Judy Middleton 2001 (revised 2023)
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copyright © J.Middleton
Albany Villas has a variety of styles in its
architecture. This house – now numbered number 5 is an example of a
plainer type of house |
Development
Albany Villas had the second most valuable plots
of land in the development known as the Cliftonville Estate. For
example, Albany plots could be purchased for £500, compared to
£1,000 for land in Medina Villas and £350 for plots in Ventnor
Villas. Of course the total value depended on the size of the plot,
and (when built) the type of house. (For more details, see
The Cliftonville Estate)
However, as is so often the case in building
developments, there were fluctuations in price due to difficult
circumstances. In the case of Cliftonville, the bankruptcy of George
Hall, one of the four original developers, meant that too many plots
came onto the market at the same time, causing the value to drop.
By the mid 1850s building work in Medina Villas
and Osborne Villas was virtually complete, while in Albany Villas
plots of land were still changing hands and houses being erected.
There was no overall plan for house-building style
in Albany Villas, as for example, there was in
Brunswick Square and
Brunswick Terrace. Plots were sold individually and it was up to the
builder or his patron as to how the new residence would look.
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copyright © J.Middleton
Number 35 provides one example of the houses
with an extraordinary ‘tower' feature at the side to be found in
this road. Major Teevan, Chief Constable of Hove, once lived in
lodgings at this house. |
An Interesting Case
James Andrew Durham of Lombard Street, and William
Cory owned plots of land in Albany Villas. Durham died in 1860 and
Cory died in 1862 – four years later an heir surfaced from
Adelaide, South Australia to claim his inheritance. Henry Cory
asserted his right to several plots in Albany Villas, the plot
numbers being 143, 144, 145 and 146 on the east side, and 156, 157,
158, 159 and 169 on the west side; there were another four plots in
Medina Villas.
According to a different deed, plot 145 already
had a house on it in 1857, and its street number was 27.
On 7 February 1867 Henry Cory transferred all his
inherited property to John William Burmester, Philip Patton Blyth,
and William Champion Jones, all of Lombard Street, London.
Census
According to the Street Directory for 1854 there
were only five houses in Albany Villas but there must have been a
flurry of building activity within a few years because the 1861
census records many inhabitants. It is interesting to note that the
occupations of heads of households were recorded as follows:
6 fund-holders
3 landed proprietors
3 small schools
2 landholders
2 barristers
2 lodging-house keepers
Captain, 4th Light Dragoons
Lieutenant-Colonel, Bengal Army, retired
Lieutenant, East India Company
Army officer, retired
Architect
Brewer
Clergyman’s widow
Clergyman, without cure of souls
Clerk
Commercial auditor
Consul, retired
Farmer, retired
Magistrate
Parliamentary agent
Railway stockholder
Proprietor of houses
Upholsterer
Among the adult children present on census night
in 1861 were two merchant seamen and one midshipman.
Royal Excursion
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copyright © J.Middleton
This old postcard of Queen Alexandra
(1844-1928)
– the former Princess of Wales – has been
embossed to
make the portrait stand out more |
On 21 July 1881 the Prince and Princess of Wales
were in the area to open the Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children
and the young princesses Louise, Victoria and Maud accompanied them.
Apparently, the horses and carriages were sent down from Marlborough
House by train the previous day. After the opening ceremony, the
royal party enjoyed a circuitous route seeing a little of Brighton
and Hove by driving along
Western Road and Church Road, turning south
down Albany Villas and following the coast road back to Brighton
where they dined with Sir Edward Sassoon.
Princess Louise (1867-1931) married in 1889 and
became the Duchess of Fife. It was an unusual marriage because he was
regarded in royal circles as a ‘commoner’ and moreover was
eighteen years older than his bride. But it was a love-match and
Queen Victoria was happy to grant her consent because he was
'immensely rich'.
Princess Maud (1869-1938) married Prince Charles
in 1896 – he was the younger brother of the Crown Prince of Denmark
and not considered a great catch, being an officer in the Danish Navy
and not wealthy. Indeed, initially it was the Crown Prince who had
caught Princess Maud’s fancy, but he showed no interest in her. It
must have been a dramatic moment in 1905 when she found herself Queen
of Norway because her husband, who took the name of King Haakon VII,
was elected as king when Norway separated from Sweden.
Re-numbering
In around 1882 Albany Villas was re-numbered.
Conservation Area
In 1969 Hove Council designated Albany Villas as
part of the
Cliftonville Estate Conservation Area.
