RM3 Community

RM3 Community Community news page for positive stories in Harold Wood and Harold Hill. By JC, a long-time local resident and journalist.

Just had a quick chat with PCSO Atish Soni as I went to do my usual shop at Lidl in Harold Hill.Lovely fella with a posi...
04/06/2026

Just had a quick chat with PCSO Atish Soni as I went to do my usual shop at Lidl in Harold Hill.

Lovely fella with a positive attitude towards improving our local community.

I even convinced him to have this selfie with yours truly!

He, along with two new female officer recruits, have been speaking to locals at Central Park this morning.

I'm sure you'll all agree, it's always nice to see a few of those reassuring high-viz jackets on our streets.

PCSC Soni tells me Sgt Ruane at the Heaton Safer Neighbourhoods Team likes positive feedback.

So feel free to say thanks to our local Havering Police team if you see them out on the beat.

Ps. To Mrs Soni... your husband has a great smile so leave him alone! 📷 😁 😂

02/06/2026

That's it for the back-catalogue article posts.

The website will be online until the end of this month and there's loads of other lovely stuff on there.

Go and take a look if you are interested in some of the best of our local RM3 community.

I've had an incredibly busy spring so far but hoping to put up a few more posts this month.

I hope you are all well and are looking forward to another summer of World Cup excitement!

Cheers, JC.

I first published this article 👇 on February 2, 2026, on the soon-to-close WordPress blog. As it's a lovely feature, I'm...
02/06/2026

I first published this article 👇 on February 2, 2026, on the soon-to-close WordPress blog. As it's a lovely feature, I'm reposting it here so it lives on after the website is shut down in June 2026.

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IT’S not a completely free lunch… but the tasty grub and chat on offer at St Peter's Church, Harold Wood every month is well worth the fiver.

The Men’s Lunch club has been going for 42 years and guest speakers have included sports stars, politicians, army officers and charity workers.

Once they even picked the brains of a surgeon.

It is ideal for men from the RM3 catchment who – for whatever reason – have spare time between 11.30am and 2.30pm on Tuesdays.

A suggested donation of ÂŁ5 cash paid on the day will book a place at the popular monthly gathering at the Gubbins Lane venue.

In return, guests get a late morning cuppa, a two-course home-cooked meal at about 12.30pm, and a presentation from a carefully selected expert.

And great company into the bargain too, of course.

It all began in 1984 when Canon Miles Thomson and Churchwarden Ray Wheeler created a monthly social gathering for retired men.

They have both passed away now but would be thrilled to see how their pet project continues to thrive in 2026.

And it is not just for pensioners anymore as – 20 years ago – Lay Minister Chris Knowles (right) made it an open church for all ages.

The spring programme is already underway and has guest speakers booked from January through to June.

Next up, on February 10, Nicholas Quest will talk about Psalm 139 and how God offers hope and comfort in the face of adversity.

The yearly programme also often includes specially-themed gatherings for Remembrance Day and Christmas, while missionaries are regularly invited along to talk about their travels.

To book in, or for more information, please call Men’s Lunch secretary Julian Harris on 01708 342080 or email [email protected]

I first published this article 👇 on December 17, 2025, on the soon-to-close WordPress blog. As it's a lovely feature, I'...
15/05/2026

I first published this article 👇 on December 17, 2025, on the soon-to-close WordPress blog. As it's a lovely feature, I'm reposting it here so it lives on after the website is shut down.

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FAMILY and friends of the late Romford Drum & Trumpet Corps legend Stuart McLeod were present for a touching tribute to him from some of the young musicians he inspired.

The former RDTC instructor and vice-president, who passed away in January 2025, dedicated so much of his time to Harold Hill’s famous marching band during the last eight years of his extraordinary life.

Stu, as he was affectionately known, was an ex-Royal Mail worker, dedicated family man, charity fundraiser and larger than life character who learnt to play the clarinet in the Royal Marines – and he used his passion for music to enrich the community.

Some of his relatives were special guests as the band put on its popular Christmas concert at St Edward the Confessor Church in Romford on Sunday (December 14, 2025).

Along with other guests at a packed-out event inside the atmospheric church hall, they were treated to an uplifting rendition of the classic You Raise Me Up in Stuart's memory.

Two of his daughters, Laura and Hayley, also handed over an incredible ÂŁ5,000 donation to the RDTC in the form of a huge cheque presented to band director Samantha Barrand.

Band secretary Kerrie Kavanagh said: “It was a terrific event and all our band members performed brilliantly to get everybody in the Christmas spirit.

“And it was also very moving when they played for Stuart.

“It was lovely to have some of Stuart’s family there and we are so grateful for their incredible donation.

“It will help pay for new instruments, which I know Stuart will have loved.

“So it’s a fitting tribute to a man who represented all that is good about the Romford Drum and Trumpet Corps.”

