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12 January 2016

Hove Plaques Index A - B

Listed below:- Elizabeth Allan, Dame Henrietta Barnett, Sir Charles Barry, Robert Bevan, Margaret Bondfield, Dr Helen Boyle, Hablot Browne 'PHIZ', Charles Busby, Dame Clara Butt. 
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Elizabeth Allan (1910-1990)
Judy Middleton  (2001 revised 2014)

copyright © J.Middleton
3 Courtenay Terrace. Hove.
Elizabeth Allan’s father was a doctor and she was the youngest of six children; she was born in Skegness. She won a scholarship to the Old Vic and in 1927 she made her first stage appearance in The Taming of the Shrew.

Her film debut was in 1929 in Alibi, an Agatha Christie thriller and her first speaking part was in 1928 in School for Scandal. Her first screen-starring role was in Service for Ladies opposite Leslie Howard in 1932 with Alexander Korda being the producer. Another film dating from 1932 was a thriller The Lodger in which her fellow actors were Ivor Novello and Jack Hawkins.   

In 1932 she married her agent Wilfrid J. O’Bryan (generally know as Bill O’Bryan) who was instrumental in furthering her career.

In 1934 she departed for Hollywood where she was kept busy in one film after another. That same year she was cast in Men in White with Clark Gable, Myrna Loy and Otto Kruger.

In January 1935 the film David Copperfield was released. Elizabeth appeared with a star-studded cast including Freddie Bartholomew, Lionel Barrymore, Basil Rathbone, Maureen O’Sullivan and W.C. Fields while George Cukor was the director. The film remains a classic.

In December 1935 a second film based on a novel by Charles Dickens was released.  This was A Tale of Two Cities in which she played Lucie Manette opposite Ronald Coleman who took the part of Sydney Carton.

In 1936 Elizabeth was cast in another film directed by George Cukor; it was Camille and her fellow stars were Robert Taylor, Lionel Barrymore and Greta Garbo.

Elizabeth’s first glimpse of the legendary Garbo was of her playing a hard game of tennis against a professional tennis player. In the Thirties tennis was much in vogue amongst Hollywood stars and fortunately Elizabeth was a keen tennis player. Two other stars with whom she played tennis were Ginger Rogers and Katherine Hepburn. In later life Elizabeth took up golf.

As Elizabeth herself said she was usually cast as a goody two-shoes character when she would really have preferred to get her teeth into portraying a vamp or a femme fatale. But despite her demure screen image, she had a racy reputation in Hollywood and there was gossip about affairs. Her marriage suffered too because her husband’s work was based back in Britain although he visited the States as often as possible. There was a separation.

Neither was Elizabeth afraid to voice her opinion and this caused arguments with the film companies and she once walked off a film set. She was blacklisted following a dispute with MGM and disillusioned with Hollywood she returned to England in 1938.
But it was not all gloom and doom. She was reconciled with her husband and the longer the marriage lasted, the more devoted to him she grew. She even became a Roman Catholic, which was her husband’s religion and when they lived at Hove, she went frequently to Mass. Her husband became Major O’Bryen and had the distinction of serving in both world wars, being awarded the Military Cross and the Croix de Guerre. During the Second World War Elizabeth busied herself working at a canteen in London.

She took up her film career again and in 1942 appeared in Went the Day Well with British stalwarts such as Thora Hird and Patricia Hayes. In 1951 Elizabeth was cast in
No Highway in the Sky with Marlene Dietrich, James Stewart, Glynis Johns and Jack Hawkins. In 1954 Heart of the Matter was released, based on Graham Greene’s book. Elizabeth’s fellow cast members were Trevor Howard, Denholm Elliott, Peter Finch and Michael Hordern. Trevor Howard said it was one of his favourite films. Michael Hordern also has a local connection because he went to Windlesham House School when it was based in Portslade.   

Elizabeth’s last firm Haunted Stranger was released in 1958 when she played opposite Boris Karloff as his wife.

Meanwhile, Elizabeth had also been making a name for herself on the small screen. She was famous for her appearances as a panellist on What’s My Line with irascible Gilbert Harding and comedian Jerry Desmonde. She was admired for her elegance, wit and fascinating earrings. But she left the show in 1952 when the schedule was moved to a Sunday and she did not wish to work on Sundays.

In the 1960s she appeared in Swop Shop and Call my Bluff and she had her own show too Shopping with Elizabeth Allan.

After over 40 years on stage, screen and television, and around 50 films to her credit Elizabeth retired to look after her sick husband. The couple lived at 3 Courtenay Terrace, a charming period property situated on the seafront at Hove. When it was first built, the house’s garden extended to the beach but eventually Hove Council purchased part of it in order to extend the famous promenade. Her husband died aged 79 in 1977 and Elizabeth decided to remain in her Hove home.

Gladys Haseltine, landlady of the Neptune pub during the 1940s and 1950s, remembered Elizabeth Allan as one of her regular customers. The pub had become popular with theatrical folk and luminaries such as Gilbert Harding, Jerry Desmonde (her erstwhile colleagues on What’s my Line) and Dickie Henderson also visited the place when Mrs Haseltine was behind the bar. The pub was at no great distance from Courtenay Terrace.

In July 1990 Elizabeth Allan aged 82 suffered a severe stroke and she was taken to Brighton General Hospital. She died on 27 July the same year.

On 25 September 1996 Leslie Hamilton, senior, Mayor of Hove, unveiled a plaque at her home 3 Courtenay Terrace.

Source
Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Internet searches

Copyright © J.Middleton 2014
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Dame Henrietta Barnett (1851-1936)
Judy Middleton (2001 revised 2014)

Copyright © J.Middleton
Plaque – 45 Wish Road
Henrietta Octavia Weston Rowland was born on 4 May 1851, the youngest of eight children, a clue to her place in the family hierarchy being provided by her second name Octavia. Her father, Alexander Rowland, was a merchant who imported essences and oils from the West Indies. Her forbears founded Rowlands Macassor Oil Company.

Although her family was wealthy, Henrietta had a keen social conscience and she enjoyed working for charity. It was during her voluntary work that she met her future husband Revd Samuel Augustus Barnett (1844-1913). The couple married on 28 January 1873. Revd Barnett was an Anglican clergyman and social reformer who was born at Bristol and educated at Wadham College, Oxford. He was actively involved with poor people in London and served as Rector of St Jude’s Church, Whitechapel from 1873 to 1902. 

During these busy years Henrietta co-founded the Children’s Country Holiday Trust while her husband founded the Family Welfare Association and in 1884 Toynbee Hall. The latter institution was the first university settlement to allow students to see at first hand how the other half lived in the East End and to interact with them; the experience must have proved an eye-opener for many a gilded youth. 

Beatrice Webb (1858-1943) social reformer and economist, described the young Mrs Barnett as ‘pretty, witty and well-to-do’. Henrietta was also blessed with enormous energy and self-confidence, which other people could find somewhat daunting but nobody could deny she had a warm and caring personality.

