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Kenneth A. Merique Genealogical and Historical Collection BOOK NO
Kenneth A. Merique Genealogical and Historical Collection SUBJECT OR SUB-HEADING OF SOURCE OF BOOK NO. DATE TITLE OF DOCUMENT DOCUMENT DOCUMENT BG no date Merique Family Documents Prayer Cards, Poem by Christopher Merique Ken Merique Family BG 10-Jan-1981 Polish Genealogical Society sets Jan 17 program Genealogical Reflections Lark Lemanski Merique Polish Daily News BG 15-Jan-1981 Merique speaks on genealogy Jan 17 2pm Explorers Room Detroit Public Library Grosse Pointe News BG 12-Feb-1981 How One Man Traced His Ancestry Kenneth Merique's mission for 23 years NE Detroiter HW Herald BG 16-Apr-1982 One the Macomb Scene Polish Queen Miss Polish Festival 1982 contest Macomb Daily BG no date Publications on Parental Responsibilities of Raising Children Responsibilities of a Sunday School E.T.T.A. BG 1976 1981 General Outline of the New Testament Rulers of Palestine during Jesus Life, Times Acts Moody Bible Inst. Chicago BG 15-29 May 1982 In Memory of Assumption Grotto Church 150th Anniversary Pilgrimage to Italy Joannes Paulus PP II BG Spring 1985 Edmund Szoka Memorial Card unknown BG no date Copy of Genesis 3.21 - 4.6 Adam Eve Cain Abel Holy Bible BG no date Copy of Genesis 4.7- 4.25 First Civilization Holy Bible BG no date Copy of Genesis 4.26 - 5.30 Family of Seth Holy Bible BG no date Copy of Genesis 5.31 - 6.14 Flood Cainites Sethites antediluvian civilization Holy Bible BG no date Copy of Genesis 9.8 - 10.2 Noah, Shem, Ham, Japheth, Ham father of Canaan Holy Bible BG no date Copy of Genesis 10.3 - 11.3 Sons of Gomer, Sons of Javan, Sons -
Hgstrust.Org London N11 1NP Tel: 020 8359 3000 Email: [email protected] (Add Character Appraisals’ in the Subject Line) Contents
Hampstead Garden Suburb Conservation Area Character Appraisal Statement Introduction For further information on the contents of this document contact: Urban Design and Heritage Team (Strategy) Hampstead Garden Suburb Trust Planning, Housing and Regeneration 862 Finchley Road First Floor, Building 2, London NW11 6AB North London Business Park, tel: 020 8455 1066 Oakleigh Road South, email: [email protected] London N11 1NP tel: 020 8359 3000 email: [email protected] (add character appraisals’ in the subject line) Contents Section 1 Introduction 5 1.1 Hampstead Garden Suburb 5 1.2 Conservation areas 5 1.3 Purpose of a character appraisal statement 5 1.4 The Barnet unitary development plan 6 1.5 Article 4 directions 7 1.6 Area of special advertisement control 7 1.7 The role of Hampstead Garden Suburb Trust 8 1.8 Distinctive features of this character appraisal 8 Section 2 Location and uses 10 2.1 Location 10 2.2 Uses and activities 11 Section 3 The historical development of Hampstead Garden Suburb 15 3.1 Early history 15 3.2 Origins of the Garden Suburb 16 3.3 Development after 1918 20 3.4 1945 to the present day 21 Section 4 Spatial analysis 22 4.1 Topography 22 4.2 Views and vistas 22 4.3 Streets and open spaces 24 4.4 Trees and hedges 26 4.5 Public realm 29 Section 5 Town planning and architecture 31 Section 6 Character areas 36 Hampstead Garden Suburb Character Appraisal Introduction 5 Section 1 Introduction 1.1 Hampstead Garden Suburb Hampstead Garden Suburb is internationally recognised as one of the finest examples of early twentieth century domestic architecture and town planning. -
Henrietta Barnett: Co-Founder of Toynbee Hall, Teacher, Philanthropist and Social Reformer
Henrietta Barnett: Co-founder of Toynbee Hall, teacher, philanthropist and social reformer. by Tijen Zahide Horoz For a future without poverty There was always “something maverick, dominating, Roman about her, which is rarely found in women, though she was capable of deep feeling.” n 1884 Henrietta Barnett and her husband Samuel founded the first university settlement, Toynbee Hall, where Oxbridge students could become actively involved in helping to improve life in the desperately poor East End Ineighbourhood of Whitechapel. Despite her active involvement in Toynbee Hall and other projects, Henrietta has often been overlooked in favour of a focus on her husband’s struggle for social reform in East London. But who was the woman behind the man? Henrietta’s work left an indelible mark