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Heritage-Statement
Document Information Cover Sheet ASITE DOCUMENT REFERENCE: WSP-EV-SW-RP-0088 DOCUMENT TITLE: Environmental Statement Chapter 6 ‘Cultural Heritage’: Final version submitted for planning REVISION: F01 PUBLISHED BY: Jessamy Funnell – WSP on behalf of PMT PUBLISHED DATE: 03/10/2011 OUTLINE DESCRIPTION/COMMENTS ON CONTENT: Uploaded by WSP on behalf of PMT. Environmental Statement Chapter 6 ‘Cultural Heritage’ ES Chapter: Final version, submitted to BHCC on 23rd September as part of the planning application. This document supersedes: PMT-EV-SW-RP-0001 Chapter 6 ES - Cultural Heritage WSP-EV-SW-RP-0073 ES Chapter 6: Cultural Heritage - Appendices Chapter 6 BSUH September 2011 6 Cultural Heritage 6.A INTRODUCTION 6.1 This chapter assesses the impact of the Proposed Development on heritage assets within the Site itself together with five Conservation Areas (CA) nearby to the Site. 6.2 The assessment presented in this chapter is based on the Proposed Development as described in Chapter 3 of this ES, and shown in Figures 3.10 to 3.17. 6.3 This chapter (and its associated figures and appendices) is not intended to be read as a standalone assessment and reference should be made to the Front End of this ES (Chapters 1 – 4), as well as Chapter 21 ‘Cumulative Effects’. 6.B LEGISLATION, POLICY AND GUIDANCE Legislative Framework 6.4 This section provides a summary of the main planning policies on which the assessment of the likely effects of the Proposed Development on cultural heritage has been made, paying particular attention to policies on design, conservation, landscape and the historic environment. -
Royal Crescent Brighton (C.1796–1805) – an Early Seaside Crescent’, the Georgian Group Journal, Vol
Sue Berry, ‘Royal Crescent Brighton (c.1796–1805) – an early seaside crescent’, The Georgian Group Journal, Vol. XXV, 2017, pp. 237–246 TEXT © THE AUTHORS 2017 ROYAL CRESCENT BRIGHTON (c.1796–1805) – an eaRLY SEASIDE CRESCENT SUE BERRY Brighton’s Georgian legacy includes some distinctive visual contribution to Brighton’s townscape, and and elegant projects, one of the most impressive of newly-discovered evidence from Court cases provides which is Royal Crescent. Built between c.1796 and valuable information about building costs, rare in 1805, this speculative project of fourteen terraced Brighton, and insights into a developer’s desire to houses faces the sea on Brighton’s eastern cliffs. Its control quality, in this case the provision of superior façade of black mathematical tiles makes a striking water closets. The Royal Pavilion facing east overlooking the Steine Byam House Belle Vue House Royal Crescent Fig. 1. Marchant’s map of Brighton in 1808 showing the location of Royal Crescent. (Private Collection) THE GEORGIAN GROUP JOURNAL VOLUME XXV ROYAL CRESCENT BRIGHTON ( c . 1 7 9 6 – 1 8 0 5 ) – AN EARLY SEASIDE CRESCENT Fig. 2. Royal Crescent today from the east. (Author) etween the late 1770s and the mid-1820s there soldiers. The government decided to garrison the Bwas a building boom in Brighton, during which town because the shallow water and gently shelving Royal Crescent, still a landmark on the eastern foreshore, characteristic of Brighton and the bay cliffs, was built (Fig. 1). The demand for houses to the west of the town, were not only convenient and services that drove the resort’s expansion for bathing machines, but could also enable troops out of its old boundaries onto the surrounding to embark and disembark easily. -
Glimpses of Our Ancestors in Sussex
..•• .-•^T-— !|f Glimpses OF OUR Sussex Ancestors SBCOJVD SERIES. ILLUSTRAI'1-JD "••^-•^-w ^^ Ex Libris C. K. OGDEN THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES Glimpses of our Ancestors in Sussex AND Gleanings in East and West Sussex. Printed i;t Fakncombe & Co., Lewes. The Pelham Monument, in St. ]\Iichael's Church, Lewes. GLIMPSES OK OUR ANCESTORS in SUSSEX; AND GLEANINGS IN EAST & WEST SUSSEX. BY C H ARLE S FLEET, ^' Author of Tales and Sketches,^' "The City Merchant," 6^c. ILLUSTRATED. ' ' I have some rights of memory in this County,' Which now to claim my vantage doth invite me." — Sliukipeare. SECOND SERIES. LEWES: " " FARNCOMBE & CO., PRINTERS, EAST SUSSEX NEWS OFFICES. 