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  • Black History Month 2021 - A message from Cllr Thay Thayalan

    From the 1800s when former Senegalese slave Cesar Picton became a successful coal merchant in the borough, to the mid-20th Century when the Windrush generation first settled in the UK, enriching British culture and making significant contributions to so many communities, including our own.  

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/news/article/201/black-history-month-2021-a-message-from-cllr-thay-thayalan
  • List of conservation areas

    Designation summary The special architectural and historic interest of this area can be summarised as: A small group of Queen Anne Revival style houses built between 1903–1908 by Vincent Davison, an active local surveyor.Historical background summary  This area of New Malden originally formed part of Norbiton Common but by the mid 19th century it had been completely enclosed as farmland.

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/heritage-conservation/list-conservation-areas/18
  • News

    The Met Office has issued an Amber Extreme Weather Warning for Wednesday 10 to Sunday 14 August as temperatures in London and South-East are set to reach the mid-30s Celcius.

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/news?page=18
  • Black History Month 2021 - A message from Cllr Thay Thayalan

    From the 1800s when former Senegalese slave Cesar Picton became a successful coal merchant in the borough, to the mid-20th Century when the Windrush generation first settled in the UK, enriching British culture and making significant contributions to so many communities, including our own.  

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/news/article/201/black-history-month-2021---a-message-from-cllr-thay-thayalan
  • List of conservation areas

    Apart from six mid19th century stuccoed houses on the north side of St James' Road (Nos. 72-82), and three mid 19th century houses at Nos 61 - 65 Maple Road, all of the houses in the rest of the conservation area were built at the same time and by the same developers, Corbett and McClymont.

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/heritage-conservation/list-conservation-areas/23
  • List of conservation areas

    Designation summary The special architectural and historic interest of this area can be summarised as: A mid 19th century housing development, forming the second stage of the Surbiton “New Town” conceived by Thomas Pooley and laterly built by Coutts and Company.

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/heritage-conservation/list-conservation-areas/2
  • Saluting Our Sisters for Black History Month 2023

    From the former slave Cesar Picton who became a successful coal merchant in the borough in the 1880’s, to the Windrush generation in the mid-twentieth century, all the way to the present day - with one of the few Race and Equalities Councils in the country, and the annual Kingston Carnival which is a key part of the borough’s cultural life.

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/news/article/434/saluting-our-sisters-for-black-history-month-2023
  • Muybridge’s San Francisco Panorama in 1878

    Muybridge started photographing the southwest view used in the first plate in the mid-morning.

    https://www.kingstonheritage.org.uk/homepage/123/muybridge-s-san-francisco-panorama-in-1878
  • List of conservation areas

    As a result, the mid-19th century saw a succession of large houses on diminishing plots from Kenry House and Kingston Hill Place to Harewood, Holmwood and Galsworthy House.

    https://www.kingston.gov.uk/heritage-conservation/list-conservation-areas/11
  • Archaeological Digs

    In the mid 1980s, the Museum of London excavated the undercroft of an inn built in the 1300s and the stone foundations of the old wooden Kingston Bridge.

    https://www.kingstonheritage.org.uk/ancientorigins