October 2024

News

Memories of Wanstead: poetry group to use local history for inspiration

highst79Wanstead High Street, 19 June 1979

Over-55s poetry group the Redbridge Rhymesters will be reflecting on memories of Wanstead at their next creative writing session.

“We’ll be joined by pupils from Snaresbrook Primary School for this event, which will take place on 5 November, so we’ll also be inspired by fireworks as well as local history,” said group founder Alexandra Wilde.

Taking place at Age UK’s Allan Burgess Centre in Wanstead from 10am to 12 noon, the free event is open to anyone over the age of 55 with an interest in poetry.

Call 020 8989 6338

Features

Listen and learn

emilie© John Ross

In the 40th of a series of articles, David Bird discusses the work of Redbridge Music Society and introduces pianist Emilie Capulet, who will be performing at Wanstead Library this month

Two essential aims of Redbridge Music Society are to enhance musical knowledge and music appreciation within the borough via high-quality, live chamber recitals featuring distinguished musicians. These aims will be realised on 22 October at Wanstead Library when celebrated pianist and lecture-recitalist Emilie Capulet will introduce and perform a diverse programme of music, featuring works by Haydn, Beethoven, Dohnanyi, Tomasi and Debussy.

Emilie is a cross-disciplinary musician and academic having a Master of Music in Performance, an MA on Shakespeare and a dual French Doctorate and British PhD on musical forms and aesthetics in the works of Virginia Woolf. Whilst touring Latin America, she received the ExpressArte award for her contribution to Nicaraguan culture, art and education. She is in much demand and is regularly invited to give recitals and concerts at music festivals and concert venues across Europe, USA and Canada. Emilie is also in demand as a guest artist on luxury cruise liners and musical river cruises.

Emilie has developed a considerable reputation as a guest speaker and lecture-recitalist and is often invited to give talks on the relations between music and other art forms and to give piano master classes and workshops in colleges, schools and universities worldwide, including the Liszt Academy in Budapest, the Sorbonne in Paris and Chichester University in the UK. 

She has appeared on radio and TV in France, Germany, Canada, Nicaragua and the UK and has made recordings of works by Beethoven, Chopin, the contemporary composer Richard Lambert and the French-Corsican composer Henri Tomasi (an award-winning and ground-breaking recording of his solo piano music).

Emilie is currently BMus (Hons) Programme Leader at Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance, Greenwich. Previously, she held the posts of Head of Classical Performance Studies and Course Leader in undergraduate and postgraduate Music Performance courses at the London College of Music, University of West London. She has been a Music Lecturer at the University of Surrey and was recently appointed Visiting Fellow at Keble College, Oxford University, for 2025. She is very active in research and is currently the recipient of a prestigious Leverhulme Research Fellowship to write the first critical study and biography of Henri Tomasi.

Please come along to support the opening event of Redbridge Music Society’s 76th season and to hear Emilie perform and talk – a recital not to be missed.


Emilie will perform at Wanstead Library on 22 October from 8pm (tickets on the door; visitors: £12; members: £9). Call 07380 606 767. Redbridge Music Society is affiliated to Making Music.

News

Cakes and Carols: bakers, singers and volunteers needed

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Cakes and Carols – a Christmas event for the over-65s – will return to Wanstead United Reformed Church this year.

“We are looking for contributions from bakers and for families to volunteer to help on the day. We would also love some young musicians or any choirs to perform for our senior guests. If you can help in any way, please get in touch,” said Suzi Robinson, who has organised the annual event since 2014.

The free festive celebration will take place on 21 December from 1.30pm to 4pm.

Call 07917 670 664

News

South Woodford Library and Kenneth More Theatre closed

IMG_1617©Geoff Wilkinson

South Woodford Library and Kenneth More Theatre have closed following the discovery of RAAC concrete.

“RAAC (reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete) was a lightweight concrete used in construction between the 1950s and 1990s. When it degrades, it must be replaced. We therefore have no choice but to close both buildings and find alternative spaces for the events and activities wherever possible. Sadly, some shows will need to be cancelled where there is no other option. We sincerely apologise for the inconvenience and disappointment this will cause,” said a spokesperson for Redbridge Council.

The closure means the theatre’s annual pantomime has been cancelled, with a smaller Christmas show to take place at Redbridge Drama Centre in South Woodford instead. “Although the venue accommodates far smaller-scale productions than the one originally scheduled for the theatre, it will still be full of fun, song, and Christmas spirit.”

Engineers have conducted a detailed structural survey to assess the theatre building, and whilst no timescale for the work has been provided, a spokesperson said: “Shows throughout the autumn and winter and into next year will not be able to go ahead.” Refunds for cancelled shows will be processed automatically.

South Woodford Library will be closed for an estimated 12 months, with extensive work required.