The RDTC has helped countless local kids since it was set up in 1957 and its HQ is on the site of the former Ingrebourne School on Taunton Road.

Boys and girls aged eight to ten years old can join its academy, while those over ten but younger than 21 can apply to be part of the senior band. Membership is – and has always been – free.

It is one of the UK’s oldest independent youth marching bands and has performed at venues including the Royal Albert Hall, Royal Festival Hall, Wembley Stadium, St Paul’s Cathedral and The London Palladium.

And now it has been invited to represent the UK at the USA’s 250th anniversary celebrations in Philadelphia on July 4, 2026, with 55 band members set to go.

It will also represent England and the UK in the World Association of Marching Show Bands (WAMSB) concert and field display competitions.

The trip will cost about ÂŁ97,000 and band members have committed to raising at least ÂŁ40,000 of that themselves.

Each young member is still expected to contribute about £900, with the remainder coming from the RDTC’s own funds.

Many young members are from lower-income households and – with the current challenging financial climate – the band are finding it increasingly difficult to rely solely on contributions from within the band community.

As of today (December 17) it has raised ÂŁ2,010 of towards a ÂŁ5,000 target and you can help make their dream trip across the pond a reality by making a donation through their GoFundMe page.

We all must have some tinned food in the cupboard that never moves, right?I call our collection the 'nuclear bunker' sup...
14/05/2026

We all must have some tinned food in the cupboard that never moves, right?

I call our collection the 'nuclear bunker' supply and, tbh, it gets right on my wick!

So I'm goner see what we can spare and drop it off to these community heroes asap.

We shouldn't be a country that relies on Foodbanks... but here we are.

Help if you can. ❤️

We really do appreciate your ongoing support for the Harold Hill Foodbank. As we continue to support our local community, would you be willing to donate to this ongoing, vital work. https://haroldhill.foodbank.org.uk/

The brilliant Lynda Smith and Hilary Salisbury have smashed it again with their new post box topper at our local Tesco s...
12/05/2026

The brilliant Lynda Smith and Hilary Salisbury have smashed it again with their new post box topper at our local Tesco superstore.

When it comes to the delayed works at Gallows Corner, I guess we have all just accepted we can either laugh or cry.

So thank you ladies for making it the former with this creation!

Tesco's tireless community champion Clover Deacon sent over these images today, so here they are for you all to enjoy.

And I'm told there is "more to be added" to the display once the roundabout is "fully opened". So hopefully by Christmas then!

Clover said their customers and staff absolutely loved walking in to see the new offering this morning and cannot wait for the update.

Lovely people, lovely work. The RM3 community - as always - salutes you both. 👏👏👏

I first published this article 👇 on December 11, 2025, on the soon-to-close WordPress blog. As it's a lovely feature, I'...
10/05/2026

I first published this article 👇 on December 11, 2025, on the soon-to-close WordPress blog. As it's a lovely feature, I'm reposting it here so it lives on after the website is shut down.

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MOST of us assumed that ‘Under Construction’ post box topper at Tesco Gallows Corner was an amusing reference to some, ahem, delayed structural works at a famous nearby roundabout.

Apparently not.

It was, in fact, more of a ‘coming soon’ place holder put there by the duo behind those incredible knitted and crocheted scenes on display at the entrance to the busy store off the A12.

Lynda Smith and Hilary Salisbury have been lovingly crafting homages to special events and seasonal holidays since February 2022.

They became friends at the Romford-based Stitch-in-Time group and their first design for Tesco was a tribute to our late Queen Elizabeth II on her Platinum Jubilee.

Since then we have been treated to many imaginative offerings every year, and Lynda explained: “We always do Christmas, definitely, Chinese New Year, one in the spring and one in the summer, and Remembrance Day.

“So we probably do at least five every year, I should think.

“Some are more straightforward than others, of course.

"The VE Day one, for instance, there were lots of elements to it so it took us a while to do.

“And the D-Day one was tricky because I did a Spitfire and had to make it look as though it was in the air. You have to think about how to construct it – and do it so it doesn’t fall apart!

“But I think the one that has made people laugh the most was the recent one we have just taken down, the work-in-progress one.

“We did it as a kind of place holder while we made the Christmas one but at the back of our minds I guess we did think it was appropriate, given what is going on with the works at Gallows.

“But that’s all part of the fun and when we get feedback like that, it is great really.”

The bases for the designs are always crocheted by Hilary (who was overseas when this interview took place) and the bulk of the knitting work by Lynda.

And Lynda revealed the secret to her ‘tricky Spitfire’ was the use of a wooden model plane supplied by her RAF-expert husband.

She also had input on the correct colours to mark D-Day – black and white stripes – from her son, who is an RAF Typhoon pilot.

Lynda, 75, added: “It has predominantly been just Hilary and I doing them but we have certainly had help with some bits from other people.

