copyright © J.Middleton Brunswick Terrace |
In World War II he joined the Army. He recalled he was late in arriving to sign up because he had been to a cocktail party and therefore he joined the shortest queue, which is how he landed in the tank section. In 1940 he was part of the 22nd Armoured Brigade and fought in Crusader tanks. He received a premonition he would be killed or wounded before he was hit in the chest and arm. Some shrapnel also lodged in his brain, which led to frequent headaches and the occasional blackout. He was invalided out of the Army.
Maugham’s most famous work was The Servant, a play written in 1948, which was made into a film starring Dirk Bogarde in 1965. He also wrote biographies, travel books, and film scripts and at least seven of his books were turned into films. On 22nd December 1960 an intriguing work entitled The Two Wise Virgins of Hove was broadcast on ITV. In 1966 Maugham left England to live in Ibiza, followed by spells in Hong Kong and Morocco. Although Maugham died in 1981, it seemed the executors were taking an inordinate amount of time in sorting out his estate with the final part not being dealt with until 2000. In September 2000 it transpired that Boston University and Texas University were involved in a bidding war to secure his personal papers and manuscripts.
7 Brunswick Terrace
James
Fitz-Herbert, 2nd
Baron de Tessier (1816-1884)
– He was born on 4 November 1816 at Woodcote Park, Epsom, Surrey;
in 1868 he succeeded his father as the 2nd
Baron, the title having been created in 1819 and borne in England by
royal authority. Tessier joined the 17th
Regiment of Foot in 1833. He experienced stirring times in India,
Afghanistan and Kabul, one of his exploits being to defend Kejih Pass
for two days and three nights. He kept the enemy’s advance in check
and personally shot the enemy general. Sir James Outram (1803-1863)
offered Fitz-Herbert his grateful thanks. Another notable exploit was
to hold a gateway in the fortress of Kalat until relieved by Major
Outram, being the only one in his party not to be killed or severely
wounded. Fitz-Herbert exchanged into the 63rd
Regiment of Foot and saw service in Ireland and New Zealand.
In
1869 he married the grand-daughter of Vice Admiral Redstock, a
younger brother of George, 4th
Earl of Waldegrave. The de Tessiers lived at 7 Brunswick Terrace from
the 1870s, and the 1881 census described him as being a late
Lieutenant Colonel. He represented Brunswick Ward with the Hove
Commissioners from 1878. He took a prominent part in the opening
proceedings of the new Waterhouse-designed Hove Town Hall, and became
chairman of Hove Town Hall Committee. He died at Hove on 17 August
1884. His funeral cortege left Brunswick Terrace, went along the
sea-front road, turned up Third Avenue, and thence to St Andrew’s
Old Church where the funeral was held and he was buried in the
churchyard. The cortege consisted of a handsome open carriage drawn
by four horses, four mourning coaches, and three private carriages.
The flowers were splendid with wreaths and crosses composed of arum
lilies, stephanotis white roses, maidenhair fern, and chrysanthemums.
The widow, the dowager Baroness Tessier, continued to occupy the
house until the 1890s. There were no children of the marriage, and so
the title passed to his brother Revd Philip Antoine who became the
3rd
Baron.
8 Brunswick Terrace
Edward Harper (1868-1893)
He lived in this house from 1868 to 1893. Although he was a barrister
by profession, his inclination was towards the arts, and he was a
keen amateur artist. The artistic gene seemed to run in the family
because his brother John Harper of York, was a noted artist.
In August 1946 there was an exhibition of Edward Harper’s work at Hove Library. The Sussex Daily News had this to say, ‘His work consists mainly of pencil sketches, noteworthy for the clever use of Chinese white to produce water effects.’ The exhibition also included three pleasing water-colours by his wife. His wife Laura Harper was at least thirty years younger than her husband; their son Henry was a student at Cambridge University in 1881.
