Judy Middleton 2003 (revised 2021)
copyright © J.Middleton The elegant curve of St Aubyns was photographed in February 2019 |
Background
At the beginning
of the 19th
century the land on which St Aubyns was later built, belonged to
Thomas Corney. In his will dated 13 July 1811 he left the land to his
nephews James Corney and Robert Corney. Thomas Corney must have died
soon after writing his will because his nephews were admitted to the
property in 1812.
The land extended north to the churchyard wall
belonging to St Andrew’s Old Church, which in those days stretched
further south than the wall we are familiar with today, and south to
the turnpike road (later Kingsway). The land included two detached
houses called Hove Lodge and Hove House.
The land was
sold for £3,600 to Henry Hopkins, who in his turn, sold it in August
1823. Perhaps Mr Hopkins became short of money for he sold the land
at a loss - £3,578-10s -
to
George Stephens, Hove brick-maker.
Stephens died in 1851, leaving the land to his
adopted son Thomas Fowle Stephens. It turned out to be a wonderful
legacy for T. F. Stephens who, in 1855, had the satisfaction of
selling it for £7,000 to Thomas Wisden Esq of Henfield. The reason
why the land had shot up in value was because of the extensive
house-building activities going on in the Cliftonville area.
Thomas
Wisdom also made a profit when he sold the land. But first of all in
1862 he had to invest £170-0-6d
in
enfranchising it under the Copyhold Act. Then he sold the land for
£11,300 to Frederick Tooth and John Tooth, timber merchants and
builders. (Frederick Tooth was the first person to be buried in Hove
Cemetery on 15 January 1882 – the cross, in polished rose marble,
is still in a remarkably good condition.)
Hove House and Isambard Kingdom Brunel
Hove House was a large property situated
south-east of Hove Street facing what later became Kingsway. It was
built in 1738 along with other properties, known at first as New
Terrace, and later as Hove Terrace. The house was also known as Old
Hove House, probably to distinguish it from the other Hove House in
Hove Street, which became Hove Manor when John Brooker purchased the
right to be Lord of the Manor.
Dr Morrell founded a school for boys at Hove
House. The school had strong links with the Unitarian Church in
Brighton of which Dr Morrel was the first minister, and his two
successors Mr Wallace and Mr Malleson, were also pastors at the
church.
copyright © J.Middleton The Unitarian Church in New Road, Brighton, was photographed in 2012 |
It is said that Sir Marc Isambard Brunel
especially selected the school as a suitable environment for his son
Isambard Kingdom Brunel (1806-1859) because he approved of the
school’s ethos and Dr Morrel’s modern approach to education.
Unlike public schools, there was no flogging or fagging, and bullying
was not tolerated. Dr Morrel also believed that girls should be
properly educated.
But facts are hard to come by, regarding Brunel’s
time at Hove. One biography stated that Brunel was at Hove in around
1814, while other authorities plumb for 1817 because Dr Morrel was
not in the area until then, and the first service was not held at the
Unitarian Church until 20 August 1820. Brunel was definitely at Hove
in 1820 because in that year he wrote home as follows:
I have been making half a dozen boats lately, till
I have worn my hands to pieces. I have also taken a plan of Hove,
which is a very amusing job. I should be much obliged to you if you
would ask papa (I hope he is well and hearty) whether he would lend
me his long measure. It is a long 80-foot tape; he will know what I
mean. I will take care of it for I want to make a more exact plan,
though this is pretty exact I think. I intend to take a view of all
(about five) the principal houses in that great town Hove.
Brunel must have had fond memories of his time at
Hove because when in around 1825 he heard that Dr Morrel was due to
preach in a chapel at Marylebone, Brunel walked all the way from
Blackfriars in order to see him.
