Match girls come out very strong on a Saturday night, when any number of them may be found at the Paragon Music Hall, in the Mile End Road; the Foresters’ Music Hall, in Cambridge Road; and the Sebright, at Hackney; The Eagle, in the City Road, used to be a favourite resort of
these girls, and in bygone summers dancing on the crystal platform was their nightly amusement. They continue to be very fond of dancing, but they are even more attached to singing. They seem to know by heart the words of all the popular music hall songs of the day, and their
homeward journey on Bank holidays from Hampstead Heath and Ching­ford, though musical, is decidedly noisy. The police are as a rule extremely good to the match girls, and a constable will rarely interfere with them unless positively compelled to do so. It must be admitted,
however, that to have half-a-dozen of these girls marching down the Bow Road singing at the top of their voices the chorus of “Ta-ra-ra ­Boom-de-ay,” or “Knocked ‘em in the Old Kent Road “ - these are at the present moment their favourites - is a little irritating to quiet-loving
citizens. The above article was first published in 'Down East and Up West', by Montagu Williams Q.C., 1894. - arthurlloyd @threadreaderapp unroll

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21 May
River Lea history - In the Roman era, Old Ford, as the name suggests, was the ancient, most downstream, crossing point of the River Lea. This was part of a pre-Roman route that followed the modern Oxford Street, Old Street, through Bethnal Green to Old Ford and thence across a
causeway through the marshes, known as Wanstead Slip (now in Leyton). The route then continued through Essex to Colchester. At this time, the Lea was a wide, fast flowing river, and the tidal estuary stretched as far as Hackney Wick. Evidence of a late Roman settlement at
Old Ford, dating from the 4th and 5th centuries, has been found. In 894, a force of Danes sailed up the river to Hertford, and in about 895 they built a fortified camp, in the higher reaches of the Lea, about 20 miles north of London. King Alfred the Great saw an opportunity to
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29 Apr
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Hackney featured highly in Renton Nicholson’s Cockney Adventures and Tales of London Life. “In the early-to-mid-19th century, water colourists were busy depicting a world that was disappearing or which had recently disappeared. At much the same time, positioned between the
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28 Apr
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