Her ultimate dream was to purchase a huge tract of land where people of all classes could live together in neighbourliness. In 1904 she formed the Garden Suburb Trust and in 1906 the Hampstead Garden Suburb Act received the Royal Assent. The land was acquired from Eton College Trustees. The first two cottages were built in 1907 and in 1909 Princess Louise came to open Waterloo Court, a block of flats for single ladies. There were some luxurious houses for the wealthy and simple cottages, many of which unfortunately did not have a bathroom. No public house was allowed within the estate although there was a clubhouse. 

True to her beliefs, Henrietta thought a church should occupy the most prominent position at the centre of her suburb and she commissioned Edwin Lutyens to design one; Eric Gill designed the foundation stones. The church was called St Jude-on-the-hill, no doubt as a tribute to their old church in Whitechapel. The church was opened in 1911. For her sixtieth birthday Henrietta’s friends clubbed together and paid for a tower and spire to be added to the structure. A Free Church was built on a site opposite and there was also a Quaker Meeting House and a synagogue.

The Hampstead Garden Suburb was a pioneering scheme and became famous throughout the world. Henrietta was made a Dame of the British Empire as a tribute to her work. 

A school for girls in the estate was named after her and in 1994 it had 650 pupils and came top in a survey of state school results. 

In 1913 the Barnetts retired to Hove where they took a house on King’s Esplanade but Henrietta’s husband died the same year and she moved to 12 Wish Road on the west side of the road. In around 1930 she moved to 45 Wish Road on the west side of the road where she remained until she died in 1936. Her ashes were buried in the churchyard of St Helen, Hangleton where her husband was also buried. 

In 1985 a plaque was unveiled at 45 Wish Road, which was funded by the Hampstead Garden Suburb Archives Trust.

Sources
Argus
Slack, Kathleen D. Henrietta’s Dream (1986)
Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade

copyright © J.Middleton
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Sir Charles Barry (1795-1860)
Judy Middleton (2001 revised 2014)

Copyright © J.Middleton
Plaque - St Andrew's Church
It is pleasant to record that Charles Barry was born in Westminster, opposite the site on which he was to leave such an outstanding and famous building. He was the fourth son of Walter Edward Barry, a stationer, who must have been an astute businessman because when he died he was able to bequeath a considerable sum to his family.

At the age of fifteen Charles Barry was articled to a firm of Lambeth surveyors and architects called Middleton & Bailey and he stayed there for six years. Perhaps as a mark of respect Barry’s son Edward was given the second name of Middleton and he too became an architect, designing Wyckhurst Place, Bolney in the 1870s.

As soon as Charles Barry reached the age of 21, he inherited enough money from his father to enable him to undertake an extensive grand tour. From 1817 to 1820 he travelled through France, Italy, Greece, Turkey, Egypt, Syria and Palestine. He thus built up a wide appreciation of different styles of architecture, which he had the leisure to study in detail. Hove Museum owns a charming pen-and-ink wash by Barry entitled Ponte delle Pagalia.    

In 1817 he also married Sarah Roswell and they went on to have a family of seven children, five sons and two daughters.
Copyright © J.Middleton
St Peter’s Church, Brighton. 
In 1823 Barry won an open competition to find the best design for a new church at Brighton to be called St Peter’s. This caused a great deal of disappointment to the local firm of Wilds & Busby who had high hopes of success with their design. To rub salt into the wound, Barry was also chosen to design St Andrew’s Chapel, Waterloo Street, Hove, which was consecrated in 1828. But then Barry was a friend of Revd Edward Everard whose idea it was to build a chapel at his own expense. Charles Augustin Busby had designed the entire Brunswick Town area on his own and it was unfortunate he was overlooked when the new chapel was mooted. St Andrew’s became a fashionable church. In 1828 the Brighton Gazette noted that ‘on Sunday last the congregation included no less than three Dukes and three Duchesses’. Today St Andrew’s Church is an important listed building and the first example of the Italianate style in England.

Copyright © J.Middleton
St Andrew’s Church, Waterloo Street
There was another connection between Barry and Hove when local landowner Sir Isaac Lyon Goldsmid asked him to enlarge his villa at Regent’s Park to create something similar to a country house.
Copyright © J.Middleton
Royal Sussex County Hospital
Then there was Barry’s design for the (Royal) Sussex County Hospital at Brighton, which opened in 1828; Attree’s Villa, Queen’s Park Brighton and the ‘Pepper Pot’ (a water tower in reality). At Hurstpierpoint Barry designed Holy Trinity Church.

Copyright © J.Middleton
This sketch of the well-known Pepper Pot 
was drawn in 1980
Barry has been described as the most versatile of the early Victorian architects. He was able to design Gothic-style churches, Grecian-style institutions while his Traveller’s Club on London was Quattrocento and the Reform Club was Cinquecento.

Barry’s magnum opus was his design for the new Houses of Parliament after a disastrous fire destroyed most of the old buildings in 1834. Once again the commission came about as a result of winning a competition and this one attracted 97 entries. A.W.N. Pugin (1812-1852) helped him create the drawings and later designed the interior details and sculptures.

But the commission was something of a poisoned chalice for Barry because of the enormous stress it involved. It was difficult to design because of the constraints imposed by having to accommodate the ancient parts that survived the fire and also the proximity of the River Thames, which involved a great deal of expense to stabilise the site. Barry woefully underestimated the time the building would take to complete and hoped it would be finished within six years; instead it spiralled out to 20 years and the final cost was put at £2,166,846. However, the Houses of Parliament immortalised his name and its image is known throughout the world.

Out of Barry’s five sons, two followed an architectural career; one was a surveyor; another became a bishop while the fifth son was the engineer of Tower Bridge.  Charles Barry was knighted in 1852.

On 8th November 2014 Councillor Brian Fitch, Mayor of Brighton & Hove, unveiled a blue plaque on St Andrew’s Church to commemorate Sir Charles Barry, which was funded by the Friends of St Andrew’s Church. Also present at the ceremony was the Mayoress of Brighton & Hove, Norah Finch, and Averil Older, chairwoman of the Commemorative Plaques Committee.

Sources
Argus (8/11/14) (10/11/14)
Bingham, Neil Busby, the Regency Architect of Brighton & Hove (1991)
Dale, Antony Fashionable Brighton (1947)
Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Internet searches
Middleton, J. A History of Hove (1979)

Copyright © J.Middleton 2014
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Robert Polhill Bevan (1865-1926)
Judy Middleton (2001 revised 2014)

copyright © J.Middleton
Plaque - 17 Brunswick Square
Robert Polhill Bevan was born at 17 Brunswick Square, Hove, on 5th August 1865 and he was the fourth child of the marriage. Laura Maria Polhill married Richard Alexander Bevan in 1861. The Brunswick Square house was the Polhill’s family home for over 40 years and Edward Polhill had been a Brunswick Square Commissioner from 1836 to 1859. The Bevans did not normally share the premises but they had recently purchased an estate of over 100 acres at Cuckfield, a house being in the course of construction, and so it seemed sensible for Mrs Bevan to spend her confinement with her widowed mother.

