Archive for the ‘Up-Coming Event’ Category

Hello everyone! A few more weeks then BTP will be returning back to normal; exploring, blogging and documenting. Last Thursday we were fortunate enough to be invited by Chris Fenwick, band manager, to the V.I.P. opening of the Dr. Feelgood Exhibition at the Canvey Club. We attended in some contemporary rock n’ roll clothes and had a great night, learning a lot more about the Band. We attended with our guest for the evening, Alan Taylor, a massive fan! It featured a plethora of Feelgood merchandise, memorabilia  and cuttings, and was excellent for giving us the Feelgood factor of what the band were really all about. We spoke to people who had travellled from Scotland, Finland, and even Holland to visit Canvey Island, to them trademarked with the stamp of Dr. Feelgood. It just showed how popular the band was during the mid seventies, and the image they put out of Canvey.

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Left to right – Liam Heatherson, Joe Mander, Phil Mitchel, Chris Fenwick, Kevin Morris, Alan Taylor.

We were fortunate enough to get interviews with Phil Mitchel (base guitar since 1980s), Kevin Morris (drummer since 1980s), Chris Fenwick (long-term manager) and due to audio issues, we will hopefully be getting one with Chris Fenwick soon. The exhibition site describes the evening as:

Take a journey through the early years when Lee, Wilko,
Sparko and the Big Figure cut their teeth on Canvey Island
before exploding onto the London pub rock scene.

View an incredible collection of concert posters, record
sleeves, press cuttings and previously unseen photographs
from the days of Down By The Jetty and Milk and Alcohol
all the way through to the modern era.

Never before assembled in one place, this is a unique
opportunity to get close to the artefacts and imagery
from one of the worlds most exciting live bands.

This was our first time in the club and it’s really warm and cosy inside making it an amazing evening for all Feelgood fans and even people who want to find out more! The band played in the fireplace for the best part of a year inside this historic old shack, just before they hit the mainstream.

 

Chris Fenwick Walks

To coincide with the exhibition a number of Chis Fenwick’s famous Canvey Walks, have been organised, visiting Canvey’s most infamous spots and Feelgood hide-outs. The walks will start at 10:30am at The Lobstersmack, Canvey on the following days:

  • 10th May
  • 17th May
  • 24th May

finishing at The Canvey Club. The walk is approximately 2 hours with no booking necessary – just turn up.

Thursday 31st January 2013 marks 60 long years since Canvey Island was hit by an abnormal storm causing mass flooding and damage to many many people’s property and lives. The horrific event terrorised Canvey however the whole of the Essex coast was affected as well as other places.

Canvey+Island,+Essex

Saturday 31st January 1953 began in Essex like any other mid-winter Saturday, however the outcome was a surprising revelation for everyone… On Canvey the new memorial hall, gaily bedecked with bunting, was publicly dedicated in the afternoon to the memory of local men who lost their lives in the Second World War. On the mainland opposite Canvey, caretakers and cleaners gave the new Benfleet secondary school in Shipwrights Drive, sometimes referred to locally as ‘The Palace’, the final polish for its official opening. At 11pm at Tewkes Creek the wind was fresh, cold and fierce. Shortly before midnight, one or two nightfarers, who was a Roman Catholic Priest who was old visiting a sick parishioner. In the bright moonlight he saw the tide lapping the top of the wall. In the Sunken Marsh a river board employee who lived nearby realised that the tide was rising rapidly. At might night, the chilling water was closing in on the whole of the Essex coast. Flooding in varying degrees had begun, and was spreading as the tide continued its inexorable rise and overwhelmed the defences on an ever-lengthening front which the weight, height and duration of its attack.  At this time, just before 1am, dykes were starting to overflow and the electricity board has received a report of a fault on Canvey due to flooding. At 12:50am, the water was at the top of the wall at Smallgains, this section in fact has recently been raised and thickened and was about a foot and a half higher that the wall at Tewkes Creek. One of the river board’s men was blowing his whistle, which echoed in the howling wind. This was just gone 1am. A few minutes after this, the chairman had rung the police station to tell the sergeant that the flood boards at Canvey Bridge had been overtopped. The Police sergeant met a constable out on a bicycle patrol who was about to telephone the police station because although the tide the water was still a foot below the top of the wall, it was extremely high for the stage of the tide.

