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Harringay, Haringey - So Good they Spelt it Twice!

The rebranding of our neighbourhood is about to become a live issue again with the Council asserting its claimed right to choose what we're called for the signage to be erected as part of the 2013 regeneration work.

The tussle over Harringay's name has been going on for over a hundred years. Throughout that time it seems to have featured a struggle between the Council, on the one hand, claiming a right to choose and the local people, on the other, demanding a right to self-determination. 

Over a hundred years ago, and long before the creation of Haringey borough, Hornsey District Council decided to change the spelling of Harringay Neighbourhood to Haringey. Local people took exception at this imposition from above and resisted the change. The opinion was expressed by, amongst others, the Harringay Ratepayers Association who represented the people of one of three Harringay Wards. Theirs was in part of what is now St Ann's Ward. The legacy of the struggle can be seen today in the signage along the Harringay Passage.

Local people won the day then and our name was safe until the latter part of the last century when the Council administration decided they had a right to change Harringay's name. Haringey Councillor and cabinet member, Nilgun Canver explained a couple of years back:

Too much emphasis on Harringay confuses everyone with the borough Haringey and I’m afraid it refers to the Harringay ward and excludes the Gardens

It's odd to see the modern day Haringey Labour party, erstwhile representatives of the people, following in the footsteps of the Tory burghers of Hornsey Council. Moreover, I'm afraid this argument just doesn't wash with me. The inhabitants of countless other London boroughs seem to manage perfectly well with boroughs and towns that bear the same name. Islington, Hackney, Camden, Enfield and many others all survive. Perhaps the real issue is that a name was chosen that doesn't share the same name as the Council's chosen administrative capital as it is the case for all the other London boroughs I've mentioned. Their vanity perhaps requires that it should do so. But is this reason enough for us to be stripped of our historical name?

For many people, this whole issue may seem esoteric and rather irrelevant. However, I'm not alone in taking a rather different view. My belief is that for our neighbourhood to thrive and for people to identify with it, it needs to have a single name. Right now, as the traders magazine posted through your door just before Christmas bears witness, we have at least three names. How can our identity and distinctiveness be developed when this is the case.

I said just now that I wasn't alone in taking a stance on this. In New York, Democrat Assemblyman Hakeem Jeffries thought the principle involved in the issue was so important that he introduced the Neighbourhoods Identity Act, requiring New York City to develop a community-oriented process of community agreement before neighbourhoods can be rebranded or boundaries redefined. 

I'm with you Hakeem.

So then, which name? The current variants are:

  • the original Harringay
  • Harringay Green Lanes
  • Green Lanes


Others have been suggested including Harringay Park and Harringay Village.

My choice is simple. I stick with Harringay. Why? Two reasons. Firstly, that's the name we've had for 130 years and I see no need to change it. Secondly, the other names don't work for me. Green Lanes is a road that runs from Newington Green to Enfield. If avoidance of confusion is the aim, this doesn't do it. Harringay Green Lanes is a three word name. Three word names don't stick. Most of them tend to get abbreviated to the first word of the name anyway. Kingston-upon-Thames for example is more commonly called Kingston. St Martins in the Fields is known as St Martins, and so on.

I suppose there is a third reason for me and that's just that I don't like people asserting rights over me that I don't believe they have. I don't believe that the Council or the Green Lanes Strategy Group have the right to change the name of the place I live in, no matter how much good work they may do. That just bridles. No, I'm with the thoroughly democratic instincts of Congressman Hakeem Jeffries. Even if I am a voice in the wilderness, I say if there's any need to tinker with the name of our neighbourhood, then let the community decide what it should be.

In 2013, as things stand the Council and the Green Lanes Strategy Group will assert their right to brand your neighbourhood as they see fit as part of the Harringay regeneration project. I was promised that the community would be given the right to choose and to influence the way that choice was made. In a  few recent email exchanges I have detected the possibility of more than a little back-pedaling on this issue. 