The Bevan family was heavily involved in banking, the tradition having started with Silvanus Bevan, banker of Lombard Street, London. It was his grandson, Richard Alexander Bevan (1834-1918), who joined the Union Bank at Brighton in 1859 and Bevan’s second son, Lancelot Richard Bevan (1863-1918), became a partner in 1891. The Union Bank was taken over in 1894 and a couple of years later it became Barclay & Co. with no less than four Bevans as directors of the local head office at North Street, Brighton. The family tradition continued into the 20thcentury.

Robert Bevan grew up with his siblings on the family estate called Horsgate at Cuckfield. Robert and his brothers, Richard, Lancelot and Herbert, enjoyed a country lifestyle, belonging to two hunts while the family kept two packs of harriers. As an artist Robert’s easy familiarity with horses is evident in his work.

Although Robert Polhill Bevan did not inherit his family’s financial genes, the money accrued did mean he was free to follow his artistic bent. He received an allowance, which was of great assistance to his ambitions, although sometimes he was short of funds and on one occasion was obliged to pawn his gold watch and chain. He was thus more fortunate than his sister Edith who had no independent life of her own until her father died in 1918 when she was aged 49. Robert received an inheritance of £10,000. 

Robert Bevan was educated at Winchester and he was at Oxford briefly, before enrolling at the Westminster School of Art in 1888 where he was taught by the principal, Fred Brown. He lodged at the house of Alfred E. Pearce who had come to Horsgate to give him drawing lessons in previous years.

In 1889 Bevan went to Paris where he studied for a year at the Academie Julian, the largest art school in the city. In 1890 he went to Pont-Aven with fellow artist Eric Forbes-Robertson where he soon filled three sketch-books with his work. After a visit to Tangier, he was back in Pont-Aven in 1893 and it is claimed that it was there Renoir encouraged him to draw horses.

Stanislawa de Karlowska

In July 1897 Bevan arrived in Jersey to attend the wedding of his friend Forbes-Robertson to a Polish art student. It turned out to be a momentous occasion for Bevan because the bridesmaid was Stanislawa de Karlowska and the attraction between the two was immediate. He pursued her to her country house in Poland and the story goes that she was combing her hair when she heard the arrival of horses in the courtyard and glimpsed Bevan through the window, dropping her comb in surprise. At first their language of communication was French and when they travelled to England she was still in the process of mastering English.

They married in Warsaw on 9thDecember 1898 and by 1900 had moved to London. But it is interesting to note that their daughter and son were both born at Horsgate. Bevan’s wife, known as Stania, was described as his greatest asset and being an artist herself, she could understand what drove him. She continued to paint under her maiden name and sometimes they both sent works to be exhibited.

Camden Town Group

Bevan and Stania knew the leading figures of the Fitzroy Street Group such as Walter Sickert, Augustus John, Lucien Pissaro, Charles Ginner, Harold Gilman and Spencer Gore.

In May 1911 Bevan became one of the founder members of the Camden Town Group, which developed around Sickert. Originally there were sixteen members of the group including Pissaro, Augustus John and Wyndham Lewis; Duncan Grant did not become a member until later on.

They held their first exhibition in June 1911 and Bevan’s Cab Horse was part of it; the Tate Gallery now owns the painting. There was a second exhibition in the same year, held in December, and one of Bevan’s works was Cab Yard, Night. In 1913 this work was exhibited at Brighton Art Gallery and purchased by Brighton Council for £400. In recent years this same work was one of the main attractions at an exhibition held at Hove Museum.

In 1914 Bevan paid his first visit to Applehayes, near the Devon and Somerset border, with Ginner and Gore, and he liked it so much that after the war he went every year. The painting called Rosemary La Vallee was painted there. In 1987 Hove Museum was keen to acquire this small oil painting and the artist’s daughter agreed to cut the recommended price from £24,000 to £20,000. There were grants available to cover £15,000 of the cost and so Hove Museum only had to fork out £5,000 in the end.

Bevan’s Work

Bevan painted in oil, watercolour and crayon and his subjects ranged from English landscapes to Polish scenes, and from market scenes to horses. He also painted a few portraits. It is pleasant to record that his reputation as an artist has grown with the years.

Bevan died on 8th July 1925 after an operation at St Thomas’s Hospital, London, just before his 40thbirthday. He was buried in the family grave at Cuckfield.

He bequeathed part of his collection to the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford. The obituary in the Times had this to say. ‘A member of the original group of enthusiasts who gathered round the late Spencer Gore and the late Harold Gilman in Camden Town, Bevan responded to the influences of the movement known as Post-Impressionism without prejudice to his personal delicacy, the influence working out in his case in a preoccupation with colour pattern. His earliest works which attracted attention were studies of the cab-rank and show-ring.’ The article also spoke of his ‘characteristically angular treatment of the masses’.

His widow died on 9thDecember 1952, a victim of the London fog.

Sources
Argus
Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Stenlake, Frances From Cuckfield to Camden Town (1999) This work was expanded to a large illustrated edition and entitled Robert Bevan, From Gaugin to Camden Town (2008) 

Copyright © J.Middleton 2014
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Margaret Bondfield (1873-1953)
Judy Middleton (2019) 

copyright © J.Middleton
Plaque - 14 Church Road
It was on 23 September 2019 that Peter Kyle, MP for Hove and Portslade, unveiled a blue plaque in honour of Margaret Bondfield at 14 Church Road, Hove, where she once worked. Although it is relatively well known that she was employed in a shop in Western Road, Brighton, her earlier labours in Hove have been overlooked.

Margaret Bondfield was born in Chard, Somerset, - a town that later acknowledged their pride in her achievements by conferring the Freedom of Chard upon her. Margaret’s middle name was Grace after her grandmother. Her immediate family history is of interest. Her grandfather John Bondfield (1783-1875) had some farmland near Chard. He also owned pack horses, using them to transport mostly cloth to Taunton, Bristol and elsewhere. It seems probable that he knew something about smuggling too. It sounds like a peaceful life but he had to fight off highwaymen, and was twice press-ganged. The first time he was able to escape, but the second time he was released from the soldiering life by the Battle of Waterloo, and the end of the war. He and Grace raised ten children, and remarkably, just one died in infancy.

