A walk through the Ancient Village of Walthamstow (4K)

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  • čas přidán 11. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 346

  • @sallii7860
    @sallii7860 Před 2 lety +5

    I've lived in walthamstow for 19 years of my life and I'm in California now but God do I miss it. Thank you for this video

  • @midnightteapot5633
    @midnightteapot5633 Před 4 lety +27

    as a young child I was temporarily looked after by a couple who owned a sweet shop in Walthamstow . they used to stick me in front of a record player out at the back of the shop and play Andy Stuart records to entertain me when they were busy . I had the run of the shop . to this day I love sweets and military band music . thank you Auntie Rose and Uncle Alf !!!

  • @athoshadjiantoni6403
    @athoshadjiantoni6403 Před 4 lety +16

    John Rogers turned Waltham Forest Borough into a world of wonder.

  • @hdoddema
    @hdoddema Před 4 lety +35

    Obviously, the whole pandemic lockdown crisis isn't in any way a good thing. But being homebound and those early very quiet weeks were unique, and I miss parts of it already. Thanks to videos like these, I've also become more interested in my own area's local history (I live in Groningen, the Netherlands). Suddenly every bump in the landscape and twist in the road has a history, and suddenly you start to see that our modern lives are taking place in ancient landscapes.

    • @janettedewar6617
      @janettedewar6617 Před 3 lety

      FASCINATING PLACE GRONINGEN. ALL THAT WATER. P'HAPS YOU COULD DO A VIDEO OF IT?

    • @manephewlenny6401
      @manephewlenny6401 Před 10 měsíci

      They stole all their water off the French.@@janettedewar6617

  • @petershort2901
    @petershort2901 Před 2 lety +5

    As a former resident of Chingford, I find your videos extremely interesting and well made. I left Chingford and England in 1966 with my wife, from Walthamstow. My fondest memories are of, of all things, the 38 bus from Chingford Royal Forest Hotel to Victoria Station. I was never really back home on a trip until I saw the 38 bus going up Chingford Mount. If you can record anything on the 38's history and route I would be forever grateful Please keep up the great work!

  • @thewalkingman777
    @thewalkingman777 Před 4 lety +16

    One of my favourite little bus routes, the W12, goes from Wanstead high street straight through the conservation area, past the Ancient house on the way to Coppermill Lane. I remember the first time i took the bus on my way to Walthamstow Wetlands and it turned into Church Lane; I was amazed, couldn't believe where I was. Wouldn't recommend it at the minute as it's a cosy little bus, but when it is safe to do so, treat yourself to an oyster card historic tour ! 😁

  • @neilstory3088
    @neilstory3088 Před 4 lety +4

    and a last thought, the mother of William Penn, founder of Pennsylvania is buried in St.Mary’s as are his brother and sister. Samuel Pepys was a visitor to Walthamstow to visit with the Penns. Thanks again for a wonderful Walk. So many memories.

  • @neilstory3088
    @neilstory3088 Před 4 lety +13

    Brilliant! Thank you so much. I grew up on Orford Road, opposite the Nags Head, in the 1960s. As a kid I was always taking my garden finds round to the very helpful people at the Vestry Museum. These were only old pottery, clay pipe remains and the odd old coin, but they helped foster my love of history. In our garden, close to the house was the remains of an old tiled floor, quite elaborate if I remember. I asked the chaps at the Museum what it could be and they suggested it might be the sight of an old mortuary and there was thought of a tunnel that went over to the Church, just across the road. Of course I had to look for the tunnel, so I hammered old wireless aerials into the turf and lo and behold I reached something solid at a depth of about five feet. Next thing we know is a hole appears in my Dad’s small but well tended grass. Well he calls the council and they think the hole has been made my a rat escaping from an old mediaeval sewer. They dug down and filled the hole.And that was the end of my archaeological career. Not exactly Time Team, I know. Anyway many thanks from across the Pond in the delightful Loyalist town of Picton, in Prince Edward County, Ontario. Keep up the good work and stay well.

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 4 lety

      thanks for sharing that great story Neil from all the way over in Ontario

  • @FishingtonBurpPuzzle
    @FishingtonBurpPuzzle Před 4 lety +5

    I lived on Church Hill road 1990 to 1992. I always remember the street market which went on for ever. Also had a great night at Walthamstow Dogs. It was a very comfortable and multicultural community.. I taught art there and every weekend took the Victoria line to London.

