Judy Middleton & D. Sharp 2019
1050 – Edward the Confessor bestowed the Manor
of Hove on Godwin, Earl of Sussex
1067 – Hove Manor, given
by William the Conqueror to William Earl de Warenne
1148 – Hou, or Hove, mentioned in the Archives
of Winchester.
1150 – St Leonard’s Church, Aldrington
erected.
1216 – Richard Poore, Bishop of Chichester,
founded St Andrew’s Church, Hove.
1379 – Poll Tax levied on inhabitants of Hove.
1402 – William Bolle entered as a hermit the
Lady Chapel at Aldrington.
1539 – Vicarage of Hove valued at the
Reformation at £20 2s 11d. Per annum.
1612 – 11 March – Inventory of Hove Vicarage
made by Samuel Harsuet.
1622 – 20 September – Subsidy levied by James
I on Hove.
1638 – 2 January – First Court Leet held by
John Scrase, Lord of the Manor.
1672 – 17 May – Quakers first convocation at
West Blatchington.
1695 – 1 May – Burial Act instituted at Hove.
1702 – August – Ship Tavern, Hove Street,
opened.
1703 & 1705 Fierce storms and floods destroy last remaining houses and St Leonard's Church at Aldrington.
copyright Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove An etching of the remains of St Leonard's by Copley Fielding (1787-1855) |
1703 & 1705 Fierce storms and floods destroy last remaining houses and St Leonard's Church at Aldrington.
1756 – Turnpikes placed on roads at Hove.
1779 – Presbyterian meeting house opened in Hove
Street.
1783 – 2 October – Burials first registered in
the Church books at Hove.
1785 – 26 May – Hove House commenced building
in Hove Street.
1793
Military Camp formed at Goldstone Bottom.
26 April – Rooke and Howell gibbeted near
Goldstone Bottom for robbery of the Mail.
1795 – Cooke and Parish shot at Goldstone Bottom
for Mutiny.
1796 – Long Baru Farm erected at Hove.
copyright © Royal Pavilion & Museum,
Brighton & Hove The Environs of Brighthemstone by Thomas Yeakell c1800 |
1800 – Wood steeple erected on St Andrew’s Parish Church.
1802 – 8 August – Captain Codlin scuttled
Adventure brig off Hove Street.
1810 – 11 June – Bull bait at the Ship Inn,
Hove Street.
copyright Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove The Ship Inn, Hove Street |
1815 – Hove Fishery Company collapsed.
1819 – 10 October – Seven smugglers captured
by Preventive men of the Hound cutter at Hove.
1822 – James Mills erected Mills Terrace.
1823 – Lower road to Shoreham between Hove and
Kingston Buci opened.
1825
Brunswick Market, Waterloo Street, built.
Brunswick Square and Brunswick Terrace commenced
by George Cheesman.
1828 – St Andrew’s Chapel, Waterloo Street,
consecrated.
1829 – Sir William Freemantle agitated for local
government in Hove.
1830 – Adelaide Crescent begun.
8 April - Brunswick Square and Brunswick Terrace
Commissioners formed.
1833 – 30 August – Antheum, Palmeira Square,
collapsed.
copyright © J.Middleton The Goldstone (Druids Stone) Hove Park c1925 |
1834
March - Gorse Stones buried near Goldstone Bottom
by William Rigden.
28 April - Extension to Shoreham Road decided.
2 May - Vestry accepted tender of £ 1,920 to
rebuild St Andrew’s Church.
1835 – 1 July - Hove annexed to Steyning Union.
1836
Brighton, Hove and Preston Waterworks
commenced.
18 June – Hove Parish Church open for Divine
Service.
copyright © J.Middleton St Andrews Old Church in 1906 |
1837 – 27 March – Constables’ rate a
farthing in the pound levied by John Mills.
1839 – 2 April – John Tucker appointed first
organist at the Parish Church.
1840 – 12 May – Railway opened through Hove to
Shoreham from Brighton.
