Judy Middleton 2002 (revised 2024)
|
copyright © J.Middleton
There are some fine examples of Willett-built houses in
Eaton Gardens. This is number 7; note the decorative details |
The Hove Courier (8 April 1882) had this to say:
‘Eaton Gardens, another aristocratic neighbourhood of
detached residences with large gardens and bold carriage approaches, arranged
and built by Mr Willett, is just becoming filled, six (all that is finished) of
the twelve houses already being tenanted and last week one was sold for
£4,680.’
By 1886 Eaton Gardens contained ten occupied houses; in
1888 the road south of
Cromwell Road for a distance of 358 feet was declared a
public highway
William Willett
In around 1875 William Willett started his building
operations at Hove with two houses in Second Avenue, in one of which he resided
for some time. Afterwards he turned his attention to building on land belonging
to the Stanford Estate. He constructed many residences in Wilbury Road, Eaton
Road, Cromwell Road, The Drive, and Eaton Gardens.
|
copyright © J.Middleton
A Willet-built house was famous for its fine details,
seen here at 7 Eaton Gardens. |
In 1879 Willett lived at 9
Wilbury Road, in 1881 he lived
at 1 Eaton Gardens but by 1883 he was located at The Drive where he remained
until his death. It was in the latter house that Willett entertained General
Booth of the Salvation Army in 1887. In 1893 the Willett Estate Office was at
79 The Drive.
J.W. Lister, Chief Librarian of Hove, wrote the following
tribute:
‘The work of Mr Willett, senior, is a triumph of private
enterprise and Hove can neither estimate nor repay the debt she owes to this
worthy citizen … The quietest and most unassuming of men without advantage of
birth, wealth or scholarship, he built upon the foundation of a good and honest
heart … He was a pillar of Nonconformity and was given to charity and
hospitality. His hobby was the building and maintenance of the Clarendon
Mission Hall.’
|
copyright © J.Middleton
William Willett built the Clarendon Mission Hall. |
It is worth noting that when he undertook the building of
the
Police Seaside Home in Portland Road he did it at cost price, thus
foregoing any profit because he believed in the worthiness of the enterprise.
|
copyright © J.Middleton
The Police Seaside Home is a fine example in red brick
of Willett’s work. |
In fact his acts of charity were not trumpeted abroad
because he preferred ‘to do good by stealth’. He retired in 1900 and died in
1913 exactly six years after his wife had died; he was buried in Hove Cemetery
on the anniversary of her interment.
William Willett was so well known that his death merited
an obituary in The Times (12 November 1913).
‘Mr Willett, a Colchester man, founded the business of
building and contracting now carried on in Kensington, Hampstead and
elsewhere.’ The firm enjoyed a high reputation for building solid town houses
and the term ’Willett-built’ applied ‘to a type of residence, which is
distinguished by individuality of design both inside and out.’
|
copyright © Royal
Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
An 1915 advert from the Brighton Season Magazine for the sale of two Willett homes in Grand Avenue |
His son, another William Willett (1856-1915) worked
alongside his father in the business. He was also a member of Hove Council.
Both Willetts had a horror of gloomy passages and dark corners and consequently
‘brightness and cheerfulness were always striven for’ in their houses. Willett,
junior, was the originator of daylight saving or summer time but he died before
his idea was implemented. His pamphlet The Waste of Daylight met with
general derision but he had important supporters in Winston Churchill, Lloyd
George, Keir Hardie, Balfour and Edward VII.
Willett, junior, died in 1915, only sixteen months after
his father. Willett junior’s son, Herbert William Mills Willett died in 1917, 26
months after his father. It must surely be unusual for three generations of a
family to expire within four years.
|
copyright © J.Middleton
This impressive doorway belongs to 7 Eaton Gardens. |
Late Appreciation
Today the name of William Willett is a byword for good
quality building and interesting decorative details. Unfortunately, Hove
councillors came rather late to an appreciation of such qualities and it is
incredible to record that it was not until 1990 that a Willett Estate
Conservation Area was established although it must be admitted that in 1989
numbers 3, 8 and 14 became listed buildings. Some people considered it a case
of shutting the stable door after the horse had bolted because some of the
handsome houses had already been demolished. But now the aim was to ensure the
preservation of those that remained intact.
