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Darrell Figgis, the Forgotten Irish Patriot in Hampstead Cemetery

In May 2008, the Irish researcher Breandán Ó Corráin, was in Hampstead Cemetery Fortune Green Road, looking for a grave. He found row number J8 and worked his way along the line checking the numbers on the back of the stones to the position of grave number 35, but there was nothing visible. Having travelled so far, he decided to dig and eventually found a small headstone covered with six inches of soil. It said:  ‘In Loving Memory of Darrell Figgis, died October 25th 1925. Not gone from memory or from love, but to our Father’s home above’. This was the grave he was looking for which had remained hidden for over 80 years and Breandán wrote a letter to the Irish Times about his discovery.   Figgis grave stone This is a very tragic story with three interlinked deaths between 1924 and 1925. Darrell Figgis was at the heart of the fight with Britain to establish the Irish Free State, but divisions within the movement and his early death made him a forgotten man.  He was born at...
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One Million Hits

    Today our Blog has 247 stories and has totaled One Million hits! Thanks everyone.  This is Rosza a beautiful Wire-haired Hungarian Viszla 

German Guns on Fortune Green

While looking through some Hampstead Council Minutes I was surprised to find a discussion about German field guns on Fortune Green in West Hampstead.  At the end of WWI in 1918, the British Government had captured thousands of German guns. By April 1920 the War Office had distributed 3,595 field guns as well as other munitions to towns across Britain and the Commonwealth for display as trophies and additional war memorials. But this was controversial, as people were still recovering from the huge wartime losses. Some towns declined the offer, in others people protested and took direct action by pushing the guns into rivers and ponds. (Trophy guns were not offered by the Government after the Second World War). In June 1921 Hampstead Council accepted the offer of four guns, two to be positioned on Fortune Green and two to be kept in store. The cost to install them on concrete bases and produce a plaque was estimated at £161, this was later lowered to £64. The local Labour Party oppos...

The Mystery of the Missing Merchant, the Cook and the Stolen Jewels

This is the story of a Brondesbury resident who for many years enjoyed a respectable and prosperous lifestyle but was eventually beset by financial problems that led to bankruptcy and drove him to crime.   City trading – prosperity and problems   Leon Tauber was born in Lithuania around 1870, where he married and had two sons Solomon Sidney (b. about 1891) and Samuel (b.1892). We don’t know when Leon and his family moved to England, probably around 1900, and he became a naturalised citizen in 1905. He made a lot of money working as a lace and embroidery merchant in the Houndsditch area where he was a well-known and respected businessman. The Tauber family moved into Fern Brae, 5 Brondesbury Park in 1910; previously Leon had been living in Houndsditch. Leon was absent on census night the following year, when his wife and their two sons described themselves as wholesale lace manufacturers. We know all the family were involved in the business. In November 1913 the property was f...

The Welsh Harp and the Lure of Water

Created on the River Brent with its tributary the Silk Stream to provide water for the Grand Union and Regent C anals , the Brent Reservoir in northwest London is familiarly known as the Welsh Harp, after the nearby Old Welsh Harp coaching inn. For many years, the water was close to and easily accessible from the Edgware Road or the surrounding fields. The reservoir became a popular destination for Londoners, who went to enjoy the many attractions it had to offer. Early pedestrians walked along the main road and visitor numbers increased as bus, tram and train services were all laid on. Their first destination was often the pub at the edge of the reservoir. The heyday of the Old Wesh Harp was in the mid-nineteenth century under the stewardship of enterprising landlord William Perkins Warner. He used both the pub grounds and the waters of the reservoir to stage a huge variety of entertainments. In season, fishing was particularly popular, but bathing, boating and ice skating were all on...

The Willesden Trunk Murders

  Amazingly, there were two murders where the bodies were hidden in trunks in Willesden. In March 1904 George Crossman left a body in a tin trunk in Kensal Rise. Then in January the following year, Arthur Devereux in a copycat murder tried the same method to dispose of a body in Harlesden.  The George Crossman case In 1904, 30-year old George Crossman was living at No.43 Ladysmith Road, near the corner of Dundonald Road Kensal Rise, paying rent of £3 15 shillings a month. He shared the house with his wife and a young son Bertie. Crossman was well-dressed, handsome with dark piercing eyes, a fashionable drooping moustache and thick black hair. He was seen in the neighbourhood smoking cigars and taking seven-year-old Bertie for walks.  In Christmas 1903, to save money he moved upstairs and sublet the lower part of the house to William Delf, a shirt manufacturer, and his wife. Almost immediately they complained of a terrible smell coming from a tin trunk in a cupboard under ...