Margaret’s father, William Bondfield (1814-1901) was only aged eight when he went to work as a ‘threading-boy’ at a small lace factory in Chard. As an adult he invented some valuable improvements in the lace-making art, besides designing patterns for lace and having the intricate knowledge of how to transfer such a pattern to the loom. His most popular design was the acorn and oak leaf one, which was manufactured for many years. But William was also heavily involved in local politics, and joined the Chard Political Union, and later on, the Anti-Corn-Law League. The Militia and Yeomanry were sometimes obliged to quell the ‘riots’. On one occasion William was in front of the banner leading a procession of over 2,000 people, marching eight abreast: further down the street, the Yeomanry was drawn up. Sticks and stones were thrown and there were shouts and confusion. The Yeomanry horses became spooked and the line broke, some troopers being pulled off their horses, while others were chased for miles.
copyright © J.Middleton
14 Church Road, Hove

Margaret Bondfield began to earn money in 1886 at the age of thirteen when she acted as Monitor for the 1st Standard, teaching a class of 48 children at the local board school, for which she received 3/- a week. This did not last long, and in 1887 she took a holiday to Brighton where her sister Annie was living. While she was there, she heard about a possible position with Mrs White at 14 Church Road, Hove, and being already of an independent mind at the age of fourteen, she decided to take up an apprenticeship there and then, and did not visit her home in Chard for five years. There is a lovely photograph of her at this age wearing a wasp-waisted, tight top sporting two rows of descending buttons with her dark hair piled up on top of her head.

Unlike her later experiences, Bondfield enjoyed her time at Hove. She wrote, ‘Mrs White successfully ran one of those old-fashioned businesses where the relations between customer and assistant were of the most courteous and friendly, and the assistants were treated like members of the family.’ It seems the establishment was somewhat exclusive, and acted as a finishing house. Many garments were brought in from wholesale dealers, plain and unadorned, and Mrs White’s girls learned how to trim and embroider them so that they became beautiful items to grace trousseau or layettes, and most of them were sent to British families in India. Bondfield remembered spending hours by the window embroidering or smocking dresses for babies.

It is interesting to note that in 1888, at the same time as a young Margaret was busy with her needle and silks, an even younger Winston Churchill was also in Hove, being in his final year at a school in Brunswick Road, where he spent four years. As adults, they came from opposite ends of the political spectrum, and would encounter one another in the House of Commons, perhaps never realising their common bond with Hove.

Unfortunately, Mrs White retired from business before Bondfield completed her apprenticeship, and she had to seek employment elsewhere. This is when she worked in Western Road, Brighton, in an outfitting department. One of the scandals of the age was the practice of ‘living-in’, which was prevalent among female shop workers. It meant that they shared rooms or dormitories with absolutely no choice of their companions, and you might be landed with some poor soul with consumption who coughed all night. The only place where you could keep belongings was a box under the bed. The food was pretty awful, and there were no bathroom facilities. Some housekeepers allowed the girls the luxury of one jug of hot water and a foot-bath once a week. Bondfield and a couple of workmates were determined to keep up a modicum of standards and enjoy one bath a week. In order to do this, as soon as the shop closed and the shutters drawn down, the girls had to run at full speed for half a mile to reach the Public Baths on the one evening a week there was a late-night opening. Arriving breathless, they had precisely fifteen minutes to divest themselves of their clothing, have a bath, and dress again before being turfed out at closing time.
copyright ©  Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
Clifton Road Congregational Church, Brighton, 
at the junction of Dyke Road and Clifton Road, 
the Church was built in 1870 and demolished in 1972.

For some relief from these appalling conditions, Bondfield joined the Clifton Road Congregational Church, where her sister Annie was a prominent member. Bondfield enjoyed singing contralto in the choir. It was at this time that she met the kind-hearted Mrs Martindale, the mother of Hilda Martindale; Mrs Martindale kept an open house to welcome oppressed shop workers in the 1880s, and she was a great influence on Bondfield.

After five years at Brighton, and having managed to save up £5, Bondfield decided to try her luck in London. She later said that it was the closest she came to starvation as she trudged from shop to shop seeking a position. She found one at last but the conditions were no better, and she worked a 65-hour week, earning £15 a year – or just below 6/- a week. Not surprisingly, she joined a union. But of course there was no provision within the working week for people to attend meetings, and so they had to be held on Sundays. The deacon at the church she attended noticed her absence on some Sundays, and she told him that every first Sunday of the month she had to attend a union meeting. He told her curtly she had to chose between church or union – she chose the union and it was twenty years before she tried to join another congregation. The choice was a blow to her because she was a woman of faith, but she also believed that the origins of the Labour Party were firmly based on Christian values.

Her motivation to try and improve the lives of women workers was always strong, and she was able to dedicate her life to it wholeheartedly. In March 1901 her father died aged 87. and in August 1901 her younger sister Katie died of tuberculosis at the age of 24. Her brother Ernest lived in South Africa, caught a chill while on active service in the Boer War, and died of pneumonia in 1902 aged 35. Her brother Frank lived with their mother in Chard. Bondfield wrote, ‘From this time on I just lived for the Trade Union Movement. I concentrated on the job. This concentration was undisturbed by love affairs.’ She had witnessed plenty of unhappiness amongst her fellow workers over love affairs that went wrong.

Bondfield was also conscious of her lack of education and determined to improve matters by joining the Ideal Club, which provided classes in different subjects including ethics and poetry. There were eminent people such as George Bernard Shaw and the Webbs who came to the Ideal Club, and Bondfield was inspired by such contacts – she also met William Morris at Kelmscott House. Later on, when she became a powerful speaker with a good, strong voice, she shared a platform with such luminaries as Keir Hardie, George Lansbury, Ramsay MacDonald and Mrs Despard.

Bondfield built up a solid knowledge of female working conditions in various occupations. For example, she undertook an investigation into conditions for shop workers that lasted two years. She started off at the top by working in a high-class shop, but every time she changed her job, the references grew shorter, and she went down and down the ladder. The experience certainly fitted her for the role of being secretary of the Shop Assistants’ Union.

The Women’s Industrial Council asked her to find out about the working conditions of married women in the Yorkshire Woollen trade. Conditions were harsh, especially if the women worked in rooms with poor or no ventilation, and consequently suffered with their lungs. There was the dreadful case of a healthy, young woman who died of anthrax through handling alpaca wool from abroad. Many men resented married women working because they felt they were taking jobs away them. They, and the stern moralists, considered a married woman’s place ought be at home, doing the chores and looking after the children. In reality, pay for men was so poor that most families could not cope without the mother’s wages too. Bondfield found that the average number of children in a family was just three, and women were terrified of adding to their burden by producing a large family, and so abortion was widely practised.

After ten years of this work, Bondfield felt completely drained and resigned in October 1908. She was a member of the Independent Labour Party, and became president of the Adult Suffrage Society. This society, almost forgotten today, did not see eye-to-eye with the Suffragists and Suffragettes. Bondfield’s stance was a pragmatic one – she did not see why there should be a limited suffrage linked to property: instead, she wanted a universal suffrage where every single inhabitant, male or female, over the age of 21 was entitled to vote – this did not come about until 1928.