By 2001 the only original houses were as follows:
Numbers 3, 5, 7, 13 and 17 on the west side
Numbers 8, 10 and 14 on the east side
House Notes
Number 2
Edmund Yates (1831-1894) lived in the house from 1891 to
1894. He was a journalist and author and a friend of Charles Dickens. Yates was
famous in his day and his name was one of four inscribed around the interior of
the dome at
Hove Library as being a noted Hove resident. The other three were
Richard Jefferies, Roden Noel and
Hablot Browne.
In 1987 developers wanted to pull down the house and build
an eight-storey block of flats but planning permission was refused in July of
that year. Michael Ray said the house was of particular importance because it
occupied a prominent site and was screened by trees.
By 1990 the house had fallen into a bad state of repair
and attacks from thieves and vandals made matters worse. In fact the situation
was so bad that the building could not even be converted into flats. Hove
Council was obliged to give permission for its demolition but the front wall
must be preserved. Moreover, bricks salvaged from the demolition would be
re-used together with other second-hand bricks; even the mortar would be
treated to give it a mellow look.
David Garbutt of Garbutt McMillan was the architect behind
the scheme and Newbay Construction were the builders. The development was
called Eaton Gate and it proved to be an expensive undertaking.
In October 1991 Roderic Chaffin-Laird, chairman of
Brightsky, spoke highly of the support given by local councillors, particularly
Peter Martin, former chairman of planning, and Garry Peltzer Dunn, former
leader of the council, in the enterprise.
The building has an impressive entrance hall with ornate
plaster cornices and panelled doors. Flats were sold for prices ranging from
£85,000 to £250,000. The completed building, which also has a frontage to Eaton
Road, was deemed to be an architectural success.
Number 3
|
copyright © J.Middleton
Number 3 Eaton Gardens was built in the 1880s. |
This Willet-built house was erected in the 1880s and on 7
December 1989 it received listed building status.
In 1999 although the ground floor remained in use as a
doctor’s surgery, planning permission was given for the charity Phoenix House
to utilise the rest of the premises. It was stated that around eight former
drug and alcohol users and their respective families would live in the house,
which would replace a smaller establishment in Seafield Road, Hove. It later
transpired that the house in Eaton Gardens would be able to accommodate twelve
adults plus ten children under the age of twelve for a period of six months.
Naturally enough, there was uproar among other residents
of Eaton Gardens with petitions and letters of protest flying about; the Evening
Argus stated there were 498 signatures and 83 letters of objection while The
Leader specified 49 names on the petition and 80 letters of objection. But
whatever the exact numbers were, councillors took no notice and voted eight to
four in favour of allowing the scheme to go forward.
The director of operations with the Phoenix House Housing
Association said they had been established for over 30 years and were the
largest drug rehabilitation association. A manager would be present in the
premises on a 24-hour basis and there would be a strict family routine.
It was announced that from 1 June 2000 the Eaton Gardens
Surgery would be known as the Eaton Centre and would provide general medical
services as well as dental, chiropody and complementary health care. Eaton
Gardens Surgery and Goodwood Court Medical Centre were to merge.
|
copyright © J.Middleton
In this photograph of 3 Eaton Gardens some of the
intricate detailing can be seen. |
Number 4
During the Second World War the house was the headquarters
of the Brighton & Hove League of Remembrance that supplied garments to the
armed forces, hospitals and missions.
In the late 1950s Maud Stewart-Baxter lived at flat 5. She
was of Scottish descent and became a well-known composer of her time and some
of her works remain in print to this day. At the age of eight she composed her
first song and when she was fourteen she won the Associated Board Open
Scholarship for violin playing out of 300 entrants. She considered her best
song to be
Loveliness More Fair. In later years her advice to aspiring
composers was never to waste time on poor lyrics because only fine words could
inspire fine music. Her favourite composers were Bach, Beethoven and Brahms.
