The Street (31 page)

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Authors: Kay Brellend

BOOK: The Street
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Campbell Road from Seven Sisters Road, taken at the start of the Peace Day celebrations of July 1919.

The inspiration for Jack Keiver, as a young man.

The inspiration for Tilly Keiver, as a young woman.

Three factory girls from Campbell Road and neighbouring Fonthill Road.

Brand Street. Built 30–40 years before Campbell Road, Brand Street was typical of slums cleared between the wars.

Campbell Road men on a beano to Southend.

The inspiration for Tilly, with the last of her 11 children.

Campbell Road, May 1935. The
Daily Mirror
used this photograph to exemplify patriotic enthusiasm in even the poorest areas.

The first floor back room at 27 Campbell Road, which occupied 2 adults and 4 children.

Campbell Road, the bottom end during the slum clearance.

I owe my gratitude to the following:

Jerry White for his wonderful study on Campbell Road, Islington

Gary and Louise for kindly sharing their research and knowledge of family history

Basil Clarke, war correspondent during WW1

Kay Brellend, the third of six children, was born in North London but now lives in a Victorian farmhouse in Suffolk. Under a pseudonym she has written sixteen historical novels published in England and North America. This is her first novel set in the twentieth century and was inspired by her grandmother’s reminiscences about her early life in Campbell Road, Islington.

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As children growing up in Tottenham, North London, I and my three sisters and two brothers always knew that my maternal grandmother (see pictures at end of book) had had a ‘hard life’. It was some while before we fully realised how dreadful had been her upbringing in a slum in Islington nicknamed The Bunk.

In the late 1970s and early 1980s an historian began researching the social history of Campbell Road, reputed to have been the worst street in North London. He contacted ex-residents of the street (see pictures at end of book) and my grandmother was interviewed and her recollections incorporated into a book he was compiling. On its publication in the mid-1980s my nan was presented with a copy. By that time Campbell Road was no more. In 1937 it had changed name to Whadcoat Street and finally slum clearance in the 1950s brought about the demise of the notorious Campbell Bunk.

My nan was born in 1901, just around the corner to Campbell Road, but she remembered having moved to the street when she was still an infant. Her family resided there, in cramped rooms (see pictures at end of book) in various dilapidated tenement houses, until she was a grown woman. She finally escaped in 1922 when she married my grandfather, but members of her family remained there for many more years. Her mother, my great-grandmother, lived there until the Second World War when she died in a tragic and rather mysterious accident.

The majority of Bunk dwellers suffered extreme hardship like my ancestors yet some anecdotes hint at their ambivalence about the place. Community spirit and camaraderie seemed to unite them (see pictures at back of book) in a way that justified a wry pride in their infamy. From my grandmother’s narrative it’s clear her regular claim to be ‘
a tough old bird
’ was no idle boast and undoubtedly accounted for her longevity. She was still digging her vegetable patch until shortly before her death at the age of ninety-two.

When my beloved mum died several years ago the Campbell Bunk book again came to light among her belongings. We also discovered the first couple of chapters of a novel she’d started that had been inspired by her mother’s wretched early life. As a family we became very interested in our genealogy and my youngest brother did some research into the family tree. My dad wondered if my mum’s work could be continued and finished as a tribute to her and to my grandmother. I considered it a privilege to take on the task.

The Street
is fiction but I have woven some of my grand-mother’s reminiscences and my mother’s writing in to the novel and trust that the end result would make them both smile.

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