This notice was spotted by our loyal reader in South Croydon.
It requires no further comment. Unless, of course, you wish to post your views with this article…
This notice was spotted by our loyal reader in South Croydon.
It requires no further comment. Unless, of course, you wish to post your views with this article…
Chris Callaway has been appointed as Old Mid-Whitgiftians’ new director of rugby.
Callaway takes over from Peter Knott, who has retired after coaching the first XV for the past two years, “a wonderful man to work with and an asset to the club”, according to a tribute from MidWives’ chairman of playing, Graham Crouch.
Callaway played for Sevenoaks and Richmond, and was recently head coach of Richmond’s development squad.
Dan Crouch will be first team coach and Jacob Bacon has been appointed under-21s head coach.
Pre-season training begins at Lime Meadow Avenue on July 9, and friendly fixtures have already been arranged against Warlingham and Horsham. More information is available on the club’s website.
Warlingham are gathering their Academy players together for summer training on Tuesday July 2 at 7.30pm. Continue reading
More than 100 years after his death, Samuel Coleridge-Taylor is not only getting a portrait of himself in his old home town; there’s to be a sketch of the composer unveiled this afternoon in the West End boardroom of PRS Music, the Performing Rights Society, to commemorate his role in the organisation’s founding.
In his day at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, Croydon-based Coleridge-Taylor was as famous as today’s pop and rock stars and as successful as Paul McCartney and Elton John. His composition, Hiawatha’s Wedding Feast, made him a global star with numerous choral societies named after him at home and abroad.
The commemorative sketch has been donated by the Samuel Coleridge-Taylor 100 Post Mortem Collective. It was commissioned by an organisation called the Beyond The Will Smith Challenge for its role model scheme to highlight African-British male role models.
“Samuel’s contribution to the musical world at a time when his colour could have held him back is nothing short of incredible,” said Guy Fletcher, the chairman of PRS.
“It is right his life and work is celebrated and we would be honoured to have his picture centre stage in our office.” Continue reading
The son of a former Bishop of Croydon has been selected as a Labour candidate in Fairfield ward for next year’s council elections.
David Wood, 41, grew up in Fairfield ward, having been brought up in the Bishop’s house in Stanhope Road when his father, Wilfred Wood, the Church of England’s first black bishop, served the area for 18 years at the end of the last century.
The selection was made at a meeting of Labour party members from Fairfield ward last night.
The three Town Hall seats for Fairfield, in the Croydon Central parliamentary constituency, are held by the Conservative councillors Susan Winborn, David Fitze and Vidhi Mohan, the cabinet member for economic development who has overseen rather a lot of riot recovery money being spent in his ward, rather than in worse affected areas of the borough along London Road and in Broad Green. Continue reading
Mystery surrounds the identity of one of the top three Croydon characters, voted for by the public, who has refused to allow their likeness to be used in a public portrait project.
The final portrait for a bench on the walk and cycle route between Wandle Park and Park Hill is due to be unveiled this week, but it will be missing one of the three Croydon celebs chosen by local residents.
Was it Bill Nighy, the acclaimed actor who used to attend John Fisher School? Did Olympic sprinter Donna Fraser ask not to be included?
Or, most likely, did often controversial supermodel Kate Moss decide that this was one publicity shot she could do without?
The portrait bench vote was launched, in trademark clumsy style, on the Croydon Council website more than a year ago, when a shortlist was foisted on the public with candidates’ names spelt incorrectly and film director, Sir David Lean, a glaring omission – probably because the council felt that were the Croydon-born Oscar-winner to be featured in the public artwork, it would only serve to highlight their closure of the eponymous cinema at the Clocktower. Continue reading
Inside Croydon’s loyal reader has been in touch. They write:
“I would like to nominate the mechanics of the Croydon MOT Centre in West Croydon.
“Today, at approximately 4.30pm, I witnessed a very nasty road rage incident, yards from the MOT garage on Pitlake.
“Three young men were arguing with a man in a car. This escalated into a fist fight. The driver of the car was being set up on by the three young men. There were many bystanders, including myself. Five or six of the mechanics from the MOT Centre were on the scene and they were able to calm the situation down. Continue reading
CROYDON COMMENTARY: The much-needed redevelopment work at Purley Hospital may not be money well-spent. And DAVID CALLAM is not surprised
Work continues on the £11 million refurbishment of Purley Hospital.
