Judy Middleton 2002 (revised 2022)
|
copyright © J.Middleton
Courtenay Terrace retains its elegant air, despite the nearby
presence of Flag Court |
Background
It is generally stated that the
terrace was built in around 1840 but a long-term resident told me
that at least one house was built in 1831. Whenever they were
actually built, they were contemporaries of the building work going
on at Brunswick Town. They also occupied a unique position, being old
properties of the
Manor of Hove, and the only ones locally with
gardens running right down to the beach – this was of course before
the spacious houses in Western
Esplanade were built, and before Hove
Council appropriated part of their gardens to enlarge the promenade.
A possible clue to the choice of
name lies in the Honourable Elizabeth Courtenay who married Lord
Charles Henry Somerset in 1788, and the couple had seven children.
She died at the Cape of Good Hope in 1815 where her husband was
governor for thirteen years. They are both remembered in a wall
tablet at St Andrew’s Church,
Waterloo Street. It seems that there
was some difficulty in the correct spelling of the name – for
example, Directories up until around 1890 favoured ‘Courtnay’,
while from around 1903 to 1905 it was ‘Courteney’, and from 1905
it has been ‘Courtenay’.
In 1854 there was a complaint
about a Mr Brooks who was busily engaged in repairing his boat on the
beach in front of Courtenay Terrace. Probably, he had no idea he was
trespassing upon private property, but he was soon informed of the
fact. By 24 August 1854 both he and the boat had gone.
Originally, there were just four
houses in Courtenay Terrace – they were Courtenay Lodge, Courtenay
Beach, Courtenay House, and Courtenay Tye. It was later on that
Courtenayside and Courtenay Towers were added to the terrace. The two
latter were once known as Hoove Lea, a mid-19th century villa. The
first four houses received received Grade II listed building status
on 24 March 1950 but the last two had to wait until 10 September 1970
for similar protection.
Compulsory Purchase
|
copyright © J.Middleton
Courtenay Terrace once enjoyed gardens leading down to the sea plus its own beach |
In 1903 Hove Council purchased for
£100 a 6-ft strip of land, plus the foreshore, opposite number 4
Courtenay Terrace. With hindsight, the council secured themselves a
bargain.
In 1907 Alderman Isger stated that
the only part of Hove sea-front not in the possession of Hove Council
were the gardens belonging to the owners of Courtenay Terrace.
Naturally, councillors did not relish the fact that their wide
promenade was interrupted by private property. It seemed only logical
that
King’s Gardens Esplanade and Medina Esplanade should be
linked. This led to a Compulsory Purchase Order being served on the
owners of number 1, 2, and 3 for a portion of their gardens and
beach. However, the relevant owners were not going to submit to the
loss without a fight. Hove Council offered them compensation of
£1,150 all told. But the owners refused, holding out for a much
larger sum, that is £5,400. The only course of action was for an
independent body to determine on the amount of compensation to be
paid.
|
copyright © J.Middleton
This postcard shows the rather handsome walls and piers built after Hove Council enlarged the esplanade |
This led to a Sheriff’s Court
being held at
Hove Town Hall in June 1908 to determine the amount of
compensation Hove Council would be obliged to pay the owners.
|
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums-Brighton & Hove
Brighton Herald 14 October 1905 |
Mr
Bartlett, Deputy Sheriff for Sussex, presided over the court, and the
special jury included Edward Lloyd (1845-1927), a famous tenor, who
lived at Hove, as well as a count. The compensation was agreed as
follows:
Courtenay
Lodge
– It was stated that some £6,000 had been expended on improving
the house, although it had subsequently been sold for £5,000. The
frontage was 39-ft and 3-in. George Bush, the freeholder, was to
receive £663, and Charles Rowe Sawyer, the tenant, was to receive
£480. By the time the common seal of the borough was affixed to the
conveyance on 9 November 1908, the name on the document was Mrs
Ferdinande F. de Varios Sawyer.
Courtenay
Beach
– Francis Middleton, owner and occupier, was to receive £600 and
costs.
Courtenay
House
– Colonel Bennett, the owner, and Mr H. M. Isaacs were to receive
£620 together.
Hove Council thought that on the
whole, the outcome was satisfactory.