Chimney-stacks
Two semi-detached houses had been made into a
single property, and later converted into no less than eighteen flats
that had all been sold by 1986. However, in the process, the
developers had removed four chimney-stacks. This was illegal because
the demolition had been carried out in a conservation area without
prior planning permission. Naturally enough, Hove Council wanted the
chimney-stacks re-instated. But the freeholder and developer of the
company had left the country. This meant the leaseholders could be
saddled with a bill of £19,000. One disgruntled leaseholder remarked
that the building had as much architectural merit as a bottle bank.
House Notes
Numbers 1 to 5 – On 10 September 1971
these houses were made Grade II listed buildings.
Number 1 – It is called White Knights and
is one of the most handsome buildings in the road.
George Hall died in this house on 20 January 1863.
He had an amazing career and was one of the instigators of the
Cliftonville development. He started off in humble enough
circumstances, earning a living as an upholsterer at 150 North
Street, Brighton. But he also became a small-time builder, and then
he began to speculate. He later claimed that he started building with
a capital of £4,376 but by 21 January 1854 he was worth £14,752.
It was on 30 June 1851 that Hall purchased some
land for £6,300 from William Mighell on behalf of William
Kirkpatrick and Richard Webb. The land measured 16 acres, 3 rods and
20 perches, and on it were built three streets in what was known as
lower Cliftonville. The partnership also included George Gallard. But
on 8 May 1852 the four men split up, and divided their assets. Hall
sold some 18 acres north of Church Road to to the other three. He
then borrowed a further £4,500 from Gallard and Kirkpatrick, using
some of his plots of land as security.
Hall also owned two business premises in Church
Street, as Church Road was formerly known; number 27 was occupied by
Hunter’s Dairy (later numbered at 100, 102, & 104 Church Road)
and number 27 was home to a baker called Funnell, and later
well-known as Forfar’s (now numbered at 123 Church Road. Hall
started to build on his plots in Medina Villas, and Albany Villas,
with eleven houses to his credit in the latter.
Then
it all started to go wrong, and on 26 January 1855 he was declared
bankrupt with total liabilities of £35,000-3-1d,
plus
400 unsecured creditors. When Hall’s plots of land were dumped on
the market all at once, the prosperity of the other developers was
seriously affected.
Number 2 (old numbering) – In 1861 a
small school was located here with only three teachers and on census
night there were just two boarders, one being 14-year old Georgiana,
daughter of Lord Methwin.
Number 4 (old numbering) – In 1861 Revd
John Peat, rector of
St Helen's Hangleton, lived in this house - he was aged
fifty and unmarried.
Number 5 (old numbering) Lady Neil, who was
born in India, lived in this house in 1861.
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copyright © National Library of Australia
The Daily Telegraph
(Sydney NSW, 1883-1930)
Friday
11 Nov 1910
Vice-Admiral Sir G. F. King-Hall
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Number 6 (old numbering) In 1861 Elizabeth
Nockholds and her sister Mary ran a small school in this house; on
census night there were three boarders.
Number 7
Admiral Sir George Fowler
King-Hall C.V.O., C.B., D.S.O. (1850-1939) and Lady King-Hall lived here before and after
the First World War. The King-Halls were a family of admirals because
Sir George’s father was Admiral Sir William King-Hall while his
younger brother was Admiral Sir Herbert King-Hall. In 1864 George
King-Hall joined the Royal Navy as a youngster and 23 years later he
was captain of HMS Pegagus. This ship had an interesting
assignment in the waters off east Africa from 1887 to 1889 when she
was pursuing illegal slave traders.
From 1900 to 1902 King-Hall was to be found
serving Sir John Fisher as chief of staff. King-Hall also had the
distinction of being the last man to hold the post of Commander in
Chief of the Australian Station, to which he was appointed in 1911.
It was something of a diplomatic posting involving public relations
with Australians to familiarize them with the concept of handing over
British defence duties in the area to the Royal Australian Navy. In
1913 the transfer took place, and the post was abolished.
It is a strange co-incidence that two British
Admirals with connections to Australia should have lived in Albany
Villas – although at different times - the other being Admiral Sir
John Hindmarsh at number 30.
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copyright © J.Middleton
Admiral Sir G. F. King-Hall lived at
number 7, while Wadham House, a school for boys, once occupied number
9 |
Number 9 – From around 1907 to 1911 Mr H.
Douglas Williams ran a boys' school here called Wadham House. The
school had been established some 30 years previously in Streatham. An
advertisement stated ‘Sea Bathing, Gymnastics and Sports in general
are under strict supervision’. A part of the
Sussex County Cricket Ground was also available to Wadham students for sports.