She had a wide range of interests including swimming, fishing and shooting and
she also read a great deal. She enjoyed collecting old china, fine glass and
seals. She lived at various addresses in Hove including flat 2 / 35
Adelaide Crescent (1951) 49 Wilbury Gardens (1954) and Eaton Gardens.
Number 5
In the 1880s Mrs Henrietta Challis put this property up
for sale. Her husband called her Hetty and he was a member of the Reform Club.
But he had recently died and she must have felt the house was too large for her
now she was widowed. The house was first offered for sale on 17 November 1884
and again on 20 April 1885.
The property had a frontage of 165 feet and a depth of 145
feet; the house was surrounded by lawns and shrubberies and was approached by a
carriage drive.
Glazed panelled doors fitted with cathedral glass divided
the entrance and inner halls.
The dining room measured 22 feet 8 inches by 17 feet.
There was a carved, marble chimney-piece, a decorative bronzed stove with tiled
hearth, and there was an enriched ceiling.
The drawing room measured 22 feet 8 inches by 17 feet.
There was a richly carved statuary marble chimney-piece and tiled hearth.
A broad staircase led up to the first floor where there
were four principal bedrooms.
There were a further four bedrooms on the second floor.
The basement contained the housekeeper’s room, a spacious
kitchen, large scullery, larder, butler’s pantry, manservant’s bedroom, wine,
beer and coal cellars and several large cupboards.
In 1883 an inventory of the house contents was taken and
the effects sold off on 13, 14 and 15 May 1885. Among the items were the
following:
A wainscot oak dining room table with three extra leaves
measuring 16 feet 3 inches by 13 feet 6 inches
A brilliant tone seven-octave tri-chord pianoforte in a
walnut case by Broadwood & Sons
A 28-day clock in an ormolu case enriched with a Sevres
china dial and eight Sevres china panels under a glass dome
Sevres china vases richly gilt
A table mirror in a Dresden china frame with raised
flowers and figures (from the south front bedroom)
Most rooms contained a Berlin black ornamental curb fender
The contents of the cellars included the following:
One dozen bottles of Pol Roger champagne (1874 vintage)
Fifteen pints of T. Logette’s champagne
One dozen bottles of sparkling Moselle from Deinhard &
Co
One dozen bottles of Amontillado sherry
One dozen bottles and eleven pints of Chateau Margaux
claret
Twenty-three bottles of hock
In 1921 Hove Council gave planning permission for the
property to be converted into flats.
Number 8
In 1925 Mr A. Faulkner on behalf of the Willett Estate
submitted plans to convert the property into eight flats. Hove Council gave
approval but it appears the conversion did not take place.
On 7 December 1989 the house received listed building
status.
In February 1990 the William Willett Trustees applied for
listed building consent to demolish the house but Hove Council refused
permission.
In November 1993 it was stated that the house was one of
the last vacant and un-modernised Willett mansion houses in Hove and would be
sold on 6 December 1993 in the ground floor lounge. There was planning
permission for the house to be turned into nine flats with another five in a
new block at the rear.
In 2001 it appeared that the bricks had been cleaned and
thus it gives the appearance of what a Willett house looked like when it was
newly built.
Number 9
In 1905 Herbert Welsford Smithers (1868-1913) and his
family occupied the house. The following year Herbert and his brother Edward
Allfree Smithers founded their brewery at Brighton with the amalgamation of the
North Street Brewery and Bedford Brewery. In 1913 they acquired West Street
Brewery (Vallance & Catt) and in 1919 the firm purchased
Portslade Brewery.
Edward lived in a house called The Gables at Furze Hill. The brothers were
unusually close and when Herbert died on 9 June 1913, Edward never got over his
loss and died on 5 February 1914. The grieving father donated two stained glass
windows in their memory at
All Saints, Hove; he only had one daughter left, Mrs
C. Somers Clarke.
|
copyright © Brighton & Hove City Libraries copyright © J.Middleton
This fine portrait of Captain Smithers is stored in
the Roll of Honour Archive at Hove Library, the elegant memorial plaque in All Saints is in memory of Captain
Reginald Cuthbert Welsford Smithers. |
But there was further tragedy in store for the family.