The Borough Surveyor had already
prepared drawings for the new boundary wall to be erected at the rear
of numbers 1, 2, and 3 Courtenay Terrace, and the south end of Medina
Lawn. The wall was to be 6-ft 6-in high with gates and piers, the
same as had already been carried out at number 4 and Hoove Lea. There
was to be an ornamental cast-iron railing at the south end of Medina
Lawn; the cost came to £480.
|
copyright © J.Middleton
The new, wider esplanade can be clearly seen in this postcard of the 1930s |
House Notes
|
copyright © J.Middleton
Courtenay Terrace was built to enjoy sea views, and this is part of terrace fronting Kingsway |
Courtenay Lodge
The 1861 census recorded that this
house was to let, but meanwhile Sarah Ann Reeves, a 50-year old
needlewoman, was looking after the premises.
Lieutenant Colonel Edward Lawrie (1846-1915) - lived at Courtenay Lodge
from 1911, he was the former resident surgeon of the Calcutta
Medical College Hospital from 1874-1879.
In 1879 until his retirement in 1885 he was
professor of surgery in the Lahore Medical College, one of the most
important medical appointments in India.
When the Brighton hospital for sick and wounded Indian
soldiers was opened, he was appointed anaesthetist and
carried out his duties in the Royal Pavilion and at York Place. He was
an ardent advocate of the claims of chloroform to be the best and
safest anaesthetic in general use, his views on this subject were
published in a book entitled Chloroform: A Manuel for Students and
Practitioners (1901).
The property is now
divided into flats.
Courtenay Beach
|
copyright © J.Middleton Celia and her famous opera singer mother, Isabel Jay
|
The Anderson family lived in this house for many years. On one memorable occasion after a fierce gale the basement kitchen was flooded with sea-water but fortunately the fire brigade came to the rescue and pumped out the water. As for the garden, the salt-laden air did not allow delicate flowers to be cultivated but the marigolds did not seem to mind and the tamarisk flourished.
Dr Anderson had a small brass plate fixed to the tall pillar next to the pavement so that his patients would know where to find him. Mrs Anderson was remembered in the neighbourhood as a kind person, and she enjoyed treating two local youngsters, Paul and Louise, with visits to the ice shows and Gilbert and Sullivan performances. There were two Anderson daughters.
Mrs Anderson came from an aristocratic background and was in fact the Honourable Cecilia Claribel Anderson, her father being the 6th Baron Waterpark (1876-1948). In addition, under her stage name of Celia Cavendish, she enjoyed a career as an actress and singer. While she lived at Courtenay Beach, her portrait was painted there, and it now hangs in the Royal Academy of Music.
Her mother Isabel Jay (1879-1929) was an even more eminent presence on the stage, becoming the principal singer of the D’Oyley Carte Opera Company. Her fame coincided with the popularity of the picture postcard, and since she had such a large fan base, a great many different images of her portraying her various roles could be purchased. (See also Westbourne Villas where Isabel Jay spent her early childhood)
The top flat was rented out to Graham Phillipson, who was only too pleased to help around the place. He was the nephew of Paul Phillipson who, between 1970 and 1986, played no less than 168 times for Sussex County Cricket team.
|
(N.L of Australia)
5 April 1935
|
This house is still a single
residence.
Courtenay Tye
Elizabeth
Allan (1910-1990)
– The popular star lived in this house for many years. She enjoyed
a long career in the public eye, spanning over forty years, with
appearances on stage, screen and television, and there were around
fifty films to her credit. In 1932 she married her agent, Wilfrid J.
O’Bryen, popularly known as Bill O’Bryen. He also attained the
rank of major, having had the distinction of serving in both world
wars.
When Bill became ill, Elizabeth
decided it was time to retire as she wished to look after him –
they were a devoted couple. When he died in 1977, she decided to stay
in the house. A local youngster called Paul used to deliver the
newspapers to her house, come rain or shine, from Jenners in Victoria
Terrace. His family still treasure an envelope signed by Mrs O’Bryen
in which was enclosed Paul’s Christmas ‘box’.
In 2016 this house, still a single
residence, was on sale for £4. Perhaps the price was a little steep,
and the property was finally sold recently for £3 million.