Number 9a – Leslie Rands (1900-1972) a
famous opera singer and baritone, and his wife (stage name Marjorie
Eyre) lived here from around 1951 until 1962. They had both sung with
the D’Oyley Carte Opera Company for many years, and had toured the
USA and Canada. Rands started off his musical career by singing in
the choir at Chichester Cathedral, and he was born and died at
Chichester. Rands and Eyre performed together at Chichester in 1952.
Number 11 – In 1907 the house was called
Kendal where Colonel E. Kensington ran Brighton Military Training
College. The colonel obviously did not attract a rush of candidates
because the college does not appear in the Directory for the next
year. However, Frederick Hora, army tutor, lasted a little longer at
this address.
Numbers 12 & 13 (old numbering) –
Madame Collinet started her school a number 12 in 1870. From 1871,
when she had twelve pupils, she occupied the next house too. By 1879
the school reverted to being in just number 12 where it continued
until around 1884. Madame Collinet was a former governess in the
family of Tom Trollope, brother of the famous writer Anthony
Trollope.
Number 17
– (Old numbering) In 1861 Ellen Wyett, aged 58, ran a school on the
premises with the assistance of her daughter, 33-year old Maria.
There were two female teachers resident on census night – one noted
as a professor of music and the other a professor of German. There
were fourteen female pupils.
Number 19 – Surgeon Charles John Smith
and his wife Sarah Ann lived here from 1870 to 1886 – the house
being originally numbered 36. Their famous son,
Sir Charles Aubrey Smith (1863-1948) was actually born in London but this house was his
childhood home – his sister was called Beryl (see also under
Plaques). In May 1987 a blue plaque was unveiled at the house. Today,
the lettering is somewhat faded – it reads ‘Charles Aubrey Smith,
Captain of Sussex and England, actor and film star lived here’.
Later on the Smiths moved to 27 Selborne Road, and by 1894 their
address was 2 Medina Villas.
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copyright © J.Middleton
Number 19 was the childhood home of Sir Charles
Aubrey Smith |
In 1891 London-born Albert Adolph, aged 35 lived
in this house with his wife and their four sons and four daughters –
Albert 13, Arthur 12, Joseph 8, Willie 5, and Emmie 10, May 7, Grace
3 and 7-month old Maud. The two servants must have been kept very
busy.
Number 21 (old numbering) – Mrs Podmore
ran a gentleman’s preparatory school in this house from around 1862
until 1877.
Number 30
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copyright © J.Middleton
Admiral Hindmarsh’s gravestone at
St Andrew’s
Old Church |
Admiral Sir John Hindmarsh
(1784-1860) lived in this house for a short while but in his day it
was number 12. In December 1986 a plaque was unveiled at the house.
It reads ‘
Admiral Sir John Hindmarsh founder Governor of South
Australia 1836 lived here’. Mr Ken Pedder, official secretary of
the South Australian Government in Britain, unveiled the plaque. The
Mayor of Hove, Councillor Ed Cruickshank-Robb, plus other councillors
and interested parties attended the event, and the occupants of the
house, Mrs Gloria Bayley and her husband Robert kindly acted as
hosts. Afterwards Mr Pedder laid a wreath on the admiral’s grave in
the churchyard of St Andrew’s Old Church, Hove (see under
St Andrew’s Churchyard for details of Hindmarsh’s life).
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copyright © J.Middleton
Number 30 is another ‘blue plaque’ house
where Admiral Sir John Hindmarsh once lived |
Number 35 – In 1891 George J. Teevan,
major (retired) Chief of Hove Police, lived here in lodgings.
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copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums,
Brighton & Hove
Colonel John Fawcett,
First Mayor of
Brighton 1854-1855
by Ebenezer Newman Downard. |
Number 37 (old numbering) In 1864
Lieutenant-Colonel John Fawcett (1803-1878) lived here. He was born
in Bombay (now Mumbai). When he moved to England, he was elected as a
Brighton Town Commissioner, and upon incorporation Fawcett became the
first Mayor of Brighton. He also took an interest in Hove and on 25
January 1858 he chaired a meeting held at the
Albion Inn, Church
Road with the object of promoting and improving west Hove.
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copyright © J.Middleton
Holy Trinity Church, Blatchington Road, Hove |
Number 39 – James Woodman, architect of
Holy Trinity Church, Hove, lived in this house from the 1860s to the
1890s. When he first occupied the house it was numbered 26.
Number 40 – Ellen Wyatt and her daughter
Maria ran a school for young ladies in this house from around 1856 to
1886. The 1861 census recorded that there were two teachers and
fourteen pupils. The house was previously numbered 17.