Captain Reginald Cuthbert Welsford Smithers of the 7th Battalion
King’s Own Light Infantry was killed in action near Ypres on 16 August 1917; he
was only nineteen years of age.
Captain Smithers’ widowed mother married again, becoming
Mrs A.J. Hollick and continued to live at 9 Eaton Gardens.
Number 10
Sir Robert Hussey (1802-1887) occupied this house in the
1880s. He joined the East India Company in 1819 and followed a long and
distinguished Army career, seeing action in Burma, India and the Crimea. He was
eventually promoted to the rank of general.
In 1846 he married Emma, widow of Captain Gordon of the
Madras Army. She died just four days before her husband’s death. He died at
Eaton Gardens on 3 May 1887.
From at least 1940 the house was run as a registered
nursing home and it was called the Eaton Gardens Nursing Home. On 3 December
1962 Richard Olivier was born there. He was the son of famous actors Sir
Laurence Olivier (1907-1989) and Joan Plowright who married on 17 March 1961
when he was aged 53 and she was 29 years old. Unusually for those times,
Olivier was present at the birth. This was Olivier’s third marriage, his first
being to Jill Esmond. In 1940 he married the actress Vivien Leigh (1913-1967).
Olivier was not content with being just an actor and tried his hand at being an
actor-manager too, notably in three films of Shakespeare’s plays.
The actress Fay Compton (1894-1978) lived here for a year
before she died in London on 2 December aged 84. She was the sister of author
Sir Compton Mackenzie (1883-1972) whose most famous work Whisky Galore (1947)
was made into a memorable film two years later. Fay and her brother came from a
long, theatrical line, with both parents, a grandfather, a sister plus various
aunts and uncles all being involved in the theatre.
Olive Gilbert, a friend of Ivor Novello, died in the
nursing home aged 82 in February 1981. Olive Gilbert was born in 1898 at Carmarthen
and thus shared a Welsh background with Ivor Novello, She started her career
with the Carl Rosa Opera Company but in 1935 joined Ivor Novello’s company. She
appeared in many of the musicals he wrote including Glamorous Nights (1935)
Careless Rapture (1936) Crest of the Wave (1937) The Dancing
Years (1939) Perchance to Dream (1945) and King’s Rhapsody (1949).
Novello wrote We’ll Gather Lilacs especially for Olive (it came from Perchance
to Dream) and it proved to be one of his most popular songs, almost
trumping that other favourite Keep the Home Fires Burning. When Ivor
Novello died on 6 March 1951 Olive was at his bedside and at his funeral We’ll
Gather Lilacs was played and relayed to the crowds outside the crematorium.
Ivor Novello left Olive a cash legacy, as well as his
collection of quartz, amber and jade items. In his biography of Novello the
author MacQueen Pope wrote:
‘Ivor owed much to Olive who for a long time looked after
him, controlled his staff and his flat, to say nothing of Redroofs, which
became perhaps the best known theatrical home in the world.’
Ivor and Olive had separate flats at the Aldwych and she
was one of a select party that accompanied him to his home in Montego Bay.
As for Olive’s musical abilities, even a stern critic like
James Agate admitted her singing was admirable. She gave 2,000 performances as
Sister Margareta in The Sound of Music.
It is said that in later life Olive lived at
Brunswick Square, Hove and her friend, celebrity vet Buster Lloyd-James, also lived in Hove.
He moved from Courtenay Gate to a house near Hove Park and she presented him
with some lilac trees and a magnolia. When she became too frail to live on her
own she moved into Eaton Gardens Nursing Home.
Ethel Read celebrated her 108th birthday at the
home in September 1992; she was believed to be the oldest person in Sussex. She
died in October 1993, two weeks after her 109th birthday, by which
time she had lived at the home for eleven years.
