copyright © J.Middleton St Leonard's Church in the 1920s before the north aisle extension was built and the churchyard was just 40 years old |
Copyright © D. Sharp Wilton Dales d.1893 aged 4 months and Margaret Ada Farringdon d.1882 aged 18 months |
In September 1899 no less than eight babies were buried at St Leonard’s.
copyright © J.Middleton Dame Elizabeth Adcock |
Harry Herriott – He had started his working life as a plumber, but later on at Brighton he held the wonderfully-named position of Assistant Inspector of Nuisances. (This essential but unglamorous post’s title was later changed to Sanitary Inspector). Then Herriott spent three and a half years in the same occupation under the Vestry of St George, Hanover Square, London. By the time he was aged 35 he must have decided that it was time to return to the south coast and he applied for a job at Hove. It was by no means a walk-over because there had been an amazing 80 applications but Harry Herriott was chosen. He thus became Chief Inspector of Nuisances at Hove earning a salary of £165 a year and an appropriate uniform was issued to him; he also earned an extra £5 for superintending the removal of house refuse.
In July 1896, after correspondence with the Local Government Board, he was also appointed an inspector under the Diseases of Animals Act 1894, which came with an allowance of two guineas a year. Herriott died at the age of 67 on 22 October 1929 and was buried in the churchyard of St Leonard’s where his large tombstone is still to be seen on the east side. The inscription recalls that he was for 28 years Chief Sanitary Inspector for the Borough of Hove.
Copyright © D. Sharp Mary Maria de Kantzow and her son Hugh Winyett Bosanquet de Kantzow and his wife Lillith Ruth and their son Barry. |
Copyright © D. Sharp Sir Charles Aubrey Smith, his mother Sarah and sisters Myrtie and Beryl (in 2018 Sussex County Cricket Club financed the restoration of the gravestone) |
copyright © J.Middleton |
Revd Roxborough Remington Smith - was born in Brighton in 1872, Roxborough Remington Smith was a brilliant scholar. He gained two degrees, went on to Cambridge University, won many academic prizes, took an MA, then went to university in Canada, to gain his Doctor of Divinity.
In 1927 he was appointed Diocesan Bishop of Algoma, in Canada. Visiting Britain in 1939 when war broke out, he decided to stay, and retired from the post in Canada. He served as General Secretary of the Church Union and spent his last working years as Rector of Lapford in Devon. Aged 70, he fully retired from the Church in 1942. Some time after this, he moved to St Keyna Avenue, Hove and died there in 1955. His obituary was printed in The Times.
Joseph Harris Stretton – He was the son of William Weston Stretton J. P. of Dane’s Hill House in Leicester. J. H. Stretton died at the age of 59 on 17 November 1889 and was buried on the south side of St Leonard’s church. His will was dated 2 October 1889 – in fact it was not long before he died, but it was enough time for a family quarrel to ensue. In his will he appointed his brother Clement Stratton, Augustus Stretton, and Joseph Edward Turner as his executors. Then came a codicil revoking the appointment of Clement, and substituting James Harris instead. Not long afterwards, another codicil re-instituted the original three. However, it seems the family dispute raged on, and four years after J. H. Stretton’s death there was a court case Stretton v Stretton in 1893. The result of this was that the property in Aldrington was invested in Augustus Stretton.
In 1894 Stretton’s Trustees sold some land and foreshore south of the Shoreham Road (later called Kingsway) for £4,100 to the Hove Commissioners for ‘public walks and pleasure grounds’. In 1909 Stretton’s Trustees required £230 for a strip of land wanted by Hove Council in connection with the Aldrington drainage scheme – Augustus Stretton was one of the names on the conveyance.
By at least 1907 the Aldrington Estate Office (Stretton’s Trustees) was situated on the west corner site of Portland Road and Worcester Villas with E. J. Holland being the manager. In 1909 Stretton’s Trustees developed part of Portland Road, east of Portland Villas. In 1921 the Aldrington-by-Sea Estate Company purchased some land fronting Kingsway from Stretton’s Trustees. The remainder of Stretton’s Estate was developed by Middleton (Builders) Ltd of Rothbury Buildings, Franklin Road, Portslade. John Stanley Towse of Marshall House, 9 Newcomen Street, London Bridge, designed every house; Harry Edgar Oliver, estate agent, of 13 Station Road, Portslade, was also involved.
