Speakers for February to November 2025

Meetings will start at 7.30 apart from the February meeting which is preceded by the AGM at 7.15. The current year will run from February to November 2025 concluding with a performance from Chanter’s Jigge

19th February 2025 Richard Matthew AGM at 7.15 followed by The History of Norwich Guildhall
19th March 2025Alison DowThe remarkable life of Thomas Fowell Buxton
16th April 2025Helen MurrayNewhaven Court: A story of love, tragedy, heroism and intrigue
17th September 2025Anne MayThe bombing of Norwich Cathedral
15th October 2025Carole RawcliffeThe Norwich Fire of 1508
19th NovemberChanter’s Jigge

19th February 2025: Richard Matthew: The history of Norwich Guildhall

The Guildhall housed Norwich City Council for over 500 years until 1938 and was at the centre of Norwich civic life although its undercroft is over 700 years old.

Richard Matthew has been a volunteer guide at the Guildhall for some years and has given many talks about it.

19th March 2025; Alison Dow: The Remarkable life of Thomas Fowell Buxton

When William Wilberforce retired after the abolition of the slave trade, Thomas Fowell Buxton led the fight against slavery in Parliament despite ferocious opposition. He was an important social reformer and deserves to be better known.

Dr Alison Dow was formerly a GP in Mile Cross, Norwich. She was born and brought up in Northern Rhodesia – now Zambia, where the country where David Livingstone died, and is still revered because of his strong anti-slavery stance. She is determined that Buxton should receive his proper place in our history.

16th April 2025: Helen Murray: Newhaven Court: A story of love, tragedy, heroism and intrigue.

Built in 1884 as the grand summer home for the well-connected Locker-Lampson family, Newhaven Court in Cromer played host to such eminent figures as Sir Winston Churchill, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Sir Ernest Shackleton, illustrator Kate Greenaway and French superstar Suzanne Lenglen.

Helen Murray has written the story of Newhaven Court and its colourful inhabitants from the decadent years of the late nineteenth century and the elegant Edwardian era, through the tragedy of the First World War to the roaring twenties, the uncertain post-war age and the Second World War.