  • @seanwilkinson876
    @seanwilkinson876 Před 4 lety +23

    You should mention that Wiilliam Morris was baptised in St Mary's Church. You should also mention about the history of Vinegar Alley and how sinister it can sometimes feel, especially when you walk down there on your own or at night. There are plague pits in the Village area and 'Vinegar Stinks', which is what Vinegar Alley used to be called, got its name from the use of vinegar as an early antiseptic. I went to school in the Barret Road area, Warwick Boys school in the 1970's, and the business area with all the breweries used to be a large wood yard which burnt down, I would guess, in about 1979: I watched it from my bedroom window in Churchhill Rd. The Village has become greatly gentrified in the last few years: for example, The Queen's Arms used to be a real spit and sawdust pub. Happy days!

    • @matsimpsk
      @matsimpsk Před 4 lety +1

      Haha, yes, the 'nice place to get away from a pandemic' comment made me smile, considering it was said pretty much on top of a plague pit ;)

    • @louiseskuse8391
      @louiseskuse8391 Před 4 lety +2

      Sean Wilkinson I was wondering why it was called 'Vinegar', thanks for explaining 😊

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 4 lety +1

      thanks for that info Sean

    • @michaelmason5174
      @michaelmason5174 Před 4 lety +1

      Hi Sean i was at Warwick boys school in 60 s i left in 1964 your right about wood yard , i think its a bit sad the way the " Village" has gone in my day people lived there struggled to make ends meet , different world now i supose keep well

    • @lauratulloch8963
      @lauratulloch8963 Před 4 lety

      That's so interesting Sean. Was Warwick Boys School the building at the end of Barrett Road and Brooke Road? Did the building have 'Manual Instruction Centre' emblazoned across the top? Here's a photo of the building here bit.ly/3dUcPXl. Also can you remember whereabouts in the Village the plague pits were meant to have been?

  • @kend.5894
    @kend.5894 Před 2 lety +1

    Born in Walthamstow and lived in the "village" in Grovesnor Park Road. Dad bought the house for £400 !! Lots of memories of the area.

  • @paulineweir4879
    @paulineweir4879 Před 4 lety +9

    I was born in Walthamstow in that village and went to school there ,thanks for the videos nice to see the place , I will take a walk down there .

  • @squires50
    @squires50 Před 2 lety +1

    Fantastic vlog. I have visited friends there. Have walked around the area so was great to find out some of the history. Thanks for sharing.

  • @johnhall6993
    @johnhall6993 Před 4 lety +12

    Thank you, John. I learnt to ring bells at St. Mary's at the end of the 1960s and the Nags Head was the closest pub to go to after Thursday practise evenings: ringing is thirsty work (great excuse). The old Town Hall in Orford Road was for a time (from 1959, I think) part of Connaught Hospital.

    • @anthonystrelitz6768
      @anthonystrelitz6768 Před 4 lety

      Actually, the old Town Hall became the front entrance to Connaught Hospital which was opened much earlier than 1959. I was taken there after an accident at school in 1951 so by then, it was already in use as a hospital.

    • @johnhall6993
      @johnhall6993 Před 4 lety

      @@anthonystrelitz6768 Thank you, Anthony. I was in there at age 7 for minor surgery in 1961. Yes, according to Lost Hospitals of London, ezitis.myzen.co.uk/connaught.html the hospital itself goes back a lot further than I thought.

  • @ashleysgaze
    @ashleysgaze Před 4 lety +4

    John: a walk through Walthamstow is the perfect antidote for dealing with the first day of winter - a v/wet and cold Melbourne afternoon - here in OZ. Many thanks & cheers!

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 4 lety +2

      Thanks Ashley - that's a nice image for me as I've only ever been to Melbourne in the winter

    • @Theinsidetrader
      @Theinsidetrader Před 3 lety +1

      Watching from Melbourne too 👍😁

  • @melissaquinn1296
    @melissaquinn1296 Před 4 lety +20

    Good walk as a taster, John, but there is so much history in the Village that you should return for a second walk. I regularly now see groups of people walking round there and when I speak to them it turns out they are tourists on a tour of Walthamstow! Who would have thought it!
    You should definitely mention the three early 19th century schools in the Village, now serving very different purposes. They encapsulate how Walthamstow has changed.
    Also, just a suggestion, what about a William Morris walk of the local areas with a connection to him. The William Morris Gallery gets tonnes of visitors so it could prove popular. You should start there as the only house he lived in that still remains. There are the sites of the other local houses he lived in, Elm House nearby and Woodford Hall in South Woodford (with his father's tomb in the nearby churchyard). There is also St Mary's Church in Walthamstow, where he was baptised, and the Old Church and the Hunting Lodge in Chingford which greatly influenced his taste and imagination. And indeed Epping Forest, which Morris said was magnificently idiosyncratic because of the strangeness of the hornbeams. The happy hours he spent wandering there can be seen in the details from nature of his designs.