In 1873 Edward Harper was one of the trustees of the will of Hannah Brackenbury, an extremely wealthy lady who had once been his near neighbour in Brunswick Terrace, but at the time of her death was living in Adelaide Crescent. It was no easy task being a trustee because the family of Miss Alice King, Hannah’s trusted companion, made repeated demands. Indeed, one wrangle involved a diamond bracelet that was claimed by a member of the King family, although by that time the bracelet was adorning the wrist of Mrs Harper. It is unclear where the bracelet ended up.
Hannah was born on 17th November 1795, daughter of Francis Brackenbury, a member of the medical profession living in Richmond, Yorkshire. But he did not found the family fortunes; that honour was down to James B Brackenbury who settled in Manchester where he was a solicitor and whose firm eventually became Brackenbury & Lewis. Crucially, the firm advised the Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway Company. As the Manchester Guardian wrote candidly ‘it was no secret that in the early days of railway enterprise they made a large fortune’. Indeed when Hannah died she still held shares in the Great Northern Railway, the Midland Railway, the London, Dover and Chatham Railway, and the Crystal Palace and South London Junction Railway.
Pride in family history is nothing new but Hannah cherished delusions of a grand ancestry, claims that may or may not have been accurate. One claimed ancestor was John de Balliol, father of John Balliol, King of Scotland 1292-1296. It was Lady Devorguilla, John de Balliol’s widow, who founded Balliol College in 1282. In the 1860s Hannah donated at least £20,000 to Balliol College towards the construction of buildings on the south side of the quadrangle facing Broad Street. The plans provided for a tower over the front gate known as the Brackenbury Tower, which perhaps was some consolation for the crumbling condition of the original Brackenbury Tower at Barnard Castle where once John de Balliol had been a powerful lord. Hannah also endowed some scholarships at Balliol College for students wishing to qualify in law or medicine and these scholarships still exist.
It is fascinating to note that the Brackenbury scholarship has made it into the realms of poetry. This is because John Betjeman (1906-1984) mentioned it in a poem written in around 1960. The title of the poem as well as the subject of the poem is John Edward Bowle, Betjeman’s life-long friend who was at Marlborough and Oxford with him. It seems it was no mean feat to win the Brackenbury Scholarship because it was viva voce, which meant you appeared before a panel of learned men who shot questions at you. Bowle’s performance was the best of his year, and after winning the Brackenbury scholarship, he became somewhat pompous in later life. It is thought that Betjeman was poking gentle fun at him in this poem, but Bowle’s re-action is not known. (John Betjeman Harvest Bells 2019).
But less than a month after Hannah’s death, Alice’s brother John King, wrote to the trustees demanding an advance of £722. The trustees had a great deal of trouble with the wrangling amongst the King family, some of whom considered Hannah’s trinkets should automatically go to them. Mrs Bessie Churchyard, Alice’s niece, asked if she might have Hannah’s diamond bracelet. But the Revd William Rooper, one of the trustees, gave her instead a moral rap on the knuckles, not that he thought it would do much good. In fact Rooper was wrong on that count and the impoverished Mrs Churchyard did have a claim on the bracelet, which apparently was already adorning the wrist of Mrs Harper whose husband was one of the trustees.
copyright © J.Middleton St Andrew Chapel, Waterloo Street |
It seems probable the Brackenburys attended services at nearby St Andrew’s Chapel, Waterloo Street whose incumbent from 1856 to 1863 was the Revd WH Rooper. But it is something of a mystery as to why the Brackenburys chose St Nicolas’s Church, Portslade for their family vault. If such an option was no longer available at St Andrew’s, Waterloo Street, there was always St Andrew’s Old Church, Hove. Perhaps they admired the picturesque location or perhaps they knew the vicar. When James Brackenbury was buried the long-time vicar was the Revd Henry Hoper who became vicar in 1815 and remained until his death in 1858. But when Harriette, Ralph and Hannah were buried, the next vicar, the Revd FG Holbrooke, was in charge (Hannah left him £300 in her will). In 1869 the elaborate Brackenbury Chapel was erected at St Nicolas and in 1871 the Brackenbury Schools at Lock’s Hill, Portslade were built at Hannah’s expense.
copyright © D. Sharp Brackenbury Chapel at St Nicolas Church, South Street, Portslade. |
Hannah died on 28th February 1873, by which time she was living at 31 Adelaide Crescent (having also lived at 30 Brunswick Terrace after Ralph’s death). Her friends were surprised she lasted so long as she did because she had been very ill. Hannington’s arranged her funeral and the cortege took an hour to travel from Adelaide Crescent to St Nicolas’s Church. Her mourning coach was drawn by four black horses and followed by four other coaches, each drawn by four horses and Hannah’s private carriage was also in the cortege. The polished oak coffin with silver furniture and nails was placed in the family vault.