Mike Enright had run the home since 1979 after he retired from
the Royal Navy, having served for 27 years. In June 2001 Mr Enright, 66, and
his wife Mary announced that they were closing down the home and 24 residents
were obliged to move out and find alternative accommodation. The Enrights were
caught in a cleft stick, as it were, because on one hand there were strict
planning regulations governing what they were allowed to do to the house while
on the other hand new Government regulations were due to come into force in
April 2002. The new measures aimed at the comfort of the residents meant that
it was no longer financially viable for small homes to stay open. During the
previous year, 54 beds in Brighton and Hove had been lost because of the new
rules. Perhaps the last straw for the Enrights was being told to close until a
new lift costing £600,000 had been installed; the reality was that planning
permission for such an improvement had already been rejected.
Number 11
Sir Joseph Sheridan (1882-1964) lived in this house in the
1960s. He was born in Ireland and was called to the Irish Bar in 1907. He
entered the Colonial Service the following year and rose to become Chief
Justice in Tanganyika in 1929 and Chief Justice of Kenya from 1934 to 1946. He
was knighted in 1932. He was married to Muriel, also from Ireland, and they had
two sons and four daughters. Sir Joseph died on Boxing Day 1964.
Number 12
James Bull (1844-1911) lived in this house when he came to
Hove in 1888. He was born in Bedford and educated at Bedford Grammar School. He
followed the career of civil engineer and spent some 30 years working on
various projects in Spain including constructing railways and developing mines.
When he lived at Hove he still made periodic visits back to Spain. He called
his Hove residence Valverde House because of his Spanish enterprises and it was
named after Valverde del Camino (Heulva). He was married to Mary and they had
two sons and three daughters.
In 1900 Bull was elected to Hove Council and to East
Sussex County Council. At Hove he was chairman of the Works Committee and his
knowledge of engineering was of great value. During this period the King’s
Gardens extension scheme and Kingsway widening scheme were carried out. Bull
was also chairman of the sub-committee formed to design the layout of
St Ann’s Well Gardens. He was one of the original members of the Hove Bench and gave
liberal assistance to All Saints building fund. In 1902 Bull and George
Cheesman were both proposed for the position of Alderman but in the ensuing
vote, Cheesman won. Bull was a Freeman of the City of London and a member of
Turner’s Company.
Bull suffered from heart trouble for three years and for
the last eighteen months of his life, he was unable to leave the house. He died
on 14 January 1911 and was buried in
Hove Cemetery where his grave is marked by
a white cross.
He left a widow who died on 16 July 1946. One of his
daughters married Captain Grant of Third Avenue while another became the wife
of Captain Herbert Spencer of Byfleet.
Today, Bull’s residence has long gone and a block of flats
now occupies the site but it is pleasant to record the name of Valverde House
is still in use.
Ronald Martin lived here in the 1960s and his career
spanned both commercial and fine art. His most famous design was for the Mars
bar wrapper. He also worked on many paintings of the old
Hove Town Hall, one
being a watercolour he completed just two months before the building was
wrecked by fire.
Hove Museum purchased it for its collection. Martin also
painted the Town Hall as it was being demolished.
Number 13
|
copyright © J.Middleton
The ‘notorious Marquess of Ailesbury and his plebeian
wife’ once lived at 13 Eaton Gardens. |
The ‘notorious Marquess of Ailesbury and his plebeian
wife’ occupied the house in the 1890s. He was George William Thomas
Brudenell-Bruce, the 4th Marquess (1863-1894). The residence in
Eaton Gardens was called Savernake House because the Brudenell-Bruce family
were hereditary Wardens of Savernake Forest. The lady came from very humble
circumstances and attended the Central National School in Brighton. But when
she grew up she achieved fame on the stage as Dolly Tester. She married
Viscount Savernake in 1884 at Brighton Registry Office and two years later she
became a Marchioness. She attended the last Polo and Hunt Ball held at the
Royal Pavilion resplendent in white satin and flashing diamonds. Her husband
maintained an interest in horse racing but ended up being warned off every
course in the country.
Number 14
By the 1980s this villa was in use as a nursing home and
it received listed building status on 7 December 1989. In 2001 it was still a
registered nursing home called Sunningdale.
Number 15
|
copyright © J.Middleton Phyllis and Zena
Dare |
Phyllis
Dare (1890-1975) lived in this house from 1955 and remained for
several years before moving to 22 Pembroke Avenue. Although she was
born in London, she would not have been unfamiliar with Brighton and
Hove, having appeared with her sister Zena Dare at the Hippodrome,
Brighton.