on the social history of London. She was a woman who – despite the obstacles of her time – accomplished so much for poor communities all over London. Driven by her determination to confront social injustice, she was a social reformer, a philanthropist, a teacher and a devoted wife. A shrewd feminist and political activist, Henrietta was not one to shy away from the challenges posed by a Victorian patriarchal society. As one Toynbee Hall settler recalled, Henrietta’s “irrepressible will was suggestive of the stronger sex”, and “there was always something maverick, dominating, Roman about her, which is rarely found in women, though she was capable of deep feeling.”1 (Cover photo): Henrietta in her forties. 1. Creedon, A. ‘Only a Woman’, Henrietta Barnett: Social Reformer and Founder of Hampstead Garden Suburb, (Chichester: Phillimore & Co. LTD, 2006) 3 A fourth sister had “married Mr James Hinton, the aurist and philosopher, whose thought greatly influenced Miss Caroline Haddon, who, as my teacher and my friend, had a dynamic effect on my then somnolent character.” The Early Years (Above): Henrietta as a young teenager. -
Hgstrust.Org London N11 1NP Tel: 020 8359 3000 Email: [email protected] (Add ‘Character Appraisals’ in the Subject Line) Contents
Hampstead Garden Suburb Central Square – Area 1 Character Appraisal For further information on the contents of this document contact: Urban Design and Heritage Team (Strategy) Hampstead Garden Suburb Trust Planning, Housing and Regeneration 862 Finchley Road First Floor, Building 2, London NW11 6AB North London Business Park, tel: 020 8455 1066 Oakleigh Road South, email: [email protected] London N11 1NP tel: 020 8359 3000 email: [email protected] (add ‘character appraisals’ in the subject line) Contents Section 1 Background historical and architectural information 5 1.1 Location and topography 5 1.2 Development dates and originating architect(s) and planners 5 1.3 Intended purpose of original development 5 1.4 Density and nature of the buildings. 5 Section 2 Overall character of the area 6 2.1 Principal positive features 7 2.2 Principal negative features 9 Section 3 The different parts of the main area in greater detail 11 3.1 Erskine Hill and North Square 11 3.2 Central Square, St. Jude’s, the Free Church and the Institute 14 3.3 South Square and Heathgate 17 3.4 Northway, Southway, Bigwood Court and Southwood Court 20 Map of area Hampstead Garden Suburb Central Square, Area 1 Character Appraisal 5 Character appraisal Section 1 Background historical and architectural information 1.1 Location and topography Central Square was literally at the centre of the ‘old’ suburb but, due to the further development of the Suburb in the 1920s and 1930s, it is now located towards the west of the Conservation Area. High on its hill, it remains the focal point of the Suburb. -
'How Lucky We Are to Live Here'*
of magnificent trees should not be and that the Trust’s expert witness considered. Hampstead Garden “did not make any great claims for LETTERS Suburb is a stunning conservation its architectural merit”. area and the tree in questions was I did not and do not understand Widecombe Way, N2 OHL well as visitors to our Suburb: part of Bigwood Nature Reserve why the Tribunal judge should 1) The extra rooms and spaces for according to the councils plans, it have been startled at what seems Sir, additional school activities and was also known as the tongue of to me to be a quite reasonable and Having earlier read “‘Inappropriate’ classes are indeed exceptional. It the ancient woodlands and covered moderately expressed opinion. There extension sends negative waves must be a pleasure to both teach by a tree preservation order, the are plenty of less distinguished around the Suburb” H&H, Sept 8, and learn in these well equipped sheer callousness of the appellants residential buildings on the Suburb. I decided to have a look at the new and inspiring rooms and areas. who were totally unable to prove In fact, that is the point I would be Henrietta Barnett School extension. 2) The outward design, whilst their case shows that fighting for grateful if you, Sir, would allow With respect, it is no monstrosity contemporary is not really sympathetic magnificent irreplaceable trees can me to make it and to draw 24 Ingram Avenue but a commendably thoughtful to its surroundings as an addition be successful. attention to its implications. construction. -