Number 42 – General William Lodwick lived
in this house from 1867 until his death in 1871; the house was
previously numbered 18. The family attended Holy Trinity Church, Hove, and there used to be three stained-glass windows inside the
church to the memory of Lodwick family members. His widow Georgina
continued to live in the house and by 1891 she was aged 68 and shared
the house with two nieces and three servants.
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copyright © J.Middleton
Number 42 was the home of the Lodwick family |
Number 46 – Barry Sullivan (1824-1891)
the famous Victorian actor purchased this house in 1869 and lived
there for the rest of his life - it was previously numbered 20.
Sullivan married Mary, daughter of Captain John Amory in Edinburgh
and the couple had two sons and three daughters. In the 1891 census
four unmarried children were still living with their parents in
Albany Villas. They were Eliza 48, Mary 46, Sarah 37, and John 32.
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copyright © National Library of Australia
Australia Town & Country Journal
(Sydney NSW,
1870-1907) Sat 16 May 1891
Barry Sullivan (1824-1891)
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Barry Sullivan was of Irish extraction and his
first appearance on stage took place in Cork in 1840. When he arrived
at the
Vic as a young man he was described as follows:
‘Sullivan, the new addition to the stock-people,
has a thin figure, a sallow complexion, a weak and thin voice and
enunciation, and he wears his hair in corkscrew ringlets… Silvani,
a confrère of the famous danseuse Taglioni, is his brother.'
It was hardly a flattering description, and yet he
went on to become ‘the most renowned tragedian of the old time
school of actors.’ The Athenaeum (14 February 1852)
commented ‘Mr Sullivan is slender of figure and graceful in his
attitudes but his vocal organ is very limited.'
However, everyone agreed he knew how to act. In
1857 he toured Canada and the USA, while in 1860s he toured Australia
and India. In 1875 he played the part of Hamlet for one hundred
nights in New York. The first night was a great Irish occasion and
after the first performance, his admirers unhitched the horses from
his carriage, which they then hauled to the Fifth Avenue Hotel
where he was staying. Outside this establishment men of the Irish
Rifles formed an honorary guard.
Sullivan had the misfortune to experience a number
of accidents on stage. When Sullivan was performing his 60th
performance as Richard III at Drury Lane, the actor portraying
Richmond got carried away and lunged with his sword, catching
Sullivan’s left eye. There was a rush of blood and Sullivan was
temporarily blinded. Afterwards it was discovered an eyelash was
embedded in the eyeball, which was extracted without the benefit of
ether or chloroform.
On another occasion at the Theatre Royal,
Edinburgh, Sullivan was shot in the side of the face, and was
carried back to his lodgings presumed dead. But he survived although
he was out of action for three months.
When Macbeth (also known as the Scottish
play – it is notoriously unlucky for its performers) was on at the
Theatre Royal, Bath, a stagehand was so absorbed in the action
one night that he failed to notice the handle of Macbeth’s foil was
resting on a gas burner. When he gave it to Sullivan the result was a
burnt hand.
Sullivan gave his last performance on 4 June 1887
playing the Duke of Gloucester in
Richard III. The sword he
had used for the previous seasons marked the occasion by shattering
into several pieces – one piece grazing the forehead of a gentleman
seated in the stalls.
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copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove |
On 12 August 1888 Sullivan suffered a stroke at
home in Albany Villas – this event confined him to his bed for over
two years, to the great grief of his family. Sullivan died on 9 May
1891 and his funeral was held at the church of the Sacred Heart in
Norton Road. Five priests presided at the service and the choir from
Brompton Oratory provided the singing. His coffin was taken back to
Ireland and he was buried at the Prospect Cemetery, Glasnevin,
Dublin. Later on a handsome marble statue of Sullivan as Hamlet was
erected on the site - Sullivan had played Hamlet over 3,000 times at
an average of twice a week for a period of 35 years.
Sullivan’s widow was still resident at Albany
Villas in 1908.
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copyright © J.Middleton
Barry Sullivan, the famous Victorian actor,
owned this house |
Dresden House
On 21 December 1909 Miss Mathilde
Dresden died at the age of 66, and she was buried in the Jewish
Cemetery at Golders Green. In her will dated 22 October 1907 she
‘established an institution where ladies of not less than 50 years
of age, in reduced circumstances, but having some small income, may
obtain lodging and food at a reasonable cost’. The settlement was
executed on 1 December 1910 with Miss Dresden’s brother Ernest
adding some of his own money. Dresden House opened on 15 December
1910 at 18 and 20 Albany Villas.
Dresden House accepted residents
of any religion, and there was enough accommodation for 25 ladies
plus the necessary staff. At first, the upper age limit was set at 65
with the income qualification being not less than £25 a year and not
more than £50 a year, but in 1936 the ceiling on the latter was
raised to £156; later on there was no upper age limit.