(see "St Nicolas Church" and "St Nicolas Church Monumental Inscriptions" pages on for further information on the Brackenbury Chapel)
Samuel Lewis (1828-1901) In 1892 Lady Emily Williams sold the house to Samuel Lewis. The Williams family had lived in the house since at least 1871 and Lady Emily was the daughter of an Earl. The property included stabling of four stalls, a loose box, a harness room, a double coach house with three rooms and a hayloft above. Lewis spent a large amount of money re-decorating and improving the house. But then he could well afford to do so because he was the famous Sam Lewis of Cork Street, a moneylender par excellence. He came from a very poor Jewish background and started off as a humble pedlar but at the height of his powers he was acquainted with top members of society, including friends of the Prince of Wales. It was said he purchased properties in fashionable places in order to keep an eye on his clientele or to be available for business. His other properties included a prestigious address in Grosvenor Square and a house in Maidenhead.
One of the advantages of his Hove house was that he could attend services at the Middle Street Synagogue, Brighton, where he became a friend of the Rabbi. Two of Sam’s clients had Hove connections; they were the 4thMarquis of Ailesbury (who had a house in Eaton Gardens) and Lord William Nevill (4th son of the Marquess of Abergavenny). Not that these particular clients did much for Sam’s fortune but that of course was why he charged such a high rate of interest on his loans. His connection with the Marquis of Ailesbury cost him at least £73,000 and with Lord William Nevill he lost £11,000. The courts were not sympathetic towards Jewish moneylenders, whatever the rights and wrongs of a case, and so it was a risky business. But more often than not Sam backed the right horse and by the time he and his wife Ada died, they were able to bequeath £2 million to charity.
In 1991 the Samuel Lewis Group consisted of four registered housing associations that managed 4,500 homes. It is interesting to note the Samuel Lewis Housing Trust was involved in converting Hove Hospital into housing. As for the Brunswick house, after Sam died on 13th January 1901, Ada put it on the market. Louis Woolf Frankel lived in the house in the 1920s until around 1935. He was one of the prime movers of the Hove New Synagogue and meetings concerning the foundation of the congregation were held in his home. Later, he became one of the trustees when the old gymnasium in Holland Road was purchased in 1928 and converted into a synagogue.
copyright © J.Middleton J.H.Round |
Thomas Creevey (1768-1838) In the autumn of 1837 Lord Sefton stayed in the house and in October he entertained a party of guests including Creevey. Thomas Creevey, although a minor politician then, is now famous for his Creevey Papers – a journal that provides us with a window into Georgian society. An intriguing piece of gossip claims the 1st Earl of Sefton was Creevey’s real father. But there is no evidence the family provided a helping hand in his career and indeed Creevey was in his forties before he became acquainted with the 2nd Earl. They became firm friends after Sefton’s daughter Georgiana died suddenly and Sefton was inconsolable. It was Creevey who helped him out of his misery. In is interesting to note that when Creevey died suddenly, Sefton got in touch with Creevey’s solicitor and had all his papers sealed up.
George Augustus Frederick FitzClarence 1st Earl of Munster (1794-1842) started his military career before the age of fourteen as a cornet in the 10th Hussars. He served in the campaigns of the Peninsular from 1809 to 1811 and he was taken prisoner at Fuentes d’Onoro but managed to escape in the confusion. He also took part in the campaign of 1816-1817 against the Mahrattas in India and he was aide-de-camp to the Marquess of Hastings. He travelled overland from India and through Egypt carrying duplicate despatches and he published an account of his travels complete with sketches he had made of various Indian military uniforms of the day.
