Judy Middleton 1992 (revised 2016)
copyright © J.Middleton This fine view of the Metropole dates from 1906 when the hotel was still a comparatively new building. |
Red Brick Surprise
The Metropole has mellowed over the years; this applies as
much to the brickwork as to people’s attitude towards the building. The
striking appearance of red brick and terracotta no longer surprises us. But
back in 1890 it was a different matter.
People were used to pale stuccoed buildings that reflected
the light; yet the sea air does its best to lift the stucco off and such
buildings require constant maintenance.
copyright © J.Middleton Brighton people were more used to the pale, stuccoed buildings to be seen in this view on either side of the red-brick Metropole. |
Red brick is more durable and Alfred Waterhouse must have
been well aware of this when he made his decision. Then the sheer size of the
hotel presents a solid statement of confidence.
Waterhouse was in the top league of Victorian architects,
being responsible for the Manchester Assize Courts, Manchester Town Hall, the
Natural History Museum at South Kensington, University College, London, and the
south frontage of Balliol College, Oxford. It is amusing to note that when Hove
Councillors decided to ask Waterhouse to design their new Town Hall, a
world-weary councillor was heard to remark that it was akin to getting a
steam-roller to crack a nut.
The Metropole cost an amazing £57,000 to build. By January
1888 the endeavour had become a limited liability company and already some
£24,000 had been allotted in blocks of £100 shares to six men who became the
board of directors; they earned £600 a year for their trouble, plus one-tenth
of the annual net profit.
Some shareholders in the Grand Hotel quietly withdrew
their money to invest in the Metropole instead. Some members of staff at the
Grand also decided to jump ship. As the Brighton Gazette reported:
‘It does seem strange to be ushered into this handsome new
building by the same tall, busy, familiar figure who has shown us in and out of
the Grand any time these three years and to see in the front line of officials
… one of the most diligent of the Grand’s booking clerks.’
Labour Disputes
It has often been asserted that the building of the
Metropole was beset by labour disputes. If there were disputes, the local
newspapers failed to report them although they gave full accounts of the London
dock dispute.
But one hint of discord came to light after the hotel was
officially opened. Brighton magistrates had to adjudicate on a wages dispute
between some carpenters engaged on work at the hotel and the builder Thomas
Holloway. Harry Winchester of 52 Upper Russell Street was the plaintiff and he
stated his wages had been reduced from 9d an hour to 8d an hour without proper notice;
therefore he claimed 5/2d in back pay. Two fellow workers backed up
Winchester’s statement and the magistrates found in favour of the plaintiff.
There was also a fatality. In April 1890 Samuel Bates, a
London zinc-worker, was standing on scaffolding running around the roof; he was
working on the dormers when his saw became caught. In trying to extricate it,
he overbalanced and crashed to the ground some 70 feet below. The jury at the
inquest recommended that a rope should be fixed to the scaffolding at a height
of 4 feet from the platform on which the men were working.
Gordon Hotels
copyright © J.Middleton There was plenty to see from the balconies of the Hotel Metropole including activity at the nearby West Pier. |
In 1889 the Hotel Metropole opened at Monte Carlo and the
one in Cannes opened around Christmas time that same year. In August 1890 the
Hotel Metropole at Brighton opened and the London one followed later. Gordon
Hotels owned all these establishments, plus the Grand and First Avenue Hotels
(both in London) and the Burlington in Eastbourne; the Royal Pier Hotel at Ryde
on the Isle of Wight would be added to their portfolio later.
Grand Opening
A special train transported some 1,500 people from London
to Brighton to attend a preview of the Hotel Metropole. The local populace also
gathered in force because a rumour had spread that the Prince of Wales would be
there too but unfortunately this was not true.
The rumour mill had obviously been busy because it also
claimed there were 4,000 bedrooms in the establishment and enough electric
lamps to light up the whole of Brighton. Others chose to believe the cost of
building the hotel exceeded the entire national debt and that the Turkish Bath
could accommodate 1,000 customers at the same time.
One newspaper reporter present at the preview found
himself quite disgusted at the amount of food and drink that some guests
consumed but then he did admit that the various buffets were excellent and of
‘abundant variety’.
The Metropole’s own band played suitable music in the
dining room but should a guest have a preference for a more military style,
there was the band of the Coldstream Guards performing in the dining room.
As dusk fell, the electric lamps began to blaze forth and
the illumination of the Italian Garden situated north of the hotel produced a
sparkling effect.
Description of Amenities
There were three dining rooms, which could accommodate 500
guests at one time. The well-known firm of Maple’s designed all the furnishing
including the high-backed dining room chairs emblazoned with the hotel’s badge
in beaten gold. The dining rooms were decorated in colours ranging from golden
brown to ivory white, with silk curtains to match. The Brighton Herald was
lost in admiration at the décor with a ‘moulded ceiling in cream and gold from
which depend a number of dazzling electroliers, the cut prisms of which flash
all the colours of the rainbow.’
