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Donna C Henry obituary

My friend and colleague Donna C Henry, who has died suddenly aged 66, was a committed community activist working to improve the lives of people on the Clapham Park estate in south London.

In the late 1990s, Donna and a group of fellow residents brought the social, economic and housing problems of the Clapham Park estate to the attention of Lambeth council. They persuaded the council to choose Clapham Park as its New Deal for Communities (NDC) area. Donna joined the board of Clapham Park Project (CPP), the NDC organisation established in 2000, soon becoming vice-chair and, in 2005, chair, a position she held conscientiously for 15 years until her death. By then, she had steered CPP’s transition to charity status.

The NDC was a New Labour programme intended to transform disadvantaged neighbourhoods. At Clapham Park, much of the investment went into upgrading the housing stock. In 2006 Clapham Park was transferred into the control of a resident-led housing association and it is now managed by Metropolitan Thames Valley Housing Association.

Since then, more than 1,500 new or refurbished homes have been completed. There is a new nursery school, community centre and shop. It is now a much safer and more pleasant place to live. In 2011, Donna’s work was recognised when she was appointed MBE.

The eldest child of Gwen Lindo and Kenneth Mills, Donna was born in St Kitts in the West Indies, and spent her early childhood there in the care of her grandmother. At the age of eight she moved to join her mother in north-west England, and was educated at Higginshaw county primary school and Hathershaw secondary school in Oldham. Later she moved to London to work as an ophthalmic nurse, eventually settling in Clapham Park. She had two children, Malana and Tshan, and married Kenneth Henry in 1988.

Donna was totally dedicated to the wellbeing of the residents of Clapham Park – as well as her work for the CPP, she sat on the board of the estate’s housing association. She devoted herself to ensuring that the regeneration programme would remain true to the community’s vision for the area.

The estate development project was not without its setbacks, not least repeated delays in funding. The financial crash of 2008 was a blow to the estate’s ambitions. Some aspects of the regeneration were not entirely successful; and Donna was personally affected. But through all those vicissitudes, she remained hopeful of eventual success, maintaining her sense of humour and good spirits.

Kenneth died in 2001. Donna is survived by Gwen, Malana and Tshan, and five grandchildren, DeVaughn, Chanté, Tyreece, Shakyra and Tisharna, and by four brothers, Garrett, Erroll, Colin and Kenneth, and three sisters, Amoy, Wanda and Diana.