Phyllis Dare trod the boards from an early age, rather like Vesta
Tilley, who also retired to Hove. Phyllis was on the stage from the
age of nine and by the time she was sixteen, she was a seasoned
performer in musical comedies and pantomime. Phyllis was enormously
popular and indeed during the First World War she was a pin-up girl.
The public eagerly bought the many postcards produced for her fans,
and she was so in demand that the poor girl was obliged to sign up to
300 postcards a week. She had a great success at the Shaftesbury
Theatre when
she was nineteen, taking on a musical role in The
Arcadians, which
ran for no less than 809 performances.
But
there was tragedy in her life too because her song-writer fiance died
in 1917, and for a while she could not face the stage. She might also
have thought that she deserved a respite, and she was well able to do
so because the fiance kindly left her some money. Perhaps she felt
old before her time and she wrote her autobiography From
School to Stage during
the lull when she was only 27 years old. On returning to the stage,
she opted to take on straight acting roles. But she did not neglect
her singing either, because she recorded some songs. She retired in
1951.
Number 16
In 1891 Mrs Campbell and Miss Campbell obviously thought
that 16 Eaton Gardens was not spacious enough for a grand social event. They
hired the newly-built Clarence Rooms attached to the Hotel Metropole, Brighton,
where the local Press reported they gave a charming ‘At Home’. 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.
Captain
Sir Henry Digby-Beste (1883-1964) lived in flat 5 in the early 1960s.
He was born in Hampshire, educated at Stonyhurst, and at the age of
sixteen he went to sea on the sailings ships of the Shaw Savill Line.
Six years later he was commissioned as a sub-lieutenant in the Royal
Indian Marines, and saw service in the Persian Gulf. He served as
Deputy Port Conservator of Madras. For ten years he was Captain
Superintendent of the Indian Mercantile Marine training ship
Dufferin.
During
the Second World War he served with the British Expeditionary Force
off the French coast, and finally found himself once again in Indian
waters. During the 1950s he was Chief Scout Commissioner.
He
was married twice. His first wife was Olave, whose father was a
colonel in the Indian Medical Service, and they had three sons and
two daughters; Olave died in 1955. In 1958 he married Amy Mary
Taylor. He died at the age of 80 at Eaton Gardens in September 1964.
Number 17
This house is one of the originals. An unusual detail is
the imposing porch standing guard over the entrance. The pillars are of a
peculiar design because they start off plain and unadorned and then halfway up
they turn into Corinthian columns.
Number 20
|
copyright © Tackagain
The German siren whistle datiing around 1900 is engraved with the following:-
H.J.S.B. Cunliffe 20 Eaton Gardens, Hove. |
In 2018 at Newcastle an
interesting object with a Hove connection came to light. It was a
German siren whistle, dating from around 1900, engraved with the
following
H.J.S.B. Cunliffe 20 Eaton Gardens, Hove. Heinrich
James Saint Benno Cunliffe was born on 9 July 1864 in Munich. It
would be interesting to know why he was born in Munich – his
parents were obviously proud of the fact because he was named
Heinrich, and St Benno is in fact the patron saint of that city.
(Later on, Heinrich would find it expedient to anglicise his name to
Henry). His father, also called Henry, could have been living in
Germany because of his business interests, and census returns
identify his profession as banker. Eventually, Henry Cunliffe,
senior, settled at Hove, where he lived with his wife Annie and
children at 28
Adelaide Crescent from 1871 to 1881. It is interesting
to note that out of the seven servants employed there, two senior
ones were of Swiss nationality.
H.J.S.B. Cunliffe was educated at
Eton – by this time calling himself Henry – and then went up to
Oxford as an undergraduate at Exeter College, gaining his BA in 1886,
and being awarded his MA a year later. In 1889 Henry married Edith
Woodhead at St Patrick’s Church, Hove, - at that time a very
fashionable place of worship. His bride Edith was a resident of Hove,
having been baptised at
St Andrew’s Old Church in 1862. Her sister,
Grace Eyre Woodhead, became famous in local annals for her
philanthropic work and indeed her name is still remembered to this
day through the Grace Eyre Foundation. Meanwhile, Henry and Edith’s
concerns were for the plight of animals and they made several large
donations to the Brighton Division of the
Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals, of which Henry was also a committee member.