In 1851 Mejluf was baptised in a Wesleyan Chapel in Gibraltar and took the Christian name of Maxwell. Like his older brother Abraham he served as a missionary for The British Society for the Propagation of the Gospel Among the Jews in the Holy Land and Morocco. There was a younger brother, Moses who was also a missionary for the Society in Oran, Algeria. A few years later Maxwell resigned from missionary service and became the pastor of the Congregational Chapel at Isleworth in Middlesex.
Maxwell was a gifted multi-linguist, speaking Hebrew, Chaldean, Arabic and Spanish. In the British Workman periodical of 1856, it reported that it was fortunate that the missionary Maxwell Ben Oliel was in Plymouth when three former slaves arrived in the port from Cuba. The periodical went on to say, Ben Oliel was the only person in Plymouth who could interpret for the freed slaves and address their good welfare while they were awaiting a ship to take them to the Gambia.
(The three former slaves had bought their freedom through a lottery scheme and paid the British Consul in Havana for safe passage to England. Slavery was not abolished until 1886 in Cuba.)
Maxwell left the Congregational Church in 1860 and entered an Anglican Theological College. He was ordained a priest by the Bishop of Carlisle and was subsequently Chaplain to the Duchess of Northumberland.
After serving as curate at a number of churches in the north of England he then took a temporary curacy at St Matthew's in Croydon. Ben Oliel had the reputation of being a brilliant theologian and preacher. His preaching attracted a large congregation who were keen on the idea of a new church with Ben Oliel as the incumbent. Ben Oliel left St Matthew's for a new church called St Paul’s which was set up in the converted Havelock Hall. The church grew and flourished.
Ben Oliel's brother in law, Robert Parnell, was a wealthy business man and guaranteed the money for a new church building to be erected in Canning Road. The new St Paul’s Church building was opened in September 1868 and Havelock Hall was sold. The Archbishop of Canterbury twice refused to license St Paul's and he, together with the vicar of St James, set up a new District with an ‘iron Church’ in competition to this ‘new’ St Paul’s.
June 1872 was a seismic moment in Ben Oliel’s ministry, when he announced to his very large evangelical congregation that all Services would now be conducted in the ritualistic Anglo-Catholic Tradition. There were protests from the congregation to the Bishop of Croydon and the Archbishop of Canterbury over the adoption of illegal ritualistic practices which culminated in the congregation leaving en masse. St Paul’s struggled to stay open and finally closed down in 1874 when it was sold to the Church of England.
For the following two years Ben Oliel took a curacy at St Michael's, a leading Anglo-Catholic church in Brighton. From 1876 until late in 1889 he served as a curate at several churches around London.
The Revd Maxwell Ben Oliel, although a very experienced priest, never achieved a status higher than a parish curate. He hardly endeared himself to the Archbishop of Canterbury when his ministry took him in a controversial Anglo-Catholic direction and he also made public speeches on the 'Disestablishment of the Church of England'. This is probably why his ministry took him to the Episcopal Church in the USA, the only part of the Anglican Communion that was disestablished from the Crown.
In 1889 he served as missionary for the Episcopal Church in the Diocese of California.
Some years later Bishop Nichols sent Ben Oliel, who was described as a very distinguished Biblical scholar and preacher, to St John’s Episcopal Church San Bernardino for a month or so as cover when the previous priest left. This cover as Rector in effect lasted just over two years.
1890s church notice from The San Bernardino Daily Courier |
On arriving in the Parish in December 1891, he found the Church advertised for sale, with debts of nearly $6000 ($150,500 in today’s values). Through clever management and the sale of Church property, Revd Ben Oliel put the Church on a sound financial footing, staving off the Sheriff’s sale of the building and even finding $500 to improve the Church’s interior. On Trinity Sunday in 1892, Bishop Nichols visited St John’s to conduct a Service of Thanksgiving assisted by Revd Ben Oliel and Canon Fletcher. While serving as Rector of St John’s, Revd Ben Oliel gave practical advice to the Diocese of California on the subject of Diocesan and Parochial organisation.
In 1893 Revd Ben Oliel wrote to the secretary of the Diocese of California giving news of his ministry since he left St John’s in August 1892, in which he indicates he seemed to be in high demand in the East.
‘I have preached, lectured and officiated in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Camden, Baltimore Jacksonville and many other cities and parishes, delivered altogether 137 sermons, lectures and addresses in 29 churches and other places. During Lent I preached every Sunday evening in St John’s Cathedral, Jacksonville, Florida and every Sunday morning in St Andrew’s Church in the same city. I have reason to believe that God has blessed my work, I had large congregations, sometimes the churches were full and overflowing.’