However, it appears that Brunel’s time at Hove
nearly came to an untimely end. Brunel’s party piece was to pretend
to swallow a coin. But on one occasion a half-sovereign became lodged
in his gullet. There was general panic, the doctor was summoned, and
Brunel was suspended by his heels while a surgeon wrestled to remove
the offending coin. This anecdote, with horrid and dramatic
embellishments, was recounted to the schoolboys by an old cobbler who
had his stall near their playground, and recorded by Henry Solly who
arrived at Dr Morrel’s in 1826.
St Aubyns Place
The first housing to be built at St Aubyns was at
the south end when the road was known as St Aubyns Place. According
to Henry Porter, the builder Jabez Reynolds started building the
houses in the 1860s, extending to number 18 on the west side, and to
number 19 on the east side. In those days, the surroundings were
almost rural. Between the two wings of St Aubyns Place, there was a
pleasant green enclosure, and old maps mark at least five mature
trees there. The enclosure was the property of Frederick Tooth and
John Tooth. To the west was a large nursery garden belonging to
Balchin & Nell with several long greenhouses plus large, stone
tanks – it was called the Cliftonville Nursery. To the east there
was a large archery ground with flagstaff and a double row of trees
on the east boundary where Seafield Road is today. The Hove
Toxophilite Society opened the ground in 1863.
By 1869, in order to take account of new
buildings, St Aubyns Place was re-numbered. For example, number 5 St
Aubyns Place became number 9 St Aubyns, and number 6 St Aubyns Place
became number 10 St Aubyns.
St Aubyns Place was declared a public highway on
18 November 1875, the Borough Surveyor stating that it extended from
the Shoreham Road (later Kingsway) northwards for 625 feet.
The rest of the road was built by the 1880s and
the whole road was known as St Aubyns – it became a public
highway in November 1882. The Borough Surveyor described it as
being1,000-ft in length while the width was 47-ft 7-in, except for
a length of around 200-ft at the south end where the width was 63-ft
9-in.
copyright © J.Middleton An old view of St Aubyns with a single parked car. The tower of St Andrew’s Old Church can be seen in the distance |
The east side of St Aubyns has terraced housing
from number 31 to number 89. By contrast, there are some rather grand
detached houses on the west side, the most imposing being number 40
and number 42, which rise to four storeys.
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove An old view of the east side of St Aubyns looking north to St Andrew's Old Church. |
Trees
In 1882 Hove Commissioners decided that trees
should be planted on both sides of St Aubyns at approximately 45-ft
apart for a cost of £40.
It was a wise investment because there are some magnificent elms there to this day. It is quite unusual to find elms flourishing so close to the sea, but of course they are not to be found at the south end. Elm trees are especially precious today because countless specimens in the country as a whole have been lost to the ravages of Dutch elm disease. Indeed, Brighton & Hove is now the proud host to the largest collection of elm trees in the kingdom.
Namrik Mews
It
is situated at the south-west end of St Aubyns. It was marked on the
1875 Ordnance
Survey Map, although
not named. At that time St Aubyns was partially built up, and there
were only ten houses north of the mews with around the same level of
development on the east side.
Namrik Mews was built on the site once occupied by Namrik Lodge where
a Mrs Mary Bush Stewart lived in 1881. The census for that year listed Mary as a widow and a Lodging House Keeper, her residents were Misses Ann and Elizabeth Jennings, Mrs Marion Sargent (all living off investments) and an 8 year school girl named Margarette Deh Carpent who was born in Lahore, her relationship to any of the Lodge's residents is not stated.
It was in 1889 that Namrik Mews made its first appearance in Street Directories, but in those days it was called Namrik Stables. There were open fields to the west of Namrik Stables all the way to the Ship Inn , Hove Manor and Hove Coastguard Station in Hove Drove (now Hove Street)
It was in 1889 that Namrik Mews made its first appearance in Street Directories, but in those days it was called Namrik Stables. There were open fields to the west of Namrik Stables all the way to the Ship Inn , Hove Manor and Hove Coastguard Station in Hove Drove (now Hove Street)
In the 1891 census three stables
were listed with one being unoccupied. Charles Hawkins, coachman and
groom, and his family occupied rooms above one stable, and James
Taffer, and his wife, lived above the other stable, together with a
lodger who was a groom.
