Judy Middleton 2001 (revised 2020)
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove Victoria Terrace on the left of Kings Road (now called Kingsway) in the early 1900s |
Development
Victoria Terrace was designed in around 1830 by
the famous Amon Wilds (1762-1833) and his son Amon Henry Wilds
(c.1790-1857). The two Wilds had designed Trinity Chapel in Ship
Street in 1817 and The Temple in Montpelier Road in 1819. But in 1822
Amon Wilds went into partnership with Charles Augustus Busby
(1786-1834) and they were responsible for Kemp Town. In the past this
partnership has been credited with the design of Brunswick Town too,
but recent research has discovered that it was actually Busby’s
work.
The original
Victoria Terrace consisted of six houses – number 7 was added
later. When they were built, the houses had the advantage of a long
garden on the south side leading right down to the sea. Since then of
course the construction of a continuous Hove promenade has led to
their loss. The façades
fronting Kingsway are delightfully ornate, with pilasters and the
cornice is decorated with moulded garlands. The shell motifs above
the windows of the first floor are of particular note because they
are something of a Wilds’ signature, appearing on many of their
buildings, and indeed the tomb of Amon Wilds in the churchyard of St
Nicholas in Brighton, is surmounted by a massive shell.
On 7 May 1873 Colonel Verner of Medina Villas
submitted plans to the Hove Commissioners to build shops over the
‘areas’ of numbers 2, 3, and 4 Victoria Terrace. The first floor
oriel windows were added when the shops were built. The pavement in
front of the terrace was composed of red bricks.
The Brighton
Gazette (30
March 1876) advertised a house in the terrace to let at a cost of
£120 a year. The house had fine sea views, seven bedrooms, a double
drawing room, dining room and a library. The provision of a double
room was also a feature of Brunswick Town. The design meant that
there were two normal-sized rooms for everyday use, but for
entertaining purposes, the doors could be folded back to create a
larger space.
In June 1882 there was a storm that caused the
intercepting sewer to overflow into the houses. Naturally, the
occupants were horrified and employed Mr Cockburn, solicitor, to seek
appropriate damages. But of course nobody would admit responsibility
– neither the Hove Commissioners, nor the Sewer Board.
Clifton House
In the 1848 Directory it was noted that a boarding
school (for boys) was located at number 6 run by M. L. Phillips. The
school was a feature of the terrace for many years. According to the
1851 census Montague Phillips, aged 37, was still in charge but ten
years later it was 39-year old George Wyatt who was running the
school. By this time the establishment was such a success that in
1861 there were no less than forty boarders spread over numbers 2, 5,
and 6 Victoria Terrace. There were four resident teachers. Probably
this was a high point in the school’s history because by the time
Revd Henry Fyffe was headmaster from around 1866 to 1874, it was
reduced to numbers 5 and 6 only.
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove An advert from the Brighton Herald for the 6 November 1875 |
A famous old boy was Alderman Jeremiah Colman who later became an important Hove resident. (For details of his life please see under Grand Avenue where he lived at number 2).
Fire Brigade
In 1875 number 8 Victoria Terrace was listed in
Kelly’s Directory as Hove Volunteer Fire Brigade Station, later in
1879 the Fire Brigade moved to a new headquarters in George Street
Enlargement
In 1910 Victoria Terrace grew in size because Hove
Council decided that adjacent buildings should be included under the
designation of Victoria Terrace, and re-numbered accordingly – they
had been known formerly as Albert Terrace and Alma Terrace.
A Drowning
On 1 November 1923 Agnes Turner of 13 Victoria
Terrace drowned in the sea opposite Hove Baths. This tragedy happened
despite the best efforts to rescue her by Police Sergeant Ockenden,
Coastguard Quigley, and Mr I. Kemp, superintendent of Hove Baths.