In 1894 Revd Ben Oliel accepted a permanent position in the Diocese of Rochester.(USA)
In an article in the Sun Weekly (California) newspaper for 4th February1900, it was stated ‘Revd Ben Oliel’s services to St John’s Church at such a critical time in its history, must be recognised as of great value’.
On his return to England in 1896 he founded the Kilburn Mission to the Jews and took Sunday services in various London churches. At the Church of England’s Church Congress held at the Royal Albert Hall in 1899, Revd Ben Oliel delivered a speech on the subject ‘The Social and Religious Conditions of Jews’. In 1901 he was elected president of the Hebrew Christian Alliance.
He died on 8th March 1907 aged 74, at the aptly named St Paul’s Lodge, 25 Walsingham Road, Aldrington, Hove.
Copyright © D. Sharp 'Looking unto Jesus' In Loving Memory of Maxwell M. Ben Oliel, Priest Who Entered into Rest, March 8th 1907 Aged 74 years. |
It may be thought a mystery as to why this much travelled priest, missionary, lecturer and author should retire to Aldrington. The possible answer could lie in the fact he knew the area well. The Revd Ben Oliel’s reputation must have been well known in the Brighton area for his name to appear on the list of guests for the official opening of St Bartholomew’s Church Brighton in 1874. The largest and tallest Anglo-Catholic church in England.
Revd Ben Oliel was friends with the Priest in Charge of St Andrew’s Church Portslade by Sea, the Revd Richard Enraght, a controversial Anglo-Catholic himself, who later served a prison sentence in 1880 for opposing the Government’s Public Worship Regulation Act.
Revd Ben Oliel and Revd Enraght would have known each other from their days when they were both curates in Brighton. Revd Ben Oliel was invited to preach on numerous occasions at St Andrew’s Portslade. Geographically St Andrew’s Church Portslade was the closest church to the people of Aldrington in the days before their own church was rebuilt in the late1870s.
Canon Henry Theodore Mogridge – was born in Loddington, Leicestershire in 1891. He became Rector of Goadby from where he moved to Sussex to become the Rector of St Leonard’s Church in 1926.
Under Revd Mogridge’s stewardship St Leonard’s Church doubled in size with a new north nave, baptistry, lych gate and spire added to the tower. In 1956 he left the Parish to become Rector of Thakeham and died in 1970. Revd Mogridge was St Leonard’s longest serving Rector and because of his love of Aldrington, requested that he be buried in St Leonard’s churchyard.
Lych-Gate
F.A. Crouch designed the lych-gate and it was erected in 1949 as a memorial to those killed in the Second World War. See also Aldrington-St Leonard's War Memorials page for further details and name listings.
Copyright © D. Sharp
Plaque reads:- This Lych-Gate reminds all who pass
through of
the sacrifice of those who lost their lives in the
1939-1945 War.
|
St Leonard's churchyard 'Secret Garden Group'
Copyright © D. Sharp |
In the north-east corner of St Leonard’s churchyard there is a former unconsecrated memorial garden, which over time has become an overgrown waste land .
In February 2013 the Secret Garden Group transformed this area through tremendously hard physical work into an organic community allotment. The Secret Garden volunteers have created raised bed vegetable gardens, herb gardens, a wild life pond and a wild wooded area.
The Group’s Secretary Joi Jones stated, “We hope that, once again, it will be somewhere where people can sit peacefully and reflect, and a great place to learn about food and how it’s grown, as well as a place to meet other members of the community and share knowledge and ideas.”
For more information, news of future events and activities see the Secret Garden Group's facebook page
Copyright © D. Sharp |
Copyright © D. Sharp |
British History Online:- churches & chapels
British Workman (1859) periodical
Crockford's
Internet searches
Kelly's street directories
Lancaster, B - The Reverend Ben Oliel and the troubles at Addiscombe
Los Angeles Herald (1892)
Middleton, J Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
St Leonard's Church Aldrington
San Bernardino Daily Courier
Sun Weekly (California)
St Andrew's Church Portslade
St Bartholomew's Church Brighton
St John's Episcopal Church, San Bernardino
St Mary Magdalene Croyden
St Michael and All Angels Brighton
Many Thanks to Jenny Watts for access to her Aldrington research material.
See also the Parish website of St Leonard's Church
page layout by D. Sharp.