The library had a chimney-piece in finely carved oak
created in the Renaissance style.
But the most important chimney-piece was to be found in
the drawing room. Not only was the marble statuary finely executed, it was also
the work of Prince Victor Hohenlohe-Langenburg whose aunt was Queen Victoria.
The prince made his first career in the Royal Navy and he saw active service in
the Crimean War. He reached the rank of captain and after retiring because of
ill-health, he was created an honorary admiral. He then embarked on a new
career in sculpture, helped by Queen Victoria, and he had his own studio
adjoining his quarters in St James’s Palace. The work at the Metropole was
perhaps his last private commission because he died in 1891. It is indeed
unfortunate that when the hotel’s interior was re-modelled in the 1960s, this
charming and historic piece was discarded.
copyright © J.Middleton This lovely view is of the entrance to the drawing room. |
The drawing room had an Arabian theme and the ceiling was
painted in creamy tones with a raised band of solid gilt. At the north end
there was an annexe called an oriental lounge with another Arabian-style
ceiling. To add to the exotic ambience there were stained-glass octagonal
lights and two hanging Moorish lamps.
There was a special smoking room for guests who wished to
indulge, furnished with comfortable easy chairs covered in fine, antique
Persian saddle-bags and rugs. There was a huge fireplace, stretching from floor
to ceiling, created of oak in an ingle-nook style. On the wall hung paintings
of coaching scenes commissioned from the Temple brothers by the management.
Downstairs, below the well-appointed billiard room, there was
the Turkish Bath also with an appropriate Eastern theme.
A central feature of what has been dubbed a public palace
was the magnificent staircase constructed of polished marble with alabaster
balusters. No doubt Victorian guests ascending the stately treads were reminded
of the popular aria I dreamt that I dwelt in Marble Halls.
Arabian Inspiration
The Arabian theme was right up-to-date. In 1888 Charles
Doughty published his Travels in Arabia Desert and Sir Richard Burton
presented the public with the last books of his 16-volume Arabian Nights
Entertainment. The character of Scheharazada was guaranteed to capture
people’s imagination with her repertoire of extraordinary tales. We are told it
was the king’s custom to kill his bride the morning after consummation had
taken place but Schehahazada managed to stave off the evil hour with her
fabulous stories.
The Metropole’s own perfumer had created an exotic perfume
to waft spicily about the expensive public rooms. He named his creation The
Light of Asia as a compliment to Sir Edwin Arnold who had first suggested it.
Arnold’s most famous work published in 1879 was The Light of Asia.
Upstairs
The number of rooms upstairs, not counting rooms for
servants, came to almost 700. Not all of them were single bedrooms because
there were some suites on each floor containing a drawing room and one or two
en-suite bedrooms. Some of the drawing rooms were adorned with brocaded silk on
the walls while the furniture varied in style from Sheraton to antique mahogany
of the rococo period.
The grandest set of rooms was the State Suite; it had a
reception room and a dining room too. There was plenty of gilded furniture in
the reception room and the walls were hung with Persian embroidery. The dining
room was fitted out in the style of Louis XV with furniture in Italian walnut
and a chimney-piece carved from Numidian marble.
Mention must be made of the bathrooms. When guests wanted
a bath there was a choice not only of hot and cold water but also sea water.
The medicinal qualities of sea water at Brighton had long been recognised and
bringing the sea to one’s bathroom was a logical extension. Some of the grander
houses on Hove seafront also had this luxury and there was a huge holding tank
under the seafront lawns where water was collected at high tide and stored.
This tank plus the machinery involved is still in place, no doubt waiting to be
re-discovered at a future date.
A single room at the Hotel Metropole cost 3/6d while one
of those splendid suites would set you back anything from £3-8s a day. But
there was the consolation of knowing one’s own servants were close at hand and
could take their meals in the steward’s room for only 6/- a day.
Italian Garden
The Italian Garden was set out on the north side of the
hotel. It was claimed that ‘this restful garden with its twin parterres,
stately bridge and placid water, is a most agreeable feature.’ It was sheltered
from the blustery seafront and must have proved a welcome relief for ladies who
wished to take the air without being buffeted by it.
Grandstand View
August Bank Holiday came shortly after the Hotel Metropole
opened and would have been the perfect place to observe two colourful parades
making their way along the seafront road. The Press reported it was a sight
that even the ‘nobility and gentry who hung about the steps of the Hotel
Metropole were not quite indifferent to.’
One parade belonged to Sanger’s Circus and there were
cages full of lions and tigers. The cavalcade also included elephants and
camels attended by ‘troops of African and European men in brilliant uniforms’.
