My own personal blog. UNISON NEC member for Housing Associations & Charities, HA Convenor, London Regional Council Officer & Chair of its Labour Link Committee.
Newham Cllr for West Ham Ward, Vice Chair of Local Authority Pension Fund Forum, Pension trustee, Housing & Safety Practitioner.
Centre left and proud member of Labour movement family. Strictly no trolls please.
Promoted by Luke Place on behalf of J.Gray, Newham Labour Group, St Luke’s Community Centre, E16 1HS.
The Alexandra Lake was originally named after Queen Alexandra, but it is more commonly known as "The Wanstead Flats" due to its use by the unemployed during The Great Depression. It's located in East London and was dug around 1905/06 when improvements were needed for drainage systems following industrial revolution advances which caused flooding issues on lands surrounding this area resulting from storm water runoff combined with heavy rainfalls causing soil erosion leaving large concrete cylinders called 'vent pipes' spaced apart along each side of river Thames connecting them into one underground pipeline in order to prevent any possible floods overrunning other areas near rivers where low lying land became prone too devastating ravages including eroded hillsides stripping off topsoil exposing rock.
We always knew it as the sand hills
ReplyDeleteYes and I read somewhere they used to be much higher but were used to fill sandbags during the second world war. Not sure if true
ReplyDeleteThe Alexandra Lake was originally named after Queen Alexandra, but it is more commonly known as "The Wanstead Flats" due to its use by the unemployed during The Great Depression. It's located in East London and was dug around 1905/06 when improvements were needed for drainage systems following industrial revolution advances which caused flooding issues on lands surrounding this area resulting from storm water runoff combined with heavy rainfalls causing soil erosion leaving large concrete cylinders called 'vent pipes' spaced apart along each side of river Thames connecting them into one underground pipeline in order to prevent any possible floods overrunning other areas near rivers where low lying land became prone too devastating ravages including eroded hillsides stripping off topsoil exposing rock.
ReplyDelete