copyright © J.Middleton Plaque - St Ann’s Well Gardens |
The Sassoons were a great family for having favourite first names and although no doubt a comforting family tradition, it does make the historian’s task somewhat difficult. For example, there were two Flora Sassoons, both living in England at the same time, but it is the earlier one who concerns us here; the second Flora Sassoon’s dates are 1859-1938. (Thanks to Rabbi Meir Salasnick for kindly setting me straight on this knotty problem.)
‘Our’ Flora was born in Mumbai with the name of Fahra, and she was the daughter of Solomon Reuben Sassoon of Baghdad. Flora was fortunate in receiving an excellent education, and was proficient in many languages. She also had business acumen and when her father died in 1894 she took over his business affairs. When Flora arrived in England, the Chief Rabbi was suitably impressed, describing her as a ‘living well of Torah and piety’.
Flora married Sassoon David Sassoon (1832-1867) a cousin, while they were both teenagers. There were three children of the marriage:
Rachel (1877-1952)
David Solomon Sassoon (1880-1942)
Mozelle (1884-1921)
Flora Sassoon lived at 37 Adelaide Crescent, Hove, from 1894 to 1913.
copyright © J.Middleton 8 King’s Gardens |
In 1908 she presented Chief Constable William Cocks with a silver cup inscribed Presented to Chief Constable Cocks (of Hove) by Mrs Flora Sassoon as a mark of recognition for exceptional services rendered during the daily visits of His Majesty King Edward VII to Mr Arthur D. Sassoon of 8 King’s Gardens, Hove, while His Majesty was resident at Brighton.’ No doubt on this occasion the King was staying with his daughter the Duchess of Fife in Sussex Square but he also stayed at King’s Gardens too and he preferred it to his daughter’s house.
Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
copyright © J.Middleton Although it was hoped the Simpson plaque would be unveiled by December 2014, it was not actually placed at Connaught Road until the spring of 2015. |
Thomas Simpson was born in Scotland and trained there as an architect. However, he went to Germany and was inspired by the sort of schools being built there. He made a fortunate move to Brighton in the 1860s and was in right place when new legislation required local authorities to be responsible for mass education. There followed a spurt in the building of new schools. Thomas Simpson, whose architectural practice was at 16 Ship Street, became architect to Brighton School Board when it was formed in 1870 and during the course of 33 years he designed no less than thirteen schools for Brighton. The first design was completed in 1870 for York Place and the last was for a school at St Luke’s Terrace in 1903. There is a full list of these schools in Timothy Carder’s Encyclopaedia of Brighton (1990). Today four of these schools are listed buildings.
Thomas Simpson married Clara Hart and they had two sons who both became architects and when trained assisted their father in his practice. From 1890 the firm at 16 Ship Street was known as Simpson & Son.
Ellen Street Schools
But Simpson did not restrict himself to Brighton because he also designed three schools at Hove. His first one was the Ellen Street Schools. This was not a direct commission but the result of a competition and the winner’s plan was published in Building News (17 December 1877). Simpson’s partner in this competition was Frederick W. Roper of 9 Adam Street, Adelphi. A note on the side of the plans stated ‘It is possible that in order to comply with requirements of the Local Government Board as to heights of buildings in new streets, the rooms may have to be reduced to 15 feet and 16 feet in height respectively instead of 16 and 17 as figured.’
The design of the building was in grand Queen Anne style with the long building embellished at intervals by four projections with two tall windows surmounted by gables. At either end of the building there was an even more elaborately decorated projection over arched doorways. A cupola in the centre, very tall chimneys and decorative ridge tiles completed the design.
The walls were built of picked stock brick, red brick was used for gables and groins while moulded red brick was used for cornices, string-courses and panels. There were brown tiles on the roof and the oak turret was covered in lead. The building was set back 10 feet from the street and there were wrought iron railings along the frontage. The firm of Hook & Oldrey were the builders. There was enough accommodation for 400 infants, 250 girls and 150 boys. The site cost £1,560 and the building and fitting-up cost between £6,000 and £8,000.
The schools were opened on 12 October 1879 and it was the first school to be erected under the auspices of Hove School Board. The school closed in July 1974.
Connaught Road Schools
copyright © J.Middleton Connaught Road Schools have come full circle with the buildings once more housing a school |
Thomas Simpson drew up plans for Connaught Road Schools and they were dated July 1882. The contractor was John T. Chappell, the well-known local builder and the materials used were red brick with terracotta dressings. Another drawing dated June 1883 shows a cupola and weather vane above the main entrance. The site cost £2,600 and the buildings cost £9,580.
The school opened at midsummer 1884 with 229 boys, 160 girls and 241 infants. But it was soon time to call upon Simpson’s expertise again and in 1893 his plans for a new workroom and science laboratories were approved and cost £1,332. Then in 1903 Simpson was busy designing a new cookery school.
It is ironic to note that the very year Connaught Road Schools celebrated its centenary was the same year it closed in July 1984. It is also ironic that the reason for closure was due to a fall in numbers of schoolchildren whereas today there is a crying need for more schools.
