Neil Rhind
Neil Biron Rhind was an English journalist, writer and an authority on the social and historical development of Blackheath and surrounding areas of south-east London.
Early life
Rhind was born and has lived most of his life in Blackheath, London. He is the youngest of four siblings born to Doris Pamela and William Alexander, a naval officer. During World War II, Rhind was evacuated and separated from his siblings for a time. He returned to Blackheath in 1951. Rhind was educated at St Marylebone Grammar School. He married Elizabeth on 3 September 1960, had two children, and lived in The Lane in Blackheath's Cator Estate.Journalism career
From 1957 to 1959, Rhind served in RAF air traffic control, mainly at Uxbridge. He worked briefly as a librarian before joining the Odham Newnes Press where he worked as the Packaging Review Yearbook editor. From 1963 he was assistant editor and then managing editor of the Good Food Guide.In 1967 he became a freelance writer working as a press officer for the Consumers' Association and press officer of the Greenwich Theatre, during and following its rebuilding and reopening. In 1969 he became press officer of the Blackheath Society.
From 1969, prompted by fierce local opposition to the Greater London Development Plan and its adverse effect on Blackheath, Rhind became involved in documenting and protecting the social and architectural history of his home district, Blackheath and Greenwich.
Work on Blackheath
In 1971 Rhind joined the Greenwich and Lewisham Antiquarian Society and was elected to its council in 1973. He succeeded Sir Leslie Monson as president in 1982, in turn being succeeded by Sir Robert Somerville in 1984. He gave two presidential addresses - The Cator Estate and Blackheath: Some Sporting Myths, and Thoughts on Jack the Ripper, the Blackheath Connection, later becoming a vice-president.Rhind joined the Blackheath Society committee in 1974, succeeded Ken Bound as chairman in September 1993, resigning in May 1998. He collated an archive collection of over 15,000 images of Blackheath which were being digitised and made available online. In 2016 he was appointed president of the Society.
Rhind was a long-standing member of the Lewisham Local History Council, and a member of the Greenwich Industrial History Society and Lewisham Local History Society. He was chairman of the Blackheath Schools of Art and Music Trust and founder of the Friends of Ranger's House. He was an honorary life member of the Westcombe Society and a past chairman of the London Borough of Lewisham Conservation Advisory Committee.
Rhind was a leading contributor to the Blackheath Conservation Area Appraisal submitted to Lewisham Council in 2007.