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 4 lety +2

      That's a great suggestion Melissa. I've written about Morris before and the Gallery and Lloyd Park is featured in my Higham Hill video but a Morris themed walk would be an interesting route

    • @melissaquinn1296
      @melissaquinn1296 Před 4 lety +1

      I shall definitely go and watch the Higham Hill video. I would be grateful if you could recommend any other of your videos which feature Walthamstow or William Morris.

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 4 lety +2

      @@melissaquinn1296 hi Melissa - here's a playlist of my videos that feature Walthamstow in some way czcams.com/video/6qKId8QCXhA/video.html
      And a bit left-field but this is a film I made last year for Borough of Culture with William Galinsky inspired by News from Nowhere - it was screened in the Town Hall debating chamber czcams.com/video/FBGAQjVrfaM/video.html

    • @melissaquinn1296
      @melissaquinn1296 Před 4 lety

      Thanks John.

  • @JTTW1455
    @JTTW1455 Před 3 měsíci

    That was a lovely, evocative walk John, I especially enjoyed the tree you pointed out that may have known more pastoral times.

  • @lizwilliams14
    @lizwilliams14 Před 4 lety +6

    That was so interesting. I never would have known how beautiful and historic Walthamstow is. Your videos always make me want to investigate further. As I’m an expat now living on the Canadian prairies, thank goodness for the internet and the public library on line etc.

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks Liz - great to think of these videos being watched on the Canadian prairies

  • @JHC_76
    @JHC_76 Před rokem

    My home town. E17 you can still see the old history of stow changed so much there now.

  • @dessysmith2514
    @dessysmith2514 Před 4 lety +4

    I live in a really beautiful place in Cornwall but WOW! it really is AWESOME STOW!! I do love London so much and one day I will live there!

    • @cdssheps
      @cdssheps Před 4 lety

      I use to live not far from e17 I would like to return home one day as I am alone now 😦 live in Devon at this time wish you well. Clive

    • @Sherirose1
      @Sherirose1 Před 3 lety

      You must come visit when all is well. There are many nice places to visit. Friendly people in Wanstead.

  • @zabedaabbas4490
    @zabedaabbas4490 Před 2 lety +1

    My home town, love that place ❤️

  • @mozdickson
    @mozdickson Před 4 lety +4

    Lovely place for a slow walk... those beautiful twin palm like trees in front of that magnificent old gaff behind the closing credits. They are indigenous to New Zealand, known as Cabbage Trees and also Kouka (the Maori name). They flower white, like that, annually in late Spring, and yes - they have an edible heart within the flower head. I noticed they thrive across the UK even in southern Scotland. We have two young ones in.our garden here in NZ. Juveniles, yet to flower. Cheers!

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 4 lety +1

      That’s wonderful additional info thanks so much. That building is the Registry Office so I imagine those trees will be in a few wedding photos. Hopefully someone who got married there will see your comment

    • @lauratulloch8963
      @lauratulloch8963 Před 4 lety +1

      I've always wondered if they are cabbage trees from New Zealand and you've just confirmed it - thank you! I'm a Kiwi living in here on Eden Road and walk past that beautiful house every day. Do you know who planted them and why they planted trees from NZ there? I am growing a kowhai tree in our back garden for my little taste of home here.

    • @mozdickson
      @mozdickson Před 4 lety

      @@lauratulloch8963 kia ora Laura, I cant help with that question...the ones I spotted in the UK in 2018 all look very mature, and well established - so I'd assumed they've been part of the landscape for a very long time. There are similarish type hebes (I think that's the term) in other southern hemisphere countries - but given you and I agree they look like Kouka, then Cabbage Trees they are. Btw I saw mature pohutukawa in flower in Oporto botanical gardens in 2018 as well! They are also in the UK. Enjoy your time in wonderful London, and dont rush back until you've seen it all!!

  • @richbutler718
    @richbutler718 Před 4 lety +6

    Thank you John again , your video’s are my Sunday treat now , and this one started outside the last school I went to , it was called Leyton county high then , I remember when I left there when I was 15 years old , standing outside , and thinking “what now” no one told me I was being taught , I thought my school life was punishment for something I may have done , I just wanted to ride my bike around wanstead flats and park , and go fishing at the hollow ponds , that was in 1972 . And compliments on the fantastic filming around Walthamstow village. Stay safe

    • @slipnslide9308
      @slipnslide9308 Před 4 lety

      Rich Butler I think my Dad may have gone to that school. He won a scholarship to go there in the late 1940’s.

