Judy Middleton 2002 (revised 2020)
Development
Osborne Villas
formed part of what came to be known as the Cliftonville Estate (see
also Albany Villas and Medina Villas). However, before this estate
was built it is interesting to note that some houses in Osborne
Villas have deeds going back to the 18th
century. In those days property transactions were recorded in the
Court Books of the Manor
of Hova Villa and Hova Ecclesia. On
27 April 1797 Matthew Martin of Burghill, Chiddingly, was
acknowledged as owner of eleven copyhold tenements.
On 14 January 1802 Matthew Martin surrendered four
of these tenements (consisting of 16 acres, 3 rods and 20 poles) to
Richard Lashmar, Brighton coal merchant. On 31 May 1826 Richard
Lashmar was declared bankrupt and consequently his land holdings went
to his creditors, including Philip Mighel and Nathaniel Hall. By 1829
the debts had been cleared, and a parcel of copyhold land was
released to Lashmar. But perhaps Lashmar was not out of the financial
woods because in the same year he mortgaged the property for £3,000
to Philip Mighell, increasing the sum by £1,000 in 1833. On 11
February 1843 the Chancery Court ordered the mortgage to be
foreclosed – both Lashmar and Mighell being dead by that time.
William Mighell, nephew and heir, became the next owner in 1851.
Land also went to George Hall, Brighton
upholsterer and developer, on behalf of William Kirkpatrick. On 8 May
1852 Richard Webb Mighell and George Gallard agreed to divide the
land holdings between them. The plot on which numbers 27 and 28
Osborne Street (the original name of part of today’s Osborne
Villas) were later built, was sold to Kirkpatrick and Gallard, who
sold plots on the east side to Charles Smart of Houghton, shipowner. On 5 August 1871 the property was sold to Samuel Isger.
The development of Osborne Villas is somewhat
complicated because prior to 1852 the land was jointly owned by
George Gallard, William Kirkpatrick, Richard Webb Mighell, and George
Hall. Then they split up and the various plots went to different
owners.
Land speculation was always risky, and George Hall
went bankrupt. In 1852 he had used four plots in Osborne Villas as
security to raise £3,000 from W. G. Bolton and J. Christian, but by
1855 he was bankrupt.
On 8 October 1852 Gallard and Kirkpatrick took out
a loan of £7,000 with Sir Frederick Hartwell & Partners, using
the brewery at the top of the street as security. Apparently, this
transaction also involved St Catherine’s Lodge.
In December 1852 Messrs R. & J. Tooth, timber
merchants, purchased seven plots in Osborne Villas and Medina Villas
for £830, and in February 1853 re-sold two of the plots in Osborne
Villas to J. Grindell, builder.
Also in February 1853 another timber merchant, T.
Peerless, purchased two Osborne plots for £500, and re-sold them
immediately for £640 to Messrs Llewllyn, Scawgood & Muggeridge.
By the close of 1853 most of the Osborne plots had
been sold, and Gallard and Kirkpatrick had dissolved their
partnership.
On 4 August 1853 George Head (described as a
Brighton upholsterer, formerly a gentleman) was recognised as tenant
of a piece of land on the west side of Osborne Villas, bordered on
the south by Hove Place and numbers 14, 15, and 16 St Catherine’s
Terrace – Richard Peters Rickman, Burwood Godlee and William Jenner
being the previous owners. On 29 January 1858 George Head was
admitted as tenant of copyhold land on the east side of Osborne
Villas. By 1864 Head was in financial difficulties, and on 21 July he
took out a mortgage of £22,000 with the London & County Banking
Company. Head owned a considerable amount of land that was itemised
in the deed and included the following:
3 lots of land in Brighton
2 lots of land in Guildford
5 lots of land in Haywards Heath
Copyhold land in Osborne Villas, occupied by
numbers 22 and 23
Other land in Osborne Villas
St Catherine’s Terrace, numbers 14, 15 and 15
Cliftonville
Osborne Villas formed part of lower Cliftonville –
upper Cliftonville being north of Church Road. But Osborne
had relatively small plots of land when compared to others in
Cliftonville. There were some larger plots at the brewery end, and at
the south, but most of them had a 25-ft frontage with a depth of
55-ft.
However, Osborne Villas was the first street in
lower Cliftonville to be completed. Professor Lowerson was of the
opinion that the road appeared ‘as a rather less grand version of
Brighton’s Montpelier Villas’.