During the 1920s the old bathing
machines used on Hove beach in the summer, were stored in Namrik Mews
during the winter months. Eventually, the bathing machines were sold
off to Lytham St Anne’s.
In 1999 Namrik Mews contained some
of the original stables, some converted into garages, and a rather
charming house with arched windows and the notice ‘Namrik Stables’
still affixed. But the buildings are considered to have been altered
too much to merit listed building status.
In August 2000 it was stated that
Richard Ray had been manufacturing glassware at his studio for over a
year. For some designs – for instance, the border of a mirror –
he used crushed glass that was then re-fused in a kiln; the finished
work looked like ice.
The name ‘Namrik’ is something
of a puzzle as to its origins and its connection to Hove. The following are suggestions of
a possible source for the name ‘Namrik’ :-
1) There
is a small island called Namrik in the Marshall
Islands’ archipelago
in the Pacific Ocean, it has no historic connection with the UK,
although it could have been visited by a former Hove sea captain ?
2) The renowned archaeologist Hormuzd Rassam (1826-1910) lived in the
Brighton and Hove area for the last 30 years of his life, notably at
Westbourne Villas. Rassam’s excavations of the ancient city of
Nineveh in 1852 was widely publicised and caused great excitement in Victorian England. Nineveh is close to Mosul, where Rassam was born and is less than 20
miles from a place called Namrik Wadi.
3) Probably the most likely
explanation for the use of the name ‘Namrik’ comes from the days
of the British Raj. There were over one hundred retired people and
their families in Victorian Hove who had connections
with India, in the form of service in either the Indian Army, the Indian
Civil Service or the East India Company. There is a small hamlet called Namrik in
the northern Indian State of Sikkim.
Although never a part of the British Raj, in the north of Tibet there is another small village called Namrik.
Although never a part of the British Raj, in the north of Tibet there is another small village called Namrik.
See also Hove and the Raj.
House Notes
Number
1
– The noted archaeologist Dr Eliot Curwen lived in this house and
died there in March 1950 at the age of 84. He came from a well-known
Cumbrian family and for some years worked as a medical missionary in
China. Indeed, his son,
Dr E Cecil Curwen, also a noted archaeologist, was born in Peking in 1898. The older Dr Curwen settled at Hove in early middle age, and kept his large medical practice going for almost 50 years. During the First World War he and Dr Desborough Clark were the honorary medical officers at the Convalescent Police Seaside Home in Portland Road when 544 wounded soldiers were treated there. Dr Curwen was honorary consulting surgeon at this institution for 40 years.
A Report from the Sussex Archaeological Collection
|
Dr E Cecil Curwen, also a noted archaeologist, was born in Peking in 1898. The older Dr Curwen settled at Hove in early middle age, and kept his large medical practice going for almost 50 years. During the First World War he and Dr Desborough Clark were the honorary medical officers at the Convalescent Police Seaside Home in Portland Road when 544 wounded soldiers were treated there. Dr Curwen was honorary consulting surgeon at this institution for 40 years.
Dr Curwen became fascinated by archaeology in 1909
after attending a lecture on the subject given by Hilaire Belloc, and
at once joined the Sussex Archaeological Society. He and his son were
among the pioneers of pre-history because before they started their
labours in 1910, not much was known about Sussex prior to the advent
of the Romans. Both Curwens wrote on the subject and the elder Dr
Curwen re-organised the Society’s museum.
Number
3
– On 8 May 1868 William Wilde took a seven-year lease on the
property at a cost of £100 a year. He rented it from a trio of
Lombard Street bankers, namely John William Burmester, Philip Patton
Blyth, and William Champion Jones. These gentlemen also had an
interest in various plots of land in Albany Villas, Medina Villas,
and Ventnor Villas, as well as number 9 St Aubyns.