  • @colinmumford6843
    @colinmumford6843 Před 4 lety +6

    Butterfields!!.... my brother had a flat on Butterfields road for 20 years. I lived with him there for one year, and it was nice to see the surrounding area agin. I was hoping you would creep down to Acacia road, which is where my mum grew up........ an “awesome show” John 🤓👍

  • @gramilwolf3448
    @gramilwolf3448 Před 4 lety +6

    You mentioned the film studios in the area and the Battle of the Somme documentary film. The connection is Geoffrey Malins who worked in studios locally and who gained permission to film the actual preparations for the battle in 1916. Many of the film clips you see in WW1 documentaries are from Malins film including the famous explosion when tunnels under German defences were filled with explosives and detonated. When released it became one of the most watched films of all time.
    Another interesting video John. thanks a lot.

  • @jamesgriffin3866
    @jamesgriffin3866 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for the walk. I was born in Thorpe Coombe and grew up in Walthamstow Village from 1972. Great memories of the village and the surrounding roads, I live in Ireland now, but my heart is forever in 101 Church Hill. Thanks. PS there are great Conker trees next to the church!!

  • @ginagibbs1775
    @ginagibbs1775 Před 2 lety +1

    My parents were married in that church and I believe my grandfather is buried there. My mother and her family lived in First Avenue.

  • @timbuthfer901
    @timbuthfer901 Před 4 lety +2

    Another great walk John. Walthamstow is a real east London gem. On the beer front I bought a case of IPA from the pretty decent beer company a stones throw from the tap, excellent stuff.

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks Tim I'll take a look, Gravity Well is another one I need to check out too, had a couple of pints at Filly Brook before the lockdown, really good

  • @julieblackstock8650
    @julieblackstock8650 Před 4 lety +4

    I just love that 15th Century house. Its gorgeous

  • @jazzman9042
    @jazzman9042 Před 4 lety +2

    What a stunning walk & talk. It was such an eye opener, as I never knew there was such early buildings in Walthamstow other than churches. Years ago 1950's when I was a lad, my dad would go to a shop called Job Stocks which was full of ex gov' WW2 stuff, from radios to watches to army battledress , they had it all. I used look in the shop windows wishing I a few bob to buy something. All my family lived in Walthamstow with the exception of us living in Forest gate.
    Given the lockdown , I thought this was a brilliant walk full of historical info. As always, superb work John; go to the top of the class! AA++

    • @jazzman9042
      @jazzman9042 Před 4 lety

      I should have said, Job Stocks was in Walthamstow... wish I could remember the name of the road.

    • @terrytaylor1394
      @terrytaylor1394 Před 4 lety

      @@jazzman9042 I have a vague memory as a kid of there being a shop like that in St Mary's Rd?

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 4 lety

      thanks Michael - not sure how I've managed to miss covering this area in a video before, I seem to have filmed all the areas around it

    • @jazzman9042
      @jazzman9042 Před 4 lety

      Hi Terry, that sounds familiar. It was on a corner, with two windows on one side and one on the other.

  • @paulmorris3613
    @paulmorris3613 Před 4 lety +3

    I have to say i have always found the folk at Vestry house really helpful, Not been there for years, especially as they made all the one-way schemes though the village and all my building work up there died, The folks in the church was nice and worth a call at the house of prayer rather than the house or libation in the pub lol
    I used to use Vestry house a lot when i was teacher. Thanks for the walk!

  • @medwaypeninsulaMR
    @medwaypeninsulaMR Před 4 lety +1

    Hi John- I must admit that part of Walthamstow I didn't go to when I was a kid growing up in Leytonstone although I do remember a school trip to the Vestry House museum. Looking forward to the next walk....Cheers Kev

  • @squires50
    @squires50 Před rokem

    Thank you John. I have friends in Walthamstow. Many of the places you visited I did too

  • @d4nn7b
    @d4nn7b Před 4 lety +5

    Great vid as always John. Didn’t realise that Walthamstow was that pretty, and the way you presented this vid was excellent! Keep up the good work! 👍🏻

  • @bassinblue
    @bassinblue Před 4 lety +2

    Amazing videos as always John. You should check out Walthamstow Town hall and the park/running track behind it. Quite lovely.

  • @madincraft4418
    @madincraft4418 Před 4 lety +1

    I play the walks while I groom dogs. It's peaceful and lovely for me and the dogs. The musical choices are so nice. I can feel the stress level dropping from my doggie clients as we work and listen.
    Thanks so much John. Restful alertness.
    Bailey the schnauzer says thank you also.