He married Mary Wyndham, an illegitimate daughter of the 3rdEarl of Egremont. The Munsters also stayed at 26 Brunswick Terrace. By all accounts he was an amiable man and very popular with his old comrades in the 10thHussars. But in later years he suffered from gout and possibly the pain or depression had an effect on him because he shot himself at his residence in Upper Belgrave Street on 20th March 1842. The implement he used was a pistol that had been presented to him by the Prince of Wales (later George IV).
Duke and Duchess of St Albans (Harriot Mellon) The Duke and Duchess of St Albans were resident in the house during the winter of 1829 and the previous year they lived at number 28. The Duchess started life as Harriot Mellon, illegitimate and Irish-born. But by 1796 she was established at Drury Lane and became a successful actress. An admiring contemporary actor described her as a countrified girl with a blooming complexion, a very, tall, fine figure, raven locks, ivory teeth, a cheek like a peach and coral lips. She caught the eye of Thomas Coutts, who was described as an old, pallid, sickly, thin gentleman dressed in a shabby coat and brown scratch wig. But he was also a banker and one of the richest men in England. He was 42 years her senior and after his wife died he married Harriot in 1815. Naturally enough his three daughters were horrified at the turn of events. They had married well and become the Marchioness of Bute, the Countess of Guildford and Lady Burdett.
Samuel Laing (1812-1897) In 1891 Scottish-born Samuel Laing aged 79 lived in the house with his wife and seven servants (five female and two male). He came from an old Orkney family and he represented Wick, and later Orkney and Shetland, as an MP. He was also something of an expert on railways and was chairman of the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway from 1848 to 1894. It was not until he retired from Parliament at the age of 70 that he turned his hand to authorship and published Modern Science and Modern Thought in 1885. It was a bestseller in its day, being an early example of how to bring science before a wider public. Writing must have been in his genes because his father (another Samuel Laing) had written popular works on his observations in Norway and Sweden in the 1830s while his uncle Malcolm Laing penned a notable 4-volume History of Scotland.
copyright © J.Middleton John Waddington J.P. |
John Waddington (1855-1935) He was born at Leeds but was educated at Brighton Grammar School and in Germany and he trained to become an engineer. His father constructed the first railway bridge over the Thames at Battersea while his grandfather made the first wheels and axles for George Stephenson in 1830 for use on the Liverpool and Manchester Railway. Waddington took a leading part in the development of Western Australia. In 1883 the area offered little attraction to the London investor but Waddington promoted and constructed 350 miles of railway there, which were still privately owned in 1935. He was the founder and chairman of Great Boulder Proprietary Gold Mines and helped to develop other industries too.
Baroness de Chessiron Alice Margaretta Crichton Baroness de Chessiron died in the house on 27th September 1938. She married firstly the Revd John Crichton (a wealthy church dignitary) and after his death she married Baron (Guy) de Chessiron, son of Princess Caroline Murat whose grandfather was King Joachin Murat of Naples. She lived at 1 Brunswick Terrace (her first husband’s marriage settlement) then sold up and moved to 19 Brunswick Terrace. She worked for many charities, notably the British Sailors Society (she was president of the Brighton & Hove branch) and St Dunstan’s. Every Armistice Day, she sold poppies outside one of the three prestigious London hotels such as the Savoy, Berkeley or Grosvenor House.
Daughters of Spencer Perceval (1762-1812) By the 1840s the house belonged to the Misses Perceval whose father Spencer Perceval was the second son of the 2nd Earl of Egremont. Perceval became Prime Minister in 1809. On 11th May 1812, as he was entering the lobby of the House of Commons, he was shot and killed by John Bellingham who was hanged for the crime on 18th May. Perceval left behind a large family of six sons and six daughters. Mary, one of the daughters, died on 4thJanuary 1847 and on 2nd May the same year her sisters Margaret and Isabella made the Brunswick house over to Spencer Horatio Walpole and Dudley Montague Perceval. At the time the sisters lived in Crofton Hall, Orpington, Kent. Number 24 Brunswick Terrace was let to the Earl of Rosse whose widowed mother lived at 33 Brunswick Terrace. Isabella Perceval married Spencer Horatio Walpole, formerly Home Secretary, and in 1861 his sister lived at 7 Brunswick Terrace.
