Guest post by local historian Philip Grant in a personal capacity
Sir Arthur Elvin in 1948.
I have to declare an interest, as I am involved with most of the events
featured in this guest post, but I hope that by sharing the details on “Wembley
Matters”, more people who might be interested in one or two of them will have
the opportunity to enjoy them.
An aerial view of Wembley Town Hall, nearing completion in 1939.
(Image from “Wembley” by Geoffrey Hewlett, 2002)
As part of Open House weekend, the Lycée International Winston Churchill
in Forty Lane is opening its doors to the public for guided tours on Saturday
13 September, from 10am to 2.30pm. Although it has been a French Lycée since
2015, many people still know the building as the former Brent Town Hall. It
started life as Wembley Town Hall, designed by Clifford Strange and built
between 1937 and 1940. The former Town Hall is Grade 2 listed, and this is a
rare opportunity for residents to go inside, so if you want more details please
“click” on this link.
During his lifetime, Arthur Elvin became known as Mister Wembley, and
played an important part in making Wembley the world-famous destination it is
today. Yet many local people now don’t know much about him, or even why the
name Elvin has been given to a garden square behind the Civic Centre or a
school in the High Road. I felt that his story needed to be told, so I am
giving an illustrated talk about him at the Wembley History Society meeting at
St Andrew’s Church Hall, Kingsbury, on Friday 19 September at 7.30pm.
As the poster above says, visitors to the Society’s meetings are very
welcome, and the 83 and 302 buses, which stop close to the venue, should be
running along Church Lane again by the time of the meeting! So, please come
along, arriving between 7.15 and 7.25pm if possible, if you would be interested
in discovering more about “Mister Wembley” and his part in our local history.
Arthur Elvin played an important part in bringing the 1948 Olympic Games
to Wembley, and that famous sporting event, and the part the local community
played in making it a success, are the subject of a free “coffee morning” talk
at Kingsbury Library on Tuesday 7 October, from 11am to 12noon (with tea/coffee
and biscuits available from 10.45, so come early!). It is best to reserve your
place for these Brent Libraries events, and you can do that by “clicking” here.
Title slide for the “coffee morning” talk on Tuesday 7 October.
The pre-arranged 1948 Olympic Games talk has been included in the
programme for “Our Freedom – Then and Now”, a nationwide
project, with Brent Libraries as one of its participating cultural organisations,
building on the legacy of the VE Day and VJ Day 80th anniversary
commemorations. When I heard about this project, and that Brent’s aim was ‘an
opportunity for local people to creatively explore and share Brent’s hidden
wartime stories, connecting the past with their own experiences of community,
resilience, and freedom today,’ I knew that I had a resource which would fit
perfectly into that theme.
Title slide for the “coffee morning” event at Wembley Library on
Wednesday 22 October
The result will be seen and heard at a Wembley Library “coffee morning”
on Wednesday 22 October, from 11am to 12noon, when the first-hand Second World
War experiences of two local housewives will be shared, through extracts from
letters they wrote to a friend. Those letters were saved by their former
neighbour, and eventually donated to Wembley History Society by her daughter in
2020, and they provide a fascinating insight into every-day life at that time. The
extracts will be read by two ladies from Brent Libraries, while I will be providing
the pictures which link their stories. You can reserve your seat for this event
by “clicking” here.
Philip Grant.