Bondfield travelled abroad – being the first woman delegate to attend the American Federation of Labour, and later on travelled extensively in the United States, and Canada, marvelling at the sheer size and space of those countries. She attended the Berne Conference in 1919, and was part of a delegation visiting Russia in 1920. The delegation met Lenin in the Kremlin who stated baldly that the policy of the proletariat must be ‘merciless war on the bourgeoisie’ and because it was a war against the opposition ‘no quarter can be given’: there was neither freedom of Press nor speech. It is curious that Bondfield, who believed in rational arguments and was opposed to violence, did not find such statements more alarming. Instead, she seemed to think that the blame for the state of affairs in Russia could be laid at the door of the West. She wrote, ‘I at least came away terribly conscious of the guilt of the democracies of the Entente countries which had suffered their governments to continue a policy so blind and remorseless which had driven Russia to this position.’
copyright © National Portrait Gallery, London 
Margaret Grace Bondfield
10 February 1922

In December 1923 Bondfield was elected MP for Northampton, the first Labour woman MP, and in the same year she became chairman of the Trades Union Council (TUC). However, her tenure as an MP was short-lived owing to a political crisis when the Labour Government collapsed – she wrote, ‘We fell because Ramsay MacDonald lost his head.’ When the General Election of 1924 took place, Bondfield was in Canada and could not get back in time to defend her seat; meanwhile her opponent was having a fine time telling her constituents that she had neglected her duties by gallivanting abroad.

The second Labour government lasted from 1929 to 1931 and Bondfield became MP for Wallsend. Bondfield was appointed Minister of Labour and became the first female member of the cabinet and the first female Privy Councillor – Ramsay MacDonald called her achievement a double-first. A souvenir photograph and film were taken of the new government consisting of eighteen men and Bondfield. She is standing behind those seated in front, her head on a level with the shoulders of the men on either side. She wrote, ‘I was never overwhelmed with the honour of it so much as with the responsibility of it.’ It is amusing to note that even King George V was impressed with her. When the new government members went to kiss hands with the king at Windsor Castle, he broke the usual protocol of silence when he came to Bondfield and told her ‘I am pleased to be the one to whom has come the opportunity to receive the first woman Privy Councillor.’

Even Winston Churchill was impressed with Bondfield’s achievements. He said that any human being who could take a Bill through its various stages in parliament needed physical strength, besides mental and moral qualities, and to be able to arrive at the end still ‘in the pink’ must indeed mean she was a ‘super-woman’.

In the General Election of 1931 Bondfield lost her seat – there being a Conservative majority of 563. She wrote, ‘Like most ministers I left office with regret. But it had been hard and exhausting work.’ She returned to her old post of Chief Woman Officer of the National Union of General and Municipal Workers, a post she held for eighteen years.

She retired in the spring of 1938 at the age of 68. She died in Sanderstead, Surrey.

Sources

Argus (26 September 2019)
Bondfield, Margaret A Life’s Work (1949)
Woftczak, H. Notable Sussex Women (2008)

Copyright © J.Middleton 2019
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Helen Boyle (1869-1957)
Judy Middleton (2001 revised 2019) 

copyright © D. Sharp
Plaque - Lady Chichester Hospital, New Church Road
Helen Boyle was born in Dublin, and she was a cousin of Revd Vicars Armstrong Boyle, who was vicar of St Nicolas Church, Portslade from 1899 to 1919 and was a strong advocate for female suffrage. Dr Boyle and Dr Mabel Jones arrived at Hove in 1897 where they established a practice at what is now 37 Church Road, Hove, being some of the first female doctors in the area. Dr Boyle had studied at the London (Royal Free Hospital) School of Medicine, and she continued with her training in Brussels.
copyright © National Portrait Gallery, London
Dr Helen Boyle photographed at
her home in The Drive, Hove.

Before moving to Sussex, Dr Boyle had gained a considerable amount of experience in the East End of London, at the London County Asylum, Essex, and with the Canning Town Mission Hospital. She was a woman of energy and vision. For example, at Brighton in 1905, she not only co-founded the Lewes Road Dispensary for Women and Children, but also set the ball rolling to treat women in the early stages of mental illness. The latter enterprise began at 101 Roundhill Crescent, Brighton, where ten patients could be treated, and later moved to 70 Brunswick Place, Hove, which was spacious enough to accommodate 38 patients.

The First World War interrupted her endeavours in Brighton and Hove because she felt called to play her part in trying to alleviate some of the terrible suffering going on in Europe. The year 1915 found her in Serbia with the Royal Free Hospital Unit when there was a dreadful epidemic of typhus. In recognition of her work in this field, Dr Boyle was decorated with the Order of St Sava IV.

Dr Boyle enjoyed travelling, but she also used it to good effect by giving lectures about her treatment for functional nervous disorders in her tours of Europe. During the 1920s she undertook a similar visit to the United States and Canada. Besides travelling, Dr Boyle also enjoyed walking and gardening.

In 1920 the Lady Chichester Hospital moved to more spacious surroundings in New Church Road, Hove. This is where the blue commemorative plaque in her honour was unveiled on 7 September 2015.

copyright © J.Middleton
The NHS Aldrington Centre (former Lady Chichester Hospital) in New Church Road, Hove

In 1923 Dr Boyle co-founded with Sir Maurice Craig the National Council for Mental Hygiene. Dr Boyle was the first woman to be president of the Brighton and Sussex Medic-Chirurgical Society, and the first woman to be elected a member of the honorary staff at the Royal Sussex County Hospital. In 1939 she had the great honour of becoming the first woman president of the Royal Medico-Psychological Association.

Dr Boyle was associated with another female pioneer – Mrs Grace Eyre Woodhead (1864-1936) who was instrumental in founding the Guardianship Society, and the medical consultant was Dr Boyle. Mrs Woodhead’s idea was to provide a holiday for children who were physically handicapped or who had mental health problems. Today, it is known as the Grace Eyre Foundation, and it is still in operation locally.

Dr Boyle had such poor eyesight that she was unable to drive a car. In photographs, her spectacles give her a somewhat stern and serious aspect, but in reality she had a great sense of humour. Her keen brain was always active, but she was seriously averse to paperwork, and was happy to delegate that to others.
In 1948 Dr Boyle retired from her work at Lady Chichester Hospital. She had so wanted to keep the hospital as an independent unit, and many people and staff supported her, but it was absorbed into the fledgling National Health Service.

However, she did not give up her medical practice, and continued to see private patients until she died. By then her business addresses were at 9 The Drive, Hove, and 49 Harley Street, London. Dr Boyle died at her home in Pyecombe in 1957 – the day after her eighty-eighth birthday.

Sources
Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Twenty-one Years of Pioneer Work. The Lady Chichester Hospital (1926)
Wojtczak, H. Notable Sussex Women (2008)

Copyright © J.Middleton 2019
 
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Hablot Knight Browne 'PHIZ' (1815-1882)
Judy Middleton (2001 revised 2014)

copyright © J.Middleton
8 Clarendon Villas, Hove.
Hablot Knight Browne was born on 15 June 1815 at Kennington, London; he was the ninth son of William Loder Browne and his long-suffering wife. It is understandable that with such a large family, there was a determined effort to find him some useful employment and so he was apprenticed to Mr Findon, an engraver.