Post Office
In 1927 it was proposed that the Post Office
should move from number 20 to number 12, and permission was sought to
erect a pillar-box outside number 12. At first Hove Council stated
the pavement was too narrow, and a pillar-box would be better off on
the other side of Kingsway, on the corner of Osborne Villas. But
later it was decided that the pillar-box could go outside number 12
after all.
This Post Office stayed at number 12 until 1992
when it closed. But in March 1994 Julie Hillyer, agreed to open a
sub-Post Office in her gift shop next door at number 13. By 2003 the
premises were shut.
Although the Post Office was no more, the old
pillar-box remained solidly where it had always stood. Unfortunately,
the passage of years had taken its toll and there was a crack that
had been painted over, again and again, while in June 2019 the door
broke. The authorities stated the pillar-box would be mended by
Christmas. Unhappily, on Friday 13 December 2019 when men came to
remove the pillar-box, it promptly gave up the ghost and broke in
two. Whether or not it will be possible to repair is not yet clear,
and a spokesman said they were reviewing the situation and the
possibility of installing a new one near the site. Nearby residents
were sad at the loss and Jillian Foley said she had been posting
letters in that pillar-box since 1958, and it was part of the
landscape.
Butchers’ Shops
In 1913 H. E. Hobden ran a butcher’s shop at
number 19. It is interesting to note that the shop has retained the
original blue and white tiles adorning the frontage to this day.
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove An advert from the Brighton Herald for the 2 November 1912 |
There was another butcher’s shop at what had been 7 Albert Terrace. This was W. & F. Philbrock’s establishment. It had the distinction of being one of the oldest butcher’s shops in Hove. It began trading in the 1850s, and were still going strong in the 1940s.
Mumford’s the Chemist
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove An advert from the Brighton Herald for the 20 December 1879, when number 4 was the 'Victoria Reading Rooms and Fancy Bazaar'. |
In 1907 Charles E. Robinson from New Bond Street, London, established a chemist’s shop at number 4. The following year King Edward VII granted a Royal Warrant to this business. When Richard G. Mumford took over the shop in 1930, he said he was only the sixth owner of the premises despite the property being so old.
Mr Mumford
continued to operate throughout the years of the Second World War. He
found a new set of customers in the Wrens who were stationed at HMS
King Alfred. He
would ensure they were informed whenever there was a rare delivery of
lipstick or face powder. The Wrens must have been the best made-up
ladies on the south coast.
His customers held him in high regard - he was
even obliging enough to cash cheques for them. For lady customers, in
days of shortages, he would let them know should a coveted perfume
become available. In September 1968 one of his lady customers took
her new-born son into the shop, especially to show him to Mr.
Mumford, who had always been so kind to her and her family. An
impatient customer then came in, demanding immediate attention, but
Mr Mumford said, ‘Madam, you will have to wait, I am attending to
this lady with her beautiful new son.’
Tailor’s Shop
Wren Joan Feast
arrived at HMS King
Alfred in
1939. In the early days of the war, the issue of uniforms was
somewhat haphazard – you just had to accept whatever happened to be
in stock. Although Wren Feast was delighted with her new uniform, she
was issued with a coat that was so large its hem literally swept the
pavement. But there was an obliging little tailor in Victoria
Terrace, near at hand. When Wren Feast visited the shop, she could
hardly believe her eyes on seeing the tailor sitting cross-legged on
a bench. Whatever alterations you asked him to do brought forth the
response ‘It shall be done’ uttered in a guttural accent with a
long-drawn out ‘done’.
Wren officers of course were an entirely different
matter – they went to an accredited naval tailor, like the men.
The Neptune
copyright © J.Middleton During the Second World War over-exuberant soldiers damaged Neptune’s trident but it looked in fine fettle when photographed on 31 May 2002. |
This establishment surely deserves an award of
some sort for being a pub that has held on to its original name.
Perhaps it would be difficult to change because the effigy of Neptune
flourishing his trident might not approve. Today it is still
flourishing, and moreover provides live music.