Henrietta Barnett School Hampstead Garden Suburb Case Study Case Study Henrietta Barnett School
library & learning Henrietta Barnett School Hampstead Garden Suburb Case Study Case Study Henrietta Barnett School Brief Solution The Henrietta Barnett School is a state grammar school for The key to the project was to match the ambition of the girls located in the Hampstead Garden Suburb Conservation refurbishment and historical importance of the school with its Area of North London. The library is situated in the main part educational imperatives, whilst offering high-quality products of the school, a Grade II* listed, early 20th Century building and excellent value for money. Because of this, a highly designed in the Queen Anne style by Sir Edwin Lutyens, and is bespoke solution was required. Julian Glover and Jonathan of heritage significance for its’ historic, architectural and social Hawkins from the FG Library design team worked closely value. with Architect Richard Paynter and a team from the school (including Head Del Cooke and Estates Manager Richard Barker Associates LLP were appointed to manage the Cain) to determine how the desired look could be achieved at refurbishment project, including the remodelling of the internal a realistic cost. Discussions focussed on the evaluation of a areas of the existing library. Alterations were designed to be range of materials, finishes and fabrics, the end objective being sympathetic to and compliment the character of the building the provision of the high quality products and levels of finish and the refurbishment, carried out by construction specialist within the available budget. T&B (Contractors) Ltd, needed to reflect the high quality of teaching and academic achievement at the school. -
A Sunny Summer Fun
www.hgs.org.uk Issue 135 · Summer 2018 Peter Cosmetatos Usual trouble- Suburb Time speaks at HB School makers show up at Capsule reveals Open Meeting, p3 Fun Day, p1&5 it’s secrets, p7 A sunny summer PETER McCLUSKIE Fun Day Sunday June 10 turned out to be the famous Styles family, and a fine sunny day which meant our regular entertainer Fizzie all the gazebos, stalls, picnic Lizzie occupied the young with tables and bunting went up in balloon modelling and drama. record time, thanks to the many Esra, of Painted Penguin, helpers and volunteers organised and her assistant had the usual by the ever hard-working RA long queues for face painting Events team. and glitter tattoos, while a team Once again our locally based of four donkeys worked hard all charity, All Dogs Matter, took afternoon giving small children over the corner of Central rides in the Square. Square near St Jude’s for its dog Arts and Crafts were strongly show and competitions for various featured this year and well-known categories, such as ‘Cutest Pup’ locals, Vera Moore, Lynda Cook and ‘Golden Oldie’. It was hardly and Diana Brahams from HGS surprising that there was a Art gave expert tuition and advice, record number of entries. which was very popular with the Local band Sound of the large numbers of children involved. Suburb provided live music The plant stall was kept during the afternoon for their busy with a constant stream of many fans. Traditional Punch plants going to good homes. and Judy was put on by one of (continued page 5) Punch & Judy never fails to attract a large crowd of enchanted children, affectionately watched over by loved ones Why you should join the Residents Association MICHAEL JACOBS to over 2,000 over the next five shown in the Suburb Directory. -
London and the Evolution of Suburbia a Tale of Two Suburbs by James