The building was then used for adult education although there were rumours it might be demolished in favour of housing. Fortunately, it held on and today, after being declared a listed building and having a full refurbishment, it is a school once more.
Davigdor Road Schools
Hove School Board purchased the site from Sir Julian Goldsmid in August 1890 for £3,3138-5-6d. In similar fashion to the Connaught Road Schools, Thomas Simpson was the architect and J.R. Chappell was the builder. The original tender stated it would cost £11,409 to build but as often happens the final bill was £15,000. The buildings were of stock brick with red brick chimneys and the porch pediments were carved red brick.
It was an interesting site because the ground level was below the level of the road. Therefore the schools were erected on concrete piles. An innovative detail was the construction of a swimming pool in the basement at a cost of £642. It was matter of pride that it was the only board school in Brighton and Hove to have a swimming pool although naturally ratepayers thought Hove Council was being rather too liberal in spending money.
This school has been known by various names. When the site was purchased that part of the road was called Goldsmid Road and it did not become Davigdor Road until 1900. Originally, it was known as East Hove Board Schools but it was also known as Holland Road Schools. In 1904 the title was East Hove Council School and in 1906 it became Davigdor Road Higher Grade School. In 1929 the boys’ school closed. After the Second World War it became Davigdor Secondary Modern School for Girls and Davigdor Infants’ School.
The school was demolished in the late 1980s.
Clarendon Mission
copyright © J.Middleton Clarendon Mission Hall was built in 1886. |
Thomas Simpson had another string to his bow in designing non-conformist chapels and buildings. He designed several at Brighton but only one at Hove, which was built by Mr Sawle of Worthing.
The inspiration behind the establishment of the Clarendon Mission in Clarendon Villas was William Taylor of 62 Clarendon Villas and his close friend William Willett of 64 The Drive who was responsible for the construction of so many fine houses in Hove and London.
The Mission Hall had only just been completed at a cost of £4,700 when a disastrous fire on 20 November 1885 reduced it to charred ruins. The hall was rebuilt the following year but the final cost came to £7,200. In 1893 William Willett built the Sunday Schools adjacent to the hall to the designs of William Henry Nash of 42 Ship Street, the plans having been approved in September 1892.
Sources
Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Internet searches
Copyright © J.Middleton 2015
copyright © J.Middleton Plaque - 19 Albany Villas |
Aubrey Smith was born in London on 21 July 1863. His father was a surgeon who lived for many years at 2 Medina Villas, Hove but later the family moved to 19 Albany Villas, Hove. Aubrey Smith was educated at Charterhouse and St John’s College, Cambridge. It is interesting to note that in his youth Aubrey Smith went to South Africa to make his fortune in a similar manner to Barnett Marks, later Mayor of Hove. But while Barnett Marks was interested in diamonds, Aubrey Smith went prospecting for gold. Like Marks too, he fell gravely ill and had to return to England. But in Aubrey Smith’s case, a doctor pronounced him dead from pneumonia, which was ironic seeing as he lived to the ripe old age of 85.
copyright © J.Middleton |
Aubrey Smith made his acting debut at Hove Town Hall on 8 November 1888 as Mr McAlister in a production of Ours. His last stage appearance at Hove was also at Hove Town Hall on 17 February 1894. He made his London debut on 9 March 1895 at the Garrick Theatre where he portrayed the clergyman in The Notorious Mrs Ebbsmith.
copyright © Sussex Cricket Museum Sir Charles Aubrey Smith |
copyright © J.Middleton Plaque - 18 Chanctonbury Road |
Early Years
George Albert Smith was born in London on 4th January 1864 but the family moved to Brighton after his father died so that Mrs Smith could run a boarding house on Grand Parade. In his youth Smith seems to have followed a variety of callings starting off with being a hypnotist in 1881, then he became an illusionist and a portrait photographer. He was also interested in spiritualism and astronomy and he gave lectures on the latter illustrated with lantern slides, which led to his fascination with the camera. Smith had unruly, curly hair, clear eyes and an extravagant moustache. At a comparatively young age he married Laura Eugenia Bayley at Ramsgate in 1888.
A turning point in his life came in March 1896 when he saw an exhibition of films by the French brothers Lumière at the Empire Theatre, Leicester Square. From then onwards his main preoccupation was animated photography and he soon became involved in their production.
copyright © J.Middleton |
copyright © J.Middleton This object was officially called Brighton Sea-going Electric Car but locals dubbed it Daddy Long Legs or Brighton Spider. |
Local Interest
Many of Smith’s films have a particular local interest. These include Brighton Sea-Going Electric Car(popularly known as Daddy Long-Legs) and Passenger Train in which people were filmed alighting from a train at Hove Station, followed by other people boarding. Walking the Greasy Pole was shot at Southwick while The Miller and the Sweep was filmed at Race Hill, Brighton, featuring a windmill that was blown down on 16th May 1913. During the course of the latter film, the sweep becomes covered with flour while the miller is doused with soot.
