Judy Middleton 2002 (revised 2019)
copyright © J.Middleton Hove Station was photographed on 20 September 2019 |
Holland Road Halt
It may surprise some people to
learn that the original railway station serving the Hove area was not
at Goldstone Villas but further east, situated north of what was
later called Holland Road. It was a sensible decision at that time
because whereas Hove village was a small settlement amidst rural
surroundings, Brunswick Town was new and fashionable.
According
to Henry Porter in The
History of Hove (1897)
the original station opened on 14 November 1845, although other
sources state that it had been in operation since 1840.
It was later known as Holland Road
Halt, and closed for good on 1 March 1880.
The next station was east of the present-day railway foot-bridge. It became operational on 1 October 1865. Rather confusingly, it was known by different names, as set out below:
Cliftonville Station from1865 until 30 June 1879
West Brighton Station from 1 July
1879 until 1 October 1894
Hove and West Brighton Station
from 1894 to 1 July 1895
Hove Station thereafter
The changing names reflect the tremendous growth of Hove in Victorian times. After Brunswick Town, the next big development was the Cliftonville area, followed later on by The Avenues, which was popularly known as West Brighton. In 1894 Hove received the status of an Urban District Council, and so naturally the councillors wished this to be reflected in the name of the station. The request to the railway authorities to change the name to just ‘Hove’ was made on 14 June 1894 but obviously it took a few months before it happened.
copyright © J.Middleton This is the second station as it is today – without its canopy |
Thirteen years later improvements were made to the station. The Cliftonville & Hove Mercury (25 October 1878) announced that in around three weeks time the platform would be covered and the extensive alterations finished. The reporter wrote that it would be a great improvement on the ‘inconvenient structure, which has hitherto done duty for passengers’.
F. D. Banister (1823-1897)
copyright © J.Middleton The London, Brighton and South Coast Railway monogram can still be seen here on a tall pillar beside the Station's entrance. |
Banister was the resident engineer
to the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway from 1860 to 1896. He
was also an architect and surveyor: most probably he designed the
second Hove Station, which was built in the Italianate style and is
remarkably similar to Portslade Railway Station, constructed in 1881.
Banister was also busy with alterations to Brighton Railway Station
in the 1880s. In 1889 / 1890 Banister designed and oversaw the
construction of the foot-bridge at Hove Station.
It is interesting to note that
Banister lived locally – in 1850 he was to be found in Queen’s
Road, Brighton, while in 1854 he was at Medina Villas, Hove, and in
1861 he resided in Ivy Lodge, near Hove Street (since demolished). It
must have been a busy household and there were just two live-in
servants to look after things. Mr Banister’s parents lived in Ivy
Lodge together with Mr Banister and his wife Nancy and their children
– daughters Catherine, 12, Eleanor, 11, Emily, 7, Alice, 5, and
sons Frederick, 8, Edward, 3, and Frank aged one.
It
seems that Banister’s influence on Hove covered more than the
railway station because Henry Porter, author of The
History of Hove (1897),
credits him with having designed the lay-out of the Cliftonville
area.
Brighton Herald 13 October 1849 |
Enlargement
In 1893 Hove Commissioners and J.
D. Banister were in communication with each other regarding the
proposed plans for alterations to Hove Station. It was hoped to
enlarge the booking office from 29-ft by 15-ft to 41-ft by 20-ft;
there would also be two flights of steps and entrances, plus two
doorways leading from the booking office to the platform instead of
the single one. The existing verandah roof at the entrance was to be
enlarged from 42-ft by 23-ft to 65-ft by 35-ft. The north platform
would also be enlarged by doing away with one set of rails, and
moving the waiting room and offices to the centre. The north platform
would then be 15-ft instead of 11-ft.
As for the new approach to the
station, negotiations were still on-going with the landowners
involved. Mr J. G. Blaker offered to give up a 15-ft strip of land in
front of the station on condition that Hove Commissioners would pay
for the construction of a footpath and maintain it, as well as
lighting the area and looking after the lamps. The addition of this
piece of land meant that the approach road would be 94-ft, of which
the railway company proposed to retain 35-ft in its ownership.
A formal agreement concerning the
approach road was signed in July 1893 between the London, Brighton
and South Coast Railway, the Hove Commissioners, Mrs Ellen
Benett-Stanford on behalf of the Stanford Estate, and Mr John George
Blaker. Meanwhile, railway users living north of the station grumbled
that no approach road was being made for their convenience.
Historic Film
The
year 1897 was a historic occasion in the history of Hove Station
because it became the first in the world to be recorded in a short
film entitled Passenger
Train.
The film provided a fascinating glimpse of a train arriving at Hove
Station in a cloud of steam, followed by passengers wearing
fashionable Victorian clothes dis-embarking and getting on the train.