Architecture of Prosperity Series: London and the Evolution of Suburbia A Tale of Two Suburbs By James Fischelis 16 October 2014 * * * I’m going to talk about what we can learn about the future of London suburbs from what has already been built. I’ve chosen to focus on the London Borough of Barnet because it typifies much of suburban London: it’s made up of 33½ square miles of parks, gardens, houses, flats, offices and high streets. I’ll be looking in particular at two areas which, to my mind, illustrate the extremes of British suburban development over the past century. First is Hampstead Garden Suburb, built between 1909 - 1936, a haven of peace and tranquillity, neat hedges and middle class affluence. The second, 3½ miles north-west, is The Grahame Park Estate completed in 1971, and notorious as a drug-riddled, high crime, low income estate. Today it’s undergoing comprehensive demolition and redevelopment. Our story starts not in Barnet, or even North London, but in the East End - in Whitechapel. It was here, in the 1870s, that the ideas that led to the creation of Hampstead Garden Suburb were being dreamed of. Henrietta Barnett, the wife of a Whitechapel vicar, was appalled by the living conditions of the urban poor she saw all around her. Bad sanitation, overcrowding and disease were rife, and there was no escape from the black soot of the city, no green space. And so with the zeal of any right-minded Victorian ‘social reformer’, she set about creating a brave new world. -
Toynbee Hall: Further Reading
Toynbee Hall: Further Reading If you would like to know more about history of Toynbee Hall, the settlement movement and the East End of London, this is a select bibliography that will provide you with a starting point for further research. All books and offprints listed here are available through the Barnett Research Centre. Histories of Toynbee Hall: Henrietta Barnett, Canon Barnett: His Life, Work and Friends (1918) Asa Briggs and Anne Macartney, Toynbee Hall: The First Hundred Years (1984) Standish Meacham, Toynbee Hall and Social Reform 1880-1914: the Search for Community, (New Haven, 1987) Werner Picht, Toynbee Hall and the English Settlements, (1914) J.A.R. Pimlott, Toynbee Hall: Fifty Years of Social Progress, (1934) Studies of the Settlement Movement: Jane Addams, A Centennial Reader (New York, 1960) Mandy Ashworth, The Oxford House in Bethnal Green, 100 Years of Work in the Community (1984) Katharine Bradley, Bringing People Together: Bede House, Bermondsey and Rotherhithe 1938 – 2003 (2004) Katharine Bradley, ‘Creating Local Elites: the University Settlement Movement, National Elites and Citizenship in East London, 1884 – 1940’, in D.J. Wolffram (ed), Changing times: Elites and the dynamics of local politics (Leuven, Belgium: Peeters, 2006) (offprint) Prudence Brown and Kitty Barnes, Connecting Neighbors: The role of settlement houses in building social bonds within communities (Chicago, 2001) Allen F. Davis, Spearheads for Reform: The Social Settlements and the Progressive Movement 1890 – 1914 (New York, 1967) Design History Forum, Osaka University, International Conferences Art and Welfare, Kurashiki 2005 Japan. 5th International Conference on the History of the Arts and Crafts Movement; 2nd International Conference on the History of the Settlement Movement, (Osaka, Japan, 2005) Mark Freeman, ‘“No finer school than a settlement”: the development of the educational settlement movement’, History of Education xxxi (2002), pp. -
SAMS MAGAZINE – ILLUSTRATIONS - 1 - *Photos Have Been Scanned and Saved on Computer (In ‘Archives’)
SAMS MAGAZINE – ILLUSTRATIONS - 1 - *Photos have been scanned and saved on computer (in ‘Archives’) 1867 INSIDE FRONT COVER: A Fuegian Christian and a Patagonian chief BACK OF TITLE PAGE: Map of South America, with SAMS Mission Station Pg 2 Cranmer Station, Keppel Island Pg 12 ‘Allen Gardiner’ – ship Pg 30 Lota, Bay of Arauco, Chile Pg 33 Lota Schools and Chambique Valley – School, Vestry, Storeroom Pg 58 The Chinchas - North Island - Main Street, North Island Pg 64 The Chinchas – Bed of Guano 110 feet high Pg 94 English Church and Schools, Callao, Peru The Cathedral of Lima, Palace of Roman Catholic Archbishop of Lima, & Church of San Francisco Between Map of Patagonia, Tierra del Fuego and the Falklands Pg 128-129 Pg 175 Coquimbo, Chile In December supplement. INSIDE FRONT COVER: Map of ‘Missionary stations present and prospective on the West coast of South America, according to Dr. Hume’s report, Oct. 1867’ 1868 INSIDE FRONT COVER: Calle del Puerto – Frente del Mercado – Rosario City, Argentina Pg 13 Stanley, Falkland Islands Pg 19 View of Rosario City, from High Bank Pg 19 Town of Stanley, East Falklands Pg 39 Penguin Rookery, Keppel Island Pg 58 Tuelche or Patagonian Indians from Chupat Pg 77 Grave of William Cathcart Murphy, MA., Callao