With everything stacked against them, it’s no wonder that the station kiosk at Snaresbrook is now shuttered. To the former staff, thank you for your service. To any interested parties, just imagine the joy of starting each day at one of the most beautiful stations on the Underground, surrounded by happy, smiling Wanstead folk. You know you want to.
The comedy line-up for the 2021 Wanstead Fringe has been unveiled – and it’s got a couple of familiar faces who are well-loved by Fringe audiences.
Paul Sinha, whose appearance has become a regular Fringe high point, is making a very welcome return. And Graeme Matthews, another favourite, is returning for a year in which there is more comedy aimed at children than we’ve ever had before.
Tickets are all selling fast though, so you’re advised to get them while you can.
These are great days for cricket lovers, with almost daily action to enjoy. And that goes too for supporters of Wanstead Cricket Club who are now able to enjoy video of key home games thanks to new cameras and streaming technology.
There are, sadly, just a few games left for this season – there is a league fixture against Chelmsford at home on Saturday 4 September, however, and the new technology will be in use again next year.
So the Nationwide went ahead with its plan and closed its Wanstead branch, instead advising its customers who relied on in-person banking that they could go to South Woodford, Walthamstow or Ilford instead.
Nationwide is hardly the first financial institution to close a branch on our high street (remember Barclays? HSBC? Santander?) but they are the one which promised they would not be closing any branches this year, only to do exactly that in Wanstead. And in a year when they made more than £800m in profit.
To the staff of the branch, however, thank you for your years of service.
Snaresbrook Crown Court has become ‘a wreck’ according to The Economist newspaper in an article which discusses English courts not coping with everyday demands.
Boarded up lodge at the pedestrian entrance
The building, designed in part by George Gilbert Scott, has been used as a court for nearly 50 years though was originally built in 1841 as an orphanage.
The article says: “At Snaresbrook, even the grand Victorian building is a wreck. The outside is covered in scaffolding; the air conditioning frequently fails, leaving everyone sweltering.” (Link here. £)
The first of the book events for this year’s Wanstead Fringe have been unveiled, with tickets now on sale.
Rory Cellan-Jones, the BBC’s technology correspondent and very familiar figure for decades, will be speaking about the revolutions society has gone through with the rise of social media and mobile phones. His new book Always On has been very well received – Stephen Fry called it ‘delightfully insightful and intensely readable‘.
Ian Dunt is one of the most talented political commentators of his generation, and is perhaps best known for his appearances on the Remainiacs podcast. His book How To Be A Liberal is a rallying cry to those who still believe in freedom and reason in the face of rising nationalism around the world.
More events are being unveiled over the next couple of weeks. Details will be published here on Wansteadium, on the Fringe site itself and via the Fringe’s social channels.