Recreation, Education, Disillusionment and Joy |
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Harold Hill Horticultural ClubGeorge Orwell, writing in his wartime essay ‘The Lion and the Unicorn’, cleverly observed the relationship between the English and their hobbies:
Living up to Orwell’s remark, the following Harold Hill-based clubs were mentioned at least once in the pages of the local press up until 1956: Animal Defenders’ League, British Legion, Tenants’ Association, Angling Club, Ambassadors’ Amateur Dramatic Society, Catholic Association, Old Folks’ Club, St John Ambulance Brigade, St Georges Ambulance and Nursing Corps, Army Cadets, Air Training Cadets, Catholic Women’s Association, Catholic Men’s Association, Cycling Club, Sunshine Club (for the blind), Hilltop Social Club, Motor Cycle Club, Dagnam Park Entertainments Committee, Roman Catholic Parents and Citizens Association, Mothers’ Club, Community Association, Sports Club, Dramatic Society, Working Men’s Club, Higher Income Tenants Association, Poultry Club, Women’s Social Club, The Friendly Women’s Club, Pensioners’ Pals, British Red Cross Society, Questors Dramatic Society and the Three Clubs Choir. These were the clubs reported on in the press, and there would have certainly been more, with many individual streets having their own social clubs. Many of these clubs such as the Catholic Association and the Community Association had multiple societies under their wing, and would allow space for them to operate in their own respective halls. Although some of the above were founded for religious reasons, or, like the various Tenants’ Associations, for practical reasons, they also took it upon themselves to organise for leisure purposes. Added to this were the political parties of all colours who had their own social committees, as well as the various churches who used their own halls for their own clubs. The Harold Hill Horticultural ClubBut the biggest of all these hobbies and entertainment societies was the Harold Hill Horticultural Club with a membership at its height of 1,500. Starting in July 1947 when 27 prospective members gathered in a prefab house to discuss possibilities, the first Chairman, Mr. C. Crotchley, announced;
At the time of this speech they had 259 members, by 1953 they had 1,000, a couple of years later they had 1,500 members. It would seem Harold Hill folk loved gardening – for most, if not all, this was the first time they had a garden of their own and they took full opportunity of what was presented to them. By the time of the fourth horticultural show in 1952 they had prize winning sections for best gardener, vegetables, flowers, fruit, and women’s, handicraft, children, and old folks, with all the these categories having several subsections each. By the fifth annual show the then secretary announced This was the era before garden centres, and besides if there were any such businesses in Essex the people of Harold Hill had neither the transport nor money for such goods. Consequently, people made do with what was around them. The LCC, despite persistent rumours, never provided top soil for gardens, and so every weekend all the men from a particular street would concentrate on one house at a time and take soil from nearby fields, while the Dagnam Park – having become known as ‘the Manor’ because of the derelict old aristocratic mansion – was pillaged of plants and bulbs. Sunday would witness a flow of residents, wheelbarrows full, streaming to and from the park. People were also resourceful with the builders waste, and many a rookery was built with the rubble left lying around in gardens. |
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