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 4 lety +1

      This is one of my favourite all time comments, my wife loves it too

  • @CGMaat
    @CGMaat Před 7 měsíci

    Our Fernando , Daisy Xavier Iris live there so thanks for helping us here in New York visit our family there! We had many walks through these sights and you add the extra history - very lovely! Hi MOLES! From wantagh Long Island! Damian is our other son - coincidence you mention guy on bike ! Junk yard were wedding after celebration! WOW ! Great job - congrats - my favorite is church lane . Would love to have an apartment there.

  • @littleacornslandscapes2935

    Thanks John, and congratulations on your trending. I'm still waiting for my kids to be impressed in any way !

  • @Waggst88
    @Waggst88 Před rokem

    What a lovely video, looking forward to seeing the rest. Keep up the great work

  • @RS-pb2se
    @RS-pb2se Před 4 lety +1

    You never realise how interesting local history is until you engage it. I only found this channel a week ago and am already loving it.
    This took me back a little as I was brought up around Walthamstow Village until the age of 7. I’ve spent most of my life in Walthamstow, and only recently moved back to the area in February. I remember going to St Mary’s Church with school regularly; great memories of community and common values with others. I used to love the Vestry House museum as a child too.
    I moved to one of the worst hectares in Walthamstow, but it’s so lovely to be in an area such enriched in culture and beauty when I explore and travel around.

  • @sherlock_malfoy5
    @sherlock_malfoy5 Před 4 lety +4

    I’ve lived on wood street for 10 years and had no idea about the history of this place

  • @Charlie.TheChatRoom
    @Charlie.TheChatRoom Před 4 lety +3

    Just purchased your book and audio book. I am utterly delighted in the reading. Definitely a good read. Keep up the good work sir! Writing from Buenos Aires, Argentina.

  • @markahomer
    @markahomer Před 4 lety +2

    Enjoyed this so much. A Walthamstow I never knew existed. Beautifully shot and narrated. Clearly gentrified since the 1960s but the only part we ever visited from Leyton back then was the High Street market and Hoe Street - especially the Granada Cinema (now EMD Cinema) and Henry Taylors for school uniform (now an HSBC). Walthamstow was always the poor relation 55 years ago - then the arrival of the Victoria Line changed all that.

  • @ZAHIR0786
    @ZAHIR0786 Před 3 lety +1

    Walthamstow village my home since birth , love it won’t move anywhere else :)
    Thanks for sharing the video 👍🏽

  • @neillevis9759
    @neillevis9759 Před 3 lety

    Enjoyed this very much, John. Lovely, unassuming manner. Told me lots, too: eg, did not know about the 16th century wine vaults in the Nag's head. Thanks very much.

  • @karengillett4448
    @karengillett4448 Před 3 lety +1

    Shame I’ve only just found this. My late hubby would have loved it...he lived in Butterfields as a child,

  • @howdymartin6258
    @howdymartin6258 Před 3 lety +1

    John, I overlooked this video so what a treat to finally see it. My previous notion of Walthamstow was the dog track and that was it - but for one amusing memory. When I used to ride round the A406 to Snaresbrook there was a timber merchant on the right in an estate just after the River Lea.... once a week, without fail, they would hoist up a display board over the premises that you could easily see from the North Circular (for that was its purpose). On it was emblazoned the words "Laminate of the week" -- and, for sure, each week it changed - always amused me that did - cheers

    • @TfL1901
      @TfL1901 Před rokem +1

      Was it Shadbolt? They sold veneers, and closed down, and moved to somewhere in Essex. It’s been replaced by the Costco

    • @howdymartin6258
      @howdymartin6258 Před rokem +1

      @@TfL1901 - it must have been - such a quirky place but a real treat

    • @TfL1901
      @TfL1901 Před rokem

      @@howdymartin6258 a bit further down the A406 on Bowes Road there is a vets, and they have a big sign that also changes each week, “Bird of the week” 🤣

  • @paultowers2291
    @paultowers2291 Před 4 lety +1

    Another excellent walk john .thanks Tc and stay safe ..

  • @lutherrhein7697
    @lutherrhein7697 Před rokem

    I lived in the area, on Livingstone road, Bakers Arms. i had pleasant walks around the cemetery.

  • @zugbug1986
    @zugbug1986 Před 4 lety +2

    Great video John, I saw a programme on the TV about year ago on Walthamstow village and it has been on my to do list. Thanks mate, stay safe.

  • @rogerkearns8094
    @rogerkearns8094 Před 4 lety +6

    Lord Raglan, that used to be my local. Had my stag do there, May 20th 1970.