1845 – 24 November First Railway station at Hove
opened.
1848 – 7 April – Meeting at the Kerrison’s
against amalgamating Hove in the Brighton Corporation Act. 28 May –
Brunswick Cricket Ground, Hove opened by C. H. Gausden.
1850 – 4 August – First house at S.W. corner
of York Road commence.
Copyright © J.Middleton St John the Baptist Church |
1851
24 February – George Basevi J.P. died at 73
Brunswick Square, aged 84.
March – Great well bored and lifting machinery
erected by G. Gallard at his brewery.
George Gallard quartette bought 16 acres in Lower Cliftonville.
7 August – Act to extend the limits of Brunswick
Terrace passed. October
Site for St John the Baptist’s Church given by
Sir Isaac Goldsmith.
1852 – William Kirkpatrick and G. Gallard bought
Hove Lawns from Miss Iuman.
1854
St John the Baptist’s Church, consecrated.
6 July Revd G.P. Malleson presented with silver
tea service and £400 at Hove.
1855
25 January – George Hall failed for £35,458 at Hove.
25 January – George Hall failed for £35,458 at Hove.
copyright Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove Hove Barrow's Amber Cup |
10 March - Copley Fielding buried in Hove
Churchyard.
19 October - Sussex Hotel opened by Henry Jones.
1856 – Bronze Age Amber Cup found near Palmeira
Square.
1858
Three acres added to Hove Churchyard.
14 August – Hove Local Improvement Act
confirmed.
23 July Hove Police enrolled.
20 October – St Patrick and St James, Cambridge
Road opened by license.
Church School, George Street opened.
copyright © J.Middleton St Andrew’s Church of England School George Street |
1859
27 April Baron Goldsmid died, aged 81.
3 October – Adur Inn, Aldrington Gap opened by
Thos. Cordwell.
1860 – 25 March – Western Branch of the
Brighton Dispensary opened at 4 and 5 Farm Road.
1861 – Hove Post Office Savings Bank opened.
1862
23 April – Deerfoot won four miles foot race for
£250 by 20 yards at Cricket Ground.
6 June – Hove and Brighton drainage commenced at
a cost of £30,000.
2 June – Water found in Goldstone works at 118
ft.
Holy Trinity Church, Eaton Road, commenced.
1863
1 January – George Hall died at 1
Albany Villas.
7 April – Dr. Gilbert laid foundation stone of
the Holy Trinity Church.
Wall at the top of George Street removed.
copyright © J.Middleton Holy Trinity Church |
1864
Revd Walter Kelly presented with a purse of £250
by District Ladies.
8 June – Holy trinity Church consecrated.
28 July Hangleton annexed to Portslade.
20 August – Ventnor Mission Hall opened.
1865 – 10 December – Grand organ by Wills,
opened in St Patrick’s, Cambridge Road.
1866 – 1 January – Mahomed’s Gymnasium
opened in Lansdowne Road.
1868 – Emmanuel Church, corner of Norfolk Terrace
erected
1869 – Omnibuses commenced plying from Castle
Square to Cliftonville.
1871 – West Brighton Estate commenced.
1872
Whit Monday – Sussex County Cricket Ground and
Hotel opened in Eaton Road.
27 June – Meeting for the extension of Hove
Lawns.
Stanford Estate opened up.
1873
27 January – Great Meeting to oppose annexation
of Hove to Brighton.
10 May – Brighton and Hove Co-operative Stores
opened.
4 September – Final meeting of old Commissioners
at Hove.
copyright © J.Middleton The Drive |
1 January – First sittings of Hove Commissioners
at Town Hall (Brunswick) Henry Endacott appointed Assistant Town Clerk.
Rigden’s Farm built in Fonthill Road.
The Drive commenced.
1875
12 January – Sir George A. Westphal died aged
90.
18 January – Dr James Hollis Pickford, J.P.
died.
