What looks like gypsies togther with Salvation Army officers, taken at a studio in Harringay around 1910.
Anyone care to hazard a guess at the story behind this picture?
46 Grand Parade, the address of the studio is now the Antepliler Patisserie.
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Albums: Historical Images of Harringay from 1885 - 1918 | 1 of 3 (F)
They may well be related to the Salvation Army's 'Gypsy Outreach' dating from the conversion of Rodney Gipsy Smith and his recruitment by William Booth for work with gypsies in the South-East between 1877 and 1882. Gipsy Smith was born in a tent in Epping Forest. Apparently a parting of the ways in 1882 was caused when Smith accepted a gift of £20 from a grateful congregation, breaking SA rules for preachers so Booth dropped him. He continued in Christian preaching into old age on both sides of the Atlantic.
No reason why the group above might not be SA gypsy converts dressed in their 'Sunday best' for their formal photo for a special occasion. Maybe.
I was reminded of this image earlier when someone 'liked' it.
Since I last commented, I'm pretty sure that I've seen a newspaper article from the first decade of the 20th century about gypsies on the former potteries site (yet-to-be Stadium site). I couldn't put my hands to it. But I did find another nearby reference telling us that there were gypsies in the area at the time of the photo.
Tottenham and Edmonton Weekly Herald - 22 January 1904
Derek Reynolds who gave me such great info on the Redvers Road area, told me that gypsies were still camping up there in the 1920s.
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