The
Neptune was
up and running in 1861, located at 10 Victoria Terrace, when John
Turner and his wife Sarah ran the business with the help of two
servants. (For full details, please see Neptune under Hove Pubs).
Preservation
On 10 September 1971 Victoria Terrace was awarded
Grade II listed building status.
In the 1970s a business called City &
Municipal Properties purchased Victoria Terrace. Originally, they
wanted to convert the premises into offices, but East Sussex County
Council blocked the scheme. The company’s response was a proposal
to demolish the lot and build a block of flats. But there was the
little matter of Victoria Terrace having been listed. Thus the
Environment Secretary ordered a Public Inquiry to be held. Mr J. H.
Chadwick, Government Inspector, stated in his report that he thought
the cost of building flats would be about the same as converting the
existing premises. Much to everyone’s astonishment Peter Shore,
Environment Secretary, decided that Victoria Terrace should be saved.
In 1983 Victoria Terrace won the main award in the
section for the renovation of period properties in the Best
Architecture Awards sponsored by Hove Civic Society and Hove Council.
Recent Times
In 1999 there were some small restaurants in
Victoria Terrace including the following:
Number
4 – Goodness,
Chinese,
Peking and Cantonese takeaway
Number
5 – Blue Bar and
Café
Number
16 – Kingsway
Fish Bar, which
by 2000 had become Cravings
In July 2000 the freehold of retail premises at
number 17 was sold to Havanna Ltd for £81,000.
In
February 2011 the owner of Breakfast
at Tiffany’s Café, had
an alarming experience. He was fast asleep upstairs with his
girlfriend when he heard a commotion downstairs. Apparently, somebody
had thrown something through the café’s window at 1 a.m., and fire
broke out. If it had not been for a vigilant passer-by, things could
have become serious. However, the next day the situation proved even
more dramatic when scenes-of-crime officers arrived and discovered a
‘viable device’ - in other words, a home-made bomb. It was not
long afterwards that two male suspects and one female were charged
and bailed.
Albert Terrace
The 1861 census noted the following:
Number 4 – occupant John Horton, cow-keeper, he
employed 5 men and 2 boys
Number 7 – John Murrell, butcher’s
In 1880 the businesses listed at Albert Terrace
was as follows:
Number1
– Artillery
Tavern, beer-house
Number 2 – coal merchant
Number 3 – fish-monger and poulterer
Number 4 – saddler and harness maker
Number
5 – Victoria
Tavern
Number 6 – greengrocer
Number 7 – butcher
Artillery Tavern
This establishment seems to have been of short
duration, being run by Thomas Hinton in the 1880s and 1890s.
The
Sussex
Daily News (5
April 1883) carries an interesting report concerning the beer-house.
Thomas Hinton, landlord, was summoned to Hove Petty Sessions charged
with keeping his premises open during prohibited hours on Easter
Sunday 25 March 1883. PC Saunders, wearing plain clothes, entered the
beer-house and found some Volunteers (military) and others, some of
whom were not resident in the house (lodging in the house permitted
the consumption of beer outside opening hours). Hinton stated he had
examined the tickets of several travellers who were in the bar, and
those who did not have tickets must have slipped in through the side
door. Hinton already had a conviction for permitting drunkenness in
his house, but Hinton said it was because of the ‘hard swearing’
uttered by PC Rogers. It appeared that Rogers absconded from the
Force when his testimony proved to be false. The Bench stated that
they would disregard Hinton’s conviction, but he was warned to keep
his side door shut in future. He was discharged although he was
obliged to pay the costs of bringing the case.
By 1905 the premises were in the hands of Miss
Chatfield who soon turned the place into sedate dining rooms.
Victoria Tavern
The tavern was already in existence in the 1860s,
and over the years was run by the following people:
1861
–
Mary Payne, beer-house keeper, Norfolk-born widow, aged 38. She lived
with her three-year old son, her sister and two servants.
