Kentish Independent – Friday 13 January 1956

Kentish Independent – Friday 13 January 1956

Evening News (London) – Monday 09 January 1956

Kentish Independent – Friday 25 November 1955
[AWH – Why was the “existing use” value relatively low? because of the downturn in the area?]

Eltham housing idea falls through
The L.C.C. lost the right to build homes on a four-acre site at Courtlands Avenue, Eltham, because it was unable to offer a competitive price for it. That was the view expressed at Tuesday’s meeting of the County Council by the chairman of the Housing Committee (Mr. W. G. Fiske).
The question of prices the council was empowered by law to offer for land cropped up when the council was informed that the Housing Minister had refused to confirm a Compulsory Purchase Order for the land at Courtlands Avenue.
Instead, the Minister has decided that private builders should be allowed to build there. The LCC had planned to build about 80 homes
Mr. Fiske declared that local authorities are to press for the right to pay the market value for land they want for housing. At the moment they are permitted to pay only “existing use” value.
This amount varies greatly. If the land is waste and overgrown, local authority can acquire it for a few pounds. If, however, the land is covered by buildings with a high rent value, then the value per acre might run into four figures.
Mr Fiske said he firmly believed that if the council had been able to offer a fair price for the site it would have secured it.
A Housing Committee comment stated: “An interesting aspect of this case is that by a combination of circumstances the maximum compensation that would have been payable if the land had been acquired by the council, wither by agreement or compulsorily, could not have equalled or approached the value of the land on the open market.”
East End News and London Shipping Chronicle – Friday 01 July 1955

East End News and London Shipping Chronicle – Friday 24 June 1955





Magistrate inspects church fittings
Poplar men found guilty of receiving
STATUES of angels, ecclesiastical vases, memorial plaques, a church bell, a font, a sacristy, and a weather vane, all alleged to have been stolen from a church at Eltham, were displayed in and outside the Thames Courtroom on Friday, and were inspected by the Magistrate (Col. W. E. Batt).
Roy Little, aged 18, general dealer, and his brother, John Henry Little, aged 28, lorry driver, both of Lochnagar-street, Poplar, and Vincent Patrick Keeping, aged 20, general dealer, of no fixed address, pleaded not guilty to stealing between May 7 and June 10 from St. Peter’s Church, Courtland-avenue, Eltham, approximately hundredweights of brass, copper and lead church fittings. valued at £60, the property of the South London Church Fund and Diocesan Board of Finance. six
They also pleaded not guilty to receiving the fittings. knowing them to have been stolen.
STORAGE
Canon Laurence Ambrose Brown, Southwark Diocesan Secretary, in charge of re-building war-damaged churches in South London, said that all the fittings had been stolen from St. Peter’s Church, which had been used for storage purposes for the last 14 years.
Det. Const. Stanley Evans said he found all the fittings at the address of the Littles early in the morning of June 10. In a bedroom in the house, he found Roy Little in bed, with his brother John under the bed. Keeping was hiding, doubled-up, in a clothes cupboard.
After questioning, they were all taken to the police station.
Roy Little told Col. Batt that he bought the fittings from a gipsy at Sidcup. He paid £28 for them and took them to his storage railway arch at Deptford. Because he thought they would not be safe there, he contacted his brother, who was visiting Woolwich, and his brother took them in his lorry to Poplar for safe keeping. John Little said that when John Little said that when they all got to Poplar, his brother and Keening decided to stay the night. When the police knocked on the door he realised that something was wrong and hid under the bed because he was afraid of the police. He did not know the metal was stolen.
Keeping said he helped to unload the church fittings from the “gipsy’s” lorry near Sidcup police station. From the look of the fittings he assumed they must have come from a builder’s yard.
“What, angels and plaques to deceased gentlemen and things like that?” queried Col. Batt, who said that there was no evidence of stealing against the three accused and dismissed the stealing charge. He found them guilty of receiving.
John Little, who was reported to have 13 previous convictions, was remanded on bail of £25 until June 25 and Roy Little and Keeping were both placed on probation for two years.
Evening News (London) – Monday 06 June 1955


Kentish Independent – Friday 07 January 1955



Also in Kentish Independent – Friday 31 December 1954
Kentish Independent – Friday 19 February 1954
[AWH- 80 homes under council scheme – numbers on current Avenue top 200 – though they are flats.]

Sydenham, Forest Hill & Penge Gazette – Friday 17 April 1953

Sydenham, Forest Hill & Penge Gazette – Friday 07 November 1952

