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Showing posts with the label white heather laundry

A Deadly Game of Conkers in Kilburn

Do you remember playing conkers at school? You drilled through a horse chestnut, put a knotted string through the middle and tried to hit your opponent’s conker with your own. The winner was the one who broke their opponent’s conker. It was a popular game, the chestnuts were free, and there was always a spare bit of string lying about, so what could possibly go wrong?  The fatal conker game On 14 October 1901, two school friends were playing the game after school in the street near their homes. 12-year-old Edward Churchill lived at No.14 Ariel Road and his friend Joseph Statham, also 12, lived at No.2 Loveridge Road, close to the corner where the boys were standing. Joseph aimed at Edward’s conker which he hit but it did not break. Unfortunately, the blow shattered Joseph’s own conker. Angry at the outcome, Joseph picked up a broken piece and without thinking, threw it across the road, as a horse-drawn van was passing by. The driver was Charles John Jones, aged 26, who worked for t...

Drilling for Oil and Gas in Willesden?

This intriguing story takes us off our usual area to Stonebridge Park. In 2017, Nick Grealy, CEO of London Local Energy (LLE), applied for a fracking licence to drill for shale gas on the old White Heather Laundry site at Stonebridge Park . Not surprisingly, this caused considerable opposition from local environmental groups. Brent Council along with Sadiq Khan the mayor of London , were also against the idea, and it does not appear to have gone any further. LLE was registered at Companies House on 9 May 2017 and dissolved on 16 October 2018 . But why did LLE choose the site? The White Heather Laundry was established in Alric Avenue in 1898, apparently by three young men from Oxford or Cambridge University (newspaper reports differ). In January 1911 they sank a well to supply water for the la undry on their two and a half acre site. At 2,225 feet this is one of the deepest artesian wells ever drilled in this country, and is reflected today by the name of a road on t...