Stepney City Farm

Stepney City Farm is a city farm in Stepney, London, England. It is situated on Stepney Way with its entrance on the roundabout leading onto Stepney High Street and Belgrave Street towards Limehouse. The land is owned by Tower Hamlets Council through a trust, "The King George's Fields Trust"[1] chaired by the Mayor of Tower Hamlets.[2]

Stepney City Farm

The farm was founded in 1979 by Lynne Bennett; at that time it was called Stepping Stones. Local residents, schools, churches and community groups were consulted and wasteland left after a World War II bomb destroyed the Stepney Congregational Church in 1941 was secured for the farm's use.[3] The site has been through several incarnations since the 17th century.[4] Worcester house (locally known as King John's Palace) was an original building from which ruins remain onsite, and the remains of the old Sunday school and the Stepney meeting house can be seen.[5][6]

Known as the Stepping Stones Farm up until 2009 under the management of Lynne Bennett,[7] the 4.2-acre.[3][8] From 2009–2012 the farm was technically the legal and financial responsibility of Tower Hamlets Council[1] but is now run by a charity, "Stepney City Farm Ltd",[9] with a 10-year lease as from 2012 (registered in June 2010 as Charity Number 1136448).[10] The farm also runs workshops in rural crafts through its resident artisans; blacksmith, woodworker and potter. In 2011, the farm created an 800 square metre community garden and added low-cost growing boxes for community use.[11]

In May 2013 a cafe and shop selling farm-reared meat and eggs as well as vegetables grown on-site was opened. It is open to the public six days a week. There is a Farmers' Market every Saturday. It is the home of The Green Wood Guild, a green wood and traditional woodworking craft workshop run by Barn the Spoon.[12]

Crossrail

In 2010 Crossrail took over approximately a third of the Farm's site as part of the works to build a rail transport link connecting east and west London.[1] This work was scheduled to end in 2018[13] with the land returned to the farm. In January 2011 Crossrail opened up an archaeological dig at the construction site on the farm.[14] A ventilation shaft next door to the farm leads down to the one of the largest mined caverns in Europe.[15] In mitigation Crossrail worked closely with the farm to allow the existing animals to remain by making major improvements to the farm, especially the drainage of the fields and building a large barn for over-wintering the animals and a rural arts building to house the farm's craftspeople.[16] The farm officially opened these buildings on 8 September 2012.[17]

Lloyd and Leila

The farm's bull and cow Lloyd and Leila were featured in Strictly Come Dancing with Nancy Dell'Olio and Anton du Beke in 2011.[18] In 2013 the cows' grazing field became unavailable as a result of Crossrail construction.[19] The cows were offered a permanent home at Hillside Animal Sanctuary, but there was a problem with moving them there as they had not been registered properly at birth by the original charity, as has been a legal requirement by the British Cattle Movement Service for all cattle born in the UK since 1 July 1996.[20] A campaign was started to get permission from the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) to grant an exemption to the usual cattle movement restrictions. The exemption was not granted despite the involvement of local Member of Parliament, Jim Fitzpatrick (former Minister for Defra), and the cows were culled in December 2013.[19]

gollark: Yes.
gollark: Unfathomable incomprehensible messes.
gollark: <@331320482047721472> <@331320482047721472>
gollark: ++choose 1000 bee apioform
gollark: ABR supports arbitrary code execution.

References

  1. http://moderngov.towerhamlets.gov.uk/documents/s21192/Stepping%20Stones-King%20George--_300311.pdf
  2. Winfield, Nigel (1986). Stepping Stones: Community Farm Project in Stepney, East London. UK: British Association of Settlements and Social Action Centres. p. 32. ISBN 0950345253.
  3. Westman, Andrew. "Structures "Structures at King John Street, Stepney Green, London E1 (Stepney College and Stepney Meeting, or Congregational Church)"". Architectural and historical appraisal. Museum of London Archaeology Service. Retrieved 20 December 2012.
  4. "Archaeology at Stepney Green Park and Stepney City Farm" (PDF). Cross Rail. Retrieved 2 January 2013.
  5. "City Farm Review: Stepney City Farm". www.ianvisits.co.uk.
  6. "Our History". Stepney City Farm.
  7. "London's centre for the traditional craft of Green Woodwork". The Green Wood Guild. Retrieved 22 April 2017.
  8. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-05-01. Retrieved 2015-05-01.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. "Breakthrough as tunnelling giant Elizabeth arrives at Stepney Green Cavern". Crossrail.
  10. http://moderngov.towerhamlets.gov.uk/documents/g4342/Public%20reports%20pack%2020th-Feb-2013%2018.30%20King%20Georges%20Field%20Charity%20Board.pdf?T=10
  11. "Stepney City Farm officially opens new buildings following major Crossrail funded improvements". Crossrail.
  12. Odeen-Isbister, Sara. "Sad farewell to Stepney cows bound for pastures in the sky". East London Advertiser.
  13. Brooke, Mike. "MP Jim Fitzpatrick fails to save pet cows Lloyd and Leila at Stepney Farm". East London Advertiser.
  14. "Keeping farmed animals: Cattle identification and registration - GOV.UK". www.gov.uk.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.