Number
9
– On 4 May 1869 the same three Lombard Street bankers mentioned
under number 3, leased this house to Charles William Waterlow for
seven years for £110 a year. The deed states the property was
formerly known as 5 St Aubyns Place.
The
Honourable Roden Berkeley Wriothesly Noel (1834-1894) lived in this
house with his wife and family for several years. He was the fourth
son of Charles Noel, Lord Barham, created the 1st
Earl of Gainsborough in 1841. His mother Frances was his father’s
fourth wife, and she was the second daughter of the 3rd
Earl of Roden. Noel was educated at Wellington and graduated from
Cambridge in 1858. He served as Groom of the Privy Chamber to Queen
Victoria from 1867 to 1871, and when he died he left the diamond
beetle pin the Queen had given him to his daughter Frances.
At
one time Noel was on the staff of the Daily
News
and was a contributor to the Daily
Chronicle. Despite
his privileged background, he wrote and lectured on socialism, one of
his works being entitled London
Doss Houses and Portsmouth Slums with Father Dolling. But
he also wrote a biography of Lord Byron. Noel was famous in his day
as a poet, although entirely forgotten today. His first volume of
poetry Behind
the Veil
was published in 1863 – his last Little
Child’s Monument went
on sale in 1881.
His name was one of four famous residents chosen to
be inscribed under the dome of Hove Reference Library (the names no
longer being visible). In the library’s collection there is a
somewhat poignant letter dated 4 April 1894, just weeks before his
death, in which he stated that he had made £9 for the Hospital the
previous day with his poetry reading ‘though the audience was not
so numerous as I have been accustomed to get in other towns’. He
died suddenly at Mainz on 26 May 1894. He left £11,570-8-9d,
and
his house in St Aubyns to his wife.
copyright © J.Middleton There was once a school for young ladies at 19 St Aubyns |
Number
10
– This property was first known as 6 St Aubyns Place, but by 1869
had become number 10 St Aubyns.
Number
19
In 1859 Mrs Gayleard, widow of Revd James Gayleard, established a school for young ladies in this property, and it was still there in 1887. It was described as ‘essentially a home school, and as such enjoys a high reputation … particularly through India and the Colonies’. There was a large, private field with a pavilion, which was suitable for tennis and other outdoor amusements.
In 1859 Mrs Gayleard, widow of Revd James Gayleard, established a school for young ladies in this property, and it was still there in 1887. It was described as ‘essentially a home school, and as such enjoys a high reputation … particularly through India and the Colonies’. There was a large, private field with a pavilion, which was suitable for tennis and other outdoor amusements.
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
Dr Helen Boyle, the celebrated pioneer woman
doctor who founded Lady Chichester Hospital in New Church Road was one of the guests of honour at this event.
Dr
Helen Boyle was the cousin of the Vicar of St Nicolas Portslade the
Revd Vicars Armstrong Boyle
|
In the 20th century the Honourable Mary Macdonald occupied the house from around 1929 until her death in 1933. She was the only daughter of the first Prime Minister of Canada Sir John A. Macdonald.
Number
20
– The property was built in around 1880, and Dr Octavius Winslow
was the first tenant.
copyright © J.Middleton In 1915 this house (22), provided a welcome refuge for Belgian families fleeing the German onslaught |
Number
22
– This house also dates back to around 1880. The first occupants
were the Coke family – Mrs Coke lived there with her daughters
Jessie and Fanny, and sons Charlie and Percy. One of the sons became
an officer in the Hussars.
In 1915 Mrs Lovett Cameron loaned this house so
that it could be used as a temporary home for middle-class Belgian refugees. Hove residents rose to the occasion by lending furniture,
while Mrs Maynard provided clothing from the depot she managed.