As it happens, it was a happy choice, and he was an apt pupil who was awarded a medal by the Society of Arts in 1833 for his John Gilpin etching. John Gilpin was a comic ballad by William Cowper. It recounts the unfortunate adventure of John Gilpin on an outing with his family when suddenly his horse bolts for ten miles, leaving his aghast wife and children far behind.

Browne began his fruitful association with Charles Dickens in 1836 but it came about in somewhat sad circumstances. What happened was that between the first and second numbers of The Pickwick Papers, the artist working on the project called Seymour, committed suicide. Browne was brought in to replace him.

At first, Browne used the name ‘Nemo’ for his etchings but he changed it to ‘Phiz’ to harmonise with Dickens’ pseudonym ‘Boz’.

Browne illustrated many of Dickens’ most memorable works including Nicholas Nickleby, Martin Chuzzlewit, Dombey & Son, David Copperfield, A Tale of Two Cities, Little Dorrit and Bleak House.

copyright © J.Middleton
Charles Dickens
But it could be difficult working for Dickens whose requirements were exacting. For example, in 1846 Dickens was especially anxious about the depiction of Mrs Pipchin and Paul and he was upset by Browne’s working of it. In a letter he wrote ‘I can’t say what pain and vexation it is to be so utterly misrepresented. I would cheerfully have given a hundred pounds to have kept this illustration out of the book.’ He grumbled that Browne could not have read the text with sufficient attention. However, Dickens knew how to give praise as well and later he wrote ‘Browne has sketched an uncommonly characteristic and capital Mr Micawber.’

In 1837 Dickens and Browne visited Yorkshire together to make studies for use in Nicholas Nickleby and in 1838 they visited Straftford-on-Avon and Kenilworth. Also in 1838 the pair attended theatrical performance where according to a letter written by Dickens to his wife ‘Browne laughed with such indecent heartiness at one point of the entertainment that an old gentleman in the next box suffered the most violent indignation.’

Dickens did not monopolize Browne completely because Browne found time to illustrate the works of other authors such as Lord Lytton and Harrison Ainsworth.

In 1867 Browne was struck by paralysis and although he survived for another fifteen years, his hand had lost its old skill.

In 1880 Browne and his wife moved to 8 Clarendon Villas, Hove. It was a busy household because their four daughters Emma, Eliza, Mabel and Beatrice lived there plus two grandchildren aged four and two who had both been born in India. In addition the Browne family included five sons.

It was at 8 Clarendon Villas that Hablot Knight Browne died on 8th July 1882. He was buried at Brighton Extra-Mural Cemetery. Browne’s eldest son Edgar became an eye surgeon in Liverpool and his direct descendant Marilyn Browne Lester paid for Hablot’s grave to be restored in 1998.

Gordon Browne (1858-1932) was another of Hablot’s sons and he followed in his father’s artistic footsteps. He received his training at Heatherley’s  School of Art and he first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1894. His most notable work was to illustrate the eight volumes of Henry Irving’s Shakespeare published in 1895. He also illustrated works by Daniel Defoe, Sir Walter Scott, Robert Louis Stevenson, Andrew Lang, George Henty and others. Gordon lived at Hove for a few years in a house overlooking Hove Lagoon. Later he moved to Richmond where he died on 27 May 1932.

Meanwhile, after Hablot Knight Browne died, his widow and daughters moved away from Clarendon Villas but remained in Hove at Maycroft Villa in the Upper Drive.

In around 1888 the famous sculptor, engraver, typographer and writer Eric Gill (1882-1940) attended a small kindergarten run by the Misses Browne, Hablot’s daughters, who he said were ‘dear, kind people’. He became best friends with their nephew Bunny Browne.

Hove Museum is of the opinion that the Misses Browne taught at Arnold House, a prep school at Hove, that Eric Gill also attended. But in his memoirs Gill only mentions the masters who taught there.

In a letter that Gordon Browne wrote to Hove Library dated 30 August 1928 he stated that his four sisters had been resident in Hove, Portslade and Southwick from 1880 to the present day,

Hablot Knight Browne was so well esteemed at Hove that his name was one of four inscribed at the base of the dome in Hove Reference Library in 1927.  

There is another connection between Dickens and Hove because Charles Dickens, his friend John Leech and their families lodged briefly at 16 Lansdowne Place in 1849, thus meriting a blue plaque on that building too.

Sources
Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Forster, John Life of Charles Dickens (1872) 3 volumes
Gill, Eric Autobiography (1940)  
Letters of Charles Dickens 1837-1870 edited by his sister-in-law and his eldest daughter (1893)

Copyright © J.Middleton 2014
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Charles Augustin Busby (1786-1834)
Judy Middleton (2001 revised 2014)

copyright © J.Middleton
2 Lansdowne Place
Charles Augustin Busby became a well-known architect and hydraulic engineer and it is interesting to note that he and his six siblings were all home educated. In 1807 the Royal Academy awarded him a gold medal for one of his designs.

He received his first important commission when he was only 23 years of age and this was to design the Commercial Coffee Rooms at Bristol.
copyright © J.Middleton
Brunswick Terrace
He married Louise Mary Williams in 1811; their son was born in 1814 and a daughter followed in 1817. That same year of 1817 he found it expeditious to remove himself to the United States of America, when a roof of one of the buildings he designed collapsed. It is not clear whether youthful enthusiasm had led him to create an unsafe structure or whether the builders were to blame. Whatever the cause, it was time to test fresh pastures.

In America Busby developed a close interest in steam-boats and even took his fascination to the point where he designed a new paddle-wheel. He also used his time across the Atlantic to study bridge design and in addition he drew plans for State Penitentiaries.

Busby returned to England in 1819. Thomas Read Kemp persuaded him to move to Brighton where he set up an architectural practice with Amon Henry Wilds. But the relationship was of short duration, being established in May 1823 and dissolved in 1825.
copyright © J.Middleton
Photo left:- Brunswick Square, west side,  Photo right:- Brunswick Square, east side.
It used to be thought the firm of Wilds & Busby was responsible for the design of Brunswick Town in Hove but recent evidence has come to light revealing it was solely the work of Busby and it remains his greatest architectural achievement.

However, Wilds & Busby did design Lewes Crescent and Sussex Square in Brighton and the Masonic Temple in Queen’s Road, Brighton. It came as a great disappointment when the plans submitted by Wilds & Busby were placed second in the competition to find the best design for St Peter’s Church, Brighton. First place went to youthful architect Charles Barry instead. Even more of an affront to Busby’s feelings was when Charles Barry was also chosen to design St Andrew’s Chapel, Waterloo Street, Hove, adjacent to the estate so closely associated with Busby.