“When we started, another lady from the knitting group called Leslie helped out with some of the figures on the May Day one, and with the Easter one.

“And it all started because – with a late friend of mine called Jan Smith – we used to do a lot of knitting of covers for Terry’s Chocolate Oranges and things like that to sell in aid of Saint Francis Hospice.

“Jan was a great one for going to the supermarket to ask for donations of the chocolate and had quite a network of contacts as a result.

“Clover [Deacon, Tesco’s Community Champion] was one of those contacts and that’s how it started.

“Also, as a group, we’d seen how these post box toppers were becoming more and more popular so we did one on a post box quite close to the hospice, with all the different workers at the hospice.

“Then we started with the Queen’s Jubilee one at Tesco and it has gone on from there.

“That location is very good as it’s under cover, so not affected by the weather, and the staff are great because they keep an eye on them. We’ve never had any vandalism, I’m pleased to say.

“And the customers always stop us for a chat when we go there to put them up or take them down. They really do appreciate them and that is just lovely for us.”

The Stitch-in-Time group meets on Tuesdays at Romford Baptist Church and you can find more information on their website.

Church Road Allotments annual spring sale blossoming nicely this morning.It's down the Waterside Close cul-de-sac, oppos...
09/05/2026

Church Road Allotments annual spring sale blossoming nicely this morning.

It's down the Waterside Close cul-de-sac, opposite the News & Wine shop.

Pop along for a lovely chat in the sun and for some great value plants.

My vote cast.I have a viewpoint but RM3 Community remains apolitical (in a big P sense) so all I'll say is this...I hope...
07/05/2026

My vote cast.

I have a viewpoint but RM3 Community remains apolitical (in a big P sense) so all I'll say is this...

I hope the area gets the elected representatives it needs and deserves.

I first published this article 👇 on December 9, 2025, on the soon-to-close WordPress blog. As it's a lovely feature, I'm...
06/05/2026

I first published this article 👇 on December 9, 2025, on the soon-to-close WordPress blog. As it's a lovely feature, I'm reposting it here so it lives on after the website is shut down.

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A MUM who fundraises tirelessly to support her disabled son has said a heartfelt thank you to the Harold Wood community for its “incredible support” over the past two decades.

Toni Richardson, 57, has spent the last 23 years organising over 100 events to cover annual care costs of up to ÂŁ5,000 for Taylor Dolman, 25, who has cerebral palsy.

Despite only being given a couple of days to live when he was born, Taylor is now a dedicated fitness fanatic and promising boxer who has grown into a happy young man with the support of family and friends.

Toni, who lives in the centre of Romford but was born and raised in Harold Wood, regularly returns to this area to hold fundraisers at the Kingsland Hall scout hut behind the shops on Station Road.

And last month, with her daughter Scartlett, 18, she had a stall at Harold Wood Foundation’s Light Before Christmas event after a kind invitation from its founder Rachel Grimwood.

A raffle and tombola helped boost the coffers and Toni says it is typical of the generosity she is always shown by local residents.

Toni, a former pupil at Harold Court Primary School, said: “We’ve had incredible support from the people of Harold Wood.

“It’s massive and I want to say a huge thank you to everyone there who has helped over the years.

“They say it takes a village to raise a child and when you have a child that needs extra help and support you cannot do it on your own.

“Mrs Lynch at Kingsland Hall has been one of our biggest supporters but that entire network there has been so important, not just in monetary terms but for emotional support, too.

“I’m a single parent and it can feel incredibly lonely, being a carer for a young person and trying to do your best. So that support from people like Rachel and Mrs Lynch is huge.”

Toni and Scarlett at a bowling alley summer 2025 fundraising event
Taylor receives social care direct payments from Havering Council.

But the huge cost of things like physio and equipment means Toni has had to stage quizzes, race nights and even barn dances to help pay the bills.

While speaking to RM3 Community, Toni was surrounded by paperwork and crates for the next fundraiser, an invite-only ‘Jingle & Mingle’ event on Sunday, December 14.

And she revealed how there will be a couple of very special guests as a result of a moment of pure serendipity at the Light Before Christmas event.

Toni explained: “We had a ‘guess the number of sweets in a jar’ game, and a lady, who was there with her husband, decided to have a go at it.

“It turned out she was closest. There were 47 and she guessed 46.

“I messaged her and said I would drop the jar off to her. I asked where she lived… and it was my old family home in Birkdale Avenue!

“I asked her how long she had been there and it turns out she had actually bought it from my parents. You couldn’t make it up!

“She said we were welcome to come over anytime and last Friday we did and some neighbours came who knew me and my sister when we were kids.

“It brought a tear to my eye and I guess it just underlines the point about how strong that community still is in Harold Wood.

“And it has come full circle as they’re now coming to the event on Sunday. It was just the most unexpected and loveliest thing to happen.”

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Romford
Havering
RM3

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+447505559362

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