2 June - £5,500 borrowed by Commissioners for
Hove drainage.
1876
29 February – Arnold Taylor’s inquiry
as to the sale of the West Brighton Waterworks.
21 March – Edmund Bachouse’s inquiry
concerning the uniting of Brighton and Hove.
19 May – First section of Church Road opened.
22 May – West Brighton Waterworks sold for
£27,500 by William Morris to the Brighton Corporation.
12 August – Thomas A. Goodman appointed
Magistrates’ Clerk at Hove.
6 November – Hove Bank, 1, Western Road opened.
18 December First School Board elected. -
Waterworks at Goldstone Bottom finished.
1878
March – St Leonard’s Church, Aldrington
restored.
29 September – Revd J.G. Gregory, from Chelsea
appointed to Emmanuel Church.
29 September - Primitive Methodist Chapel
Goldstone Villas opened.
November – Convent of the Sacred Heart.
The Drive opened.
1879
Hove disunited from Preston.
2 April – Revd Thomas Peacey appointed Vicar of
Hove.
1 July – West Brighton Railway Station opened.
13 October – Ellen Street Board School opened.
1880 – 22 May – First stone of Hove new Town Hall laid by J.W. Howlett J.P.
1881 – June – Church of Sacred Heart, Norton
Road, opened.
4 November – new organ placed in the Parish
Church.
copyright © J.Middleton Hove Town Hall in Church Road |
1882
27 March – Foundation of St Barnabas Church,
Sackville Road laid.
7 April – Hove Cemetery opened on Old Shoreham
Road (25 acres).
8 July – Hablot Knight-Brown (Phiz) deid aged 67
at 8 Clarendon Villas.
13 December – New Town Hall, Church Road opened;
cost £35,000.
24 December – Brighton & Hove Gas Company
and the Black Rock Gas Company amalgamated.
1883
Parish Churchyard closed for burials.
27 December – Hill & Co.’s tender for sea
defences for £25,000 accepted.
1884
8 January – Revd Dr. James O’Brian (St
Patrick’s) died.
28 April – Sir Michael Costa died aged 74, in
Seafield Road
June – Mainway to Shoreham commenced
14 August – Major G.J. Teevan appointed Chief
Constable at Hove.
1885
28 August – Arthur Bigge J.P., died at 23
Cambridge Road.
1 October – William Rigden died in Seafield
Road.
1886
23 January – F. Batts, Parish Clerk died.
24 January – Henry Endacott appointed Vestry
Clerk of Hove.
copyright Royal
Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove 1930s view of the Devil's Dyke Railway Station. |
1887
Williamson Home for Ladies built by Jane Hannah
MacDonald.
1 September – Devil's Dyke Railway opened
13 September – Coal duties abolished at Hove
1888
22 January – Revd Walter Kelly (former Vicar of
Hove) died.
18 April – Connaught Road Board School opened.
1889
22 June – George Gallard died at Hove.
12 September – Dr Ernest Sexton Metcalf elected
Medical Officer of Health.
9 October – Stephen G. Dancy appointed Clerk to
School Board, Hove
1890 – 9 October – Alfred DuPont killed in the
Grand Avenue.
1891
13 April – Farewell banquet to J.W. Howlett.
1 May – Consecration of the nave and aisle of
All Saints, Eaton Road.
2 May – Hove Recreation Ground opened
3 May – Thomas Barry Sullivan (actor) died at 46
Albany Villas, aged 67
14 May – Banquet to G.B. Woodruff.
26 June – Charles S. Parnell married Catherine
O’Shea at Steyning.
29 June – West Blatchington Church restored.
9 July – Electric lighting adopted by Hove
Council.
6 October – Charles S. Parnell died at 10,
Walsingham Terrace, Aldrington.
5 November – Church School, George Street,
re-opened.
12 November – Hove electric lighting contracted
for, by Compton & Co.
14 December – Hove Public Library, 11 Grand
Avenue opened.