“We have worked hard behind the scenes to find alternatives for those who use the library and gym. We will open a pop-up library, cafe, fitness studio, and study area in Redbridge Drama Centre, a few minutes walk from South Woodford Library. A number of rooms within the drama centre will be converted into a multi-purpose gym, and the equipment will be moved here for people to use.”

Books can be returned via a drop box at Redbridge Drama Centre or at the libraries in Wanstead and Woodford Green.

“We understand the closure is frustrating, and we apologise for the inconvenience it will cause. The safety of local people will always be our top priority.”

Features

Medical Emergency

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In the fifth of a series of articles charting the challenges facing Aldersbrook Medical Centre, Paul Wildish reports on the latest developments in the procurement of a permanent GP contract

Since February 2024, the patients of Aldersbrook Medical Centre (AMC), led by their Patient Participation Group (PPG), have been conducting a campaign to achieve a permanent settlement of GP providers of our choice from NE London Integrated Care Board (NELICB).

When the temporary contract expired, we wanted the providers from the Richmond Road practice in Hackney to remain, as they had introduced so many beneficial changes to what had previously been a failing practice. NELICB had other ideas and offered an extension of Richmond Road’s contract at a price they couldn’t afford. The PPG felt this could be construed as a ‘constructive dismissal,’ despite Richmond Road’s universally recognised award-winning clinical practice. We were determined to resist.

After public meetings, pickets at ICB HQ in Stratford and by enlisting the support of local councillors, our former MP John Cryer and Lord Victor Adebowale, Chair of the NHS Confederation, the PPG has engaged with the NELICB constructively to ensure the patients’ voice is heard during the next phase of designing and awarding a new permanent contract that corresponds with our needs. No other PPG in the UK has conducted a campaign of this kind to win such formal negotiating access to be part of the process of the procurement of a permanent GP contract.

What have we won so far? As this will be a permanent GP contract, we know corporate providers are excluded. The NELICB has recognised the AMC surgery must retain GP services on site and not become a part-time or inadequately staffed annexe of a local practice. We insisted the ICB came to meet patients at a public meeting at Aldersbrook Bowls Club to explain the procurement process, answer questions and take regard of patients’ views in the selection process. Our biggest coup has been the secondment of the AMC PPG’s chair Terilla Bernard to the ICB panel. This will put the contract out to tender, conduct the bidding process, interview the shortlisted GP bidders and ultimately select the successful GP team. Hats off to the ICB for taking such regard for the patients’ voice that they have invited Terilla on board to represent us. The procurement process is governed by rules of commercial confidentiality and the contract will meet official NHS specifications. Terilla has therefore been required to sign an NDA until the end of the procurement process. During this time, any negotiations will be under strict purdah.

Until the winner of the bidding process is selected in January 2025, due diligence has been carried out and the successful winners announced, the patients and PPG will remain on tenterhooks. The new, permanent contract will commence in March 2025. We sincerely hope our Richmond Road GPs will win.


For more information about the Aldersbrook Medical Centre Patient Participation Group, visit wnstd.com/amc

Features

By George, Our George!

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In the second of a series of articles by those leading the campaign to save The George, Martin Wheatley reflects on some of the qualities of Wanstead’s ‘pub for all seasons’

The George truly is a pub for all seasons. We see the newly legal drinkers showing their ID with an air of feigned indifference; young men and women enjoying their well-earned leisure time, perhaps even experiencing the spark of young love without the aid of an app; families, from toddlers to grandparents, gathering for a meal; retired couples on a budget treating themselves to a few drinks and perhaps a bite to eat; pensioners keeping warm in winter more cheaply than heating their own homes, with the bonus of a drink; single men nursing a pint; folk attending a wake and raising a glass to the departed.

How does The George achieve this? Value for money is a factor but not the only one. There is no muzak, conversation is possible without shouting. Admittedly, there are some televisions but they, thankfully, are silent. Whenever I’m at the bar, the screen seems to be showing news of ghastly goings-on around the globe, which only serves as a reminder of what I came to the pub to escape. There is a good selection of real ale (even if this isn’t your tipple, I would hope the preservation of this uniquely British drink in the uniquely British environment of the pub is something you’d support). And they take cash. Paying for a pint of cask ale with coin of the realm is by no means possible everywhere, not even in Wanstead!

Above all, it is a public house. All members of the public are welcome and can feel comfortable there.

So, what can be done to save The George? None of us is privy to the financial ins and outs behind the scenes, but I imagine the rent is not cheap. On top of that, pubs have been mercilessly targeted for taxation by all governments and for a long time. The George looks busy enough but, I should say, less so than in years past. All that we cherish in our communities – church, post office, independent shops – all that actually constitutes a community, will wither and die if we don’t make use of them.

Do sign the petition, do lobby your MP, do whatever you can, but above all, put aside social media, the podcast, the boxset and head pub-wards to The George for a drink.