1am February 1st - Meanwhile, at the Newlands, the 2 river board men and a group of gathered dedicated citizens tried to rouse the elderly and the young. Stumbling in the moonlight across the muddy rutty unmade roads, up and down garden paths then went knocking, shouting and even one screeching at his whistle as a last attempt to save fellow Islanders. With the howling noise of the wind, corrugated roofs, wrought iron gates and loose shed doors it was a difficult task to stir residents.  However many people had no warning and were awakened by the sudden roar as the wall burst, by the swish of the water as it rushed past, by the clatter and crash of the debris striking the house, by the noise of splitting timber and smashing glass. Half-awake, dazed and bewildered, as they struggled to escape from this violent, engulfing nightmare, to reach the outdoor staircases to their lofts, or to fight their way through the tumult outside, to go to the aid of elderly relatives or neighbours living nearby, successive waves charging through the walls swept them off the feet, breathless and numb from the icy impact. The margin between life and death was a matter of seconds as the water gushed through shattered windows and doors, and, impounded as it was in the Sunken Marsh by the inland counter wall, with no means of dispersal; it rose rapidly to a lethal depth.

Many who clambered on chairs, tables, cookers, mangled-tables and step-ladders, to keep their heads above the water or to make holes in the flimsy ceilings in order to escape into the roof space or out onto the roof, found their supports swept away from under their feet, leaving them fighting in the dark with floating furniture, clutching desperately at fanlights and the tops of doors and wardrobes, and trying to hold children up above the suffocating water. The Sunken Marsh was well described as a ‘basin of death’… By 1:25am the water was above windowsill level at the Newlands end of the Sunken Marsh, and, over topping the counter wall, was already pouring over it into the low ground between the counter wall and the High Street.

Have lessons been learnt though?

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This is just a little bit of what happened on that awful night. Liam and I are in the process of filming a documentary DVD to commemorate those that died and also the people that were affected by the floods. We are attending several events to pay our respects and also to film. If you have a story on the floods or know someone that does, we would be greatful if you would share it with us.

An unlikely artist’s impression which has circulated the internet

The Canvey Island Monster has been classed as a ‘cryptid’ – an unidentifiable species of creature, inline with the Loch Ness Monster, and Bigfoot, as  a few examples.  In November 1953, a strange marine creature was washed up on Canvey at the beach, soon after the Canvey Floods. It was described as being 73cm/2.4ft in length, and having ‘thick reddish-brown skin and bulging eyes, and gills.’ It was also said as having ‘hind legs with five-toed horseshoe-shaped feet with concave arches – which appeared to be suited for bipedal locomotion – but no forelimbs.’ and its remains were soon cremated, as zoologists for some reason said it to be of no danger to the public.

Resident Colin Day describes himself coming across the carcass as a boy:

I was THERE. I was a young lad of nine at the time. I noticed a group of peers in a crowd on the beach. Kids were prodding it with their spades. I ACTUALLY TOUCHED IT ! I thought it was a person at first as I could only see part of it through the crowd. Its flesh was NOT fish-like….Scales. It was a pinkish colour and looked like wobbly human flesh with cellulite (orange peel texture). I remember shouting to the other kids…”It’s a mermaid” over and over. I have to say that even at 66, my long term memory is excellent, especially about the day I saw my first mermaid.

The only photograph of the monster, taken by Canvey photographer Rev. Joseph Overs.

However, a year later in 1954, another beast was found. It was ‘described as being similar to the first but much larger, being 120cm (3.9 ft) long and weighing approximately 11.3kg (25lb). It was sufficiently fresh for its eyes, nostrils and teeth to be studied though no official explanation was given at the time as to what it was or what happened to the carcass.’  The size of a child! It has been speculated as most likely to have been either an anglerfish or even more likely a frogfish.

In 1999, Fortean journalist Nicholas Warren carried out an investigation into the 1953–54 sightings. He was unable to locate any official records at the Plymouth Marine Biology Association Laboratory or the National Rivers Authority identifying the creature as being a known or unknown specimen, but was able to find accounts from locals who believed the creature was an anglerfish. This determination was later seconded by Alwyne Wheeler, former ichthyologist for the Department of Zoology at the British Natural History Museum, who put forward that the creature was an anglerfish whose pronounced fins had been incorrectly described as being hind legs

Cutting from when the ’54 monster was washed up.

In relation to the events of 1953-54, Joe and I, this time last year, made a short film called ‘The Canvey Island Monster Returns’, which imagines it comes back to attack residents, in a kind of ‘spoof news report’ fashion. This year, on Halloween, the 31st, part two comes out, with much more action and adventure following an airborne virus it brings which infects islanders into a zombie-like state. A documentary on the real monster will come out too (a video version of this article). Below is the first Canvey Island Monster fictional film, and an advertisement poster for part two, which will be available on Beyond the Point TV, our YouTube channel, on release date.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pZA2pK6ixGk

On September 17th, the myself & Liam gave a talk to the The Distaff Club (a very kind Women’s club!) about Beyond the Point, our work and local remains. Lasting about an hour and a half, we educated the club (and got educated a bit!) It was a wonderful evening.

The Audience!