Historic Events
Although Smith concentrated on comic films, he also recorded historic events such as Queen Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee Procession in 1897, Edward VII’s funeral procession entering St George’s Chapel, Windsor, and the Prince of Wales’s tour of India.
Recognition at Last
Belated recognition came in old age when at the age of 91 the British Film Academy awarded him a Fellowship. He lived at 18 Chanctonbury Road, Hove, from 1940 until his death in 1959.
In May 1992 the Mayor of Hove, Audrey Buttimer, unveiled a plaque on the house, which read ‘George Albert Smith 1864-1959 cinematograph pioneer lived here’.
In 1996 the Centenary of the Cinema was celebrated and a special plaque was erected on one of the four redbrick entrance piers at Somerhill Road. The inscription reads, ‘St Ann’s Well Gardens Site of the Film Studio 1897-1903 created by George Albert Smith’. Many of Smith’s films can be viewed at the refurbished Hove Museum, which reopened in February 2003.
Copyright © J.Middleton 2014
His full name was John Richard Thomas Sullivan, and he was born at Balham, London. He came of Irish stock with both his parents being from the Emerald Isle. If ever a man pulled himself up by his boot-straps, it was John Sullivan. He left his Secondary Modern School with absolutely no qualifications. But there was one piece of incredible good luck, and that was a master called Jim Trowers who encouraged Sullivan to read great literature such as the works of Charles Dickens. After leaving school Sullivan attended evening classes and read self-help books. Sullivan also developed great powers of observation, and carefully noted his ordinary surroundings in a working class environment such as the open markets. This gave him first-class raw material that he later used to great effect in his television scripts. In this he was emulating Dickens who also started off in humble surroundings working in a boot-blacking factory.
Sullivan first came to notice in his sketches for The Two Ronnies, which ultimately lead to his famous creation Only Fools and Horses. The latter enjoyed an incredible run from 1981 to 2003 and for which Sullivan wrote no less than 64 episodes. In 1990 the British Academy Television Awards made Sullivan the winner in the Best Comedy Series. Sullivan is remembered for many other productions, and for instance he wrote 32 episodes for The Green, Green Grass.
In 1974 Sullivan married Sharon Usher, and the couple went on to have two sons and a daughter. The Sullivans were one of the original owners of the newly-built Prince of Wales Court in Kingsway, which was completed in 1989. The Sullivans ended up in the prestigious penthouse, but had started off in a third-floor flat. The couple loved to spend their weekends at Hove, especially if the weather was kind enough to allow them to sit on the beach. In fact, Sullivan called Hove his ‘winding-down place’. Other residents of Prince of Wales Court were fully aware of the celebrity in their midst, and after Sullivan died in 2011, some of them thought a blue plaque to his memory would be a fitting tribute. However, the powers-that-be thought it a little premature, and indeed the Heritage Commission requires that a person thus honoured must have been dead for at least five years. Leading lights in the quest for Sullivan’s blue plaque were local residents Joni van Oortmarssen, Pat Fortin, and Councillor Robert Nemeth. Meanwhile, neighbours were busy collecting cash for the project because it costs £1,500 to install a blue plaque.
It
was at noon on 10 October 2022 that the blue plaque was at last
officially ‘unveiled’ although the word is incorrect because the
weather was so stormy that the usual curtain-pulling ceremony had to
be abandoned. But Sue Sullivan stood by the plaque and touched it in
a tribute to her husband. Also present at the occasion were
Councillor Jackie O’Quinn, Deputy Mayor of Brighton and Hove, and
there was an address by Sue Holderness, a friend and colleague, who
was memorable as Marlene Boyce in Only
Fools and Horses; she
lamented that Sullivan ‘was gone too soon.’ (Argus
24/10/22
/ 12/11/22)
Judy Middleton (2014)
copyright © J.Middleton 8 St Aubyn’s Mansions, Hove |
She was born at Worcester and was named Matilda Alice Powles, the second offspring in a family of thirteen children. Her real name was not sprinkled with stardust but she did hang on to part of it for her stage name. Probably she had difficulty in childhood pronouncing Matilda and referred to herself as Tilley.
copyright © J.Middleton King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra. |
Tilley also took part in pantomimes as a principal boy but for those roles she only needed to worry about tights rather than trousers. Her favourite pantomime part was Dick Whittington. She did not perform in pantomime until she was thirteen years old and it took place at the Theatre Royal, Portsmouth. The following year she appeared in the pantomime Queen of Hearts at the Theatre Royal, Brighton, then under the management of ‘dear Mrs Nye Chart’.
copyright © J.Middleton In this male attire, Vesta Tilley sang Six Days’ Leave, one of her most successful Great War songs. In fact it was second only in popularity to The Army of Today’s All Right. |
copyright © J.Middleton
Vesta Tilley in feminine mode. However did
she manage to pull a wig on over all that hair?
|
copyright © J.Middleton St Aubyn’s Mansions is the only residence in Hove to sport two blue plaques. Vesta Tilley’s one is on the right. |
Sources
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