Courtenay House
|
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums
Sir Alfred Cooper Rawson M.P. |
Sir
Cooper Rawson (1876-1946)
lived in the house from the 1920s until the Second World War. He was
born at Whetstone Pastures, Leicester, on 26 July 1876. He served as
a sub-lieutenant in the RND in 1915, and was in the RNVR from 1916 to
1918. He never forgot his Naval background, and in 1918 he was
granted a commission as an honorary commander attached to the Sussex
Division. Indeed, the hall at the former HQ of Hove Sea Cadets was
known as the Cooper Rawson Hall. In 1940 he was made an honorary
captain RNVR. When Hove extended its boundaries in 1927, he marked
the occasion by flying Naval pennants from his residence to spell
‘Welcome’, and took a prominent part in the celebrations.
Rawson
was a member of Wandsworth Borough Council from 1911 to 1922, and
Mayor of Wandsworth from 1918 to 1919. In 1926 he was created a
knight, as well as being awarded the Légion
d’Honneur by the French government in recognition of his services
to France through the British Legion of Help. Rawson was the
Conservative Member of Parliament for Brighton from 1922 to 1944, in
the days when Hove was part of the Brighton constituency. He has the
distinction of winning his seat in 1931 with the highest majority
ever to be recorded – a feat unlikely to be exceeded in these more
fractious times – his majority was an incredible 62,253.
|
copyright © E. Rawson
Elizabeth Robson (later Lady Rawson)
resplendent in her wedding dress decorated
with bands of scalloped lace |
Rawson was an acknowledged expert
on the roadstone industry, and was chairman of the following
companies:
Montsorrel Granite Company
Endaby Stoney Stanton Granite
Company
John Ellis & Sons
Durex Ltd
When a Bill was introduced into
the House of Commons to permit municipal quarrying on a large scale,
he led the opposition, and it was withdrawn.
In February 1934 Princess Helena
Victoria (1870-1948) took luncheon with the Rawsons before going on
to officially open a new extension to Hove Hospital. The princess was
Queen Victoria’s grand-daughter, and in 1917 when George V gave up
all German titles to become the House of Windsor, the princess became
known by these Christian names, instead of being Princess Helena
Victoria of Schleswig-Holstein. She never married, but devoted
herself to good works.
It
was in 1902 that Rawson had married Elizabeth Robson. Lady Rawson
became a JP, and was president of the Shoreham branch of the British
Sailors’ Society. In 1940 a rumour went around that the Rawsons had
left Hove. This was not true and he let it be known via the Brighton
Herald that
they had merely moved house, and were now located at 11 Upper Drive
‘which with increased taxation and a diminished income is more
appropriate to my means’.
Sir Cooper Rawson died in January
1946 and his funeral was held at All Saints Church, The Drive, on 16
January with Bishop Crotty officiating. There was a large
congregation, including members of the RNVR, Navy League, Sea Cadets
and British Legion. The coffin was covered by the Union Flag,
surmounted by sword, hat and decorations. He was buried in Putney
Vale Cemetery.
Major
Adrian Cornwell-Clyne (1892-1969)
– He was an author, artist and musician who lived at Hove for
twenty years, and during the 1960s occupied the penthouse of
Courtenay House. He was brother of the popular novelist Denise Robins
who lived in Adelaide Crescent for a while. In 1912 Cornwell-Clyne
became the first to hold a one-man exhibition of purely abstract art,
but two years later he abandoned this form of art. During the First
World War he was wounded a the Somme, and consequently spent one year
in hospital to recover. In 1916 he founded the first school of
camouflage, known as the Special Works School, in Kensington Gardens.
During the Second World War he organised huge, colour transparency
maps of the whole of the British Isles for the benefit of the RAF.
Ironically, his only son Christopher was killed in the war while
serving in the RAF.
Hoove Lea
The strange name of the house was
taken from the old pronunciation of Hove – the present-day short
‘o’ being of comparative recent origin. This house was sometimes
numbered as 10 Mills Terrace. John Besemeres occupied the house in
the 1860s.
