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Encyclopedia > Dial House

Dial House is a sixteenth-century farm cottage nestling deep in the countryside in Essex, England, fringing Epping Forest. Since 1967 the place has been an anarchist-pacifist open house, the base of operations for a number of cultural, artistic and political projects ranging from avant garde jazz events to helping to found the Free Festival movement.

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Dial House in summer

Perhaps the best known manifestation of the public face of Dial House was the punk rock band Crass. Crass took literally the punk manifesto of 'anyone can do it', and combined the use of song, film, sound collage, graphics and subversion to launch a sustained and original critical broadside against all that they saw as a culture built on foundations of war, violence, religious hypocrisy and blind consumerism.


Crass all but retired from the public eye during the mid-1980s. Physically and mentally exhausted by the efforts thay had put into running the group, as well as what they describe as harassment by the forces of the state, the group retreated to Dial House to recuperate before facing more personal struggles, particularly against land owners and property developers seemingly intent on encroaching into the last remaining green belt areas surrounding London. Over a decade later, this culminated in co-founders Penny Rimbaud and Gee Vaucher buying the previously rented house at auction, a decision which left them £100,000 in debt, but at last securing a stable future for what they've now named a 'Centre For Dynamic Cultural Change'.

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The vegetable garden at Dial House

The summer of 2001 saw a gathering at Dial House for a visioning event for the future of this space. Dial House has been described as 'paradise'- some would say that it is certainly an asylum from the madness that is early 21st century fossil-fuel- and war-driven 'civilisation'. The garden is a maze of vegetable plots, native tree plantings, fruit bushes and flower beds teeming with humming bees and birdsong, and a multitude of hidden shelters and sitting places adorned with sculptures and carvings. The building itself contains artists' studios, rehearsal rooms, libraries and social spaces. At the 2001 gathering many possibilities for the house were discussed, such as art venue, healing workshop space, jazz festivals, permaculture convergences, poets' retreat, fireworks parties, willow sculpture courses and more.


External links

  • Dial House Appeal (http://www.abisti.demon.co.uk/dialhouse/)
  • Compost Toilet building workshop at Dial House, summer 2002 (http://pages.unisonfree.net/gburnett/compostloo/essay/compostbog.htm)
  • Crass - history & information - official website (http://www.southern.com/southern/label/CRC/)
  • Permaculture introductory courses at Dial House (http://www.gb0063551.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/course/index.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
The Twickenham Museum : The Sundial on Dial House (393 words)
Dial House, on Riverside at Twickenham takes its name from the painted sundial in the centre of the front of the house.
The dial is attractive and colourful, but the date of 1726 given almost certainly refers to an earlier dial bearing the same motto Redeeming the Time and naming Thomas Twining I who owned the property at that time.
The dial has probably been repainted several times in the last 115 years and the sharp-eyed will note that the hour marker lines in the region of 10 o'clock to 2 o'clock are not quite directed to the 'centre' of the dial which is at the root of the gnomon.
The Twickenham Museum : Dial House (369 words)
Dial House was owned by members of the Twining family from about 1722 until 1889.
Although the house remained in the family, it was leased to tenants from 1834 until 1866 when it was occupied by Elizabeth Twining until her death on Christmas Day 1889.
Dial House was formally conveyed to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners and in 2001 they reclaimed it on behalf of the Diocese of Kensington and converted it for the use of the Bishop.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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