This time last year I published my history pamphlet May Day in South London, which as the name suggests looks at the different ways people in this part of the world have commemorated the season with May Queens, chimney sweep processions, horse parades, trade union demonstrations, anarchist protests and much more. I sold most of the print run at various events, online and in bookshops including Bookseller Crow and 56a Info Shop. There's about 15 hard copies left, so if you want one you'd better order quick (details in box to right), though you can also get an electronic version.
Amidst a flurry of activity for May Day 2011 I gave a talk on it at South East London Folklore Society (Old Kings Head, SE1) and also, briefly, at a Lewisham Anti Cuts Alliance event at the then occupied ex-Job Centre on Deptford High Street. A nice mix, as one of the themes of the text is the way that the seasonal 'green' elements of May Day have been intertwined with the radical 'red' elements over the years.
I also did the rounds of various May Day related activities, including the opening of the Brixton Windmill, which featured a May Queen on May 2 2011:
And the Deptford Jack in the Green procession through Greenwich on May Day itself:
I also went on the Cool Tan May Day walk from Tate Modern to Camberwell Green on May 21st 2011.
Elsewhere there were May Queens in Petts Wood, Orpington and at Hayes Common in the borough of Bromley.
At St George's Roman Catholic Cathedral in Southwark, up to 2,000 people from all over the world took part in the annual Mass for Migrants on May 2 2011- May Day also being marked as the Feast of St Joseph the Worker.
So what's happening this year on and around May Day? Let us know.
Amidst a flurry of activity for May Day 2011 I gave a talk on it at South East London Folklore Society (Old Kings Head, SE1) and also, briefly, at a Lewisham Anti Cuts Alliance event at the then occupied ex-Job Centre on Deptford High Street. A nice mix, as one of the themes of the text is the way that the seasonal 'green' elements of May Day have been intertwined with the radical 'red' elements over the years.
I also did the rounds of various May Day related activities, including the opening of the Brixton Windmill, which featured a May Queen on May 2 2011:
And the Deptford Jack in the Green procession through Greenwich on May Day itself:
I also went on the Cool Tan May Day walk from Tate Modern to Camberwell Green on May 21st 2011.
Elsewhere there were May Queens in Petts Wood, Orpington and at Hayes Common in the borough of Bromley.
At St George's Roman Catholic Cathedral in Southwark, up to 2,000 people from all over the world took part in the annual Mass for Migrants on May 2 2011- May Day also being marked as the Feast of St Joseph the Worker.
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