Earl and Countess of Scarborough They occupied the house in 1861 with their daughter, son, niece and a retinue of servants (seven female and five male). The 9th Earl of Scarborough (1813-1884) was a Lieutenant Colonel of the West Yorkshire Yeomanry. He married Frederica Mary Adeliza Drummond in 1846 and they had three sons, the third being born in 1862.
George Wombwell (1788-1850) In August 1844 George Wombwell, founder of Wombwell’s Menageries, lived in the house, having stayed previously at 27 Brunswick Terrace in 1833. He died on 16th November 1850 of bronchitis. In spite of long standing ill-health, he was on the road with his menagerie when he died at Northallerton. The Times (27thNovember 1850) had this to say. ‘His enterprise and perseverance coupled with the possession of sound judgement and strict integrity, had gained for the deceased considerable wealth, and he has long maintained the position of being the largest proprietor of wild animals in the world. No one probably has done so much to forward practically the study of natural history among the masses, for his menageries visited every fair and every town in the country and were everywhere popular’.
Philip Salomons (1796-1867) On 4th September 1852 the house was almost entirely destroyed by fire. The Salomon family already lived there but while reconstruction work was going on, they had moved along the terrace to number 18 where their son David was born. The 1861 census records that London-born Philip Salomon (now a widower) was back at number 26 with his butler and six female servants and his son David was nine years old. Philip Salomons had married Emma Abigail, daughter of Jacob Montefiore, and they had four children; the 1861 census lists three, David, Stella and Laura. Emma became a beautiful woman and Nathaniel Hawthorne saw her at a Lord Mayor’s Banquet and was so enthralled he modelled Marion in The Marble Faun on her. Philip Salomons was one of the first serious collectors of Jewish ritual silver in Europe and he had his own private prayer room constructed on the roof of his house in Brunswick Terrace where the outline can still be seen today. He was involved in some land speculation at Hove when on 26th May 1849 he purchased fourteen acres of land for £8,250; the land was later covered by properties in the Upper Cliftonville development. Philip Salomons was the elder brother of Sir David Salomons who was the first Jew to become a Sheriff, an Alderman and Lord Mayor of London. Sir David Lionel Salomons (who was born at Brunswick Terrace) had the misfortune to lose both his parents at a young age and his uncle brought him up and his three sisters at Broomhill, Kent; a property he later inherited from his uncle as well as the baronetcy. David Salomons’ grand-daughter Vera Frances Bryce-Salomons died in her eighties at Limerick in 1969. She was the last survivor of one of Anglo-Jewry’s most distinguished families.
Lord and Lady Lurgan. In 1881 Lord and Lady Lurgan were in residence. He was aged 49 and he was Lord Lieutenant of County Armagh, Ireland. Lord Lurgan had married the Honourable Emily Anne Browne, daughter of the 3rdBaron Kilmaine. By 1881 the couple had six unmarried daughters living with them ranging from 26-year old Mary to Isabella 18, Clementine 13 and Emmeline aged 7. James McLoughlin, Irish-born house steward, headed the retinue of servants. There were three male servants and amongst the eleven female servants were two lady’s maids, two sick nurses, a still-room maid, a school-room maid, and a nursery maid. There was also a Russian-born governess and altogether there were 24 people in the household. The following year Charles Brownlow 2ndBaron Lurgan (1831-1882) died and was buried in the churchyard of St Andrew’s Old Church. A family vault was created there, which by 1932 contained five coffins although apparently there was ‘room for two more’. The other coffins belonged to Roderick Cecil Brownlow, a 5-week old baby who died in 1914; the Hon Mary Emily Jane Brownlow (1854-1917); the 2nd Baron’s widow Emily Anne who died in 1923 and Lieutenant Colonel the Hon John Roderick Brownlow (1865-1932). When it was decided to build a new St Andrew’s Church of England School and playing field on top of this part of the cemetery, the five Brownlow coffins were discreetly removed and re-interred in Hove Cemetery on 1stMay 1973. In fact these were the only burials to be thus removed – all the others stayed put. This was because despite the necessary publicity nobody else came forward to lay claim to deceased relatives.