Between Main street, Panama Pg 94-95 Pg 95 Panama Water Carrier: No 1 Pg 96 Panama Water Carrier: No 2 (with mule) Pg 107 Bullock carts in the Plaza de las Carretas, Rosario SAMS MAGAZINE – ILLUSTRATIONS - 2 - Pg 129 Tacna, Peru – principal street Arica, Peru, landing place Pg 141 English Church, Monte Video Pg 142 Map of Uruguay, showing Salto, Paysandu, Fray Bentos, Colonia, Monte Video, Río de la Plata and Buenos Aires Pg 153 Arequipa and Mount Misti, Peru Grand Plaza, Market Place and Cathedral, Arequipa Pg 171 Indian mother and child, Peru Pg 186 Iquique, Peru, before the earthquake of 13/8/1868 Pg 189 Arica, Peru, after the earthquake of 13/08/1868 Pg 210 Mission Stations. -
Preserving the Historic Garden Suburb: Case Studies from London and New York
Suburban Sustainability Volume 2 Issue 1 Article 1 2014 Preserving the Historic Garden Suburb: Case Studies from London and New York Jeffrey A. Kroessler John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/subsust Part of the Architectural History and Criticism Commons, Historic Preservation and Conservation Commons, and the Urban, Community and Regional Planning Commons Recommended Citation Kroessler, Jeffrey A. (2014) "Preserving the Historic Garden Suburb: Case Studies from London and New York," Suburban Sustainability: Vol. 2 : Iss. 1 , Article 1. https://www.doi.org/http://dx.doi.org/10.5038/2164-0866.2.1.1 Available at: https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/subsust/vol2/iss1/1 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Environmental Sustainability at Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Suburban Sustainability by an authorized editor of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Kroessler: Preserving the Historic Garden Suburb Introduction In all the discussions of sustainability, historic preservation rarely makes an appearance. Energy efficiency, recycled materials, green roofs, LEED certification, solar power and windmills, even bike racks – all are popularized as acceptable elements of sustainable architecture. Economic justice, environmentalism, and social justice are the primary concerns of sustainability advocates. Environmental planning addresses the preservation of open space and greenbelts, but rarely the preservation of the built environment (Young 2002). Restoring or maintaining historic buildings is generally not counted as green by environmental advocates. But really, the greenest building is the one that is already built. -
The Living Church Catholic Evangelical Ecumenical
Caregivers and Care Scott Gunn on Forward Movement From the Pulpit March 23, 2014 THE LIVING CHURCH CATHOLIC EVANGELICAL ECUMENICAL Parish Administration Issue $5.50 livingchurch.org Lessons from Four New Congregations #ZXJTEPNBIPVTFJTCVJMU BOECZ 1SPWFSCT VOEFSTUBOEJOHJUJTFTUBCMJTIFE CZLOPXMFEHFUIFSPPNTBSFĕMMFE XJUIBMMQSFDJPVTBOEQMFBTBOUSJDIFT &YQFSJFODF3FUJSFNFOU3FEFĕOFEBU7JDBST-BOEJOHJO1POUF7FESB#FBDI BOEBU(MFONPPSJO4U"VHVTUJOFT8PSME(PMG7JMMBHF 7JDBST-BOEJOHDPNt(MFONPPSDPNt THE LIVING CHURCH ON THE COVER THIS ISSUE March 23, 2014 | “There is not one right way to begin a new congregation but there NEWS are key ingredients to make one 4 Holy Meals at Penn Form Community thrive” (see “Lessons from Four New Congregations,” p. 14). FEATURES St. Philip's Church, Frisco, Texas, completed in 2006. In 10 Caring for Caregivers By Retta Blaney the foreground is St. Philip's High Cross, commissioned | 14 Lessons from Four New Congregations By Clay Lein in 2011 and created by sculptor Eliseo Garcia. | Photo courtesy of St. Philip’s Church 18 Up from Pavement and Puddles By George Sumner | 22 TWENTY MINUTES WITH SCOTT GUNN Discipleship and Celebration By Richard J. Mammana, Jr. 10 22 | CULTURES 26 Gnawing: A Song of Noah By Michael Cover | BOOKS 27 Six Lenten Devotionals Review by Giuseppe Gagliano | 28 Imagining the Kingdom: How Worship Works Review by Mark F.M. Clavier 30 Consultancy Skills for Mission and Ministry Mindful Ministry • Developing Faithful Ministers Review by Jason Ingalls 26 33 The Complete Introduction to the Devout Life Review by Calvin Lane | 36 Fear and Friendship: Anglicans Engaging with Islam Review by Peter Eaton OTHER DEPARTMENTS 37 Caeli enarrant 39 Letters 41 People & Places 42 Sunday’s Readings We are grateful to St.