
The Kings Head has always been a fantastic place for family parties – this is another of Hal’s shots at Lillie and James’ wedding in 2011.

The Kings Head has always been a fantastic place for family parties – this is another of Hal’s shots at Lillie and James’ wedding in 2011.
Landermere Quay, where the land meets the sea, is a tiny hamlet near the village of Thorpe-le-Soken in the Essex marshes. Easier to access by sea than by road, it’s been home to my mother’s family – the Hendersons – since the 1950s when my great-grandparents bought the smugglers’ pub (The Kings Head) and the fishermen’s cottages (Gull Cottages) as a suitable home for my grandparents Nigel and Judith Henderson, who had until then been living in Chisenhale Road, Bethnal Green, with their three children Jo, Justin (my mother) and Ned. Their fourth child Stephen was born when they were living at the Kings Head.
The family moved to Landermere when Justin was eight – at this stage Jo would have been nine and Ned a baby. Steve was born three years later.
Justin died in 2007 so I can’t ask her for any more stories, but I have memories of her telling us that when she was a child there was a pony, possibly a Shetland; and multiple cats (the ones Mum used to talk about especially were called Bouncer and Camilla).
I do know that there were other families living at Landermere. Judith (my grandmother) was an anthropologist who was involved in the Mass Observation project in the East End after the second world war. Her project was called Discover Your Neighbour – and her part revolved around the family who lived next door in Chisenhale Road, Leslie and Doreen Samuels and their seven boys. When Nigel and Judith moved to Landermere, they took the Samuels family with them and gave them one of the cottages to live in – it’s still owned by Peter Samuels (one of the seven sons) now.
Nigel was one of the foremost artists of the Independent Group, and his colleague and friend Eduardo Paolozzi also moved to Landermere with his wife Freda; between them they formed Hammer Prints, which was run largely from the Kings Head.
There are lots of other stories about Landermere from before I was born – hopefully I’ll dredge the memory banks at some stage – but if you have any memories or photographs of Landermere you’d like to share, please let me know and I’ll happily publish them.