But Busby did design other churches, notably St George’s, Kemp Town, and St Margaret’s Chapel, Brighton, both in Greek Revival style.
copyright © J.Middleton
Photo left:- Brunswick Place, west side, Photo right:- Brunswick Street West.
As for Brunswick Town, Busby’s work involved the design of Brunswick Terrace, Brunswick Square, Brunswick Place, Brunswick Street West, Brunswick Street East, Lansdowne Place and Lansdowne Square. But his Market House was not a success. It occupied a prominent island site between Upper Market Street and Lower Market Street and opened for business on 28 August 1828. Although all kinds of necessities could be purchased there, it was never the success that Busby envisaged and by 1839 was no longer in use as a market. Later on it became famous as the home of Dupont’s Riding Academy.

Brunswick Cottage

In 1829 Busby moved with his family to a house at 1 Stanhope Place, which later became 2 Lansdowne Place. At the back of this house a passage led to his drawing office, a lofty, arched chamber with large windows. The true nature of this small building has only come to light in recent years. It is now called Brunswick Cottage and is situated in Brunswick Street West.

In the 1950s this drawing office was converted into a residence and all sorts of partitions were installed. In May 2000 work started to restore the building and create a modern living space while at the same time maintaining more empathy with the original dimensions. By this time the ceiling was sagging in an alarming manner under the weight of a water tank in the loft; when everything was removed, the original arched ceiling could be seen. As the walls were also beginning to bulge, steel lines were strung across the space. Busby obviously thought of his drawing office as a temporary structure because it was not well built and the walls of bungaroush were so unstable that even applying thin coats of plaster brought away chunks of it.

Restoration work revealed the shape of two large windows on the east wall but it was impossible to re-establish them because the privacy of next-door’s garden/patio would be invaded and anyway planning permission was refused.
copyright © J.Middleton
Brunswick Cottage, Brunswick Street West
Outside there are three windows at pavement level that indicate the basement living area. Emergency work was needed on the chimney after damage caused by a storm on 15 September 2000. Alan Phillips was the architect who oversaw the restoration and the project was the subject of Channel 4 TV programme Doing It Up broadcast in February 2001.   

Hard Times

The Brunswick Square Commissioners were established in 1830 and Busby was one of the original members. He was also honoured by being given the title of High Commissioner of Hove.

He should have made his fortune from Brunswick Town. The terms were quite generous and after Brunswick Square was completed, he was to be given the houses numbering from 19 to 44. Unfortunately, the economic climate changed rapidly after building operations started and consequently the building boom slowed down. As a result the downturn in house sales was not what he had anticipated and he overstretched himself financially.
copyright © J.Middleton
Photo left:- Brunswick Street East, Photo right:- Lansdowne Place, west side. 
In 1833 he owed some £12,600, mostly to friends, and bankruptcy proceedings against him were started. Even his two female servants went unpaid. But he must have been a popular character because his friends rallied around and saved the situation. But the family was left almost penniless.

Busby died on 18 September 1834 and his entire estate was worth less than £200. His funeral was held at St Andrew’s Old Church, Hove and he was buried in the churchyard there.
copyright © J.Middleton
Photo left:- Lansdowne Place, east side, Photo right:- Lansdowne Square.
As a final ignominy, while the tomb of Amon Henry Wilds is splendidly preserved in St Nicolas’s Churchyard, Brighton, Busby’s has disappeared. Surely his family could have afforded a headstone? In the 1970s most of the north part of the churchyard belonging to St Andrew’s Church became playing fields for the newly built St Andrew’s School. Before all the headstones and memorials were demolished, a dedicated team set about recording all the inscriptions in a book that was printed in July 1974. But there was no mention of Busby in the index. It can only be presumed that Busby’s mortal remains are still there somewhere because there was only one family (the Brownlows) who wanted the remains of their forbears moved to Hove Cemetery. An interesting point is that when Tesco’s came to build their extensive car park off Church Road on another part of the churchyard, the contractors discovered the bodies had not been buried as deeply as they should have been. The surface had to be raised up before they could lay tarmac.
copyright © J.Middleton
St Andrew’s Old Church, Hove, south side. Busby’s grave was in the north part of the churchyard

Discovery

In April 1988 some 200 architectural drawings by Busby were discovered in the attic of a farmhouse in Essex. They disappeared from public view after Francis Wells, one of Busby’s pupils, inherited them. It is a relief to record that the Royal Institute of British Architects purchased the drawings for the sum of £10,000.

In 1991 a fascinating piece designed by Busby went on display at Brighton Museum and Art Gallery. The item was a large and beautiful tea urn made of silver and decorated with a model of the Chain Pier. This item was ceremoniously presented to Captain Brown, the designer of the Chain Pier, in 1826.
copyright © J.Middleton
Photo left:-Market House, north façade, Photo right:- Market House, east façade.
In August 1991 some original Brunswick house deeds came up for auction. Incredibly, they had been discovered in a castle in Holland. But before the auction took place, the owners accepted £300 from Nick Tyson of the Regency Town House Trust at 13 Brunswick Square where he planned to put them on display.

The Regency Town House Trust also felt moved to splash out some money in October 1997 when a rare volume containing Busby’s architectural designs and interiors was purchased for £6,000.

It seems fitting that although we have lost the grave, items associated with Busby have continued to come to light.

Sources
Argus
Bingham, Neil C.A. Busby, The Regency Architect of Brighton & Hove (1991)
Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade

Copyright © J.Middleton 2014
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Dame Clara Butt (1872-1936)
Judy Middleton (2001 revised 2021)

copyright © J.Middleton
4 St Aubyn’s Mansions, Hove
Early Years

Clara’s father was Henry Albert Butt who lived in Jersey, while Clara’s mother was Clara Hook, and her family lived in Shoreham. It might seem odd that Clara’s parents came from such different places but there was a link between Jersey and Shoreham because of the oyster fishery business. Fishing smacks from the Channel Islands often put into the port of Shoreham with freshly-caught oysters in the hold, which were stored in special ponds in the harbour and the River Adur. The story was romantic because the couple fell in love while the bridegroom was only 21, and the bride still in her teens when they married. It is known that Henry Albert Butt acted as a crew member in at least five boats, and later on owned two of his own.

The young couple went to live in Jersey. Sadly, their first child, Bertie, died, and their second child was Clara Butt. It seems the couple might have travelled to Shoreham to see her family, but the labour pains started while she was still at sea, and thus Clara Butt was born in a house at Adur Terrace, Southwick, West Sussex. There is a charming tradition that the baby was baptised using water from a large clam shell that Captain Glazebrook had carried home as a souvenir from the South Pacific. This clam shell was in a Methodist Chapel, which was in a rather unusual place, namely the sail-loft belonging to Robert Horne Penney who had kindly lent the space to them.

In 1880 the Butts left the Channel Islands and headed to Bristol from where Captain Butt continued to go to sea. It was at Bristol that Clara encountered the leading singing teacher in the west of England. His name was Dan Rootham and under his tuition her voice matured to such an extent that she won an open scholarship to the Royal College of Music.