Sir
Joseph Hawley 3rd
baronet (1813-1875)
– He was the son of the Sir Henry Hawley, the 2nd
baronet, and the eldest in a family of ten children. It seems his
first love was yachting but when he was aged 30 he decided to venture
into pastures new, so to speak. It is his second grand interest that
gained him immortality, and that was his great success as horse-owner
and breeder, and as such a leading Victorian character. He had the
distinction of his horses winning all five of the English classic
races. One of his famous horses was Teddington
winner of the 1851 Derby. Hawley was an inveterate gambler, and
placed so much money on Teddington’s
success
that he was able to walk away with £80,000. However, his gambling
made him unpopular in certain circles, although not with his jockeys
who were well pleased with his generous presents. He was married with
three daughters.
It seems that Sir Joseph Hawley
was at Hoove Lea at least by 1874, and when he died in 1875, his
brother Henry (born 14 July 1815) succeeded to the title. He owned
7,600 acres, and had another house at 31 Gloucester Square, London,
while the family seat was Leybourne Grange, near Maidstone, Kent. He
was married twice, but died without issue at Hoove Lea on 5 October
1898.
In 1904 Hoove Lea lost some of its
south-facing garden with steps leading down to its own beach when
Hove Council acquired a strip of land 17-ft by 90-ft in length in
order to extend the promenade.
|
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums-Brighton & Hove
Brighton Herald 23 March 1918 |
The exclusive Hoove Lea School was
to be found on the premises from 1909 to around 1916 when it moved to
The Drive. (Please see under
Hove’s Old Schools).
Sir
George Donaldson (1845-1925)
– He occupied this house after the school for young ladies had
departed and stayed until around 1918 when he moved to 1 Grand Avenue
where he had his own museum. In 1894 he donated his collection of musical
instruments to the Royal College of Music, and in 1900 he gave a
collection of furniture to the Victorian and Albert Museum.
Percy
Macquoid (1852-1925)
|
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums-Brighton & Hove
Percy Macquoid on the beach at Hove aged
about
70 years. The photograph was taken
by Major Leonard Dent, who
had been a page boy
at the wedding of Percy Macquoid and
Theresa Dent
in 1891.
|
He was an artist and designer, and was responsible for costumes
and property at two London theatres – St
James’s Theatre, and
Her
Majesty’s Theatre. Like
Sir George Donaldson, he was an avid collector. He wrote an erudite
volume entitled A
History of English Furniture,
which he later expanded into the Dictionary
of English Furniture. His
widow, Theresa, donated a collection of furniture, silver, porcelain,
and pictures to Preston Manor where they were placed in the library,
which in 1939 became known as the Macquoid Room. Percy Macquoid’s
favourite piece of furniture was a 16th
century walnut cabinet-on-stand, which he believed to have once
belonged to Diane de Poitiers, mistress of Henri II of France.
Another favourite was a 17th
century oak draw-leaf table at which Charles II was supposed to have
eaten before the Battle of Naseby.
On the 18 and 19 January 1932 there was a two-day auction of the entire contents of Hoove Lea on the orders of Mrs Macquoid, the auctioneers being Jenner & Dell of 22 Regency Square, Brighton, and 54 Church Road, Hove. Among the host of items were the following:
|
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums-Brighton & Hove
Portrait of Theresa Isa Dent by Percy Thomas Macquoid
(later Mrs Theresa Macquoid)
|
Single and elbow chairs of Carolean and later periods
A massive Tudor oak refectory table
A walnut and oak Charles II gate-legged table
A choice walnut marquetry chest of drawers
Three large panels of Flemish tapestry
Persian carpets
Dresden and Minto cups and saucers
Hoove Lea contained an entrance hall, an inner hall, morning room, drawing room, south principal bedroom, back bedroom and bathroom, five other bedrooms, servants’ hall, butler’s pantry, housekeeper’s room, small kitchen and kitchen and scullery. There were marble fireplaces, a huge chandelier in the drawing room, a conservatory and a verandah. It was far too large for one family in modern times, and in 1933 it was split into two residences.
Courtenay Towers
This property was created in the 1930s, and was formerly part of Hoove Lea. In the 1950s Bert Merrett was interested in the house but he was pipped at the post by he famous actress Eunice Gayson (1928-2018) but whether or not she actually moved in, is not known. Eunice Gayson became famous as the first of the Bond girls – appearing in
Dr No (1962) and
From Russia with Love (1963).
The property is now divided into flats.
Courtenayside
This property too was created from part of the former Hoove Lea. In the 1970s it was owned by the Beard Brewery family. It is still a single residence, and nowadays there is a swimming pool in the garden.