The other parade was staged to advertise a skating rink.
There were six ‘hackney carriages containing instalments of musicians, who
tried to play together, but under the circumstances found that to be a little
beyond their powers.’ Around 30 men dressed in dark blue plush uniforms and
many boys in sailor suits followed behind the carriages.
Guests of Importance
The year 1890 seems to have been something of a vintage
year for the hotel as regards society figures frequenting the establishment.
The list included the following:
Prince Esterhazy
Prince Antoine D’Orleans
The Infanta d’Espagne
Princess Alexis Dolgourouki
Prince Ilbrahim
The Russian Ambassador
The Turkish Ambassador
Some of the very first of the Metropole’s guests in the
first week of August 1890 were as follows:
Countess of Stradbroke
Lady Gwendoline Rous
Honourable Charles Willoughby
Count Appongi
Comtesse de Brémont
The Comtesse de Brémont was an interesting lady who
regularly appeared on the Brighton social scene that year. For her stay in
August she was mixing business with pleasure because later in the month she
gave a lecture in the Music Room of the Royal Pavilion concerning the
goldfields and social life in the Transvaal. There was a select audience
(meaning presumably that the room was not crowded) and they enjoyed the
Comtesse’s little jokes such as marriage without love was like soup without
salt.
Another lecturer who enjoyed a restful time at the hotel
in January 1891 was Charles Dickens; not of course the famous author but his
son who had come to unwind after an arduous lecture tour. He was gratified to
find the sun shining and said he had not enjoyed so much sunshine anywhere else
for a long time.
Indian Princes
Out of foreign royalty that stayed at the Metropole
probably the most interesting were the Indian princes.
The Maharajah of Cooch Behar arrived in September 1900.
Maharaja Sayajirao, Gaekwad III of Baroda (r.1863-1939)
also arrived in 1900 and stayed for most of November. His Maharani and their
children, four princes and one princess, accompanied him. It would be
interesting to know if his retinue contained his usual entourage when visiting
Europe consisting of two cooks, groceries and two cows because he mistrusted
foreign food to meet his religious dietary requirements. Like many Indian
princes he owned magnificent jewels including a diamond collar composed of 500
large diamonds from which hung the Star of the South, a diamond of 128 carats.
But the Maharaja was also a progressive ruler and
introduced a whole raft of reforms including free and compulsory education; he
outlawed polygamy and allowed Hindu widows to re-marry; he built an irrigation
system, railways and hospitals. He was also a patron of the arts and encouraged
craftsmen. His name is remembered locally because of the Baroda Pigeon House
commissioned for the Indian and Colonial Exhibition of 1886 in London that was
eventually presented to Hove Museum and stood in the grounds for many years but
is now unfortunately no longer extant.
The Maharaja was contemptuous of British rule in India and
famously at the Delhi Durbar refused to wear his full regalia and jewels while
giving the briefest of bows before turning his back on British royalty. This
was a grave insult but because the Maharaja was so popular and such a model
ruler the British wisely let matters rest.
The Clarence Rooms
The Clarence Rooms had a separate entrance from Cannon
Place but were an important feature of the hotel and could be hired for private
functions. There was a handsome reception room with an octagonal roof, an
imposing ballroom with a beautifully modelled wagon-head roof, and beyond the
ballroom was the crush room where guests could sit out the dancing and partake
of light refreshments.
One of the first people to take advantage of the Clarence
Rooms were Mrs and Miss Campbell of 16 Eaton Gardens, Hove, who gave a charming
‘At Home’ in January 1891. The Campbells hired the Fraser Quintet from London
to provide the music and the guest list included Lady Pocock, Lady Napier and
General and Mrs Holland.
Later in the same month the Brighton Troop of the
Middlesex Yeomanry Cavalry gave a Cinderella Dance in the ballroom; (the
inclusion of the word ‘Cinderella’ meant the guests departed at midnight).
Notable among the many beautiful gowns were Mrs Cargill’s of white silk trimmed
with pale blue feathers and Miss Twaite’s of black velvet with mauve ostrich
plumes; Miss Minnie Freeman wore a gown of rose pink with spangled net, and Miss
Williams was adorned in a gown of lemon veiling trimmed with snowdrops. It must
have been a colourful sight with the men dressed in military uniform.
An Eccentric Guest
Among so many guests of differing backgrounds, there was
bound to be a few eccentrics and Miss Lamont certainly fitted that category.
Miss Lamont was a lady of means and more or less lived at the hotel in 1896.
She was under the delusion that slanderous allegations were being made against
her character. She engaged the services of Moser’s Detective Agency and
enlisted the help of both Mr and Mrs Moser to combat the situation.
Mr Moser was despatched to Cairo, and no doubt realising
he was on to a good thing he charged Miss Lamont 21 guineas a week; the total
expenses for his trip came to 200 guineas.