23 December – Board of Trade rejected the
erection of a Pier at Hove.
copyright © D. Sharp St Peter's Church, West Blatchington. |
1892
2 January – Roman Catholic School, Coleridge
Street, built.
14 March – Portrait and candelabra given to J.
W. Howlett.
6 May – Hove Recreation Ground, Old Shoreham
Road opened.
9 June – Hove Commissioners refuse to license
Meyner’s Bus Service.
14 July – School of Art founded in Hove.
11 August - £11,000 borrowed for Hove Esplanade.
29 October – Princess Christian laid foundation
stone for Police Convalescent Home, Portland Road.
8 December – Contract confirmed by the Council
with Electric Light Company.
copyright © J.Middleton The Police Convalescent Home, Portland Road. |
1893
2 May – Aldrington annexed to Hove.
6 May – Board School in Goldsmid Road opened.
24 June – Duke of Portland gave a site for St
Philip’s Church, Aldrington.
21 July – Police Convalescent Home opened.
31 October – Dinner and presentation to W. H.
Cockburn, by Hove Regatta Committee.
Hove Laundry and Hove Baths opened.
22 December – Dr William Kebble, Medical Officer
of Health, died, aged 73.
1894
1 January – Reference Library, Hove opened.
4 May – Vera Fane Benett-Stanford died.
20 May – Edmond Hodson Yates, of The World,
died aged 63.
29 May – Hove Swimming Club instituted.
9 June – Revd Fred. Reade retired from the
incumbency of St John the Baptist, Hove.
copyright © J.Middleton Aldrington Recreation Ground (Wish Park) |
14 June – Aldrington Recreation Ground bought
for £10,000 by Hove.
14 June – Commissioners petitioned the Railway
Company to re-name West Brighton Station “Hove”.
1 October – Building commenced of St Philip’s
Aldrington.
5 November – Bishop of Chichester (Dr Durnford)
reopened George Street Church School.
9 November – Dr Durnford laid foundation stone
of St Philip’s Aldrington.
27 December – Hove Commissioners converted into
a District Council.
1895
14 February – Faculty for forming a portion of
Hove Parish Burial Ground into a road.
5 August – Hove Churchyard set back 31 feet.
10 October – Wood pavements laid for traffic in
Hove.
25 October – St Philip’s Aldrington, opened by
license.
5 November – Brighton refused to connect
Aldrington drainage.
14 November – Re-arrangement of Hove Town Wards.
8 December – George Augustus Sala died at 58
Norton Road, aged 67.
copyright © J.Middleton All Saints Church, (Hove Parish Church) |
1896
13 February – Urban Council decided to petition
for a Charter of Incorporation.
1 March – Prince of Wales and suite attended
service in Hove Parish Church.
23 March – Urban Council resolve to extend the
sea wall westward.
9 April – Duke and Duchess of York visited Mr
Reuben Sassoon at Hove.
3 June – Memorial stone of Wesleyan Church,
Portland Road, laid.
15 July – Severe thunderstorm at Hove.
17 July – Hove petition the Privy Council for a
Charter.
15 August – Urban Council arranged to give Band
performances on Hove Lawns.
2 September – Corporation of Brighton protest to
Privy Council against the Charter for Hove.
10 September – George B. Woodruff rejects the
scheme of amalgamation with Brighton.
15 September – Monster Meeting in favour of Hove
Charter.
29 September – Steyning Guardians support the
Charter of Incorporation.
17 December – Westleyan Church, Portland Road,
opened.
1897
17 January – Draft of the Charter sent by Privy
Council to Hove.
27 May – H. Porter’s “History of Hove”
published.
1898
14 March – Geo. T. Congreve died, aged 77.
22 April – Charter granted for Incorporation of
Hove.
20 May – St Philip’s Aldrington consecrated.
18 July – Confirmation of Hove Charter by Privy
Council.