In 1927 number 35 Medina Villas
was acquired, and the top floor was converted into a nursing unit.
Over the years other houses in Albany Villas were added to the
portfolio until by 1998 Dresden House occupied nine houses in Albany
Villas.
In July 1991 CPO George Poole
opened a new verandah for the benefit of wheelchair-bound residents
so that they could enjoy sitting in the sunshine; there was a garden,
but they were unable to access it because of the steep steps. It was
Bryan Dunn, maintenance manager and ex Navy-man, who came up with the
idea of a verandah. He wrote to the crews of 55 different ships
asking for a donation, and it took two years to raise the £4,000.
Doris
Spencer celebrated her 102nd
birthday in July 1991, and she had spent sixteen years living at
Dresden House. In her youth she had been an active member of the
suffragette movement, and a professional artist. In August 1994 Alice
Johnstone-Nicol and Ruth Griffiths both celebrated their 101st
birthday. In February 1998 Winifred Pearcy was 100 years old. In her
younger days she was a keen tennis player, and she and her husband
moved to Hove in the 1920s, being married for 64 years. Frank Pearcy
used to design pubs in Hove, Portslade and Southwick for Bass, both
before and after the Second World War. Mrs Ena Davies lived at
Dresden House for a few years, having moved there from Woodhouse Road
after her banker husband died in 1994. She died in June 2001, and her
will published in October, revealed that she left most of her
£2,014,200 estate to charity. She also left £1,000 to St Philip’s
Church, Hove.
An advertisement in 1998 stated
that residents had the use of a library, the Albany Drawing Room, the
Medina Garden Room, the French Room, and a verandah looking out over
the enclosed garden. There was a resident’s shop, a hairdressing
salon, and a bar that opened four times a week. Good food was an
important part of the Dresden House experience. All residents had
single bedrooms with their own keys. En suite facilities had been
added to a number of rooms, and a new group of six en-suite bedrooms
was being created on the Medina Villas side, complete with a
kitchenette.
In 2006 Dresden House was sold.
Miscellaneous
Fay Compton – actress and sister of Sir
Compton Mackenzie, is supposed to have lived or stayed at Albany
Villas.
Sandra Landy (1938-2017) – She was born
Sandra Ogilvie at Croydon, daughter of a banker, and the family later
moved to the Sussex coast. Her parents were both county bridge
players, and when her mother died while Sandra was still a
schoolgirl, she took up bridge to partner her father. She was
educated at Wistons School, Brighton, Hove Grammar School for Girls,
St Anne's College, Oxford, and New Hall, Cambridge. In 1951 she
became a lecturer at Brighton College of Technology, and in 1992 she
was appointed principal lecturer at the University of Brighton. She
married Peter Landy in 1967 and they had two children born in 1968 and
1970/
While she was at Oxford University she joined the
Bridge Club, which until then had been exclusively a male preserve.
In 1966 she embarked on her international bridge-playing career and
the next year began playing for the British Ladies Team. She played
bridge in cities all over the world from Oslo to Beijing, and from
Athens to Miami. In 1975 she had the satisfaction of winning the
European Championship on home ground at the Brighton Centre. She
played for Britain in 11 World Championships, becoming World Champion
five times, and competed in 16 European Championships. By 1996 she
was a British Grand Master, World Grand Master, and was ranked number
one on the Women’s World Grand Master All Time list.
Her bridge partners have included Fritzi Gordon,
Dorothy Shanaham, Nicola Gardiner (later Smith), Sally Sowter (later
Horton), Michelle Brunner, Michelle Handley, and Abby Walker.
Landy took a great interest in her local bridge
club, namely the Avenue Bridge Club located at 15
Third Avenue.
She lived in Albany Villas and died at the age 78.
Sources
Australia Town & Country Journal (Sydney NSW,
1870-1907) Sat 16 May 1891 (obituary)
Census returns
Middleton J, Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Dictionary of National Biography
Evening Argus
Internet searches
Street Directories
Hove Council Minute Books
Kidd, C, & Montague-Smith Debrett’s Book
of Royal Children (1982)
Lowerson, J.
editor Cliftonville, A Victorian suburb (1977)
National Library of Australia
The Telegraph 6 January 2017 (obituary)
The Daily Telegraph (Sydney NSW, 1883-1930) Friday
11 Nov 1910
The Keep
HOW 66/2 – Re. Property in Albany Villas, Medina
Villas and Ventnor Terrace
Copyright © J.Middleton 2018
page layout by D. Sharp