Much of Osborne Villas was built as a terrace of
plain, stuccoed housing with roofs that are not visible from street
level, although chimney pots can be seen. Numbers 7 and 9, built in
around 1855 have a large overhang between the top of the walls and
the roof, and there are canopies. Number 55 on the east side is
completely different, and was built later on. In fact, the house
displays the Victorian passion for decorative plasterwork, and the
barge boards above the attic windows are unusual. (See also under
‘House Notes’). Number 63 is also a pleasing structure, obviously
once a coach-house. It has kept its grey tiles and terracotta ridge
tiles in a fleur-de-lys style.
In July 2007 there was considerable
concern about a decorative feature found at the top of some houses in
Osborne Villas; in particular there was one house where the turret
was jutting forward after a large crack appeared, threatening to send
loose masonry crashing to the ground. Residents were evacuated, and
scaffolding erected. Apparently, 2½ tons of masonry was being held
up by a little piece of asphalt. An architectural builder explained
that the trouble arose because of the weight involved, and several
residents in the road had solved the problematic turret by having it
removed completely, and replacing it with a much lighter wooden
structure; at a stroke the weight load was reduced by some 90%. It
was a problem that happened in older properties where the maintenance
of the bays had often been ignored. (Argus
18/7/08)
copyright © J.Middleton Number 55 has a style all of its own |
The name Osborne was right up-to-date because in
the 1840s Queen Victoria had purchased ‘Dear Osborne’ in the Isle
of Wight as a family retreat, and Prince Albert designed Osborne
House in the Italianate style. Indeed, the naming of Osborne for a
road in Hove may have set the style for others in Cliftonville such
as Medina Villas and Ventnor Villas because both Medina and Ventnor
are to be found in the Isle of Wight. It may be that Albany derives
from the name of Queen Victoria’s youngest son, Prince Leopold,
Duke of Albany (1853-1884).
Re-numbering
The road was originally built as two distinct
parts with villas built in Osborne Villas, and terraced housing in
Osborne Street. In 1903 the whole road became Osborne Villas, and
consequently the houses had to be re-numbered.
Pavements
Originally, the Osborne pavements were composed of
red bricks, but in the late 1870s flagstones replaced them.
In January 1925 it was stated that the York stone
foot-way on the west side was worn and uneven, while the Purbeck
stone channel was defective. The Borough Surveyor suggested that
artificial stone slabs should be used, together with a granite kerb.
The estimated cost of this improvement was £774. But if the kerb
already in stock were used, the cost could be reduced to £581.
Advertisement
The
Brighton Guardian
(16
September 1852) carried an advertisement for four substantially-built
dwelling houses containing the following:
Two parlours with folding doors
Four bedrooms
WC
Housekeeper’s room
Kitchen
Scullery, etc
The houses were let to ‘respectable tenants’
for £35 a year. But old customs remained and because the houses were
‘held’ of the Manor of Hova Villa and Hova Ecclesia, there was
still a small fee to pay.
copyright
© Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove Brighton Herald's 1853 advert for the sale of properties in Osborne Villas |
Shocking Case of Child Neglect
According to the 1854 Directory Mrs Emma Smythe
kept a small, boarding school at number 10. In 1854 Mrs Smythe was
described as a respectably-attired widow between the ages of 50 and
60 who came originally from Yorkshire. There were around twelve
children in her care, of both sexes, with the eldest child being
twelve years of age. But all was not well at the establishment.
In July 1854 Mrs Smythe was up before the
magistrates, and she was found guilty of aggravated assault on one of
her charges. Mrs Smythe could have been jailed for a maximum of six
months, but the magistrates thought two months would suffice because
the prospect of continuing to run a school were ruined.
The unfortunate child in the case was three-year
old Elizabeth Browne whose parents lived in a distant part of the
kingdom. The child slept on a mat in the kitchen, with some loose
rags as a pillow, and an old blanket and part of a skirt to cover
her. On one occasion when the unhappy child soiled herself, Mrs
Smythe rubbed the dirty blanket on Elizabeth’s face until her lips
bled. Then the child was locked in the cellar, naked, until 3 p.m.
Another witness spoke of Elizabeth as being kept without food for
eight-and-a-half hours.
Osborne Street
In the 1861 census the occupations of some of the
inhabitants were listed as follows:
3 policemen
Blind-maker
Boot-maker
Brick-maker
Carpenter
Conductor
Dressmaker
Fencing master
Fly driver
Laundress
Milliner
Omnibus conductor
Porter
There was a small, private school at number 29
Osborne Villas.