8 August – Charter sent to Town Clerk of Hove
(Henry Endacott)
11 August – Council decide on Third Avenue for
Public Library site.
23 August – Public reading of Hove Charter at
the Town Hall.
26 September – Aldrington Board School, Portland
Road, opened.
2 November – Municipal Election of 30
Councillors at Hove.
9 November – Election of first Mayor and 10
Aldermen at Hove.
24 November – Bye-election of Councillors for
Hove.
12 December – First Mayor Banquet at Hove Town Hall.
1889
2 January – Free dinners began to Hove children
and aged poor.
11 March – Hove Town Council decides against
wood-paving for Hove seafront.
16 June – Opening of Young Men’s Institute at
Holland Road.
29 June – Town Council take wood-paving in
Western Road from dilatory contractors and give the work to Messrs
Mowland & Co.
13 July – Barnum’s at Hove.
29 July – Cricket: Visit of the Australian team
to the County Cricket Ground, drawn game, Sussex 414 and 124 for 4 wickets,
Australia 624 for 4 wickets (declared) Victor Trumper
300 not out, Australian record score in England.
3 November – Technical buildings at Connaught
Road Board Schools destroyed by fire, damage about £1000.
22 December - Hove Magistrates distributes £103
10s in Christmas Doles.
28 December – Local Government Inquiry as to
annexation of Preston Rural by Hove.
1900
Two contrasting items of news from the beginning
of the 1900s:-
13 January - Hove Town Council passed a resolution
to oppose before the Parliamentary Committee, the Bill that would
allow Brighton Corporation to build an electric tramway service in
Brighton and an electricity generating station near the Portslade Gas Works.
copyright Royal
Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove Portslade Gas Works |
(Hove Council were concerned that the new electric
power supply line for the proposed Brighton Tramway would not pass
through Hove’s territory, therefore making it impossible for Hove
to benefit from this new electricity power supply.
Brighton
Corporation proposed to run the electricity power supply line north up Portslade Urban District Council's Station Road and
Carlton Terrace and then east along the north side of
Old Shoreham Road to central Brighton. The north side of Old Shoreham
Road was in Preston Rural District Council's territory. Hove Council were only
willing to withdraw their opposition to the Brighton Tramway Bill if
the Local Government Board allowed Hove Council to annex Preston
Rural into Hove)
January – There was an appeal for the able men
of Brighton and Hove, who were good horse riders, to volunteer to
fight at the Front (the ‘Front’ being the Second Boer War in
South Africa)
*******
Mr H. Porter wrote in The History of Hove (1897) 'Perhaps the peruser in bidding au revoir to
these pages will be impelled to admit that Hove does possess some
interest to have a history of its own, and that the town is quite as
worthy of consideration as its overbearing, overcrowded and overgrown
rival – Brighton.'
When
the compiler of The History of Hove called on Mr Frederick Willard of Church
Road, he very ironically informed him ‘that Hove had no history, and
that there was time enough in a half-century to think about collating
one.’ Mr William H. Gibson, of the King’s Road, was even more assertive
respecting the insignificance of Hove.
Mr H Porter wrote, 'So far the futility of their fragile remarks have been conspicuously contradicted. We hope it will be so in the future, and that the anticipations of the zealous and courteous town clerk, Mr Henry Endacott, will be verified, and that not only will Hove become populous, but powerful and prosperous.'
Mr H Porter wrote, 'So far the futility of their fragile remarks have been conspicuously contradicted. We hope it will be so in the future, and that the anticipations of the zealous and courteous town clerk, Mr Henry Endacott, will be verified, and that not only will Hove become populous, but powerful and prosperous.'
Sources
Brighton Herald
Brighton & Hove City Libraries
Porter, H. The History of Hove (1897)
Brighton & Hove City Libraries
Porter, H. The History of Hove (1897)
Royal Pavilion & Museum,
Brighton & Hove
Copyright © J.Middleton 2019
page layout by D. Sharp
page layout by D. Sharp