Local authorities played their part too with Hove Council waiving the
payment of rates, and the gas company reduced their bill by a third.
Two Belgian nuns were on hand to look after the families. Later on,
the house became the Hove Club for Belgian Ladies, and The Duchess of
Norfolk opened it in 1922.
Numbers
30, 32, & 34
– In the 1860s Alfred Thorncroft Mills purchased some land from
Frederick Tooth and John Tooth, and these three houses were built
upon it. It appears there was more than one mortgage on the property.
On 8 April 1862 Mr Mills, gentleman, secured a loan of £8,000 from
the Tooths, and George Philcox Hill of Brighton. On 10 January 1868
Mr Mills took out a further loan of £1,500 with Revd Arthur Bruce
Frazer, rector of Horsham, while he also borrowed £700 from Charles
Bridger, Augustus Goring Bridger, James Bond Orme, and Somers Clarke
– the latter gentleman taking over both these debts at a later
stage.
copyright © J.Middleton These houses were built in the 1860s |
These three houses were put up for sale on 9 September 1872, described as well-built marine residences. Number 30 featured the following:
4 good bedrooms on the upper floor
WC on the half-landing
2 best bedrooms and 2 dressing rooms on the first
floor
Ground floor contained a spacious dining room and
drawing room, fitted with handsome, marble chimney pieces, elaborate
cornices, and plate glass windows
Entrance hall, and WC
Basement contained a ‘capital kitchen’
Housekeeper’s room
Scullery
Wine, beer and coal cellars
The house was let on a lease from 25 March 1868 at
£110 a year, and the lessor or lessee could extend the lease at the
end of seven or fourteen years.
These
three houses were again on the market just eleven years later, being
put up for auction at the Old
Ship, Brighton,
on 5 November 1883.
Numbers 30 and 32 were withdrawn, but number 34
sold for £1,620. On 25 May 1889 spinsters Eliza Osborne and Mary
Hollingdale purchased numbers 30 and 34 for £1,050.
On 24 June 1892 Somers Clarke let number 30 to
Thomas Halcrow Johnson and his wife Emma Sophia Johnson for seven
years – the rent for the first year was £60, and for the remainder
it was set at £80 a year. The people who signed the lease were
Somers Clarke, George Walter Willett, and the Johnsons. On 1 January
1907 Mrs Johnson took out a further lease on the house at £80 a
year. She died in 1913, and then the estate agent had the problem of
trying to find a new tenant. Several letters were written to
solicitors Howlett & Clarke in 1914, and one contained the
following:
We should like to call your attention to the fact
that there is a considerable amount of grained and varnished work …
which is out of date for decorative purposes and does not add to the
chances of letting the house.
Moreover, the agents suggested that the proposed
rent of £90 a year was far too high, especially since the house did
not possess a bathroom while a nearby house had a bathroom and
electricity throughout, and was on offer for £80 a year. Furthermore
there were seven or eight other houses in St Aubyns to let and
‘houses do let well in this road’.
On 22 March 1889 Somers Clarke sold number 32 for
£1,450 to Charles Bellerby.
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
This advert from the Brighton Herald of 1912 shows
there had been very little movement in property prices over the
subsequent 20 years.
|
Number
36
– A Mr Tooth occupied this house in 1881 when in the same year it
was reported that he had shot a mad dog.
copyright © J.Middleton The family home of Edmund Vallance was at 38 St Aubyns |
Number
38
– This house was the family home of Edmund Vallance (1841-1937)
whose forebears were Brighton brewers. His father Charles Vallance
became a brewer and miller at Bristol, and it was there that Edmund
was born. But Edmund did not tread in his father’s footsteps and
preferred to emulate his cousin Benjamin Vallance by following a
career in medicine.