A Bakery
In 1890 Weekes’ Bakery was operating in Osborne
Street, and in August of that year it was reported that the
establishment was emitting a great deal of black smoke. Hove
Commissioners gave the owner 24 hours in which to amend the
situation. The same people running the bakery, also ran the brewery.
A Brewery
copyright
© Brighton &
Hove City Libraries
Two remnants of old Hove – The Osborne Villas brewery jutting
out into Church Road, and the gasometer in the backgound
|
copyright
© Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove Brighton Herald's 1852 advert for Osborne Villas brewery |
The brewery was situated at the top of Osborne
Villas on the west side – the site now occupied by Grosvenor
Mansions, a shop and part of the road. In the early days it was
numbered at 26A Osborne Street. George Gallard was responsible for
the building of the steam brewery in 1852 – another of his
enterprises was being ‘the proprietor of the horse water-works for
Hove and Cliftonville’.
The Osborne brewery was known as Brighton Steam
Brewery until 1869, then just as Brighton Brewery, although the
locals tended to call it Weekes’ Brewery because in 1870 R. C.
Weekes purchased it.
The brewery was a source of frustration to town
planners because the north part jutted right out into Church Road
causing an obstruction known locally as The Bunion. Both officials
and residents wanted something done about it. In 1880 a petition
signed by 235 people was despatched to Hove Commissioners with a
request for its removal. Nothing happened and a similar petition
produced in 1895 garnered 1,019 signatures.
Mr Weekes had a simple solution to the situation –
he just ignored the letters. In 1899 Hove Council wrote to Mr Weekes
asking him to receive a deputation about removing part of his
brewery. Once again, the letter was ignored. Then councillors had to
consider taking action under the Land Clauses Consolidation Acts in
order to acquire a portion of the property for road widening.
copyright
© Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove The Carter Bros Stationers & Book Shop was built on the site of the Osborne Villas brewery |
The brewery site was finally sold on 21 August
1902 – demolition swiftly followed – and Hove rid itself of The
Bunion, no doubt to public rejoicing.
Apparently, the demolition only covered the
structures on ground level, and the original vaults remained intact
underneath. These proved to be useful for air-raid shelters during
the Second World War.
copyright © J.Middleton Grosvenor Mansions were built on part of the brewery site |
House Notes
Number 17
– Alfred Daniel Taylor (1872-1928) lived in this house. He was born
in the King’s Cross area of London where his father, William
Taylor, earned a living as a bookbinder – this may account for
Alfred’s love of books. Then William decided on a change of
direction and in 1883 he and his family moved to Brighton where he
became the landlord of a pub or two. By 1894 William had moved to the
Cliftonville
Inn, Hove
Place. Two years later William handed over the running of the
business to his sons Alfred Daniel and Albert.
copyright © J.Middleton Alfred Daniel Taylor, a publican, who was also a dedicated enthusiast of cricket and music, lived in this house |
Alfred married Ellen Louise Dench in 1902 and in
1904 they became the proud parents of a son called Alfred Daniel too.
They only had the one child and this was in contrast to Alfred
senior’s parents whose brood numbered seven children. It is
interesting to note that Ellen’s address before marriage was
Osborne Street because by 1917 she and her family were living at 17
Osborne Villas.
Music was a passion with Alfred and he even
claimed to be able to play any musical instrument. When he was young
he often appeared in concerts held on the West Pier playing the
piccolo. He was also an adept flautist and some of the bookplates in
his collection carry an illustration of a flute. During the First
World War, Alfred helped to form the Sussex Volunteers Regiment’s
Band and became the bandmaster. There is a splendid photograph of him
in his military uniform looking somewhat pompous.
Alfred
had other strings to his bow and was an expert on cricket, writing
for local publications under the pseudonym of Willow Wielder. Alfred
kept his extensive collection of cricket books and memorabilia in a
large room upstairs in the Cliftonville
Inn. In
1903 there was nearly a disaster when a fire broke out in this
library. Fearing the worst, some priceless items were removed in
haste and handed out of the window to safety. Thankfully, although
the room was badly damaged, the only items destroyed were a few
manuscripts. Some idea of the size of his collection can be gauged
from the fact that in 1908 he possessed 1,700 separate publications
on cricket. Indeed, at his death it was claimed to be the largest
collection of books on cricket ever amassed.
copyright © Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove A. D. Taylor wrote a book about this famous painting of a cricket match at Brighton between Sussex & Kent in 1849 |
Alfred
did extensive research before he put together his monograph
concerning the celebrated cricket match on The Level between Sussex
and Kent. He demonstrated that it was not an actual event but a
fictional occasion that enabled the artist to paint some 60 people,
famous in the 1840s. It is a sad fact that on the same day as the
first instalment of this work was being published, Alfred died in his
51st
year at 17 Osborne Villas. He had been ill for a while, and did not
have time to correct the proofs of the final two parts. His work was
entitled The
Story of a Cricket Picture and
was
published
by Emery & Son of 170 Church Road, Hove.
