Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Everyone will use wikipedia though, non?


There's still a bit of the Great North Wood at the very top end of East Dulwich (actually, probably mostly in Sydenham, but starts in ED). Misleadingly named, the Great North Wood was actually a huge oak forest in what is now South London - also known as the Kings Wood. Oliver Cronwell seized ownership of it after the English Civil War, and there's a disused track/tunnel which runs through the wood where trains once ran from Peckham to Crystal Palace.


Most of this is courtesy of this forum (Sean in particular I think?) but I've read it elsewhere too.

Also, some of East Dulwich is on the Charles Booth poverty maps. You could maybe show that somewhere which is now very chi-chi used to be marked as a slum in Edwardian/Victorian times...


http://booth.lse.ac.uk/cgi-bin/do.pl?sub=view_booth_and_barth&m.l=0&m.d.l=0&m.p.x=10366&m.p.y=11676&m.p.w=500&m.p.h=309&m.p.l=0&m.p.p.l=0&m.t.w=128&m.t.h=80&b.p.x=17968&b.p.y=18012&b.p.w=500&b.p.h=309&b.p.l=1&m.v.x=353&m.v.y=17

John Beasley's book about East Dulwich has all the facts you could ever need. Should be a copy in the library or Chener Books. It was also serialised in SE22 magazine if you can find any back issues.


To get you started, how about the history of doodlebugs that landed on East Dulwich. Lots of references on the web - see the separate thread on this topic.

Pissaro knocked around locally, and painted the now defunct Lordship Lane station (on canvas, that is - he didn't apply a coat of Sandtex to the ticket office). Walk about 200 yards up Cox's Walk from the Harvester and you can still stand on the bridge from which he painted it.

I get the impression that some of the usual suspects are trying to subvert a child's homework. Not nice.


Each year the London Archaeologist (magazine) does an annual supplement of London fieldwork reports. The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies publishes Britannia once a year which also contains fieldwork reports. Over the last 40 years there has been next to no evidence of any local Roman archaeology this side of the Old Kent Road. Earlier works of synthesis dating before 1970 also have no mention of a Roman fort in this area. The topography of the area and the known distribution of Claudian forts in South East England indicate that an undiscovered Roman fort is unlikely.


One couldn't prove there is no Roman fort without excavating the whole of East Dulwich, but if someone says there is one they should be able to adduce some evidence.

Maybe there is some confusion about the burial mound thing.


Urban Myth has always suggested (incorrectly) that Hornimans Triangle (the bit across the road from the gardens where the little playground is with the sadly empty paddling pool) was a plague burial pit. Interesting thread about it here.


Perhaps this other burial mound is a different thing.


I like the history of honor oak, SEE HERE.


Oak of Honor Hill also known as One Tree Hill is where Elizabeth 1 picnicked with Sir Richard Bulkeley of Beaumaris in the Lewisham area on May Day in 1602 and it is reliably believed that it was by an oak tree on the summit of this hill. The tree became known as the Oak of Honor. In 1896 the open space was enclosed to form an extension to a golf club, but a campaign involving demonstrations and rioting led to its acquisition by Camberwell Borough Council as public open space in 1905.

At the archaeologists press conference:


"From this tiny piece of flint, discovered after a fifteen week dig" (holds up for camera) "we have deduced that the peoples who lived here ten thousand years ago probably lived like this" (shows picture of village, clothed people, dogs running, fire burning, crops being sown, dancing round campfires, meat roasting, babies being swaddled..)

Bon Scott, singer of AC/DC died in East Dulwich after a night on the Pop. (Overhill, or Underhill road, one of the two*) His death lead to the band releasing Back in Black, with Geordie boy Brian Johnson on vocal, and so producing one of their most widely acclaimed albums. Any male teacher in their 40's will be impressed by this, and likely make a pilgrimage.


Eric

* It's been mentioned on here before, but can't find it in the search...annoyingly

jim_the_chin Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> is it me or has this homework probably been set so

> kids can learn how to research things? Not

> getting your mum to ask people on a forum to do

> the leg work? Or does that count as research?



You beat me to it...

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Another recommendation for Dulwich Test and Services Centre. Only been using them for a couple of years but wish I’d found them earlier 
    • A new roadmap (surely railmap?!) for rail accessibility has been published: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/accessible-railways-roadmap It says "approximately 56% of stations and around 66% of the 1.3 billion journeys that take place on the network have step-free access to platforms...  "£373 million has been committed over the next 5 years to deliver Access for All projects, providing step-free access from station entrances to and between platforms, alongside other essential accessibility upgrades. These works, together, will increase the number of step-free stations across Great Britain from 56% to 58%. "This improvement will make travel easier with step-free access available at stations covering an increased share of total rail journeys – from 66% up to 71%" Don't know what that means for us here: upgrading Peckham Rye would cover a lot of rail journeys but the cost has no doubt increased from the £40m figure previously quoted. So that would eat into a lot of the funding.
    • It's not really though, is it. It's practical.  At least we're allowed Christmas lights.
    • We are the only specialist floor insulation company on the market to focus on insulating from below – meaning almost zero mess, disruption or noise! Warmdwell is extremely proud to receive the highest reviews for our professionalism, reliability, commitment and the all-round ease of doing business with us: we draw our team from professional, creative, educated backgrounds to provide a friendly, problem-solving team with the deepest integrity. We take real care of your home and aim to leave it as spotless as possible. Please check our Google Reviews to speak for us: "We were really pleased with their quote, communication, and with having the job done perfectly with almost zero disruption. We think they left the space cleaner than when they arrived, and we are definitely already getting the effects of a warmer room" – Miriam & Abed, Sevenoaks, Oct 2025 "Laurence and his team were extremely polite & helpful, and the work was performed over just 2 days with minimal disruption. It was absolutely the most relaxed work I have ever had performed on the house!" – Alistair, Cambridge, July 2025 "Extremely friendly, polite and efficient" – Diane, Forest Hill, June 2025 We are always keen to chat through your floor insulation options and provide as much free advice as we can, as well as free quotes and surveys – so why not ask us today about what is possible to protect your floors from the cold ventilation air blowing underneath, keep your heat in and warm up your home? We use high-performance mineral wool slabs, never foam, for so many reasons: it is the ideal flexible material for the irregularities of old floors; is breathable, working with the way your floor has successfully performed for perhaps 100 years or more; can easily be removed to access pipes and cables; and is completely non-combustible. A local business based in Crystal Palace, we work extensively around Dulwich, Herne Hill, Forest Hill, Lewisham, Tooting, Balham and across the south East of England. Please ask us about your floor insulation options or for local project case studies today! Phone Number: 02080792793 Email Address: [email protected] Website: https://warmdwell.co.uk/ View full listing
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...