The film was shot by George Albert Smith (1864-1959) one of the
brilliant Hove Film pioneers, now rated as of world-wide importance.
Smith built his first movie camera in !896, and the following year
produced 31 short films, one of which was Passenger
Train.
1898
On 1 July 1898 the first Pullman
service from the south coast to London was instituted. It seemed that
the new service took some time to become popular because on that
first occasion, when the train arrived at Hove from Worthing, there
were no passengers aboard, but five gentlemen boarded the train at
Hove. (How present-day commuters would sigh at the thought of all
those lovely empty seats!).
In
the Hove Gazette
(3
September 1898) there was an amusing letter from a passenger about
the hazards of waiting on the platform. ‘It is very pleasant to get
milk free of charge providing it is put into a proper utensil. It is
very unpleasant when one has to receive it in drops on one’s
clothes as was recently my experience at Hove Station. While waiting
on the platform for my train some officials were carrying cans of
milk across the line and without any warning until too late I was
favoured by a shower bath when they hurled the churns down with a
bang. I unfortunately had a black coat on, the cleaning of which has
cost me three and sixpence.’
The Foot-bridge
copyright © J.Middleton The long-lasting footbridge is still well-used |
It was not until the 1880s that
consideration was given to the needs of people who might wish to
cross the railway line in safety. At first it seems that a subway was
envisaged. But in May 1888 Mr A. Searle, secretary and general
manager of the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway, suggested to
the Hove Commissioners that a foot-bridge should be provided instead
of a subway. The Hove Commissioners agreed provided that the whole
project did not cost more then £1,200 and that the relevant
landowners came up with two-thirds of the cost. By July 1888 it had
been agreed that landowners and Hove Commissioners should advance the
sum of £800 towards the cost of the foot-bridge, and this amount was
deposited in the railway company’s account the following month.
F. D. Banister designed the
foot-bridge. It seemed that the project was taking longer to complete
than Hove Commissioners thought it should, and so the town clerk
wrote to Mr Banister in June 1890 to ascertain the reason for the
delay in opening the structure to the public. Mr Banister replied
that the non-delivery of ironwork was the cause of the delay but he
hoped the footbridge would be completed by July 1890.
The newly completed foot-bridge
became a magnet for local children, and in October 1894 the
delightfully-named Mr Tickle complained to the authorities about
children playing there. By 1895 the foot-bridge had become a
favourite vantage point from which to watch the arrival and departure
of trains. The Hove authorities did not like this, and asked the
railway company to board up the sides. While the company were happy
to comply with the request, they required £100 to be paid for the
work. The Hove authorities replied rather haughtily that they could
not see their way to paying the money. Furthermore, they wrote that
‘in their opinion the time has arrived when a properly covered
access to Hove Railway Station from the north side should be provided
by the company.’
copyright © J.Middleton There are still interesting views to be enjoyed from the north side of the foot-bridge – to the east you look down on Hove Park Villas |
The company refused, and so Hove
sent a deputation to talk to the company’s directors. Finally, on
23 September 1896 an agreement was reached whereby the company would
pay half the cost of roofing and closing in the sides to a height of
5-ft, while Hove should stump up for the other half, as well as
maintain the foot-bridge in the future. Sir Alan Sarle wrote to ask
for confirmation of this agreement in writing. In March 1897 the
surveyor, (Mr Banister was no longer working for the company)
produced plans for roofing and boarding up the sides.
In October 1895 it was decided to
affix notices to the side of the bridge stating ‘Persons are
requested not to spit on the Bridge’.
In
May 1897 the surveyor reported that there was insufficient lighting
on the foot-bridge but he could nor recommend incandescent gas
lighting because of the vibrations. Instead, he recommended that ten
candle-power tantallum lamps should be installed at a cost of £20
with the annual expenditure expected to be £26-8s.
In 1917 it was decided that the
lamps on the foot-bridge should be kept lit all night.
copyright © J.Middleton Another interesting view to be enjoyed from the north side of the foot-bridge – to the west is the wonderful mosaic lettering still adorning the erstwhile Dubarry Perfumery |
In March 1913 Hove Council decreed
that new steps should be installed at both ends of the foot-bridge.
It seems probable that there had been complaints about the steepness
of the flight of steps because the proposal was to replace the rise
of 7-in with a rise of 5½. This led to another exchange between the
council and the company because Hove wanted the company to do the
work for an estimated cost of £190. But the company replied that the
estimate was far too low and the most likely cost would be around
£322. In August 1913 Hove councillors decided not to proceed –
only to change their minds two months later. The company then
undertook to construct the new flights for £300. It is interesting
to note that because of the slight rise in the gradient to the north,
there are more steps on the south side.
