Judy Middleton 2003 (revised 2018)
copyright © J.Middleton The Stone commemorating the Duke of Portland’s gift is in a prominent place |
Duke of Portland (1857-1943)
copyright © National Library of Australia The Duke of Portland The Sydney Mail 17 August 1889 |
On 11 June 1889 the Duke of Portland married
Winifred Anna Dallas-York, formerly Mistress of the Robes to the
Queen. The couple went on to have two sons and a daughter. It is not
surprising that they lived in considerable state in Welbeck Abbey,
which resembled a principality more than anything else because in
1900 some 320 staff were employed there, including fourteen
house-maids plus 38 other male and female servants for the kitchen
and other domestic duties. The chief steward was the kingpin of the
domestic staff, and his status was so high and his responsibilities
so onerous that he had his own footman to wait on him at table in the
steward’s dining room where the ten most senior servants (known as
the Upper Ten) joined him for meals.
copyright © National Library of Australia Duchess of Portland The Herald (Melbourne) 19 April 1923 |
There is a picturesque anecdote about the duke and
duchess dating from the 1930s. One evening the duke was chatting to
his wife as she was getting ready to attend a ball. Deep in
conversation he sat down on a chair without realising it was already
occupied. He soon jumped up because he had landed on top of his
wife’s large diamond tiara and impaled himself upon its platinum
spikes. The duchess was quite unperturbed, either by her husband’s
painful situation, or her broken tiara. She said, ‘Never mind, I’ll
wear the other one.’
The Duke of
Portland was Master of the Horse to Queen Victoria – an appropriate
role because he loved horses and was a devotee of horse racing.
Indeed, The Times
described
him as ‘a prominent figure of the Turf’. One of his greatest
racehorses was St
Simon, which
he purchased for 1,600 guineas. This horse won the Ascot Gold Cup and
the Goodwood Cup in 1884 and sired notable horses such as Persimmon
and
Diamond Jubilee
that
won the Derby for the Prince of Wales.
In August 1906 the Duke of Portland offered as a
gift to the people of Hove for ever as an open space, a piece of land
abutting Tamworth Road and Marmion Road consisting of 1.75 acres (0.7
hectares).
In 1914 the Duke and Duchess of Portland
celebrated their Silver Wedding by the donation of three recreation
grounds – one in Kirkby-in-Ashfield, one in Mansfield, and the
other in Mansfield Woodhouse.
Stoneham
There has been some debate about where the name
‘Stoneham’ for the open space originates. The most attractive
theory is that it was because the area was once in use as a gravel
pit, but later became a convenient site where Mr Mainstone kept his
pigs – thus a combination of ‘stone’ and ‘ham’. Delightful.
Mr Mainstone was the Duke of Portland’s bailiff, and the duke
particularly asked that Mainstone Road should be named in his honour
and because the bailiff occupied a cottage there with his family that
was once surrounded by fields.
copyright © J.Middleton Pigs were once kept in a chalk pit here – the ground now occupied by Stoneham Park |
Unfortunately for this theory, the word ‘Stoneham’
was already in use in the area. The Stoneham Estate dated from the
1880s, and included land on which Lennox Road, Kendal Road, Ruskin
Road Stoneham Road, Payne Avenue, Tamworth Road, and part of Mortimer
Road were built. Crucially, one of the mortgagees was William
Stoneham of Fenchurch Street, London.
Development
Although the Duke of Portland gifted the land in
1906, Hove Council was in no hurry to consolidate on this kind
donation. The reason, as ever, was lack of money. Indeed, it was not
until 1913 that the space was officially opened.
In November 1909 it was decided that 38 elm trees
should be planted on the east, west, and south sides at a cost of
£10. In June 1911 it was stated that wrought-iron hurdle fencing
would be erected, together with three gates.
In November 1912 the council decided a brick wall should be built on the north side to replace the wooden fence, and a new iron fence should be installed on the west side to replace the old iron fence at a cost of £185. In 1913 six seats were provided and they cost £3 each.
In November 1912 the council decided a brick wall should be built on the north side to replace the wooden fence, and a new iron fence should be installed on the west side to replace the old iron fence at a cost of £185. In 1913 six seats were provided and they cost £3 each.
copyright
© Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove An extract from a report in the Brighton Herald on the opening of Portland Road Recreation Ground (Stoneham Park) in 1913 |
At
first it was called Portland Road Recreation Ground, later it became
Stoneham Recreation Ground, and today it is Stoneham Park. It was
opened on 1st
October 1913.
Labour Party Meetings
In July 1919 Hove Council granted permission to
the Portland Ward Association of Brighton & Hove Labour Party to
hold meetings at Stoneham on Saturday evenings in the summer and
autumn. But they must not hold more than two meetings in a month.
In 1920 the meetings were held on alternate
Mondays at 7.30 p.m. from 12 July to 20 September.
Improvements
In 1923 a sheltered seat costing £40 was erected
on the north side.