1875
– Charles Bulbech
1885
– Charles Nicholson
1887
– Thomas Child. According to the 1891 census Thomas Child was still
there. He was born in Hove and was aged 44. He lived with his wife
Catherine 36, and their children Thomas 9, Catherine 7, Arthur 6,
Harriet 4, George 3, and Rosetta 2. Thomas was still the landlord in
1896.
1899
– I. Leech
1910
– Edward Grover. It was during his tenure that his address changed
from 5 Albert Terrace to 13 Victoria Terrace.
1920
– S.H. Hallon
1930
– A. J. N. Smart
1935
– Ernest G. Wingham. It is interesting to note that Mr Wingham was
still described as a beer retailer. He remained there until the
1950s, and was probably the last landlord.
The establishment was not mentioned in the 1958
Directory.
Alma Terrace
No doubt this terrace was named after the famous
Battle of Alma in the Crimean War (1854-1856). There is an Alma
Cottage in Portslade Village of a similar date. Alma Terrace was
situated east of the original Victoria Terrace, and consisted of five
houses.
Before the houses received a name, the famous Bun
House was in existence, providing refreshments for travellers. In
1841 Alfred Arnold, aged 23, was recorded as a baker, grocer and beer
retailer. He lived in the premises with his wife, one daughter and
two sons. Also living there were Thomas Southon, a 37-year old baker,
an errand boy and two servants.
copyright © Brighton & Hove City Libraries Traveller's Joy Inn, one of four pubs once to be found in Victoria Terrace, note the black horse emerging from the pub's front door ! |
In
1853 the brewers Vallance & Catt purchased the Bun House and it
became a pub called romantically Travellers
Joy Inn, numbered
at 5 Alma Terrace. Vallance & Catt remained the owners until 1899
when Tamplin’s took over. The old inn was demolished in 1908 and a
new one built on the same site, although new building line was in
keeping with the other premises, instead of jutting out. The pub’s
last name was The Alibi.
(For more details, please see The Alibi under Hove Pubs).
copyright © J.Middleton Whatever name is chosen for this pub, it will always be viewed as a striking and individual piece of architecture. The Alibi was photographed on 16 April 2014. |
Next door to the old inn was an enterprising
business with the name Clements on the name-board. As well as
providing afternoon teas, the owners were willing to hire out
everything you might need for entertaining such as tables, chairs,
glass, cutlery. crockery and tablecloths.
Colonel W. J. Verner
The 1874 Directory lists Colonel William John
Verner living at 2 Victoria Terrace, and he also owned property
there. He sent three letters to the West Hove Commissioners:
Complaining about a building at the back of 4
Medina Terrace
Complaining that the offending building had still
not been taken down
Complaining about a building in the course of
construction at the rear of 5 Medina Terrace
The 1881 census recorded Irish-born Colonel
William Verner aged 62, living with his family at 35 Brunswick Place.
His family consisted of his London-born wife Mary, and their
children:
Constance, 30, born in Shropshire
William, 28, officer in the army, born in Reading
Evelyn, 24, born in Bournemouth
Wilford, 17, born in the Isle of Wight
In May 1873 Colonel Verner submitted plans for
shops over the ‘areas’ of numbers 2, 3, and 4 Victoria Terrace.
His
obituary was published in The
Times (23
September 1902) as follows: ‘Colonel William John Verner, whose
death in his 84th
year is reported to have occurred at Brighton on the 21st
instance, was the third son of Mr David Verner of Church Hill,
Vernersbridge, County Armagh, Ireland. He entered the Army in 1837
and served in the 53rd
and 21st
regiments and subsequently was colonel commanding the Antrim Rifles
Militia. He was in his day an enthusiastic falconer, and did much to
resuscitate the sport in conjunction with the late Mr Charles St.