Edmund trained at the Sussex County Hospital, and
in 1865 travelled to India as Staff Assistant Surgeon. In 1867 he was
serving with the 3rd
Dragoon Guards, by the following year he was with the 2nd
Dragoon Guards, and in 1869 he joined the 19th
Hussars, which his family always regarded as ‘his’ regiment.
copyright © V. Vallance A fine portrait of a gallant soldier – Captain Vane de Valence Mortimer Vallance of the 5th (Royal Irish) Lancers |
In 1868 Edmund took part in the Abyssinian
Campaign under the leadership of Sir Robert Napier. This celebrated
expedition rescued the British consul plus some missionaries who had
been thrown into prison by King Theodore of Abyssinia. It is ironic
that a notable prisoner they rescued was the archaeologist Hormuzd
Rassam who later settled at Hove and lived for many years with his
family in Westbourne Villas.
Edmund
Vallance married Jane Mortimer, and although their first son Vivien
died as a baby, they went on to have twins Vane and Valerie. Vane de
Valence Mortimer Vallance grew up to become a dashing captain in the
5th
Lancers.
He was fortunate to survive the First World War because he saw action in so many battles – at Ypres, Le Cateau, the Marne, Aisne, Loos and the Somme. The 5th Lancers were the last British troops to leave Mons, and the first to re-enter it in November 1918. Captain Vallance was twice Mentioned in Despatches, and was awarded the Military Cross.
He was fortunate to survive the First World War because he saw action in so many battles – at Ypres, Le Cateau, the Marne, Aisne, Loos and the Somme. The 5th Lancers were the last British troops to leave Mons, and the first to re-enter it in November 1918. Captain Vallance was twice Mentioned in Despatches, and was awarded the Military Cross.
In November 1932 Edmund and Jane Vallance
celebrated their Diamond Wedding Anniversary. Mrs Vallance reflected
on how women’s lives had changed for the better. In her youth
everything had to be done at home, and women were worked to death.
Should a young girl venture out into the street without wearing a
paid of gloves, it was considered shocking.
This
house later became the Polonia
Hotel
and afterwards the Devonshire
Hotel. In
February 1988 there was a fire at the hotel. The blaze started in the
junction box and spread into the space above a false ceiling in the
basement. The power failed and the building was plunged into
darkness. Four fire-crews from Brighton and Hove dealt with the
flames while an ambulance stood by. Fortunately, more than 100
residents – many of them homeless people – escaped unharmed.
Today EF (International School of Languages)
occupies the property plus the adjacent house number 36.
Number
40
– This house was called Lynton Court – in 1927 Hove Council
approved plans to convert the property into flats.
In August 1996 Mike Grabsky, aged 38, of Lynton
Court won the UK Monopoly championship. Then he had to face players
from 36 countries at Monte Carlo. He had previously won the UK title
in 1987. Grabsky, a computer programmer, became English Monopoly
Champion in 1999 at Leeds after beating 30 other challengers –
ironically, his final opponent was his wife Jane, a banker.
Number
41
– Charles James Wills once occupied this house. He was one-time
Medical Officer of the Telegraph Department in Persia. He took a keen
interest in the country and penned two books on the subject – The
Land of the Lion and the Sun or Modern Persia (1863)
and Persia
as it is (1886).
Number
44 – This house was built in 1892. The Street Directory for 1940
recorded that Ernest J. Mitchell ran a hotel there. By the 1990s it
was known as the Carlton Rest Home.
In December 1999 it was stated that Russell and Fiona Pinsent owned the home. The couple also ran St Helen’s Rest Home in Mile Oak Road, Portslade, which closed in the autumn of 1999. By 2019 the property was known as Carlton House where people suffering from dementia were cared for.
copyright © J.Middleton Number 44 St Aubyns was built in 1892 |
In December 1999 it was stated that Russell and Fiona Pinsent owned the home. The couple also ran St Helen’s Rest Home in Mile Oak Road, Portslade, which closed in the autumn of 1999. By 2019 the property was known as Carlton House where people suffering from dementia were cared for.