    • @BoneStar
      @BoneStar Před 4 lety +2

      Fell out of every single one of those pubs more times than I wish to admit

  • @raymondpenalver7095
    @raymondpenalver7095 Před 4 lety +3

    Another perfect ending for a Sunday night watching another one of your great videos, full of interesting historical facts as always, many thanks John !

  • @andycam4645
    @andycam4645 Před 2 lety

    John, Many thanks again for another nostalgia-fest! As a student living in central London, I'd take the Victoria Line from Warren Street to the end to have my hair done in Walthamstow at an affordable price - got to love Walthamstown. Would walk along Hoe Street and then down Garnet (?) to the William Morris house and Lloyd park - cafe at WM had delicious cake! Also joined a Wassailing Group over Christmas/New Year, and after conscientious rehearsing, we wassailed along the streets of Walthamstow in the freezing late afternoon, calling at the Nag's Head, and a cheese shop and others, and a generous pub provided us with curry dinners (which we'd earned!). The dogs' track was being converted to a residential site. Memories, memories!

  • @vivinnz
    @vivinnz Před 2 lety

    Thank you so much for this nostalgic trip down memory lane. My Grandmother's family came from Walthamstow and i grew up in Tottenham. Every Saturday for years we went to the market and knew many of the street traders. In the 1950's to 60's my father had the barbers shop in Buxton Road off the market. Lovely to be able to visit several of the places I used to know while travelling with you on your walks. And all from the comfort of my armchair - in Invercargill, New Zealand. Thank you.

  • @TfL1901
    @TfL1901 Před rokem

    It has been so interesting to witness the change in Walthamstow Village… I used to walk through the village on my way to my piano lesson as a child… I lived not far from the village until just recently. The village has become so different

  • @john80c
    @john80c Před 4 lety +3

    Great video john. The only thing I knew about Walthamstow was the tv wrestling back in the 60s was sometimes from Walthamstow Baths.

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 4 lety +2

      I need to go and find Walthamstow Baths now John

    • @john80c
      @john80c Před 4 lety

      @@JohnRogersWalks hope I've got that right as my memory is not always that good

    • @lauratulloch8963
      @lauratulloch8963 Před 4 lety +1

      That's fascinating John. Are you referring to the Lido that used to be at Hollow Ponds?

    • @john80c
      @john80c Před 4 lety

      @@lauratulloch8963 no it was actually a swimming baths. They used to cover the pool with boards and erect a ring on the boards. This was about +60 years ago so it probably was closed and developed years ago.

    • @stevehead365
      @stevehead365 Před 2 lety

      @@JohnRogersWalks The baths are long gone, used to be down hill next to the library on High Street, if the library is still there.

  • @soupermanz
    @soupermanz Před 3 lety

    My wife and I were married in St Marys Church in 1972 !! Don't live in the area now, and it was good to see it again. I always thought the area had an ancient feel to it. Great history was on our doorstep back then.

  • @MsLinz1975
    @MsLinz1975 Před 4 lety +3

    Home! I grew up here and loved it.

  • @rpm1796
    @rpm1796 Před 4 lety +2

    Evening Blighty,
    This will be the end of my first week on board ship..... great fun & luv the set & tone.
    Canna wait for your, soon to be...actual pub reviews.....I've been following your treks & reading up as you go, on the olde pub histories on Goog Maps...such as when you and Mr. Sinclair happened by the old Rose in Docklands...Magic Shadows....

  • @somauk
    @somauk Před 3 lety

    I’d lived in Walthamstow (Church Hill and Wood Street) and Leytonstone. Many good memories. I recently visited God’s Old Junkyard in E-17 before lockdown. Loved cycling along the canal to Waltham Abbey. I will never forget the Hitchcock Mosaic’s in Leytonstone Underground Station. I loved cycling through Epping Forest for leisure.

  • @GRAHAM1514
    @GRAHAM1514 Před 4 lety +3

    Thanks for this Excellent video you have made John , Going back to my Roots !

  • @petercrosby5775
    @petercrosby5775 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for sharing I lived in Highams Park until 1966 but now live in St.Thomas Ontario Canada it bought back many memories.

  • @Pierlover
    @Pierlover Před 4 lety +1

    That was a real treat. And now I can say I was born in Awesome-stow!

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 4 lety +1

      thanks Douglas - yes, I reckon there's a t-shirt somewhere as well

  • @user-sw2lv3zp6o
    @user-sw2lv3zp6o Před 4 lety

    I lived in Walthamstow Village between 1994 and 2011. Thoroughly enjoyed it.