The fee for the English enquiries was charged at one
guinea an agent, plus 2nd class rail travel and 12/6d for hotel
expenses.
Miss Lamont settled the accounts with the exception of the
final £64, which she refused to pay. Mrs Moser brought an action against her in
the Court of the Queen’s Bench and Miss Lamont responded by hiring a Queen’s
Counsel for the defence. The conclusion was that Mr Justice Charles, whilst
making comments about Miss Lamont’s mental capacity, referred the whole matter
to official referees.
Cars
On 14 November 1896 the emancipation of the motor car took
place and it is amusing to recall the relevant Act of Parliament referred to
them as ‘light locomotives’. It meant that at last cars were allowed to use the
public highway without the attendance of three persons, one of who had to
precede the vehicle by at least 20 yards; whether or not this personage was
still waving a red flag in the 1890s is open to debate.
To celebrate the event a group of cars made their way from
the Hotel Metropole, London, to the Hotel Metropole, Brighton. This day is
still commemorated by the annual Veteran Car Rally that takes place on the
first Sunday in November and was so memorably depicted in the classic film of Genevieve.
Back in 1896 there was a great deal of public interest in
the event and it was rashly claimed that 54 cars were to take part. As it
happened 21 of them failed to turn up and of the 22 that left Brixton, 20
managed to make it to Brighton.
copyright © Brighton &
Hove City Libraries There was a crowd of people, despite the rain, to watch the first cars arriving at Brighton on 14 November 1896. |
It was piously hoped that participants would have the good
manners not to overtake the car driven by Harry Lawson, president of the Motor
Car Club that had organised the run. This proved impossible when Lawson lost a
bolt from his cylinder and chugged into the Reigate lunch stop three-quarters
of an hour behind the first arrival. But he did manage to be the fourth car
into Brighton.
The Motor Car Club awarded gold medals to the first eight
arrivals. They were:
A Bollée Voiturette
Another Bollée
A Panhard omnibus
Harry Lawson’s car
A Panhard and Levessor
A Britannia Bath Chair
A Daimler Phaeton
A Pennington Tricycle
It should be noted that 10,000 cyclists were said to have
been on the road to Brighton at the same time as the car run was taking place.
Such a sight would have gladdened the heart of Mr Lawson, despite losing his
bolt, because he was the inventor of the safety bicycle as was rumoured to be
on the way to becoming a millionaire.
At the Metropole Hotel, Brighton, a celebratory dinner was
held after the event. Lord Winchilsea presided over the occasion and the Mayor
of Brighton and the Mayor of Reigate were also in attendance.
copyright © Brighton &
Hove City Libraries These two splendid cars were photographed outside the Hotel Metropole on 16 November 1896. |
Monday 16 September 1896 turned out to be a fine day, in
stark contrast to the miserable conditions of the Emancipation Run. A crowd of
curious Brighton residents made for the seafront to view these new-fangled
vehicles drawn up outside the Metropole. The police were out in force to
control the scene and from time to time halted the ordinary traffic to allow
people to cross the road.
The Brighton Herald summed up the general attitude
to the cars as follows:
‘At present the horseless carriage is certainly not a
thing of beauty. One of the first things to be done must be to design a car
that will at least have the appearance of completeness, and not that of a trap
or ordinary van with the horse left out.’
copyright © Brighton &
Hove City Libraries This car called Present Times also took part in the Emancipation Run. |
Carriages
copyright © Brighton &
Hove City Libraries Alfred Vanderbilt was photographed with the Venture in May 1908; he stands on the right and the guard Walter Godden is on the left. |
It might be thought that with the arrival of the railway
to Brighton in 1841 and the invention of motor cars, the coach and four horses
would soon be consigned to history. This was not so and well turned out
equipages continued to trot along the coast road.
By the 1890s coaching had become something of a
prestigious art and great care was taken to match the horses. For example the Nimrod
had matched pairs of greys or roans that drew a coach painted in primrose
yellow; the guards were decked out in plush yellow coats. This splendid mode of
transport was to be seen in the 1890s drawn up in front of the Metropole with
the famous Ted Fownes sitting majestically on the driver’s seat. Fownes wore a
silk top hat and lightly held the reins and long whip. Ted was one of the old
school that had grown up with coaching. He was born in 1851 and being out on
the open road in all weathers did not seem to do him much harm because he lived
until his ninety-second year, dying in 1943.
Ted Fownes would have been familiar with Hatchett’s White
Horse Cellars in Piccadilly, which was a famous rendezvous for the coaching
fraternity. When the premises changed hands in 1890, coaches were obliged to
find a new starting point. Some migrated to the Hotel Metropole in
Northumberland Avenue and thus a fitting conclusion to a pleasant outing was to
finish up at the Hotel Metropole, Brighton. The staff in the cigar department
at the London Metropole, were most helpful in dispensing timetables to
prospective customers.