John and Captain Francis Solvin; but he never could be persuaded to
put his unrivalled knowledge of the art of training falcons into
writing.’ (The 53rd
Regiment became the King’s (Shropshire) Light Infantry, and the
21st
Regiment became the Royal Scots Fusiliers). The Colonel’s younger
son Wilford followed in his footsteps and served with the Royal
Fusiliers.
The Verner Cross
There
is a curious footnote to Colonel Verner’s younger son Wilford. On a
site between Spa Court and the back of Medina Terrace, there was a
marble cross set into the boundary wall with the following
inscription In
Loving Memory of Wilford Cole Verner who departed this life November
21st
1889 aged 26. God is Love.
There was a story circulating in the 1950s and
1960s that Wilford had gone for a swim in the sea and never returned
to the shore. It was a feasible theory given the siting of the
memorial. In fact Wilford died of typhoid fever at 36 St
Petersborough Place, Westminster. Perhaps the cross is a testimony to
the grief of the family, and the need to keep his name alive.
Besides, his sister Ida Constance Verner occupied number 2 Victoria
Terrace for many years.
copyright © J.Middleton The Verner Cross surrounded by builder's materials |
In 2012 the fate of the Verner cross became something of a cause célèbre to local historians. This was because there was a proposal to move it. David Gilmour, guitarist with Pink Floyd, and his wife Polly Samson, owned a a 6-storey property in Medina Terrace that was said to be worth £3 million. They had spent a considerable sum of money on restoring the house, and now they wished to extend the Coach House at the back into a more commodious canoe/boat store: to enable this work to take place, it was proposed to move the cross some 20 metres.
copyright © J.Middleton The restored Verner Cross |
It is pleasant to record that the Verner Cross now
looks in a better state than it has done for years.
Ida Verner (1850-1937)
copyright
© Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
J. W. Lister, Borough Librarian and Curator
by Ida Verner, c.1922.
|
Ida Constance Verner was the daughter of Colonel
W. J. Verner, and the sister of Wilford Cole Verner. She was a
talented artist who lived at 2 Victoria Terrace from around 1905 to
her death. But she is little remembered today although she painted
some fine portraits. More to the point, she has left us portraits of
two Hove notables – the child prodigy violinist Isolde Menges
(1893-1976) who was born at 27 Clarendon Villas, and Mr J. W. Lister,
Hove’s Chief Librarian and Curator (1870-1951). It was he who
instigated the unique Roll of Honour to commemorate all those who
were lost in the Great War by contacting the families involved and
asked for details of their sons’ lives plus a photograph if
possible. Today the Roll of Honour is stored at Hove Library, and its
importance has grown with the passing years. Mr Lister was aged 51
when Ida Verner painted his portrait, which in 1923 she presented to
Hove Museum. In 1926 Ida Verner also presented Hove Museum with
George IV’s writing desk.
In her day Ida Verner was well regarded and
exhibited her work at the following locations:
Grosvenor Gallery, two paintings
London Salon, ten paintings
New Gallery, one painting
Royal Academy, eight paintings
Royal Institute of Oil Painters, one painting
Royal Society of Portrait Painters, two paintings
In 1905 Hove Council gave Gibbins & Son, on
behalf of Ida Verner, permission for a proposed picture gallery at 2
Victoria Terrace. It seems she had her studio at the back of Victoria
Terrace in an out-building known as the Coach House.
It is interesting to note that in 1947 there was a
Verner Club at 2 Victoria Terrace, with Miss E, Weldon being an
honorary secretary. Perhaps this was a club for budding artists?
Meanwhile, the Hove Battery site was far from being deserted because it became part of the ‘stone frigate’ known as HMS King Alfred, which also included the newly-built swimming baths, and later on, Mowden School, Lancing College and other buildings. It is a proud statistic that 22,500 men passed through HMS King Alfred to become RNVR officers, so vital to the war effort. Such a significant contribution ought to be publicly commemorated but alas! it is not.