  • @gordonshuffle9827
    @gordonshuffle9827 Před 4 lety +3

    Thanks for all videos John .Hope you can get back on the London loop eventually

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 4 lety

      Thanks Gordon - me too, might be in the autumn though I reckon

  • @kohedunn
    @kohedunn Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you John for this lovely walk that I wish I had known better.. We moved from Hale end in Highams park when I was twelve 1957 , to The Drive in walthamstow... We had rented one of the big houses slated for demolition.. Being only twelve, I had little information of the area ..How beautiful it all looks...I'm glad you mentioned Vestry House , as I would love to know more about 'The Drive ", as it was back then... There was a church at the top of the Drive, But I don't know the name...Not knowing some of the places you walked through today , put me at a disadvantage...So lovely...Thank you again..

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 4 lety

      My pleasure Anne - I had a friend at City Poly who lived in the Drive - about 30 years ago, I remember going there to rehearse with our band

  • @ralphwinter6421
    @ralphwinter6421 Před 4 lety +3

    Cheers John, cool walk.

  • @Whiskel
    @Whiskel Před 2 lety

    This was lovely. Used to regularly walk between Fairlop Road, Leytonstone to see friends living in Grove Road. There for a good few years, perhaps my favourite of all the areas I've lived in London.

  • @rambling_rob7035
    @rambling_rob7035 Před 4 lety +1

    John, what a great walk. Well deserved bump in the numbers of viewers.

  • @franktuckwell196
    @franktuckwell196 Před 2 lety +1

    Watched a few of yours now, very good, enough history to be interesting without being boring, no naff soundtrack and nice and steady filming. Having found you have subscribed. Amazing what you can learn just by walking out and about in London.

  • @misslaverne4915
    @misslaverne4915 Před 3 lety

    Thank you for the lovely walk down memory lane, I have not been back for a while and it was lovely to see it again, I lived in Beulah road, we had a Greengrocer shop. Again thanks, it really cheered me up!

  • @carolinasaez473
    @carolinasaez473 Před 3 lety

    Lovely memories of my time living in Walthamstow, more than a decade ago. I used to walk past St Mary's church on my way to work. Thanks John!

  • @robertbarling5601
    @robertbarling5601 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you once again John for a wonderful and informative video. You showed me parts of Walthamsrow that I didn't know existed. Bob.

  • @PhilDoleman
    @PhilDoleman Před 3 lety

    I've really been enjoying your videos John, but this one really brought back some memories. I used to live in Leytonstone and cycle to work in Walthamstow going on 18 years ago (you walked right past my old workplace). It really took me back, seeing the ancient house and the Vestry House (and the Nags Head, where I spent quite a few evenings!). I live in Derbyshire now, with the peak district on my doorstep, but Walthamstow village is every bit as beautiful.

  • @2Sugarbears
    @2Sugarbears Před 3 lety

    I just found you tonight, Oct 19, 2020. You took me to a wonderful place that I didn't know existed. I felt time/place/people in some of the wonderful buildings. I felt quite the time traveler. Thanks John Rogers, thanks so much.

  • @angelenoof206
    @angelenoof206 Před 4 lety +1

    Magnificent dude! Thank you SO much. Wish I was there for incomparable Thames Valley summer. You are the best. Loving you constantly from here in Mexico City.

  • @leeoulds9540
    @leeoulds9540 Před 3 lety

    Fantastic video. I spent the first ten years of my life living close to Walthamstow village from 1970-80. Great nostalgia seeing the places I knew so well as a kid. There used to be a boys club on Grove Road that me & my mates went to twice a week. Ahh, good times!🙂

  • @paulosborne6517
    @paulosborne6517 Před 4 lety +3

    Oh, that was lovely! It always surprises me how polarized Walthamstow is - the grot of the town and the sedate & secret treasures of the village to the East... Even the Spar on Orford Road is something a bit special - they do gourmet burgers and have barrels of local wine for decanting into your own receptacles at £7 a pop. You *must* go to God's Own Junkyard some time, for a neon-lit Sunday breakfast after the night before - it's a bit like someone plonked The Electric Ballroom down in the middle of the 17th century.

  • @jjwhittle8873
    @jjwhittle8873 Před rokem

    I used to live in Walthamstow and the Nag's Head was our local. The landlady owned a lot of cats and had a little cat cemetery in the pub garden.
    One afternoon she ordered everyone outside to the front of the pub as she'd organised a jazz wake procession for one of the cats that had recently died. So yeah, a unique place. I hope it still is like that.

  • @5animalfrolics532
    @5animalfrolics532 Před 2 lety

    Thanks John It was amazing to see this I worked in Walthamstow in the mid to late 90s from an office Wood Street and it is good to see how it has changed and a number of places that were customers of that business still going.