Number
46
– For a time in the 1990s this house was empty and somewhat
derelict – soon squatters moved in; an eviction order was not
obtained until 2000. The irony of the situation was that the
Chichester Diocesan Housing Association had purchased the property
specifically to renovate it and create flats for people without
proper homes.
Number
48
– The property was built in 1892 and was home to Mr and Mrs R.
Willis. Madame Visetti lived here too – she was the widow of Albert
Visetti, musical director to such famous singers as Adelina Patti.
Madame Visetti was also the mother of Radclyffe Hall whose most
celebrated book was The
Well of Loneliness.
copyright © J.Middleton Madame Visetti, the mother of controversial author Radclyffe Hall, once lived in this property |
Later on it became the Cinderella Hotel. The hotel was mentioned in Nicky Singer’s best-seller Feather Boy (2002). She wrote that the hotel ‘had a flight of ballroom-type steps up to the huge front door. And I’m looking, as I always do, for the glass slipper.’ In fact the house has only one step but number 42 has a flight of nine steps.
Number
59C
– The Bellingham family lived here. On 25 June 1945 Percy
Bellingham, aged 42, and his daughter Sheila, aged 12, drowned in the
sea at Hove, although apparently they were both within their depth.
Number
69
– Widow Mrs Ethel Mary Yates lived here. In 1939 she gave the use
of this house to the war effort, and it became a Red Cross sub-depot
of which she was Principal. There were 60 members and within three
years they had knitted almost 2,000 garments. Number 69 became a
sector post for ARP wardens too. Mrs Yates died on 20 September 1942.
Number
79
– Colonel Stewart Alexander Cleeve, late of the 51st
King’s Own Light Infantry and the 13th
Prince Albert Light Infantry, lived in this house after his
retirement. From 1851 to 1861 he was on the HQ staff of the Bengal
Army.
He served throughout the Burma War from 1852 to 1853. During the Naval action and destruction of the enemy’s stockades on the Rangoon river, he was on board HEIC steam frigate Feroze, and took part in the storming and capture of Rangoon.
copyright © D. Sharp Colonel Stewart Alexander Cleeve in 1910 |
He served throughout the Burma War from 1852 to 1853. During the Naval action and destruction of the enemy’s stockades on the Rangoon river, he was on board HEIC steam frigate Feroze, and took part in the storming and capture of Rangoon.
On 21 September 1898 the Colonel’s youngest
daughter married William Whateley at St Patrick’s Church, Hove. She
was attended by six bridesmaids, including her sisters May and
Beatrice. After the service, guests went back to the house in St
Aubyns where the reception was held.
Colonel Stewart died at the age of 87 in this
house on 24 February 1913. He was given a military funeral at St
Andrew’s Old Church. His coffin was draped with the Union flag, on
which rested his helmet, sword and medals, and the coffin was borne
to the church on a gun carriage drawn by six horses. The funeral was
attended by military family members as follows:
Colonel E. J. S. Cleeve (late RFA) son
Lieutenant Colonel E. S. Cleeve (RFA) son
Colonel W. F. Cleeve (late RA) nephew
Colonel S. D. Cleeve, nephew
The Cleeves were a family with a strong military
tradition. Colonel Stewart Alexander Cleeve’s father was Lieutenant
Colonel William Cleeve (RA).
On
the south wall of the south aisle inside All Saints Church, Hove,
there is a brass plaque in memory of Sub-Lieutenant Alexander Stewart
RN who died at Hove on 8 December 1888 ‘from the climatic effects
of service on the west coast of Africa aboard HMS Goshawk’.
Miscellaneous
Ernest
Austin
– The Sussex
Daily News (23
August 1916) recorded that Ernest Austin, younger son of Alfred
Austin of St Aubyns, had died recently. Apparently, Ernest was a
gifted compose and had embarked ‘upon a career of great brilliance
in the world of music’ when it was interrupted by the war. He
composed under the name of Ernest Verdayne, most probably because
there was another Ernest Austin who was already established in
musical circles.