On marriage Henry and Edith took
up residence at 20 Eaton Gardens, which he continued to occupy until
he died on 30 November 1930. Perhaps the couple hoped to have a large
family because the spacious house was surrounded by large gardens,
which by the 1950s supported a massive screen of mature trees. But
sadly, no children arrived. Perhaps this led to tensions in the
marriage, and it is a fact that by 1911 the couple were living apart,
which was a rare step to take in those days. Edith moved away from
Hove and went to live in Waldron, a village near Heathfield, and had
four servants to look after her.
Henry consoled himself by
concentrating on intellectual pursuits, and in 1908 he published his
work Catholicism on a Philosophical Basis. It is unlikely to
have been a bestseller, despite its modest price of 2/6d.
Thenceforth, he described himself as an author.
It seems likely that Henry was a
keen bicycle rider, hence ownership of the siren whistle. Cycling was
an extremely popular sport, and Hove with its broad, uncluttered
roads, was a cyclist’s paradise. At one time, bicycles at Hove far
outnumbered other forms of transport. But there was one grave
drawback – there was no braking system, and no warning bell. In
fact, early Acme siren whistles were known as a ‘cyclist’s road
clearer’. If a cyclist wanted to warn an unwary pedestrian of his
presence, a good blast on his siren whistle would usually do the
trick. Henry must have been fond of his whistle to take the trouble
to have his name engraved upon it. The question remains – how did
Henry’s whistle end up in Newcastle? A clue lies in the fact that
Annie, wife of Henry Cunliffe, senior, was born in Newcastle, and
because Henry Cunliffe, junior, had no children, it seems probable
that relatives from Newcastle, claimed his possessions.
(Additional
research by D. Sharp)
Eaton Restaurant
In around 1944 the residents of Eaton Mansions formed
their own dining club and it was after the war that the landlord expanded the
small restaurant. In around 1953 he sold it to Mrs Barber who ran it as a
high-class restaurant. In 1960 Mrs Barber sold the enterprise to Mr Daniel and
two years later John and Tony Cutress, directors of
Forfars, purchased the
business from Mr Daniel’s liquidators.
|
Photograph from the 1910 Brighton Season Magazine showing
Forfars Confectionary Department in Hova Villas |
Mrs June Cutress devised the re-decorating scheme, which
was carried out by Ring’s and Braybon’s. It was keeping business in the family,
as it were, because John Ring was June Cutress’s father. It was John Ring who
fitted the luxurious and specially designed carpet.
|
From Hove’s Coronation Souvenir Book
(1953) |
There were 120 wines on the wine list to choose from and
it was appropriate since John Cutress was a Chevalier de Tastevin. John Rowlins
was the manager and the restaurant could seat 85 people while the function room
could accommodate 40.
In 1980 the Eaton Restaurant won the Golden Crowns Award,
the highest distinction awarded by the Automobile Association. The restaurant
was run as part of the Forfar’s group initially, and then as a family company.
By 1987 it was described as one of the most distinguished restaurants in the
area, having also won awards from both the AA and Michelin.
In September 1987 the Cutresses sold the Eaton Restaurant
for £200,000 to a company headed by Councillor Alfred Feld of the Norfolk
Resort Hotel. It was re-named the Eaton Gardens Restaurant.
In November 1991 Gilles Ferrod, the French manager,
declared the restaurant a Beaujolais free zone. He said the much-publicised
event was nothing but hype and the quality of the wine had gone down.
In March 1992 there was a full-page in the Evening
Argus celebrating the restaurant’s 25th anniversary. By then it
could seat up to 120 people and 90 wines of quality were on the wine list.
However, John Cutress retorted that celebrating a 25th anniversary
was a trifle premature since Resort Hotels plc had only been there five years.
