The Karsino

The Karsino was a hotel on Tagg's Island in the River Thames in England which stood from 1912 until 1972.

The Karsino as photographed in 1924

History

It was built for Fred Karno by architect Frank Matcham in 1912. When World War I started in 1914, the resort was popular with returning military officers and their families and staged picnics and entertainment at times for wounded soldiers. In 1925 Fred Karno declared bankruptcy. It changed hands several times and in 1972 the hotel, dilapidated, was demolished. Fire destroyed all the other buildings at the resort.[1]

An 11-minute film of the recreation on the lower canalised Thames in 1924 has footage devoted to the Karsino, preceded by the intertitle (titlecard): "There are ample facilities for gaiety here too - for opposite is the famous Karsino, on Tagg's Island".[2]

External links

  1. 'Eccentric Club Entertain Wounded Soldiers', 1916, British Film Institute archive.

References

  1. "Fred Karno and the Karsino". Richmond upon Thames. Retrieved 2010-10-16.
  2. 'Along Father Thames to Shepperton', 1924, British Film Institute archive

Coordinates: 51°24′31″N 0°21′6″W / 51.40861°N 0.35167°W / 51.40861; -0.35167 (The Karsino)

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