Ernest
Dowson
– Ernest Dowson (1867-1900) was a famous poet in his time and he
was known to visit his uncle who lived in St Aubyns. His friends
included Aubrey Beardsley, W. B. Yeats and Oscar Wilde. Dowson’s
most famous works were Cynara
(1891)
and Vitae
Summa Brevis. Although
today the name ‘Dowson’ may not ring many bells, the following
phrases of his still resonate:
Days of wine and roses
Gone with the Wind
I have been faithful to thee, Cynara! In my
fashion
Sir Robert Bruce Lockhart
(1887-1970) – He lived in St Aubyns from March 1947 to December
1949. He was a man of wide interests and experiences, ranging from
rubber planting in Malaya to playing football in Moscow for the
famous Motozovsti team – he was also a keen fan of fishing.
Professionally, he was a career diplomat, and in
1911 he was sent to Russia as a vice-consul. Relationships between
the two countries ceased when the Russian revolution broke out, but
he was soon back on Russian soil as a semi-official representative.
Unfortunately, this ended in 1918 when he was imprisoned in the
Kremlin. He regained his freedom when the British government agreed
to exchange him for Maxim Litvinov who was being held in England. By
a strange twist of fate, both Lockhart, and Litvinov’s widow Ivy,
later lived at Hove. At one stage Lockhart was involved with the
famous spy Sidney Reilly in a plot to replace Lenin with a more
democratic leader in what became known as the Lockhart Plot.
Lockhart was devoted to the Czech people, and for
seventeen years he broadcast a weekly talk in Czech on the BBC World
Service. He was a personal friend of Jan Masaryk, and wrote a memoir
about him. He was also a prolific author, penning the following
titles:
Memoirs
of a British Agent (1932)
Retreat
from Glory (1934)
Return
to Malaya (1936)
Guns
or Butter
(1938)
Comes
the Reckoning (1948)
The
Marines were There (1950)
My
Europe (1952)
Giants
Cast Long Shadows (1960)
Lockhart later moved to Ditchling to live with his
son Robin. In 1970 he moved to a nursing home at 6 Walsingham Road,
Hove, where he died at the age of 82 on 27 February 1970.
Clive
Olive
– This unfortunate youth, who was the victim of the famous Ollie
murder in 1973, once lived in a top-floor flat with his mother in St
Aubyns.
The
Only Alternative Left
– This was the name of a guest-house that Monica Crowe ran in 1987.
She instituted leisure weekends where smoking was banned, and only
vegetarian dishes served. Guests could learn about meditation, or
shiatsu, or listen to amateur chamber music, or feminist poetry
reading. The guest-house was still in operation in May 1990, by which
time it was known as The
Left, and
was staunchly feminist. Although men were welcome during the week, it
was strictly sisters only at the weekend. Downstairs, Julie Mercy ran
the Cafe Jules. Apparently, before the Second World War, there was a
gentleman’s club here.
copyright © J.Middleton The east side of St Aubyns leading to the Kingsway |
Sources
Census Returns
Local newspapers
Lowerson,
J. editor Cliftonville,
Hove, a Victorian Suburb (1977)
Middleton,
J. A History of Women’s Lives in Hove and Portslade (2018)
Middleton J, Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Middleton J, Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Solly,
I. These
Eighty Years (1893)
Street Directories
Sussex
Daily News
(23 August 1916)
Vaughan,
A. Isambard
Kingdom Brunel (1991)
The Keep
HOW 39/17-18 – Re. 30-34 St Aubyns
HOW 39/40 – Conveyance of two pieces of land,
Portslade, and St Aubyns
HOW 66/2 – Re. 3 & 9 St Aubyn’s Place,
1869
Copyright © J.Middleton 2019
page layout and additional research by D. Sharp
page layout and additional research by D. Sharp