Coaching was an expensive business, even with good
patronage. It really did not pay its way but there were still wealthy men eager
to have a chance of owning a prestigious coach and four and doing a spot of driving
now and again. For example, Captain J. Spicer and Captain Hamilton financed the
Nimrod.
In 1908 the conservative world of coaching was shaken up
by the arrival of American money in the shape of Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt. His
horses were American trotting horses and were swifter than the old English
coach horses. Strength was no longer paramount because road surfaces had been
improved; besides Vanderbilt set his horses on shorter stages so that they did
not tire themselves out.
copyright © Robert Jeeves Alfred Vandebilt’s coach Venture was photographed in around 1908 with the Metropole in the background. Note the horses’ distinctive headbands. |
Vanderbilt’s first coach was the Venture, which
called regularly at the Brighton Metropole. Later on he added the Old Times and
these two coaches with their beautiful horses became one of the sights of
Brighton.
There was huge excitement when the first Vanderbilt coach
came to Brighton and it was the ‘millionaire whip’s first business run’. The Venture
left London at 11 a.m. on 8 May 1908. The first team was the famous greys
with their manes braided with red and white ribbons and their heads adorned
with red and white carnations. The coach was painted maroon with red and white
fine-lining.
There were eight changes of horses on the way, the last
being at Pyecombe where the company adjourned for tea at the Plough. Alfred
Vanderbilt occupied the box seat dressed in a grey frock coat and grey top hat.
Guard Godden wore the Venture uniform of a single-breasted frock coat of
French grey with maroon cuffs, collar and lappets, black gaiters and boots and
a beaver hat. As the Venture sped along King’s Road, Godden was observed
playing the 100-year old bugle with all his old skill. Vanderbilt never forgot
the enthusiastic reception he received from crowds outside the hotel.
copyright © D.Sharp Alfred Vandebilt’s coach Venture photographed on its last run of the 1909 season. (Brighton Season Magazine) |
While Vanderbilt was running his coaches, he and his wife
occupied a house in Kemp Town. Young Master Vanderbilt had his own private
brougham with a basketwork body and the paintwork in Vanderbilt maroon. The
youngster was often seen taking the air in this carriage accompanied by his
nurse and two male servants. Locals were amused to see that the servants on the
box wore white hats whereas an English servant in that situation would have
worn a black silk hat.
Vanderbilt’s enthusiasm for the sport can be gauged from
the fact that he once shipped across the Atlantic 26 horses, 16 coaches plus a
team of grooms and assistants.
In 1913 Vanderbilt sold the Old Times to Lord
Leconfield, Lord Lieutenant of Sussex, who was also a keen sportsman and
relished the chance of driving the coach, which still came to the Brighton
Metropole. It was mostly Ted Fownes up on the box seat and Lord Leconfield
thought the world of him, writing this touching tribute:
‘During all these years I never saw him worried, nor did I
ever see one of the grooms at the changing places in any way rude to him. As a
coachman it was a wonder to see him drive; I have seen him have some very tough
rides, but he never worried: the only thing that you noticed was that he became
very silent and the muscles at the back of his neck swelled right up.’
The outbreak of the Great War in 1914 brought the glory
days of coaching to an abrupt end. It must have been a heart-breaking time for
Vanderbilt because the Army commandeered all the horses from the Venture and
the Old Times. Vanderbilt was very attached to all his horses and
understood the temperament of each one.
But Vanderbilt was nothing if not generous and he came up
with the idea of providing ambulances for use on the front line. He did not
wish to delegate the task and intended to supervise the undertaking personally.
On 1 May 1915 he set sail on the ill-fated Lusitania, which a German
submarine torpedoed on 7 May.
When the Lusitania began to list badly, there was
general panic aboard as people scrambled to get aboard the lifeboats. By
contrast Vanderbilt appeared quite calm, dressed in a grey pin-stripe suit with
a polka-dot tie as if he were going to Ascot. He instructed his valet to gather
together all the children he could find and Vanderbilt was seen hurrying to the
lifeboats with two children in his arms.
He died a hero’s death because although he could not swim,
he insisted on giving his lifejacket to Alice Middleton, a young nurse who
survived the disaster. Vandebilt’s body was never recovered although his family
offered a reward of 5,000 dollars for its discovery. Altogether, 1,195 people
were lost in the sinking of the Lusitania.
The Brighton Gazette had this to say:
‘It was with the greatest sorrow that Brightonians realise
that Mr Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt, who has been for so many years such a
well-known figure in the town, now is no more. His calmness under all
circumstances was remarkable, and this was often shown by the manner in which
he handled his horses at moments when calm judgement was the one thing that
evaded a possible accident.’