A Stellar Career

copyright © J.Middleton
Dame Clara Butt
Clara Butt made a great impression both because of her voice and her commanding presence. She stood 6 feet 2 inches tall, with dark eyes and dark hair attributed to a remote Spanish ancestor. The consensus was that Tennyson’s words were an apt description of her ‘a daughter of the gods, divinely tall’. It is interesting to note that Edward Elgar found her so inspiring that he based the part of the angel in his oratorio The Dream of Gerontius on her.

On her mother’s side, Clara was descended from Thomas Hook, a famous author and practical joker who also edited John Bull.

All Clara’s sisters had fine voices and she made herself responsible for their training. They were Pauline (a soprano) and Ethel and Hazel (both contraltos like Clara). They all sang together at one of Clara’s Royal Albert Hall concerts.

Clara Butt’s first public appearance on the concert platform was in December 1882 at the Royal Albert Hall in a performance of Arthur Sullivan’s Golden Legend with Madame Albani and Edward Lloyd. 

Clara Butt’s first public appearance on the concert platform was in December 1882 at the Royal Albert Hall in a performance of Arthur Sullivan’s Golden Legend with Madame Albani and Edward Lloyd.

The work most closely associated with Clara Butt was Abide with Me and indeed she sang it at Queen Victoria’s memorial service in 1901. Another favourite was Sullivan’s The Lost Chord. It was at Clara’s suggestion that Land of Hope and Glory was written and Elgar’s Sea Pictures were especially composed for her.

There was a well-known story concerning the time Clara was rehearsing with massed brass bands at the Royal Albert Hall. The conductor was obliged to shout to the musicians ‘Play up, gentlemen, I can’t hear you.’ The name of the harassed conductor varies with the storyteller but never the name of Clara Butt.

During her first tour of Australia the Sydney Sun wrote enthusiastically, ‘The singing of this great contralto is warm with the life of breathing womanhood – it throbs with the earnestness of one who is a singer by the Grace of God.’

Sir Hebert Tree once said ‘There’s Nature – there’s Art … and there is Clara Butt!’

Family Life

On 26 June 1900 Clara married Kennerley Rumford at Bristol Cathedral while a crowd numbering some 20,000 people milled around outside to see the bride arrive. One of the pageboys was young Ivor Novello (1893-1951). Two years previously Clara had stood him on a chair and taught him to sing Abide with Me.

Edward Lloyd, the famous tenor, was a guest at the wedding. When Lloyd gave his farewell concert on 12 December 1900, Clara also sang. Lloyd emerged from retirement once more to sing in one of Clara’s concerts at the Royal Albert Hall, which took place on 18 October 1902.

Edward Lloyd owned a house called Hassendean in New Church Road, Hove from around 1898 to 1900 and is said to have leased it to Clara for a while. The house still stands and is now occupied by St Christopher’s School. Alfred Fisher founded the Hove Academy of Music at 22 Church Road, Hove and Clara is said to have had something to do with the institution.

Clara and Kennerley Rumford had once taken part in recitals together. For relaxation he enjoyed nothing better than to go fishing. One of his wedding gifts to his wife was a fishing rod, hoping no doubt to enthuse her in the sport. His love of fishing was so well known that Queen Victoria allowed him the privilege of enjoying two days of fishing on Deeside.  There were three children of the marriage, Joy, Roy and Victor.

St Aubyn’s Mansions

The Rumfords had a home in Hampstead but they also enjoyed their flat at 4 St Aubyn’s Mansions on Hove seafront, which they occupied from 1903 until around 1906.

The large hall contained Clara’s grand piano.

The dining room walls were maroon in colour and formed a perfect background on which to display some fine engravings. There were also several mementoes to affirm the couple’s popularity with the royal family. Queen Victoria gave Mr Rumsford a loving cup in appreciation of his singing. Other royal gifts included a cigarette case set with diamonds from Queen Victoria, a cigarette case engraved with the royal coat of arms from Princess Christian, two Jubilee medals, a signed portrait of the Queen, a silver-framed photograph of Princess Christian, and a silver tankard and a silver inkstand engraved with the royal coat of arms.

The drawing room was described as ‘a fine apartment, panelled in oak, supplemented by a rich frieze in olive green, whereon are bronze and copper plates. Oaken balustrades inclose (sic) a most inviting recess of ease, on either side of which dainty lanterns of electric light are pendant for those who would read as they rest.’

From either of these rooms you could ‘step on to the balcony through a couple of glass doors and imagine yourself afloat. Almost underneath you is the sea and the advantage of the St Aubyn’s promontory is that the sea is neither so truant nor so migratory as it is elsewhere. It never recedes very far, while even the lowest tides does not leave a dismal and un-decorative desert of sand and it is never so far away that you cannot catch the pathos and passion of its song.’
copyright © Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
Brighton Season Magazine 1925

Great War

In 1918 a special pageant was held at the Hippodrome in Brighton in aid of the work of Hove Hospital War Supply Depot in Grand Avenue, and Clara had a starring role. The Brighton Herald reported that the ‘most imposing figure of all, on her throne on the left of the stage was Madame Clara Butt. No such embodiment of Britannia has ever before been seen in Brighton.’ She wore a white robe with myriad points of lustre, a sweeping crimson cloak, a golden helmet with crimson plumes and she held a trident. She sang Rule Britannia and Have You Any News of My Boy Jack?

Amusing Incident at the Dome

In the early 1920s Clara gave a concert at the Dome in Brighton. She was in the middle of singing Down in the Forest Something Stirred when someone dropped an umbrella from the gallery and to everyone’s horror it went clattering down the steps. But Clara was not annoyed and instead she stopped singing because she was laughing so much. She said she could not go on because it was so funny.

Tour of the East

In September 1930 Clara returned from an extensive tour of the East. She met the famous Indian poet and and philosopher Rabindranath Tagore and she was a tremendous hit in Japan. A leading Japanese newspaper organised a poll to find who was the most popular person and top of the list was Clara with 20,000 votes. As a result of this popularity she made a number of recordings in Tokyo including Abide with Me and Land of Hope and Glory.

Plaque

Dame Clara Butt died on 23 January 1936 at North Shields.

It was decided that a blue plaque should be installed at her Hove residence and Councillor Geoff Wells, Deputy Mayor, unveiled it in August 2011. Unfortunately, there were red faces all round when someone noticed that the year of her birth was wrong. The plaque stated she was born in 1848 when the correct date should be 1872. The mistake was soon rectified.

St Aubyn’s Mansions thus became the only building in Hove to boast of two blue plaques, the other being in honour of Vesta Tilley.    
copyright © J.Middleton
This photograph of St Aubyn’s Mansions was taken on 16 April 2014 and the two plaques on the first floor. 

Sources
Argus
Brighton Herald
Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Matthews, K.
Down Channel: The Smacks and Mariners of the Shoreham Oyster Fishery (2021)
Ponder, William Clara Butt (1928)
The World (24 November 1903)

Copyright © J.Middleton 2014
page layout by D.Sharp