copyright © J.Middleton Imposing entrance on the corner of Lansdowne Place but numbered as 32 Brunswick Terrace. |
School for Ladies. For around 50 years this building was run as an exclusive private school for young ladies. Miss Poggi founded the school but by the time Frances Power Cobbe arrived there as a pupil in 1836, Miss Runciman and Miss Roberts ran the establishment. There were 25 girls ranging in age from nine to nineteen, several governesses and teachers and a considerable staff of respectable servants. Standard dress for the girls was evening attire of silk or muslin complete with kid slippers and gloves. The noise was considerable since each girl was obliged to spend two hours practising the piano, and lessons were taught in large double rooms where the girls recited their lessons in English, French, German and Italian. At least their accents should have been authentic because native speakers taught languages. Alessandro Manzoni was amongst the number and he was the author of the famous work I Promesi Sposi. Music and dancing were very important subjects and besides the piano and singing, lessons could also be taken on learning to play the harp, accordion or concertina. Old Madame Michaud came to teach the girls English dancing and other national dances, her stout frame draped in a heavy, green, velvet gown with a deep sable hem. Exercise was limited to decorous walks along the promenade accompanied by a governess (only six girls at a time) and the wielding of dumb-bells under the supervision of a military gentleman. Lessons in history and geography were limited to once a fortnight, and for science the girls attended public lectures given by a Mr Walker at Brighton. Religious instruction barely featured except for the girls having to learn a daily text from a little red book entitled Daily Bread.
All the girls had fathers of some social standing, country gentlemen, MPs, or offshoots of the aristocracy. There were several heiresses and a grand-daughter of a duke who was teased for being somewhat dim. Miss Smith was the school beauty and she was the daughter of the poet and author Horace Smith. The nominal fee was around £120 or £130 a year but there were so many extras that £1,000 for two years of education was probably nearer the mark.
Frances Power Cobbe (1822-1904) She came from a wealthy and distinguished Anglo-Irish family and was the only daughter of Charles Cobbe and Frances Conway. She had three much older brothers and she enjoyed a happy childhood and a close relationship with her mother. In her autobiography she wrote at length about the two years she spent at Miss Poggi’s School at Brunswick Terrace. Parts of it are often quoted as a classic example of the sort of education well-bred young girls received in the 19thcentury. Cobbe arrived at the school in 1836 and left two years later, quite satisfied she had received a thorough education. But she soon became aware of the limitations to her knowledge and set about educating herself.
She went to live in England in 1858 and sometime in the early 1860s began sharing a house in London with Mary Lloyd. Cobbe became a professional journalist contributing to a wide range of periodicals and supplying a regular leader for the daily paper Echo. In fact she was the most prolific writer among mid-Victorian feminists. She was involved in a number of good causes such as the Workhouse Visiting Society and the Society for Friendless Girls. She campaigned for female suffrage and played an important part in bringing about the 1884 Matrimonial Causes Act.
One of Cobbe’s best-known articles was Wife Torture in England published in the Contemporary Review in 1878. She saw the tolerance of successive governments to violence against women was a direct result of women’s lack of political rights. She sought to make violence the grounds for a separation order. Another powerful piece was The Medical Profession and its Morality published in the Modern Review in 1881. She was angry at the contemporary belief that too much study had a bad effect on a woman’s health, upsetting their delicate constitution. She wrote sarcastically doctors had made a great discovery that mental labour was peculiarly injurious to the weaker sex and one term at Girton was worse than five London seasons.