The new-look NHS facility will re-open later this year in a building that has been re-modelled to meet some of the needs of 21st century medicine.
Patients will be treated in what is essentially a new clinic, but encased in a skin that dates back to its cottage hospital roots in 1909, modified and expanded in the wake of the Great War.
The refurbished facilities will undoubtedly be an improvement on what we have been used to in recent years, but has the NHS made the most of the chance to change the hospital for the better?
I think not.
A fully comprehensive approach might have been too radical for the denizens of Purley, many of whom are more concerned with the past than they are with the present or future. This would have involved a complete re-build. Continue reading
Many sincere congratulations to June Rixson, the Croydon lollipop lady whose public service was recognised yesterday when she was awarded the British Empire Medal in the Queen’s birthday honours.
Let’s just hope that Rixson and her school crossing patrol colleagues whose jobs are under threat as a result of council cut-backs (to save all of £60,000 a year – little more than is paid each year in “allowances” to the council leader Mike Fisher), get the real reward of not being made redundant from important jobs that oversees the safety of our schoolchildren on the borough’s busy roads every day. Continue reading
This was spotted by our loyal reader in North End yesterday, at the Green Fair…
Clearly, Councillor Simon “I’m cheap, but I’m not free” Hoar’s reputation is sinking lower than ever. Continue reading
The Save the David Lean Cinema Campaign is off on tour tonight, with the first of three film screenings at venues outside the centre of town.
The campaign is showing the 1984 French film, A Sunday in the Country, at 7.30pm tonight, June 15, at Shirley Community Centre, Shrublands Avenue, Shirley, CR0 8JA.
Directed by Bertrand Tavernier, the film stars Louis Ducreux, Michel Aumont and Sabine Azéma.
The film won 17 international awards including several for best foreign film and best director. The BFI’s 16mm print offers the added pleasure of discovering a film that isn’t currently available on DVD or Blu Ray.
Set shortly before World War I, Monsieur Ladmiral, an elderly painter living in the French countryside, receives his regular Sunday visit from son Gonzague and his family. Unexpectedly, non-conformist daughter Irene also arrives, resulting in a challenging day that will have a lasting impact on the family. English subtitles. Continue reading
The Croydon Labour party’s selection process for candidates to stand at next year’s Town Hall elections claimed its first casualty on Wednesday night, when Karen Jewitt, councillor for Woodside ward, failed to be selected.
Jewitt has been a Croydon councillor for nearly 20 years. She polled the highest number of votes in Woodside ward at the local council elections in 2002, 2006 and 2010 – even beating Tony Newman, the Croydon Labour group leader.
The meeting on Wednesday re-selected Newman and the other standing councillor in the ward, Paul Scott, but local members voted for Hamida Ali ahead of Jewitt. Continue reading
IAN LAMONT on the international call-up for a rugby player made in Croydon
Another benchmark for sport in Croydon will be made tomorrow, when Marland Yarde runs out in an England shirt at the Velez Sarsfield stadium in Buenos Aires to win his first international cap.

No stopping him: Marland Yarde makes his decisive break to score the first try against the Barbarians at Twickenham last month
Yarde thus joins Danny Cipriani as a former pupil of Whitgift School to graduate to the full England rugby side.
The 21-year-old London Irish flying wing’s selection for a Test debut against Argentina was rendered inevitable a couple of weekends ago when Yarde crossed the whitewash at Twickenham for the first try in the England XV’s win in the practice game against the Barbarians.
Yarde played at Whitgift in what is looking like a well-polished golden generation. Among his team mates in the double Daily Mail Cup-winning side was Elliot Daly. Daly was somehow overlooked by England coach Stuart Lancaster for the tour to South America, but was good enough to make it into the Baa-Baas’ international all-stars side and also scored a try at Twickenham on the same day as Yarde.
Back in their school days, and usually on the other wing from Yarde in that Whitgift first XV of a couple of years ago was Lawrence Okoye. Whatever happened to him? Continue reading