Punk 4 Mental Health
Nigel Osner and Joel Vos talk with Freddy about an upcoming night at the Dublin Castle, “Punk 4 Mental Health”. They get into the true meaning of punk, old age, and mental health (and the connections between all three!).
Package by: Freddy Chick
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Episode 4: What became of the hospital building after WWI
These 4 podcasts explore the Legacy of the Endell Street Military Hospital, the only British army hospital to have been established and run by women during WWI. Opened in 1915 on the site of a former Victorian workhouse by Suffragette doctors Flora Murray and Louisa Garrett Anderson, its staff of 180 women treated over 26,000 in-patients and performed over 7,000 surgical operations.
In 2018 a group of local volunteers came together to learn research and recording skills as part of a Heritage Lottery funded project, and they created these podcasts to share their findings about what happened to the hospital and its female staff members after the war ended.
- Episode 1
- The legacy of WWI women doctors
- Episode 2
- The postwar life of a nursing orderly
- Episode 3
- Interview with Endell Street Military Hospital author Wendy Moore
- Digital Drama Projects
- Digital Drama News
- Back to Camden Community Radio
- Follow Camden Community Radio on Twitter
This file has been downloaded 56 times
Episode 3: Interview with Endell Street Military Hospital author Wendy Moore
These 4 podcasts explore the Legacy of the Endell Street Military Hospital, the only British army hospital to have been established and run by women during WW1. Opened in 1915 on the site of a former Victorian workhouse by Suffragette doctors Flora Murray and Louisa Garrett Anderson, its staff of 180 women treated over 26,000 in-patients and performed over 7,000 surgical operations. In 2018 a group of local volunteers came together to learn research and recording skills as part of a Heritage Lottery funded project, and they created these podcasts to share their findings about what happened to the hospital and its female staff members after the war ended.
Podcast by: Digital Media
- Episode 1
- The legacy of WWI women doctors
- Episode 2
- The postwar life of a nursing orderly
- Episode 4
- What became of the hospital building after WWI
- Digital Drama Projects
- Digital Drama News
- Back to Camden Community Radio
- Follow Camden Community Radio on Twitter
This file has been downloaded 57 times
Talking Shop: Is Camden one of the best places to live in the country?
In a recent survey, Camden was one of three London boroughs named as one of the best places to live in the country. The study looked at areas across England and ranked them on factors such as economic growth, sustainability and happiness. In this first episode of Talking Shop, Marian, Freddy and Violet discuss whether they agree with the findings.
Talking Shop is a new show from Camden Community Radio which sees members of the station looking at a news story from a local perspective.
Package by Freddy Chick, Marian Larragy and Violet Macdonald.
This file has been downloaded 113 times
Sally Buchan has an installation this week at the Flux Exhibtion
Camden-based multi-media artist Sally Buchanan doesn’t necessarily know what her projects are going to be about, but always knows that they are going to happen. Not surprising then that her contribution to the FLUX Exhibition – this week in the Parade Ground of Chelsea College of the Arts – is called ‘The Inevitable Installation’. Sally talked to Camden Community Radio while she was still on a high from the (not quite finished) work on her sculpture which she hopes will draw people into a space that suggests another world, another dimension. Consisting of ten cubes, each a different colour and constructed with scaffolding and organza that people can walk through or view from outside, the installation plays with shape and colour as overlaps transpose colours and convey different hues. On Monday and Tuesday ‘The Inevitable Installation’ will be assembled (and filmed with a time lapse camera) in situ.
Entry is FREE, Gates open each day at 11am. Chelsea College is next to Tate Britain at 16 John Islip Street, SW1 4UJ.Bus 88, Pimlico tube station or River bus to Tate Britain.
Package by: Marian Larragy
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