Directory Entry for Victoria Terrace 1918
Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve
2003 (revised 2020)
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove (photograph from the Brighton Graphic) S. Matthews, signal instructor RNVR on the left, teaching semaphore signalling at Hove Coastguard Station on the 15 July 1915 |
In 1903 the Royal Naval Reserve
was formed at Hove with Admiral the Honourable Thomas Brand in
command, On 26 April 1904 the Brighton & Hove Company was
commissioned as a separate Sussex RNVR Division as follows:
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove Brighton Herald 2 June 1906 |
Numbers 1 & 2 at Hove
(including the RNR Battery)
Number 3 at Eastbourne
Number 4 at Newhaven
Number 5 at Hastings
By 1906 enough money had been
raised at Hove to purchase a headquarters at 5 Victoria Terrace.
Training took place at the RNR Battery site immediately south east of
Hove Street, or more prosaically, in the basement of a chemist’s
shop in Church Road, Hove.
It is pleasant to record that the
outfit also contained a band, which in 1906 had given no less than
100 performances during the summer months on the Western Lawns as
well as in Portland Road. In the same year the RNVR Band also
provided the music at Hove Town Hall for the first Dance of the
season. On the latter occasion Bandmaster Potter and Assistant
Bandmaster Levy were presented with new batons made for them by
Leading Seaman Woolley.
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums Viscount Curzon |
In
1907 Lieutenant Viscount Curzon (1884-1964) became commander of the
Sussex Division. The Curzon family had long been connected with the
Navy, and young Curzon joined the RNVR as soon as he left school.
Before this appointment, he had served with the London Division. When
his father died in 1929, he succeeded to the title and became the 5th
Earl Howe. By that time he was a Member of Parliament, but inheriting
a title meant he could not stand for re-election to the House of
Commons. He had an unexpected alternative career as a motor racing
driver – usually considered to be a young man’s sport, but which
he took up at the of 44.
On 16 July 1908 Hove Council
approved plans for an addition to the back of 5 Victoria Terrace; it
was submitted on behalf of the officers of the RNVR by Mr H. W.
Sanders. The extra space proved to be inadequate within a few years
and a new building was envisaged. However, in 1913 a legal snag was
encountered. It necessitated Lord Curzon, Commander of the Sussex
RNVR, to appeal directly to Hove Council to allow the new building to
remain. He stated that he had followed the correct procedures, and
indeed had specifically asked the solicitor to the Public Works Loan
Board, who was in possession of all title deeds and covenants, if
there were any restrictive covenants to be observed at the site. The
solicitor assured Lord Curzon there were none. It was only when the
building was being erected that it transpired a portion of it was
infringing a covenant dated 13 July 1893 between John Tooth and
others, and the Hove Commissioners. Lord Curzon’s letter to Hove
Council was despatched in February 1914, in which he stated the
building was nearly completed, that it would be very expensive to
re-build, and that it was urgently required in the public interest.
He asked if it might remain for the time being, and Hove Council
agreed.
As
early as 2 August 1914 (two days before war was declared) all
available signalmen had left to join their respective ships, and
within less than three weeks, practically the entire strength of the
local division had been absorbed into the fighting forces. The
instructors went off to serve with the Fleet, while most of the
reservists served as infantry in the 63rd
(Royal Naval) Division; the latter seeing action at Antwerp, Mons,
Gallipoli and Salonica. Some served aboard Royal Navy vessels as
signallers / artificers. Many men from all Divisions were killed
numbering 10,795, while the toll of the wounded came to 30,892.
Meanwhile, new recruits arriving
at Hove found themselves having a week’s trial at Hove Battery, and
those deemed fit enough were sent on to regular training at Crystal
Palace.
In 1921 the Division was re-formed
with Earl Howe (formerly Viscount Curzon) in command.
By 1938 the headquarters were
still at 5 Victoria Terrace, and the commanding officer was none
other than Captain Earl Howe. The officer instructor was Lieutenant
Commander C. F. H. Churchill.