A Bevy of Beauties
Many a Gaiety Girl swept into the Hotel Metropole at
Brighton trailing expensive perfume and ardent admirers. Gaiety Girls were not
ordinary show-girls or actresses. They really were the crème de la crème and
the aristocracy did not hesitate to select brides from their ranks. George
Edwardes, known in theatrical circles as ‘the Guv’nor’, hand-picked them all.
Once selected, a Gaiety Girl was put through a rigorous
course of instruction from the best teachers; she learnt how to breathe
properly, speak correctly and dance lightly. Some of them were even sent off to
France to be given a little French polish as well as learn the language. A
Gaiety Girl was obliged to live up to the perceived image and the Guv’nor
advised her always to dine at Romano’s in the Strand because that was the
smartest place to be seen in town. He also happened to have a special
arrangement with the restaurant whereby a Gaiety Girl enjoyed a special tariff.
Not of course that she was likely to be short of an escort. Indeed it gave a
man enormous cachet to be seen about with a Gaiety Girl on his arm.
The Guv’nor also paid for the dresses the Gaiety Girls
wore for the four days of Ascot. This was not a trifling gift when you consider
that every stitch and tuck was done by hand. Edwardes must have regarded the
expense as an investment because the Gaiety Girls were seen as leaders of
fashion as well as stars of the stage and they were used to moving in the most
exclusive circles.
Constance (Connie) Gilchrist (1864-1946) was a Gaiety Girl
and Sir C.B. Cochrane remembered her at the Metropole not long after it opened.
Cochrane had more than a passing interest in the hotel because as a bored
sixteen-year old he worked in the surveyor’s office where the plans were drawn
up. He had been obliged to leave Brighton Grammar School and the companionship
of Aubrey Beardsley because his parents were financially embarrassed and he had
to start earning his own living. All Cochrane was really interested in was the
theatre and eventually he became a celebrated impresario.
Connie Gilchrist rose to fame by performing her
skipping-rope dance routine. For this she was dressed in a costume with a short
skirt, mauve tights and little black-laced boots. The artist Whistler
immortalised her in his painting that started off with the title The Girl
with the Skipping Rope but was later changed to The Girl in Gold. Connie
was very popular and a name on everyone’s lips, except it seems the judiciary.
The public loved the story of when Mr Justice Coleridge was presiding in court
when the name of Connie Gilchrist was mentioned to illustrate a point. ‘And
who’ intoned the learned judge ‘is Connie Gilchrist?’ It became a popular
catchphrase. Miss Gilchrist was so successful in her career that she was able
to hang up her skipping-rope at the age of 22 and on 19 July 1892 she married
the 7th Earl of Orkney.
An equally stellar Gaiety Girl was Rosie Boote whose
career was in way impeded by her inelegant surname. Anyway she soon changed it
by marrying the Marquess of Headfort. She too visited the Metropole.
copyright © J.Middleton The beautiful Gertie Millar came from humble origins but rose to adorn the aristocracy. |
In 1916 Gertie Millar (1879-1952) was spotted sipping tea at the Metropole. She was a graceful dancer as well as being beautiful. Her father was a Bradford mill worker and she went on the stage at the age of thirteen. In 1924 she retired from the stage and married the 2nd Earl of Dudley in the same year.
Another Metropole visitor was petite Gabrielle Ray who
received the ultimate in stage door gifts. Gaiety Girls were accustomed to
being showered with expensive presents and Guards officers jostled with the
likes of the Maharaja of Cooch Behar. In Gabrielle’s case her gift was a
complete grapevine trained in a half-hoop over a basket that had taken eight
years to grow. The grapevine yielded 20 bunches of black grapes and four strong
men were required to lift it.
copyright © J.Middleton Lily Elsie enjoyed great success as Sonia in The Merry Widow. King Edward VII was a fan. |
Lily Elsie also visited the Metropole. She was an
enchanting principal boy in The New Aladdin but her greatest success was
as Sonia in The Merry Widow, which ran for 778 performances. The first
performance took place on 17 June 1907 and Edward VII was such a fan he saw the
show four times.
Ladies rushed to copy Elsie’s large cartwheel-style hats.
No doubt the hats were highly fashionable but it was hard luck on anybody
seated behind a woman wearing such a creation. Ladies did not normally remove
their hats inside a theatre. The management of the Theatre Royal, Brighton used
to insert a request inside their programmes asking ladies and gentlemen to
remove their hats but ladies often chose to ignore it.
copyright © J.Middleton Zena Dare played the part of Peter in Barrie’s Peter Pan. The sisters Phyllis and Zena Dare sometimes appeared on the stage together |
Other Metropole-visiting stars of the stage were Julia James
plus Zena Dare (1887-1975) and her sister Phyllis Dare (1890-1975). Julia James
was a leading star at the Gaiety and had wonderful red hair that attracted
admiring glances wherever she went. Zena Dare was well-known for playing Peter
in Barrie’s Peter Pan.