Liam and I spoke about local remains, ranging from Canvey Island’s ROC post, to the Wat Tyler explosives factory, to even Upperhorse Island. We started by introducing the equipment that we use, and you can watch a pre-filmed video on that here.

BTP Joe

Along side us was a table of our booklets and DVD’s which we sold many! This surprising delight, added £45 to Beyond the Point, which included a very generous £10 each, to me and Liam. We outsold our green BTP annual and a DVD has been ordered from the event (which will get delivered soon!). In the break, we did tuck in to something else that we discovered…

BTP Joe having a break with his tea and doughnuts and Liam had a hot chocolate and doughnuts!

The evening went VERY well and a BIG thank you to the club for allowing us to talk and also, for their donation……….In other news now and it’s 27 days until we release the Canvey Island Monster Returns! For my Birthday (September 30th) Liam and I went to Wimbledon Studio’s up in London where The Bill was filmed. We have a sneaky clip that was filmed there!! Not long now!

Well……

With thanks to Lauren Hockney for writing a really good article, Beyond the Point featured in The Echo on Wednesday 29th August. It was published on line the following the day and our website views shot up to a record breaking 299!!

The BTP Boys, famous once again!

TWO teenage history fans hope to bring the past into the present for people on Canvey after launching a website in their spare time. In between studying for their GCSEs and enjoying other hobbies, friends Joe Mander and Liam Heatherson, both 15, found time to set up Beyond the Point just over a year ago. The pair, who have been friends since they were six, wanted to promote Castle Point’s history, and particularly Canvey’s past, to local residents. They spend much of their spare time visiting places of interest and recording their experiences, which are then uploaded to the website for others to share.

Joe, of Gainsborough Avenue, Canvey, goes to Castle View School , and says he and Liam, a pupil at Westcliff High School for Boys, will continue to work on the website at weekends and during school holidays when they go into Year 11 next month. Joe said: “School does come first, but we are going to carry on and just do visits at weekends, so we will fit it in around our school work. “We’ve always had a strong passion for history and we know the Canvey community as a whole is very passionate about it as well, so that’s why we started the website.”

Liam, of Heilsburg Road, Canvey, added: “It’s really interesting and a different hobby. “It’s quite important for the website to continue. History has a big influence on the island because it has its own unique location, rather than some other towns inland. “It’s got a strong sense of community and its own pocket of history.” The idea for the website started after a visit to Canvey Wick, where the two teenagers found some concrete remains which used to be part of an oil refinery. Other areas the pair have explored include Two Tree Island, near Leigh station.

For more information, visit http://www.beyondthepoint.co.uk

Source: http://www.echo-news.co.uk/news/9899062.Teenagers_bring_past_to_life_with_website_about_Canvey_s_history/?ref=la Image and text are copyright protected which Beyond the Point does not own.

—————————————–NEWS UPDATE————————————————-

A little news update now! Beyond the Point is having a stall this Saturday (September 8th 2012) at the Essex Records Office. With thanks to the Canvey Island Community Archive for telling us, we will be taking our stall down there and, once again, exhibiting our finds and sharing our experiences for the day. The times are 10am-4pm (approx) and we will be selling our DVD’s, annual publication and postcards as usual. If you would like to come and support Liam and myself, you can find directions here. After receiving a phone call from Liam this evening, I can announce that we will be holding a talk at the War Memorial Hall on Canvey, on Monday 17th from 7pm-10pm. – As this is very recent news, please keep an eye on the website, forum, Facebook or twitter for more information on this event, but reserve the date!

The Bay Museum now has a new site, made by the BTP Boys on WordPress. Visit it here http://the-bay-museum.co.uk/. The old site was made from scrath and so was too difficult to update, plus it was left incomplete anyway, so we were asked to create them a new one. What’s more is Beyond the Point will have a long-term, possibly permanent, display section in the museum, on the top floor left of the balcony door. We have produced a display on what remains of Canvey’s history – quote from the Bay Museum’s website:

From Sunday 12th of August onwards, BeyondthePoint.co.uk (creators of this website, who research and explore local historical remnants) are displaying an exhibition on Canvey’s history, through time. However, it focuses on what’s left of our history, and what you can go and see yourself. Covering everything from Upper Horse Island – a Roman Fort, to nuclear and wartime bunkers, even covering the illusive history of Canvey’s oil refinery which could have been, covering one fith of the Island’s land-mass. Featuring archeological finds, intricate models, and plenty of information and images, this new look on your island is an unmissable exhibition. The Museum is open every Sunday, with the display located to the left of the upstairs balcony door, so come and see it for yourself.

Here is a close up of the scale model of Canvey’s Nuclear ROC Post (http://beyondthepoint.co.uk/2011/10/08/canveys-nuclear-roc-post/) I made which is on display within the exhibit.