In
1939 the reservists were once again mobilised and sent to serve with
the Fleet, 30 of them going to HMS Ark
Royal as
aircraft handlers, while others carried out mine-sweeping duties
aboard converted trawlers.
copyright © J.Middleton Hove Battery and Coastguard Station |
Meanwhile, the Hove Battery site was far from being deserted because it became part of the ‘stone frigate’ known as HMS King Alfred, which also included the newly-built swimming baths, and later on, Mowden School, Lancing College and other buildings. It is a proud statistic that 22,500 men passed through HMS King Alfred to become RNVR officers, so vital to the war effort. Such a significant contribution ought to be publicly commemorated but alas! it is not.
In
1946 the Sussex Division was re-constituted under Captain T. D.
Manning, the veteran Earl Howe having retired after 39 years with the
Division. In 1949 the Sussex Division became HMS
Sussex, when
the county-class cruiser of that name was paid off.
Directory Entry for Victoria Terrace 1918
1. W. Combs, house furniture
1a. Misses Hayter & Simpson, milliners
2. Ida Verner
3. Mrs Williams
4. Thomas Read, chemist
5. RNVR Volunteers (Brighton & Hove Company)
6.
Kingsway
Mansions
1.
Major Peter Paget RAMC
2.
Mrs Swifte
3.
P. E. Tooth Esq MA (Cantab)
4.
Mrs Koosen
H.
Batchelor, caretaker
7.Jefferies & North, auctioneers
9. Clarke Brothers, undertakers
Clarke,
H.A.
10.
Neptune
Inn
11. Mark Reed
12. Smith & Co, greengrocers
13.
Victoria
Tavern
14. R. N. Jenner, newsagent
16. Thompson, E, greengrocer
17. Miss Chatfield, dining rooms
18. William Still, draper
19. H. E. Hobden, butcher
20. Post & Telegraph
J.
Gwile, grocer
21. G. Girling, hairdresser
St Aubyns Hotel
Directory Entry for Victoria Terrace 1938
W. A. Combs, upholsterer
Mary Jean, Arts & Crafts
Kingsway Private Hotel and café, Mrs B. J. W.
Rome, proprietress
Richard G. Mumford, chemist
RNVR HQ, Lieutenant-Commander C. F. H. Churchill
RN, officer instructor
Kingsway
Mansions
William
Amos Burton
Mrs
George Edwards
P.
Burlet
George Withall, confectioner
Jefferies & North, auctioneers
Victoria Garage
Clarke & Son, house agents, undertaker’s
Alexander H. Clarke
Cyril A. Clarke
Neptune
Inn,
James Tooley
W. & F. Philbrock, butcher’s
Armistead Hartley, confectioner and Post Office
Ernest G. Wingham, beer retailer
R. N. Jenner, newsagent
Marie, ladies’ hairdresser
Miss E. Compton, grocer
Egbert Thompson, greengrocers
James Lynn
Alfred Chatfield, dining rooms
William Still, draper
Herbert E. Hobden, butcher
William J. Crabb & Son, wine merchants
Maison Cifrille, laidies’ hairdresser
St Aubyns Hotel
Sources
Argus
(23/2/11
/ 1/3/11 / 20 November 2012 / 15 March 2013 / 18 December 2019)
Census returns
Brighton
Gazette (30
March 1876)
Directories
Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Middleton,
J. A
History of Women’s Lives in Hove and Portslade (2018
Middleton,
J. HMS
King Alfred (1986,
reprinted by Hove Council 1989)
Middleton
J. Hove
and Portslade in the Great War
Middleton,
J. Hove
in Old Picture Postcards (1983)
Sussex
Daily News (5
April 1883)
Thornton,
W. M. 75th
Anniversary of the RNR and RNVR (1978)
The
Times (23
September 1902)
Copyright © J.Middleton 2020
page layout by D.Sharp
page layout by D.Sharp