London through its charity shops #12: Kingston
Though originally in Surrey, Kingston-upon-Thames is now part of Greater London.
Considering it’s basically one big concrete shopping centre, it’s surprising there aren’t more charity shops there. There are two on Castle Street; an average Oxfam and a colourful if below par FARA. Around the corner on Fife Road is an uninspiring Princess Alice Hospice shop. It’s possible I’ve been in these charity shops hundreds of times and never bought a thing. Next to the falling down telephone boxes sculpture, designed by David Mach and possibly the only interesting thing in Kingston (okay, I’m being a bit harsh; there’s still a few fine old buildings left in the ‘historic market town’ but mostly the place has become pretty homogeneous) is a small Oxfam Books. There are two more Princess Alice shops nearby – one for furniture, the other for children. And I made a discovery only recently – there’s a Cancer Research on Eden Street; it’s very nice, clean and well-organised with well stocked book and CD shelves.
Here are some interesting Kingston cultural facts: the photographer Eadweard Muybridge, credited with being the precursor of moving film, was born there; Three Men in a Boat begins in Kingston; it makes an appearance in The War of the Worlds; a character in Austen’s Emma often visits Kingston; a character in DH Lawrence’s The Rainbow dreams of a job in Kingston, presumably in a time when the town had some character; a whole episode of TV programme Primeval was filmed in the Bentall Centre... some of these fascinating facts were gleaned from Wikipedia.