“Change your hearts or you will lose your Inns and you will deserve to have lost them. But when you have lost your Inns drown your empty selves, for you will have lost the last of England.” Hilaire Belloc wrote those words in 1912. They still hold true but we are drinking in the Last Chance Saloon Bar.

News

Have your say on Redbridge Council’s leisure and culture strategy

poolArtist’s impression of the new pool under construction in Wanstead

Redbridge Council is seeking feedback on leisure and culture offerings in the borough.

“As we develop a new leisure and culture strategy, we want to ensure Redbridge continues to offer opportunities that meet the evolving needs of our residents and visitors… We would appreciate your participation in our survey to help us plan for the next 10 years,” said a spokesperson.

The consultation closes on 20 October.

A new swimming pool in Wanstead Leisure Centre is scheduled to open in summer 2025.

Visit wnstd.com/leisure

News

Haven House Christmas Cake appeal: bakers and buyers needed

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Organisers of the Haven House Christmas Cake appeal are seeking local volunteer bakers to take part in the festive fundraiser.

“If you can bake a few Christmas cakes, please let us know. And if you would like to buy a cake in exchange for a donation to the children’s hospice, reserve one now, as supplies are, of course, limited,” said Paul Canal.

The appeal is now in its fifth year, with over 300 cakes baked and sold to date, raising over £4,000 for the Woodford Green charity.

Email havenhousebakers@gmail.com

News

Conservation group to resume work in Wanstead Park

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The Wren Wildlife Group’s practical work sessions will resume in Wanstead Park this month.

We are a local conservation group about to start our season of work in Wanstead Park and on the Flats. This involves habitat management, clearing scrub and various other pieces of work as requested by the City of London. We meet weekly on Thursday mornings at 10am and at the same time on the first Sunday of the month. More help is welcome! All tools and gloves provided,” said Peter Williams.

Visit wnstd.com/wren

Features

Another round

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Paul Donovan invites you to sample all that’s on offer at the second annual Wanstead Beer Festival

The Wanstead Beer Festival will be bigger and better this year, with more beers and the addition of a gin bar. The 40-plus beers and ciders are drawn from across the UK, with Essex-based breweries Brentwood, Elephant and Billlericay all being well represented.

Brentwood’s popular Pride of Prague, brewed to mark West Ham’s European Conference Cup victory last year, will once again be available. Get in quick, as this one sold out last time.

Another Essex-based brewery is Mighty Oak, which brings its champion beer, Captain Bob – always popular and goes quickly.

The popular Sussex brewery, Listers, makes a return, bringing its best bitter. A new one from Listers is their premium bitter, Special Ale. 

Harveys of Lewes will again be represented with Best Bitter and a new surprise beer.

Gloucester brewery, Goffs, makes a first-time appearance with the all-American hopped Cheltenham Gold.

Closer to home is West London-based Portobello, who bring Market Porter and Central Line Red – hopefully they’ll be on time! 

The Wanstead Beer Festival prides itself on its local ethos. So, East London breweries like Redemption, Beerblefish, Neckstamper, East London Brewery and Pretty Decent are all prominent, particularly amongst the keg beers. Pretty Decent’s “I could get better in T*sco’s for a quid” was popular last year, whilst Beerblefish’s Lee Valley lager is another sell-out beer.

There will also be a variety of ciders available. Devon-based Farmer Jim’s will be providing the popular Rhubarb Bob. There will also be a Farmyard Perrie on offer from Farmer Jim.

Those who like their gin won’t be disappointed. New this year is the English gin bar. There will be gins from Essex, Sussex and East London. Plus wine, prosecco and soft drinks will again be available. Christ Church will be doing the food.

Last year, Wanstead put down a marker as a place that likes its beer. The beer trade is under pressure. Breweries and pubs are going under on a daily basis. The George in Wanstead is the latest to come under threat. Wetherspoons are seeking to sell the pub.

The George, in many ways, exemplifies what a lot of people are looking for in a pub – reasonably priced beer and food and somewhere to come and meet other people. The sight of four people sitting around a table on mobile phones is not unusual, but people do actually talk directly to each other as well. Then, there are those who come in for a drink and maybe to keep warm. This is why supporting our local pub and breweries is so important. People across the generations come in to meet and greet one another.

There is the campaign to save The George, which hopefully will succeed, but if not, we need to come up with alternatives. Beer festivals contribute, as do micro pubs. There are all sorts of possibilities. What is for sure is that our pubs and breweries need support – use them or lose them.

On that note, we look forward to seeing you at the second Wanstead Beer Festival. Again, funds raised will be going to charity.

So, plenty to look forward to. More people, more beers and gin – what’s not to like? Last year, the festival proved so popular that tickets sold out a week early. So, don’t miss out this time. Roll on 12 October. It’s your round.


The Wanstead Beer Festival will take place on 12 October (1pm to 11pm) in the halls of Christ Church. For more information and tickets, visit wnstd.com/beer