
English Wanderer
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Channel creation dateMar 03, 2024
Added to TGlist
May 29, 2024Latest posts in group "English Wanderer"


17.05.202504:03
16.05.202520:26
Alek gave David Clews a kicking, "you are pathetic", "i give up, you are useless " then stormed off like a moody child. Comedy gold.
16.05.202516:12
Reposted from:
Mark Collett

16.05.202516:05
The Future of PA - with Laura Towler
LIVESTREAM: Tonight, 7pm UK time (2pm EST)
Tonight we will discuss the future of PA and reveal some shocking news about the Electoral Commission. This will be followed by a Q&A.
- MASSIVE NEWS proving electoral corruption in Britain
- REFORMING UK politics
- New PA developments and NEWS
Odysee: https://odysee.com/@MarkCollett:6/PA-Future:0
DLIVE: https://dlive.tv/markcollett
Entropy: https://entropystream.live/app/markcollett
LIVESTREAM: Tonight, 7pm UK time (2pm EST)
Tonight we will discuss the future of PA and reveal some shocking news about the Electoral Commission. This will be followed by a Q&A.
- MASSIVE NEWS proving electoral corruption in Britain
- REFORMING UK politics
- New PA developments and NEWS
Odysee: https://odysee.com/@MarkCollett:6/PA-Future:0
DLIVE: https://dlive.tv/markcollett
Entropy: https://entropystream.live/app/markcollett




16.05.202512:33
16.05.202512:22
Yes Starmer… you’re right!..
We are definitely becoming a nation of strangers..
And it’s all politicians doing..😳🤡🤡
We are definitely becoming a nation of strangers..
And it’s all politicians doing..😳🤡🤡


15.05.202520:50
Is this the diversity they talk about?
A young English lad is attacked by migrants...
A young English lad is attacked by migrants...


Reposted from:
Traditional Britain Group

15.05.202520:27
In Harraby, Carlisle, a new arrival is greeted by the police, due to him walking around town with a knife.


15.05.202520:25
15.05.202520:21


15.05.202518:28
15.05.202518:24
Women in curlers and headscarves haggled for the best price, and the smell of jellied eels from Tubby Isaacs’ stall mixed with frying onions from nearby cafés. It was noisy, chaotic, and entirely alive with a kind of gritty beauty.
Behind the bustle, however, life wasn’t easy. Many lived in Victorian tenements that were crumbling, damp, and overcrowded. Yet despite the poverty, there was resilience and warmth. Families looked out for each other, and neighbours left their doors open. The street was more than just a market—it was a lifeline, a theatre, and a memory box for thousands who walked it each week. Wentworth Street in 1960 was a place where London’s working-class spirit glowed brightest, just before sweeping redevelopment began to change it all.
Behind the bustle, however, life wasn’t easy. Many lived in Victorian tenements that were crumbling, damp, and overcrowded. Yet despite the poverty, there was resilience and warmth. Families looked out for each other, and neighbours left their doors open. The street was more than just a market—it was a lifeline, a theatre, and a memory box for thousands who walked it each week. Wentworth Street in 1960 was a place where London’s working-class spirit glowed brightest, just before sweeping redevelopment began to change it all.
15.05.202518:23
Wentworth Street in Tower Hamlets, 1960, was a vibrant artery of East End life, alive with the chatter of traders, the scent of spices, and the clatter of barrows on cobbles. It formed part of the Petticoat Lane Market—one of London's most iconic street markets, where generations of East Enders had made their living. In 1960, the street pulsed with a post-war energy, as families rebuilt their lives and communities thrived despite hardship. Jewish tailors, Irish labourers, and newly arrived Bangladeshi families lived cheek by jowl, bringing their traditions, languages, and foods into the shared rhythm of daily life.
Stalls lined both sides of the street, heaving with goods ranging from second-hand clothes and trinkets to fresh produce and dodgy watches. Sellers shouted their best offers—“Everyfink a bargain, love!”—while kids darted between the crowd, playing football with rolled-up newspaper or cadging a few pence to buy sweets.
Stalls lined both sides of the street, heaving with goods ranging from second-hand clothes and trinkets to fresh produce and dodgy watches. Sellers shouted their best offers—“Everyfink a bargain, love!”—while kids darted between the crowd, playing football with rolled-up newspaper or cadging a few pence to buy sweets.




15.05.202517:58
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15.05.202523:59
572Subscribers26.04.202523:59
300Citation index26.04.202516:11
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100.00%ER23.03.202523:59
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