Number
22
– (old numbering) In January 1894 it was reported to the
authorities that fowls were being kept in the back yard of this
house. The occupant was given seven days notice in which to remove
them, and thoroughly cleanse the yard.
Number
23
Clyde Christie was an artist, playwright, and poet who lived in
this house in the 1930s. He painted two portraits of Viscountess
Wolseley, one in oils, the other in pencil and pastel, which today
are to be found in the Wolseley Room at Hove Library.
Numbers 30-31
copyright © J.Middleton Clyde Christie lived in this house and painted two portraits of Viscountess Wolseley |
copyright © J.Middleton Viscountess Wolseley by Clyde Christie |
Numbers 30-31
copyright
© Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove (from the Brighton Herald) An annual Christmas Bazaar was held at numbers 30 & 31 Osborne Villas in the 1870s |
Number
49
Two remarkable sisters lived in this house from 1986 until 1992. Una Dillon (1903-1993) was the founder of Dillon’s bookshops, which by the time she died had a turnover of £145 million. Carmen Dillon (1908-2000) was a trained architect who became a very successful art director for the film industry at a time when a woman in such a role was unusual. Their eldest sister Tess lectured in science at London University, and they shared a large Kensington flat. Una continued to live in Osborne Villas until 1992 when she moved into the Victoria Nursing Home, followed by Carmen in 1994.
copyright © J.Middleton The remarkable Dillon sisters lived here |
Two remarkable sisters lived in this house from 1986 until 1992. Una Dillon (1903-1993) was the founder of Dillon’s bookshops, which by the time she died had a turnover of £145 million. Carmen Dillon (1908-2000) was a trained architect who became a very successful art director for the film industry at a time when a woman in such a role was unusual. Their eldest sister Tess lectured in science at London University, and they shared a large Kensington flat. Una continued to live in Osborne Villas until 1992 when she moved into the Victoria Nursing Home, followed by Carmen in 1994.
Number
55
– In 1996 Paul Bouch and Nichola Guest purchased the property. But
before they moved in, they expended the sum of £30,000 on a thorough
programme of refurbishment, and continued to spend more each year to
complete the task. Part of the work entailed bringing the frontage up
to scratch and this meant it had to be shot-blasted clean. The house
was built in 1875, and remarkably, has had only four previous owners.
It is believed the property was once home to a boys’ school, and
later became a boarding house. It was still possible to see the room
numbers on the doors from its latter use. In May 2002 the house was
put on the market at £700,000.
Number
57
– In 1954 Captain Ralph de Basso was responsible for building
Valentine Cottage, the first Regency-style cottage to be erected in
one hundred years. At the time he was a 59-year old ex-cavalry
officer, artist and photographer.
Number
74
– In the 1990s this house was occupied by two best-selling authors
– Eric Clark and Marcelle Bernstein.
Eric
Clark was born on 29 July 1937 in Birmingham. He became a successful
investigative journalist, and was a Home Affairs correspondent on the
Observer,
Daily Mail, and
Guardian.
On
12 April 1972 he married Marcelle Bernstein and the couple went on to
have one son and two daughters. In 1980 they moved to Hove. In his
journalist days, Clark travelled throughout Europe, and the United
States. He worked on articles about Simon Wiesenthal, and war
criminals, trans-national crime, and espionage, the CIA, the Mafia
and drugs. Clark’s series of articles on gambling in the Observer
were
cited by the then Home Secretary as pivotal in his decision to change
Britain’s gaming laws. Clark has always strenuously denied claims,
first mooted in Private
Eye, that
concurrent with his journalistic work, he also worked for British and
American intelligent services. However, he has admitted to having
long-standing and close contacts with the intelligence and diplomatic
services, as well as numerous law enforcement agencies. Soon after
Clark moved to Sussex he made the intriguing remark, ‘There are
probably more retired spies to the acre in Brighton than in any town
of its size in the world.’