In 1916 the great social occasion at the Metropole was
Sunday afternoon tea. Society and theatrical stars came in great numbers,
including Blanche Tolmin who appeared as Cleopatra at the Shaftesbury later in
the year, and Mademoiselle Alice Delysia (1889-1979) the French actress and
singer who Cochrane managed for many years.
Among the brightest stars was Vesta Tilley who also took
tea at the Metropole in May 1916. She first appeared on the stage at the age of
three and toured the country with her father Harry Ball, the tramp musician; he
also owned a wonderful performing dog called Fathead. Vesta Tilley became a
noted male impersonator and, ironically, a leader of men’s fashions in the
1890s. She spent her final years at Hove in St Aubyn’s Mansions by which time
she had become Lady de Frece. She died at the age of 88 in 1952 and a blue
plaque has recently been unveiled to her memory there.
It is remarkable how many of these stars lived to a grand
old age.
Another lady who greatly enjoyed Sunday teatime at the
Metropole was Countess Poulett. In February 1916 she was gowned in deep
sapphire velvet, sables across her shoulders, a long rope of pearls, diamond
ornaments and a high black toque. Two months later the Countess wore a lace
dress over a satin underskirt and a couple of weeks after that she was seen in
a rose-pink dress veiled in flounced black net while the swathed corsage was
arranged with a rose-pink sash and fastened with a rope of diamonds and pearls.
The Countess started life as plain Sylvia Storey, daughter
of Fred Storey, actor and dancer. Like other theatrical beauties Sylvia used
her career as a Gaiety Girl to climb the social ladder. She became Countess
Poulett in the greatest secrecy and when news of the marriage leaked out it
caused a sensation. But perhaps these great ladies of the theatre could play
the aristocratic role better than those born with blue blood in their veins.
Although Lillie Langtry (1853-1929) was never a Gaiety
Girl, her name eclipsed the other bright stars because of her royal
associations. By the time she stayed at the Metropole her days of greatest fame
were over because the eyes of the Prince of Wales had wandered elsewhere.
Lillie first met the prince on 24 May 1877 and although an
acknowledged beauty she seemed an unlikely candidate for a prince’s amour; she
was the daughter of the Dean of Jersey and a respectable married woman of three
years standing. When her friendship with the Prince of Wales became public
knowledge, people were terribly anxious to catch a glimpse of her. Whenever she
went shopping or riding in the park, people would follow her and stare. Some
were even bold enough to lift up her sunshade in order to have a good look at
her face. Even great ladies such as Lady Cadogan were known to climb onto iron
chairs in the park as Lillie went by for a better view. Her soubriquet ‘The
Jersey Lily’ arose because it was the title of the portrait Millais painted of
her; they both shared a Jersey background.
Lillie was obviously a lady of wit as well as beauty.
Bernard Falk, reporter and author, and later Hove resident, remembered how she
kept everyone amused on a voyage to the United States. When presented with an
immigration questionnaire, she answered as follows:
Distinguishing body marks: a pair of big blue eyes
Colour of hair: a matter of opinion
Complexion; troublesome
In contrast to the Gaiety Girls who often retired from the
stage once they entered society, Lillie trod the boards for the first time in
1881 making her debut in She Stoops to Conquer. She was never a great
success as an actress but her name still attracted an audience. She appeared at
the Theatre Royal, Brighton, in 1892; the local Press did not comment on her
acting skills but did record how the audience was startled at her wealth of diamonds.
Lillie was again in Brighton in December 1896, only this time she appeared at
the Royal Pavilion in the role of narrator. Tepid applause greeted her and
reviews were unkind ‘her efforts as an actress can scarcely be said to have
ever put her in the front rank’. Poor Lillie.
The Great War
It is true to say that while appalling losses were being
suffered on the other side of the English Channel, social life and the tinkling
of tea cups continued as usual at the Hotel Metropole. Guests were free to come
and go and if there was a sprinkling of military and naval uniforms that only
served to heighten the atmosphere.
Some officers were home on leave while others were
recuperating from wounds. There was a large military camp at Shoreham and
officers were frequently invited to the Metropole.
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove Lady Barrett-Lennard's 1916 charity concert in aid of wounded Canadian soldiers (Brighton Season Magazine) |
In March 1916 a Mrs Barnes motored over from Eastbourne
for Sunday afternoon tea at the Metropole and amongst her party were members of
the Royal Flying Corps (the RAF was not formed until 1918).
Another lady doing her bit for the war effort was Lady
Barrett-Lennard who arranged a matinée in the Clarence Rooms in aid of a fund
providing entertainment for wounded Canadian soldiers. Tickets cost 5/- and tea
was included.