Mills Terrace
It was in 1822 that James Mills built this row of houses on the south side of the coast road (later Kingsway) opposite to where the part between where
Albany Villas and
Fourth Avenue were later built. Viewed from the north side, Mills Terrace might appear to be a modest row of houses, but it was a different matter on the south side. At the south end of the garden there were a few low steps leading to a gravelled walk, with a wall on the sea side, and a tamarisk hedge on the north side. The south-facing windows thus looked out over gardens bright with flowers and a view to the sea. There were six smaller houses on the east side, and three larger ones on the west side, the two groups being separated by a path that led to a formal garden. A large house on the west side called Hoove Lea was sometimes numbered as 10 Mills Terrace. On the north side there brick pavements.
According to Henry Porter, James Mills was a constable and way-warden, while his son sought to better his social standing by adopting the prefix of ‘Sir’.
|
copyright © J.Middleton James Mills of Mills Terrace died 11 April 1846 aged 71, the churchyard St Andrew's Old Church.
|
When James Mills died he was buried in the churchyard of
St Andrew’s Old Church where his tomb can be seen to this day. The tombstone inscription records the following information:
James Mills of Mills Terrace died 11 April 1846 aged 71
Susannah, relict of the above, died 20 June 1850 aged 74
Son James Henry Mills died 18 April 1873
Caroline his beloved wife, died 3 February 1843 in the 34th year of her age
The 1851 census recorded the occupants of 9 Mills Terrace as follows:
James Henry Mills, widower and proprietor of houses
Jane, aged 18, daughter
Emily, aged 17, daughter
Eliza, aged 15, daughter
Fanny, aged 13, daughter
Susan, aged 11, daughter
Charlotte, aged 9, daughter
Perhaps the unfortunate Mrs Mills died in childbirth, her body worn out by child-bearing. All the daughters were born at Brighton, while James Henry Mills hailed from Tynemouth, Northumberland.
In the
Hove Museum collection there was a portrait of James Henry Mills by J. Watkins dated 1870, while H. R. Nibbs executed a lithographic view of Mills Terrace.
The 1848 Directory stated that there were ten houses in Mills Terrace, which included three furnished houses. In 1851 there was a small school at number 4, while in 1854 Sir George Craufurd occupied number 2.
Some details from the 1861 census were as follows:
Number 3 – Charles Mare, 46-year old ship-builder.
Number 5 – James Cranstoun, aged 50, baron and landed proprietor, daughter, butler, page and five servants. He was born at St Kitts, West Indies.
Number 6 – Revd Edward Birch MA (Oxford) priest without care of souls, aged 29.
Number 7 – George Moulson, aged 48, a private tutor.
|
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums-Brighton & Hove
Brighton Herald 26 June 1901 |
By 1891 four of the houses were being run as respectable lodging houses. For example, at numbers 3 and 4, Miss Eliza Nightingale, with the assistance of five servants, looked after five guests, including a gentleman, and a stockbroker. At number 5 Mrs Eliza Bradford had nine lodgers but managed the situation with only one live-in servant. At number 7 Mrs Sarah Chade, with the help of two nieces, had five guests on the premises.
Mills Terrace was demolished in 1899, but Hoove Lea remained. In December 1907 Messrs Venton, Bull & Cooper submitted plans for a block of flats to be built on the site. Alderman Henriques remarked that there were still plans in existence of the concert hall once projected for the site. But nothing came of the concert hall or the flats. In April 1916 it was stated that Ernest Joseph Budd, Mrs Violet Budd, and Mr Abraham Carlish had recently purchased the whole of the freehold land from the trustees of the late Sir Horatio Davies, and building operations were taking place. But this too came to nothing because by 1930 a miniature golf course occupied the site. It was in 1934 that Courtenay Gate was erected on the site.
|
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums-Brighton & Hove
Courtenay Gate on the left was built in 1934 and is a listed building. |
Sources
Brighton Herald (1905/1940)
Census Returns
Directories
Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Hove Council Minutes
Porter, Henry The History of Hove (1897)
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
Trove (15 July 1875)
Trove Newspapers (National Library of Australia)
With thanks to Jill Foley for sharing her memories
Copyright © J.Middleton 2020
page layout by D.Sharp