In
the 1970s Clark turned to writing books – his first novel being
Black
Gambit, which
was published in seventeen countries. Jack Higgins commented on the
book that ‘it could only be compared to The
Spy Who Came in from the Cold.’ Among
subsequent novels are the following:
The
Sleeper (1979)
Send
in the Lions (1981)
Chinese
Burn (1984)
Hide
and Seek (1994)
Clark
also wrote two highly acclaimed non-fiction works – Corps
Diplomatique (on
diplomats) and The
Want Makers (about
the world-wide advertising industry. In 2001 Clark and his family
moved to London.
Marcelle
Bernstein has been a professional writer all her working life,
starting off at the age of nineteen working for the Guardian’s
women’s
page. Then she became news-desk assistant on the Daily
Mirror, and
by the time she was aged 24, she was a staff feature writer on the
Observer.
During
her career she met all sorts of interesting people. On one occasion,
against official advice, she went to Harlem at the time of the race
riots in the United States. Another time she horrified the Israeli
Government by visiting an Arab family in the Arab zone just after the
Six Days War. For a travel article on Canada she went to Hudson Bay
where she could see Polar bears from her window, and another article
meant she rode with professional rodeo cowboys. She once interviewed
Agatha Christie, and wrote profiles on other writers including Jean
Rhys, Roald Dahl, and Paul Gallico. She spent an uproarious time in
Austria filming with the Monty
Python team,
toured Northern working men’s clubs in the company of Dusty
Springfield, and nightspots in Las Vegas with Liza Minelli.
Bernstein’s
first book was a non-fiction work entitled Nuns
(1976).
In order to gather first-hand accounts she travelled all over the
world to interview nuns – from the jungles of Borneo to the United
States, and from France to visit some Carmelites in Wales. The book
was well received and described as ‘probably the finest book that
will ever be written on the religious life.’ It is amusing to note
that it was while she was engaged on writing the chapter about
celibacy that she gave birth to her eldest daughter.
Bernstein
then turned to fiction and Sadie
was
published in 1983. It was based on her grandmother’s experiences
and tells the story of a Jewish woman living through two world wars
and three marriages. The book was an immediate success. Then came
Salka
(1986)
inspired by the diary of a young Jewish immigrant who travelled from
Russia to Vienna, and then to England. Lili
(1988)
was about a dancer and her scandalous life at the turn of the 20th
century. In 1991 Bernstein published Body
and Soul and
it was made into an award-winning ITV series broadcast in 1993
starring Kristin Scott Thomas, Anthony Valentine, Amanda Redman, and
Dorothy Tutin. It tells the story of an enclosed nun who leaves her
convent for family reasons, and then falls in love. Bernstein’s
later books include Sacred
and Profane (1995)
and Saints
and Sinners (1998).
Bernstein’s books have been translated into sixteen languages. In
2001 she moved to London with her family.
Miscellaneous
Sam
Fenton
– He is an artist who lived in Osborne Villas, and in 1999 was
described as being 76 years old. Examples of his work were exhibited
at the Royal Academy six times between the years 1943 and 1980. The
Prince of Wales admires his work, and particularly requested that
Fenton’s watercolours should be included in an exhibition held in
London in 1997 called The
Discerning Eye. Lionel
Blair, who is also a Fenton fan, made a similar request for another
exhibition of the same name held in November 1999.
Reginald
Pepper of Swindon
– This is the name Joanna Carrington used when she began to paint
in a more primitive style in 1974 as an alternative from her usual
mode. However, interest in Reg Pepper’s work grew apace, and in
1981 the Portal Gallery, specializing in primitive-style work, asked
for full biographical details. Joanna Carrington then felt obliged to
own up to her alias. In 1984 she wrote a children’s book Papper
and Jam with
illustrations by Reg Pepper. Joanna Carrington is the niece of Dora
Carrington of Bloomsbury set fame. Joanna lived in Osborne Villas in
the 1980s.
copyright © J.Middleton A view of Osborne Villas looking north |
Sources
Brighton & Hove City Libraries
Census Returns
Census Returns
Directories
Middleton J, Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Evening Argus
Hove Council Minute Books
Laughton,
To, A.
D. Taylor, the Cricketologist (2002)
Lowerson,
J. editor Cliftonville,
Hove, A Victorian Suburb (1977)
Old newspapers
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
The Keep
AMS 5776/2/2 – Re 27/28 Osborne Street
AMS 5776/2/8-9 – Re 27/28 Osborne Street
Copyright © J.Middleton 2018
page layout by D. Sharp
page layout by D. Sharp