The foot-bridge has not kept up
with the times. The pressure group Hove Station Neighbourhood Forum
thinks that with all the new housing and re-development going on in
the area, something needs to be done. For example, in these days when
shops and public spaces have to be disabled-access friendly by law,
at the foot-bridge there is no help for disabled people, nor for that
matter for mothers struggling with buggies, although there is a metal
trough to enable bicyclists to wheel their machines up and down in
comfort. In 2017 David Kemp, a Forum member, said he had drawn up
plans for a replacement foot-bridge over three years ago: another
Forum member Mike Gibson stated that the cost of installing lifts
would require the expenditure of a minimum of £1 million.
Also in 2017, Councillor Gill
Mitchell, transport committee chairwoman, Brighton & Hove Council
City Council stated that while the foot-bridge was ‘currently
structurally sound (it) was fast approaching the end of its design
life’.
But there are no easy answers. The
logistics of demolishing the foot-bridge and building a new one over
a busy working railway are horrendous, and never mind the cost.
Network Rail owns and maintains the foot-bridge while the City
Council is responsible for keeping it clean and tidy. Many residents
feel more should be done by the latter authority and want Cityclean
to monitor it carefully. They say there is a problem with pigeon
droppings, and mess from dogs and even urban foxes.
Incidents and Accidents
1843
– According to Henry Porter, on 3 January 1843 the tubes of an
engine called Brighton
burst while it was standing at Hove Station seriously scalding
William Cavan, the engine driver.
1878
– In October 1878 Samuel Cheesman, goods guard, lost a leg while
engaged in shunting and coupling trucks.
1879
– On 4 March 1879 William Harris, a 37-year old labourer at Hove
Station, was completing the task of unloading coal for a Mr Bayley.
Unfortunately he stepped between two trucks to retrieve some fallen
coal, which he should not have done because shunting was in progress.
Although he was crushed between the trucks, witnesses saw him running
away from the scene. His colleagues ran after him and caught him so
that he could be taken to hospital. An arm had to be amputated and he
died two days later. At the inquest one of the witnesses was Jesse
Jones, who had worked at Hove Station for around 30 years. He was
employed at the yard as foreman to Messrs Cockerell & Co. Mr
Jones stated that shunting took place every day between 12 noon and 2
p.m.
1897
– In May 1879 William Eggs, aged over 40 and a luggage porter at
Hove Station, committed suicide by taking oxalic acid. He was
discovered on the ground in Brunswick Street West. He had purchased
the acid at Skenington’s, 6 Waterloo Street, saying he needed it in
order clean copper. At the inquest, despite the facts, an open
verdict was returned because the jury refused to bring a verdict of
suicide in case the unfortunate William Eggs was refused a proper
Christian burial.
1898
– In the summer of 1898 Barnum & Bailey’s Circus - ‘the
greatest show on earth’ - arrived at Hove. The circus had 70 of its
own specially constructed railway cars (each one being 60-ft in
length) which made four separate trains consisting of seventeen
coaches each. Two of the coaches had been loaded after the show at
Hove and the drivers were given orders to start. Unfortunately, one
train was going forward while the other was banking up a siding, and
they met with a terrific crash – the engine of one forcing its way
onto the rear of the other train. Three of the cars were telescoped
and had to be left behind, together with seven show cars, the lamp
van, and the band wagon. Men worked all Saturday night and Sunday
night repairing the damage.
1898
– In September 1898 Henry Morris of 91 Wordsworth Street had one of
his fingers so badly crushed while loading a van with timber that he
was obliged to go to hospital to have the top of his finger
amputated.
The Third Railway Station
copyright © D.Sharp The view from the The Drive railway bridge looking west to Hove Station and the former Dubarry Perfumery. |
This was constructed in 1905 on a site west of the second railways station, and it is in fact the same railway station that is in use to the present day. F. D. Banister was not involved in the project because he had retired from the company in 1896 and died the following year.
It is sometimes stated that the
third railway station dates back to 1893. If that were the case, why
were discussions going on between Hove Commissioners and F.D.
Banister in 1893 regarding the enlargement of the ticket hall and
canopy? Such considerations would be redundant if a new station had
been built. Besides, the legal formalities about ownership of the
land south of the station were still going on. (See under
‘Enlargement’.)
There is also the case that the
opening of a new station in 1893 receives no mention in Henry
Porter’s exhaustive list of Hove events at the end of his book.
Other events – such as the opening of the Seaside Home for Police
in Portland Road on 21 July 1893 – are recorded. It seems logical
that such an important structure as a new station happening under his
nose, so to speak, would find a place in his chronicles.