As far as fashion went in 1916, it seems the ladies who
frequented the Metropole were vying with each other to appear in the most
expensive furs. It can only be the prestige involved because the hotel was well
heated and together with the press of company, there was no need to go around
dripping with furs.
Imagine the scene in January 1916 when Mrs Woolley wore a
long coat of musquash trimmed with skunk, Mrs Styan was clad in her Russian
furs, Mrs Seager P. Hunt from Boston, U.S.A. sported her wonderful sables, and
Mrs Finch was wrapped in rich white fox furs. Then there was novelist Miss
Winifred Graham in a coat of real pony skin and actress Miss Blanche Tolmin in
a velvet suit trimmed with grey opossum fur.
By 1918 conditions on the home front had become more
difficult. There were lighting restrictions and the use of petrol for frivolous
journeys was frowned upon. There were food shortages and ‘meatless’ days. In
these circumstances a local reporter was shocked to find a Brighton lady giving
a large party for her female friends at the Metropole although it would have
been acceptable had there been wounded officers present.
Princess Louise (1848-1939)
Of course not even a Gaiety Girl could acquire the prestige
inherent in a genuine member of the royal family. Such a personage was Princess
Louise who stayed at the Hotel Metropole, Brighton for ten days in August 1917.
Princess Louise was the sixth child and fourth daughter
born to Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. Queen Victoria quite expected this
child to be different because she was born in the tumultuous year of 1848, the
year of revolutions. Princess Louise turned out to be the most beautiful of the
daughters as well as the most talented and with an independent mind of her own.
She became a fine sculptor and studied under experts to acquire her skills. It
must have been galling for her when critics and the public in general assumed
her sculptures relied heavily on the skills of her teachers or assistants in
her studio. Perhaps they did not think a member of the royal family could
become a true artist. Her most famous work is a full-size sculpture of her
mother as a young queen in white Carrara marble, which stands outside
Kensington Palace.
Princess Louise was close to her eldest brother, the
Prince of Wales, and indeed it seems she shared something of his temperament as
regards having an eye for the opposite sex. But what was cheerfully overlooked
in a prince was considered scandalous in a princess. There were rumours of
affairs and perhaps even an illegitimate baby. Proof that there must be some
basis for these stories rests on the fact that papers relating to Princess
Louise are firmly locked away in the Royal Archives and cannot be accessed by
researchers despite the good lady having been dead these past 77 years.
On 21 March 1871 Princess Louise married the Marquess of
Lorne, later 9th Duke of Argyll. The publicity stated it was a true
love match but it was more probably a case of the princess being leant on by
those in authority. There were no children of the marriage.
Princess Louise was very popular with the public and she
often made public appearances when Queen Victoria was unwilling or unable to do
so. Princess Louise moved in artistic circles and she had become accustomed to
talking with all sorts of people. She had the common touch and was able to
relate to ordinary folk and talk to them in a friendly way. She was widowed in
1914 and she became tireless in her visits to the wounded in hospitals up and
down the country, She even sold some of her own possessions to raise funds for
the war effort.
It was for the purpose of bringing comfort to wounded
soldiers that Princess Louise visited Brighton in 1917 where she stayed at the
Metropole with two ladies-in-waiting Mrs Holden and Miss Styles.
Princess Louise visited wounded soldiers at the Royal
Pavilion. It was not her first visit because she had also visited in January
1916 when it was still in use as an Indian Military Hospital. But from April
1916 the place had become the Pavilion Military Hospital for Limbless Soldiers.
The Brighton Herald reported on her 1917 visit thus: ‘with the wounded
men – all of whom had lost a limb, in some cases alas two! – the Princess
showed the tenderest sympathy, and she chatted to many of them in that
friendly, unaffected way, which at once put them at their ease.’
Princess Louise also visited York Place Hospital. This
occupied former school buildings and was in use as an Indian Military Hospital
too for a while and later, like the Royal Pavilion, was designated for ordinary
British troops.
copyright © J.Middleton A nostalgic glimpse of the Metropole with the sun setting behind the West Pier |
Sources
Thanks to the
following people allowing me to reproduce their photographs:
Brighton &
Hove City Libraries
George Cook
Robert Jeeves (Step
Back in Time 36 Queen’s Road Brighton)
Tony
McKendrick-Warden)
J.S. Otlowski
Darcy Packwood
Brian Walker
Thanks are also
due to many people who kindly provided me with help and valuable information.
Amongst them are the following:
Harold Lay and Ken
Amiet, Beatrice Clissold, James W. Collins, Arthur Knight, Ken Lyon, Jim Park
Denis Russell, Dorothy Sharp, Joe Vinall
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Copyright © J.Middleton 2016
page layout by D.Sharp