  • @lesliegprice6652
    @lesliegprice6652 Před 4 lety

    Nice to see the Walthamstow Village my Dad's elder sisters had a bungalow there always considered it posh, take care John your films give me great solace in these turbulent times .....

  • @maaxpoower9037
    @maaxpoower9037 Před 4 lety +1

    excellent

  • @marciajenkins819
    @marciajenkins819 Před 4 lety

    My husband and I look forward to these videos every Sunday.

  • @nigel9843
    @nigel9843 Před 4 lety +1

    Nice walk showing the better part of Walthamstow.

  • @andynixon2820
    @andynixon2820 Před 4 lety

    My grandmother was born in Walthamstow in 1920 . She was the eldest girl amongst 13 kids and they lived in two rooms above a pub .
    She passed on a little bit of her Walthamstow culture to me .

  • @ttv2951
    @ttv2951 Před 4 lety +1

    Who knew there was so much history to Walmthamstow ? the other comments inspired me to look further its really amazing Awesomestow. Cant wait for Lockdown to finish and let John get out and about more, great video.

  • @jmac1948
    @jmac1948 Před 3 lety +1

    Mothers Ruin is the place if you want to get hammered, £7.50 for a cocktail but you'll be smiling after a couple. The breweries are excellent too, plenty of street food on offer during the summer months. I'm actually in this video, I hope you enjoyed the walk.

  • @jillfrancis8380
    @jillfrancis8380 Před 4 lety

    Thank you John for this positive view of Walthamstow. My mother grew up there in the mid 1920s and I visited in the 90s with not a very good impression, so this restored my view of how it was in times past and may encourage me to take my daughter on a visit in the future.

  • @4thEyeVision
    @4thEyeVision Před 4 lety +2

    John thanks you made Walthamstow in to a beautiful Village Wow

  • @vincezielinski2784
    @vincezielinski2784 Před 3 lety

    Great video . You ended up in Fraser road , another 25 yards and you would have been outside the house I grew up in . I can remember delivering newspapers to the Monoux almshouses early in the mornings and getting spooked by the graves . Thanks for all the reminders . Vince

  • @lesgoody3141
    @lesgoody3141 Před 4 lety +3

    A great one John! Well done!

  • @guth21776
    @guth21776 Před 21 dnem

    I really miss lockdown. I fear we will never have one again. It changed my life for the better. Alas I did lose a good friend at the beginning.

  • @stevenrawlings4663
    @stevenrawlings4663 Před 3 lety

    I lived in St Mary Rd in the village for a while about 30 year ago. Had a drink or 2 in The Nags Head.

  • @AndrzejLondyn
    @AndrzejLondyn Před 3 lety

    I'm using your vlogs in three ways: 1. Sightseeing because I'm wheelchair-bound 2. Getting information about London history 3. Improving my English listening skills because English is my third language.
    Thank you John.

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 3 lety

      great to hear the videos are useful Andrew - thanks for letting me know

  • @redjacc7581
    @redjacc7581 Před 3 lety

    used to know walthhamstow well in years gone by. Lovely episode

  • @janicejohnson9138
    @janicejohnson9138 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for doing these interesting walks, although I grow up in Walthamstow and come from a old Walthamstow family I realised how little knew about the local history of the place. I hope to go back some time and do this walk myself. It was good to see the old Bakers Alms houses are still there. My mother was born in Bakers Avenue Leyton, worked in a Bakers and died in the Bakers retirement flats in Epping.

  • @staceygrove5976
    @staceygrove5976 Před 3 lety

    I was living in a rented flat in Cromwell Road, Walthamstow Village, in the mid-1990s, and you could buy an entire late Victorian terraced house there for around £65,000 at the time. Wish I'd done so, as they now cost close to £500,000, I'm told, and I'll probably never be able to move back there (now living in the Manchester area)!

  • @sannimcable
    @sannimcable Před 3 lety

    Beautiful

  • @jamesnightingale9782
    @jamesnightingale9782 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks John. Excellent as always..it’s been a while so I now have some videos to catch up with.mad times.great that your getting out and about. I need to get a pint lol I do miss my local.

    • @JohnRogersWalks
      @JohnRogersWalks  Před 4 lety

      thanks James - plenty of time to catch up. You might find a local pub selling draft beer to take away - there are a few round here now

  • @annepaul2043
    @annepaul2043 Před 3 lety

    I remember being taken to Walthamstow museum as a child ,where are the stocks? My father's
    family lived at 3, Longfellow road. I spent the first 18 years of my life in Leyton. I didn't know there was a canal there. Now I live in Canada.