On 23 March 1997 the actor Terence Morgan and his wife
Georgina celebrated their Golden Wedding Anniversary with a ball at the
restaurant. Among their guests were Lord and Lady Attenborough, Donald and
Diana Sinden and Judy Cornwell. Morgan met his wife at the Piccadilly Theatre,
London, while working with Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh in The Skin of
Our Teeth. They married in Caxton Hall. Morgan took a leading role in 26
films and played the part of Hamlet early in his career. The couple had lived
at Hove since the late 1950s.
In 1994 Robert Feld was managing director of Resort Hotels
when the company collapsed with debts of over £70 million.
In May 1998 it was revealed that Club Moor, registered in
Crawley, but owned by a Brighton businessman, was the new owner of the
restaurant. But staff refused to reveal his identity. The restaurant employed
17 full-time staff.
In March 1999 the council refused to grant a public
entertainment licence to the management because new electrical work had not
been carried out as required. The restaurant later closed and in July 1999 was
put up for sale by contractual tender. The property included numbers 11 and 13
Eaton Gardens as a freehold investment beside the restaurant premises. The
house contained 15 self-contained flats comprising 8 studio flats, 5
one-bedroom and 2 two-bedroom flats.
In October 1999 Bourne Property Developments put in a
planning application to convert the restaurant premises into five flats and
consent was granted by December.
John Cutress said he was very disappointed about the
outcome. He remembered what a popular place it had been with its fine wines and
traditional English cuisine; he had employed the same cook for 25 years.
Bramber Court, Steyning Court, Valentine Court
These blocks of flats were built in the 1960s
Eaton Court
|
copyright © J.Middleton
Eaton Court was built with red bricks, in start
contrast to the pale bricks used in the Willett-built houses, known oddly
enough as white bricks. |
This block of flats is built on the corner of Eaton Road
and Eaton Gardens.
Eaton Hall
In 1978 the sites of the old houses numbers 15 and 17 were
to be numbered as 15 Eaton Gardens and the new property was to be called Eaton
Hall.
Gainsborough House
This block of flats was built in around 1980.
Valverde House
It was named after the house of the same name at number
12, that once occupied the site and engineer James Bull lived there.
Vanbrugh Court
|
copyright © J.Middleton
The new and the old – Vanbrugh Court and number 13. |
It was built in 1989 and contained 31 double-glazed
apartments; there was garaging underneath the building. Prices were from
£69,000 to £300,000. In July 1999 a two-bedroom flat was on sale for £105, 000.
Veric
This block of flats was built in the 1980s. A resident,
Maurice Michaels, waged a long battle with the council about improving the
lighting in Eaton Gardens. It began in February 1989 and some 90 letters later
in February 1998 the council at last got its act together, putting up an
experimental higher-powered lamp outside Veric while the rest of the lighting
in the road was also to be improved.
Miscellaneous
In 1883 an orphan servant girl Mary Christmas was working
in the kitchen of one of the houses in Eaton Gardens when her clothes caught
fire. Her mistress, Mrs Mary Taplan, ran to the front door and called for
assistance. But nothing was done until a neighbour, Mrs Isted, ran in and
smothered the flames with a blanket; the unfortunate girl meanwhile cursing
callous onlookers for doing nothing to help. At the inquest held the very next
day the coroner remarked that apart from Mrs Isted nobody else had behaved with
much credit.
In 1976 Peter Hadlow was cleaning windows at a block of
flats in Eaton Gardens when he slipped and fell five floors down to the ground.
He suffered multiple fractures and was blinded but he survived.
Cannabis
Sussex
Police received a tip-off that there might be a cannabis factory
secretly at work in well-to-do Eaton Gardens. Thus on 9 July 2024
officers paid an official visit to the premises and discovered that
there were over 100 cannabis plants merrily flourishing inside.
Moreover, the street value of the innocuous-looking greenery was
estimated to be in the region of £50,000. The plants were destroyed
and the plant infrastructure destroyed. (Argus
20/7/24)
Sources
Adland,
D. Brighton’s
Music Halls (1994)
Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Evening Argus
Wojtczak,
H. Notable
Sussex Women (2008)
Copyright © J.Middleton 2016
page layout by D.Sharp