In May 1925 Hove Council decided to erect a
lavatory for children, built of brick with a red tile roof. In order
for it to blend in with its surroundings, it was to be covered
outside by rustic woodwork. It was to be situated on the west side,
75 feet north from Marmion Road. The following month Parsons &
Sons agreed to erect the building for £173.
The Gun
copyright
© Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove Photograph from the Brighton Graphic entitled 'The German gun while at Preston Park Barracks, Brighton' |
In 1920 the Royal Sussex Regiment presented the
town of Hove with a captured German gun, which was put on display in
the Stoneham ground and surrounded by fencing.
By 1928 some Hove councillors were becoming fed up
with the sight of the gun. They disliked such a grim war relic being
continuously on display in front of children. Besides, the gun’s
condition was deteriorating, while the fence around it needed repair.
Other councillors disagreed vehemently, stating that to throw it out
would be an insult to the Royal Sussex Regiment.
It is interesting to note that there were other
relics from the First World War including a gun at Hove Battery on
the seafront, and a tank in Hove Park. Just think how valuable these
relics would be today! But the Great War was supposed to be the war
that ended all wars, and so such souvenirs were chucked out.
Recent Times
In 1982 an Improvement Fund was set up to give
Stoneham Park a face-lift. Within three years some £2,800 was raised
or given, and there were plans to purchase new equipment.
In November 1985 children from Aldrington Infants’
School and West Hove Junior School helped to plant bulbs in the park.
In May 1989 the Mayor of Hove, Councillor Margaret
Adams, opened a children’s play-base at Stoneham Park that had two
rooms plus a kitchen. It was situated in a former electricity
sub-station built in 1925.
By 1994 there were two football areas plus some
play equipment for children with rubberised mats underneath for
safety purposes that looked like asphalt from a distance. Although
some of the original trees remained, the park was remarkable for its
lack of grass.
In August 1995 it was reported that the park was
plagued by an army of pigeons, and parents were reluctant to take
their children to the park because the ground was covered with bird
droppings. The pigeons had been attracted by people feeding them
while visiting the play area. Hove Council put up notices asking
people not to feed the birds there.
In December 1996 it was revealed that, as part of
planning gain, the Pavilion and Avenue Lawn Tennis Club had offered
to donate £40,000 to pay for a sport’s area in Stoneham Park. In
return sixteen houses would be built on the site of their old courts
on the south side of Wilbury Avenue, while the club created a brand
new establishment at The Droveway. This offer was not confirmed until
October 1998.
By 1999 it was unfortunate that Stoneham Park had
become a hot-spot for drug abusers. In July 1999 local residents and
workers from the YMCA in Marmion Road were working to improve the
situation. However, when the council removed old play-equipment such
as the see-saw, and a mini-slide, concerned residents feared the
drug-users would return. The council promised to spend £6,000 on new
equipment.
copyright © J.Middleton The playground on a sunny day in October 2018 |
In February 2000 there was a consultation exercise
with local residents to ascertain what improvements they would like
to see. They came up with the following:
Installing a rubber surface around play equipment
Reducing the amount of tarmac
Getting rid of a rusty climbing frame
Removing the basketball court to the other side,
near the Marmion Road gate
Keeping dogs out of the park
Discouraging drug users
In March 2001 Hove YMCA came up with an idea
called the Park Safe Project. This would entail three volunteers
patrolling the park from 4.30. p.m. to 7 p.m. during the spring and
summer so that children might play in safety without parents worrying
about truculent teenagers, drug users, and drug dealers.
Meanwhile, the ‘Our Park’ appeal launched by
the Poets’ Corner Residents’Association had managed to raise some
£5,000, which was added to the £46,000 already earmarked by
Brighton & Hove City Council.
On 26 May 2001 Councillor Harry Steer, Mayor of
Brighton & Hove, officially re-opened Stoneham Park. The area now
boasted new play equipment in the form of a climbing frame, monkey
bars, two sets of swings and a triple slide. There was a grassed
area, and landscaping work had been carried out with hedges being cut
back being one example.
The project turned out to be a huge success and
was much appreciated by parents. It seems that when drug dealers
endeavoured to return to their old haunts, determined parents chased
them out again.
In the spring of 2000 daffodil and crocus bulbs
were planted.
In 2013 the centenary of Stoneham Park was
celebrated with gusto.
copyright © J.Middleton A vivid mural brightens up a blank wall facing the children’s playground |
In 2018 the park
is thriving, and lively murals enhance the surroundings. The play
area for young children, now including a sand-pit, has secure metal
fencing closing it off from the rest of the park. The grassed area is
quiet and green with mature trees shadowing it. The stumps of those
trees that needed to be felled have been kept in
situ and levelled to
serve as stools or tables. The cafe – now called The Hive – has
been re-opened and is doing well plus, great relief all round, there
are public toilets.
Sources
Dictionary of National Biography
Middleton J, Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Evening Argus
Hove Council Minute Books
National Library of Australia
National Library of Australia
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
The Keep
AMS 5976 – Deeds relating to 24 Stoneham Road
1880-1966
Copyright © J.Middleton 2018
page layout by D. Sharp
page layout by D. Sharp