So, once I have written this post, I will email Councillor Canver, Chair of the Green Lanes Strategy Group to ask for her public commitment that the community be given the determining voice in what our neighbourhood is called.

Amendment

The following paragraphs were added as a comment to this thread by the original author on 5th Jan 2013. Since they cover key issues, and I have been told the comment is hard to find, I have copied them in below:

Having picked up on Alan's suggestion to refer to the legal situation for changing an area's name, a relatively quick spin through sources available has turned up some interesting information.

1. A neighbourhood name has no legal status.

2. The closest approximation for any legal status is contained in quasi-legal or "official" gazettes, such as the Royal Mail's PAF Gazette.

However, even though the information they contain is official rather than legal, it's fascinating to see what lengths the Royal Mail has to go to in order to change the name of a neighbourhood.

Their guidance details a three month consultation process in order to allow changing the name of a neighbourhood in its gazette. The process includes writing to every address affected as well as the MP and other official bodies.

3. Street names and numbers are governed by law, as Alan was told. The relevant legislation is the Public Health Acts Amendment Act of 1907. It says:

The local authority may, with the consent of two-thirds in number of the ratepayers, and persons who are liable to pay an amount in respect of council tax, in any street, alter the name of such street or any part of such street.

So, there is no law that governs the naming of neighbourhoods, but there are principles of justice aplenty that should guide the Council in how it behaves in a situation when it seeks to change an area's name.

As Planning Organisation, Planning Sanity puts it, a neighbourhood is:

" an area where inhabitants live and that it is their state of mind as to what constitutes their neighbourhood. A neighbourhood should not be seen to correspond to any legal or physical division, but more as a social concept, the evidence for which may be given by the people who live there."

If we take as a precedent the principles enshrined both in law and official practice and the opinion of urban experts, I can find no precedent or reference to any principle of justice which suggests that a name change can or should be imposed from above by a person, group of persons or body. At every turn I find evidence confirming my belief that the naming of a neighbourhood belongs to the people who inhabit it and should only be changed with painstaking consultation. It seems extraordinary then that any elected member or officer should even be considering  taking it upon themselves or a small semi-official body to rename a neighbourhood however well meaning might be their intent.

In other areas where a change has been sought, consultations have been the norm. Staines is the most recent example.

It's difficult not to wonder, if a Council is prepared to cut corners on allowing local people self-determintaion in less weighty situations such as this, where else are such 'efficiencies' made at the cost of democratic justice?

I remain convinced that unless and until we have a proper process whereby local residents approve a change, the Council should in all documents refer to Harringay as Harringay. 

Tags for Forum Posts: glsg, harringay name

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Did anyone go to the LCSP meeting last Thursday evening where this was discussed who could give us a summary?

This is the offical membership list that I've just received back from the council:

Part two cores members:

Cllr Canver (St Ann’s Ward Councillor, Cabinet Member for the Environment and Chair of the group)

Cllr Brabazon (St Ann’s Ward Councillor)

Cllr David Brown (St Ann’s Ward Councillor)

Cllr Gina Adamou (Harringay Ward Councillor)

Cllr Karen Alexander (Harringay Ward Councillor)

Cllr David Schmitz (Harringay Ward Councillor)

Ian Sygrave (Chair- Ladder Community Safety Partnership and Chair of Harringay Police Safer Neighbourhood Panel)

(Ian Sygrave plus 1 other)

Andy Newman (Gardens Resident Association) (Francois Ballay substitute)

Sue Green (Gardens Resident Association)

Rob Chau (Harringay Green Lanes Traders Association)

Shefik Mehmet (Harringay Green Lanes Traders Association)

Adam Coffman (Fairland Park and Ducketts Common)

Geoff Amabillino plus 1 (Woodlands Park Residents Association)

Ceri Williams (Friends of Chestnuts Park)

Police Sergeants of Harringay and St Ann’s wards

 

Part one invitees:

Hugh Flouch (Harringay Online)

Liz Ixer (Harringay Online)

Mary Hogan (BTCV)

 

Part one and part two members:

Relevant council officers depending on the issues

Thanks Ant. That made me smile. Maybe I see the world through Harringay-tinted specs, but haven't the traders just rebranded as the Harringay Green Lanes Traders Association......well almost? It seems that they still have this other organisation managing their website - the Harringay Traders Association.  Thankfully however, they do refer to our area as Harringay...most of the time.

