Tag: Blog Post

  • ANC Print Shop

    ANC Print Shop

    Islington as a Place of Refuge – Tour Stop 4 Significance: Where anti-apartheid material was produced Apartheid was official policy of institutional racism and segregation in South Africa between 1948 and 1994. It was a system designed to disempower black South Africans and ensure the white population remained in power.…

  • Holloway Prison

    Holloway Prison

    Islington as a Place of Refuge – Tour Stop 7 Significance: Location of interned German Jewish ‘enemy aliens’ Holloway Prison operated from 1852-2016, exclusively holding female and young offenders from 1903. Thousands of women were imprisoned there over its history. The story of women behind bars has long held the…

  • Islington Refugee Services and Support

    Islington Refugee Services and Support

    Islington as a Place of Refuge – Tour Stop 8 Significance: Islington Refugee Services and Support Islington has long been a place where migrants and refugees have settled. The borough is central, accommodation has often been cheap and there is a history of tolerance – Finsbury was the first UK…

  • We’ll Meet Again: VE-Day Celebrations

    We’ll Meet Again: VE-Day Celebrations

    As the final installment of the exhibition We’ll Meet Again: Islington on the Home Front in Photographs 1939-45, we look at how the people of Islington and Finsbury celebrated Victory in Europe Day, or ‘VE-Day’ in May 1945. Monday 7 May 1945 marked a joyous occasion – the formal surrender…

  • Researching We’ll Meet Again: a volunteer’s experience

    Researching We’ll Meet Again: a volunteer’s experience

    At Islington Museum we are lucky to have a dedicated team of volunteers that share their skills and expertise with us regularly. These volunteers assist us with a huge range of activities on a daily basis, from customer service, to collections work, educational assistance and research. A recent addition to…

  • The German Destroyer in Finsbury

    The German Destroyer in Finsbury

    The captured Messerschmitt Bf 110, pictured above on display outside Finsbury Town Hall, Garnault Place in October 1940, became the most photographed Luftwaffe plane of WW2. The aircraft was a twin-engined heavy fighter or ‘Zerstörer’ (‘Destroyer’ in English) flown by the Luftwaffe and some other nations during WW2. It was…

  • We’ll Meet Again: Carry On!

    We’ll Meet Again: Carry On!

    As part of the exhibition We’ll Meet Again: Islington on the Home Front in Photographs 1939-45, we delve further into life on the Home Front for the people of Islington and Finsbury during the Second World War. Whilst the people of Britain had to adapt to new ways of living…

  • Each bob you pay keeps the bomber away: The Islington Spitfire

    Each bob you pay keeps the bomber away: The Islington Spitfire

    Lord Beaverbrook, the Anglo-Canadian media tycoon Max Aitken, came into the British Government in early 1940 to help speed up aircraft production. He was an advocate of public appeals to raise funds for things like raw materials and also encouraged the public to shop thriftily to help the war effort.…

  • We’ll Meet Again: Home Front Preparations

    We’ll Meet Again: Home Front Preparations

    As part of the exhibition We’ll Meet Again: Islington on the Home Front in Photographs 1939-45, we look at how the people of Islington and Finsbury prepared the Home Front for the Second World War. The people of Britain endured the Second World War in an overwhelmingly stoical manner. The…

  • We’ll Meet Again: Bomb Damage – Islington in Action

    We’ll Meet Again: Bomb Damage – Islington in Action

    As part of the exhibition We’ll Meet Again: Islington on the Home Front in Photographs (1939-45), we delve deeper into the significant bomb damage suffered in Islington and Finsbury. Britain began preparing for the devastation of war on the home front well before the Second World War began. With the…