a joy to be catching up in person. There was a beautiful walk to be had to our April meeting too. Pictured here, Victoria Park and the courtyard garden of St Margaret’s House.

Our next meeting, on 19 May, will be our AGM, with important votes for the next year and some celebrations. 

Our next coffee morning: 
29 April, 10.30 at the Beehive Café, Bethnal Green, E2 9LH

The Beehive café is on the opposite side of Cambridge Heath Road to the Museum of Childhood. 

Look out for our May update with details of our May meeting, May walk, coffee morning and other news.