Shunting
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove 1909 map showing Hove Station's Goods Yard by Sackville Road |
In October 1909 a petition signed
by 67 people was presented to the management complaining about the
‘great annoyance and discomfort arising fr leading toom the
continual shunting of Goods Trains at Hove Station at night’.
Apparently, shunting started in
the evening and continued all through the night, every weekday night,
whereas in 1879 shunting took place between 12 midday and 2 p.m.
The petition must have been
ignored because shunting was still taking place in the 1950s until
there was a rail strike and an eerie silence fell upon the shunting
yard. Near neighbours had grown so used to the noise that it
constituted the backdrop to their lives. Indeed, Mrs Sharp told her
family that she could not sleep a wink because it was so quiet.
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove Hove Station in the 1930s with the Dubarry Perfumery in the background. |
Personnel
Robert
Cressy
– The Sussex
Daily News (16
September 1937) carried a short report about Mr Cressy, who had been
manager of W. H. Smith’s bookstall at Hove Station for 20 years. He
died aged 57 after a long illness and was buried in the churchyard of
St Helen’s, Hangleton, on 15 September. Little more than a month
previously, his wife had committed suicide, her body being found in a
field at Falmer – this event had upset him greatly.
John
Egan
– The 1851 census recorded Dublin-born John Egan living at Hove
Station – he was a 41-year old station clerk. He lived with his
wife, aged 40, who had been born in Liverpool, and six children –
three of whom had been born in Dublin while the three youngest were
born at Brighton – perhaps Catherine was his second wife. The
children were as follows:
John, aged 19, railway engineer
Emily, aged 17
Edwin, aged 15, railway lamp-maker
Albert, 11
George, 5
Ernest, 2
The Egans were still there in
1861, but Edwin had become an engine-fitter while Albert was an
engine cleaner.
C.
Staples and F. Evans
– In April 1903 Mr Staples, late goods guard at Hove Station, was
presented with a handsome gladstone bag when he left to take up a
position in the Cape Government Railway. Mr Evans, ticket collector,
did the presentation, and Mr Evans himself was leaving shortly for
Canada.
William
Yeomanson
– Margate-born Mr Yeomanson was stationmaster at Hove from 1885. In
1891 he was aged 45, and lived with his wife, two sons, and two
daughters. He retired in 1908, having spent 44 years in the service
of the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway. He continued to live
in Hove where he died on 21 February 1935 at his home 6 Avondale
Road.
The 1990s
In July 1994 Hove Station won the
‘best-kept large station’ category in the Sussex area of Network
South Central.
In January 1995 it was reported
that Hove had been left off the list of ‘core’ stations – this
meant that after the company was privatised in 1996, travellers at
Hove would probably not be able to purchase the full range of tickets
to any destination in the country as they could at present.
In April 1998 it was stated that
Connex South-Central closed the large yellow doors at the front of
the station at 9.45 p.m. to prevent vandalism. People who were not
regular customers assumed the place was shut up for the night but in
fact there was still access via the foot-bridge.
In August 1999 Hove Station was
nominated as one of the three finalists in the ‘most
passenger-friendly’ category of a competition run by Railtrack in
conjunction with Rotary International. The other finalists were
Nuneaton and Oxford, out of a total of 2,500 U.K. stations. Tim
Flude, Hove Station supervisor, has worked at Hove for nine years and
he had no idea they had been nominated, although he did stress that
the staff tried to be friendly. Asif Zaidi, who has run the newspaper
kiosk for ten years, said they all worked together well, and because
the station was relatively small, they could get to know the
regulars. Fred Shipton was the senior staff night-worker, and he
often brought in his own brushes and paint to do some voluntary
decorating.
However, all was not convenient
because the toilets remained closed.
Face-lift
copyright © J.Middleton Fresh flowers for sale are a colourful sight outside Hove Station |
In August 2000 the scaffolding
that obscured the exterior of Hove Station for two years was at last
removed. The building had been given a £1 million face-lift. The
steel and glass canopy was re-built and painted, while the platform
canopies and station roof were renewed. Attention was also given to
the surfacing of the platform and the structural steelwork in the
sub-way. There were now also automatic ticket barriers, that had been
installed a few months previously.
copyright © J.Middleton The canopy is now in beautiful condition |
Sources
Argus
Census Returns
Cliftonville
& Hove Mercury (25
October 1878)
Encyclopaedia
of Hove and Portslade
Hove Council Minute Books
Hove
Gazette (3
September 1898)
Hove
Mercury (7
March 1879)
Porter,
H. A
History of Hove (1897)
Sussex
Daily News (16
September 1937)
Copyright © J.Middleton 2019
page layout by D.Sharp