Field Marshal Sir William Gomm (1782-1875) He was born in Barbados but lived in this house from around 1867 until 1875. He followed a military career that spanned an amazing 60 years. He saw action in Hanover, Copenhagen, the Peninsular War (including the Battle of Coruna in 1809) the siege of Flushing, and Flanders (including the Battle of Waterloo in 1815). He was sent to Jamaica and Mauritius and ended his career as Commander-in-Chief of India from 1851 to 1855. By the time he came to live at Hove he was married to his second wife who was the grand-daughter of the 5th Marquis of Lothian. Probably the Field Marshal was used to plenty of space and so he occupied both numbers 33 and 34 although by 1871 there was only he and his wife plus seven servants (five female and two male). The Gomms used to spend winters in their Brunswick house. He was still in full possession of his faculties when he died at Hove on 15th March 1875.
Angela du Maurier (1904-2002) – Although it is not known whether or not she actually stayed at Brunswick Terrace it is interesting to note that she certainly mentioned it in one of her novels. It appears early on in Treveryan (1942 reprinted 2003) and describes the place where one of the main characters – Sir Oswald Martineau – lived in his later years. It is also entirely in context that Martineau should have retired to Hove after serving for years as a judge in India because Hove was noted for its many residents who had worked in the sub-continent.
‘The flat in Brunswick Terrace was a charming one, full of nice things: elegant if rather solid furniture, a great many books, some valuable water colours, few if any ornaments beyond one or two oriental bronzes; a man’s flat for a man living alone, with only a devoted man-servant in attendance, and his faithful Mrs Leigh coming in daily to cook.’ (Reproduced with the kind permission of the publisher Truran Books Ltd).
Angela was one of three sisters born to Gerald du Maurier and his wife Muriel. Angela was the eldest, Daphne was born in 1907 and Jeanne arrived in 1911. However, reading about Angela’s life one cannot help but feel sorry for her. She never quite cut the mustard in her family circle, while Daphne du Maurier became a famous author, and was Gerald’s favourite, and Jeanne was a talented artist. It seems that Angela was the most scarred by their curious upbringing. The parents were determined to keep their daughters pure and innocent, which was somewhat ironic considering Gerald was notorious for his affairs. An ordinary education at school did not take place; instead there was a governess and a finishing school that Angela did not enjoy. The result was that Angela was extremely naive, believing in fairies, and continuing to think of Father Christmas as a real person into her teens. When Angela was kissed for the first time at the age of nineteen, she feared she was pregnant. She never had a successful relationship with a man – some found her innocence charming, others found it a bore. Upon learning the facts of life at last, she was appalled. Not surprisingly, she felt more at home in female company.
When it came to writing, Angela was always going to be in the shadow of her sister. Her first novel was rejected, and was only published after her sister became famous. Altogether, Angela wrote eleven novels and two autobiographies; from the latter category, the one called Only the Sister (1951) surely encapsulates the way she felt about her standing. Out of the novels Treveryan is considered to be the best. Had she not had such a notable sister, no doubt the book would have been more widely recognised. It is well written, although one cannot help but be reminded of Manderley, and the obsessive love for the family home.
Angela survived the longest of the
family. When Gerald died in 1934, Daphne was devastated, but it had a
liberating effect on Angela – no more put-downs or harsh criticism
to chip away at her fragile confidence. Angela lived with her mother
until Muriel died in 1957.
John Morley (1924-1994) – He was born in Birmingham and that is where he was taken to his first pantomime, which obviously had a lasting influence on his life. As a child he played with a toy theatre, complete with different scenery and figures to inspire the imagination. When he was studying at Cambridge he joined the Cambridge Footlights from whom he received much encouragement. During the Second World War, in 1943 he found himself in the prestigious Coldstream Guards. There he received an accolade that will surely never be equalled. At around the same time he became an officer, his first pantomime with the hilarious title Dick Whittington and his Kit was being performed for his regiment. In fact, the army proved to be a useful training ground in writing for the troops. After the war he became popularly known as the King of Panto because he wrote 200 pantomimes including his version of Aladdin, which holds the record for the longest-running pantomime in the Guinness Book of Records. Not surprisingly he was an expert on pantomime and put his knowledge to good use by writing The Encyclopaedia of Pantomime published in 1993; he had already written The Magic of Houdini in 1978, and The Performing Arts in 1980. He lived in Brunswick Terrace.
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