So all part two attendees apart from the police all are elected in their own groups, interesting.

Absolutely, yes. I think that's the case with all RAs, but with the exception of the councillors, one has to ask whether the size of their electorate gives them a mandate to decide on issues such as this one. I'm sure that some (most?) of them don't claim such a mandate either.

We're missing out on representation here by not having a resident's association. Is anyone willing to take up the challenge of organising?

Though Adam is a slightly interesting one. He is change of FoFP but only recently and before then Matt the previous chair wasn't invited to attend the GLSG meetings (AFAIK), and prior to that Adam was chair of FoDC and now the new chair is not invited to attend (again AFAIK). To be clear i don't have any issue at all with Adam being invited to attend, i'm pleased he is especially to both parts one and two, i just think its an interesting to  point this out. Also its interesting to note the three part one only attendees, and Mary (BTCV) is I believe Friends of Railway Fields.

Actually Adam has only recently been elected chair but has been on the FoFP committee for many years as events secretary (scroll down to AGM's):

http://fairlandpark.org/events/

I think Michael has hit the nail on the head.

Yep its true about being the events guy but thats not really the point - Adam isn't really at the GLSG representing FOFP or FODC, we didn't choose him as our rep and most of us had no idea he attended. Even Adam himself when i asked him the other week wasn't sure why he got to go!

Whatever the GLSG or any other body may decide, the issue will ultimately be decided by the way in which those who live here choose to tell others where it is we live. On this point, the beginning of a Wikipedia entry is instructive:

"Sixth Avenue – officially Avenue of the Americas, although this name is seldom used by New Yorkers ..."

The entry is headed "Sixth Avenue", despite the road having had the other designation since 1945.

When the matter comes before the Group, I shall start from the position that we should retain "Harringay", largely for the reasons which Hugh advances. (As you would expect, I am not astonished that today's Labour borrows from Tories of the 19th century - Mr. Milliband's recent discovery of Disraeli attests to that.)

But whatever is decided, I shall still tell people that my family lives in "Harringay with two Rs; the neighbourhood as opposed to the Borough." A bit of mouthful, but there we are.

Perhaps we could shorten it by borrowing from the French, with "Harringay-les-2-Rs" as in "Colombey-les-Deux-Églises." Four words, I know, rather than two, but still possessing a certain panache.

David Schmitz

Liberal Democrat Councillor for Harringay Ward

"The tussle over Harringay's name has been going on for over a hundred years. Throughout that time it seems to have featured a struggle between the Council, on the one hand, claiming a right to choose and the local people, on the other, demanding a right to self-determination."

Incredible. The Council cramming 100 years of claiming into its 47 years of existence? Or was Haering equally arbitrary in imposing unwanted placenames?  I must also express my deep disappointment that in 14½ years on the Council I've never been told about the - presumably top secret - Name Tussling Committee.

Meanwhile, it seems that at least since 1912, The People have been meeting in a series of Inter-Ladder Congresses to formulate their demands for self determination. No Taxation without Naming rights? Cafe Lemon Tea emptied into the New River? Aux noms, citoyens !

And now suddenly the Council despotically imposing its will. What's new? Shale deposits discovered under Railway Fields?

Smart Alec comments aside, Alan, it's a referenceable fact that disagreements between local people and the Council over the name of the neighbourhood have been going in since the early twentieth century. 

This issue may not be on your agenda, Alan, but I'm not sure of the point in your seeking to belittle its importance. 

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