1883. P R E FA C E HE favor with which the first Volume of Glimpses of our Ancestors in Sussex was received by the Public and the Press has encouraged the Author to issue a Second Volume, partly devoted to the same class of subjects which fill the first volume and partly to subjects of a more descriptive and topographical character. Trusting that an equal measure of indulgence will be extended to this as was received by the former publication, the Author leaves it to the kind judgment of the Public. 1C59?SS ERRATUM. Noble Sussex Family," read,— At page 13, line 27, of "A "This Ducal Pelham married the Lady Mary Godolphin, the Duke of "a grand-daughter of John Churchill, great "Marlborough." DEDICATED, BY PERMISSION, TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE HENRY THOMAS PELHAM (EARL OF CHICHESTER), Lord Lieutenant of the County of Sussex. LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. -
The Unpublished Journal of Gideon Mantell 1819 – 1852
The Unpublished Journal of Gideon Mantell 1819 – 1852 Edited with an introduction by John A. Cooper © 2010 The Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove UK 1 The Unpublished Journal of Gideon Mantell: 1819 – 1852 Introduction Historians of English society of the early 19th century, particularly those interested in the history of science, will be familiar with the journal of Gideon Algernon Mantell (1790-1852). Whilst not kept on a daily basis, Mantell’s journal, kept from 1818, offers valuable insights into not only his own remarkable life and work, but through his comments on a huge range of issues and personalities, contributes much to our understanding of contemporary science and society. Gideon Mantell died in 1852. All of his extensive archives passed first to his son Reginald and on his death, to his younger son Walter who in 1840 had emigrated to New Zealand. These papers together with Walter’s own library and papers were donated to the Alexander Turnbull Library in Wellington, New Zealand in 1927 by his daughter-in- law. At some time after that, a typescript was produced of the entire 4-volume manuscript journal and it is this typescript which has been the principal reference point for subsequent workers. In particular, an original copy was lodged with the Sussex Archaeological Society in Lewes, Sussex. In 1940, E. Cecil Curwen published his abridged version of Gideon Mantell’s Journal (Oxford University Press 1940) and his pencilled marks on the typescript indicate those portions of the text which he reproduced. About half of the text was published by Curwen. -
Places of Worship in Georgian and Regency Brighton and Hove’, the Georgian Group Journal, Vol
Sue Berry, ‘Places of worship in Georgian and Regency Brighton and Hove’, The Georgian Group Journal, Vol. XIX, 2011, pp. 157–172 TEXT © THE AUTHORS 2011 PLACES OF WORSHIP IN GEORGIAN AND REGENCY BRIGHTON AND HOVE C . – SUE BERRY Between and , the number of places of whereas Lewes had , residents and six parish worship in the flourishing resort of Brighton and churches and Chichester , residents, eight Hove increased from four to about forty, most of which parish churches and a cathedral. The writer believed were built after . The provision for Anglican that Brighton needed at least four more Anglican worshippers before was limited to two old parish churches, calculating that one church would serve churches and a seasonally open chapel of ease. By , people. He claimed that, because of the lack of the total number of buildings and sittings offered by provision by the Church of England, dissenting Nonconformist places of worship had outnumbered groups would flourish, and he drew attention to the those for Anglicans. Their simple buildings were closure of the St James’s Street Chapel (see below), located on cheaper land behind streets or along minor an Anglican free chapel opened by some local streets. But from Anglicans and Nonconformists gentlemen in because neither the Vicar of started building larger places of worship on major Brighton nor the Bishop of Chichester would streets, and some of these striking buildings still survive. support it. Though there were already some fifteen nonconformist places of worship, most of which had rom around the small town of Brighton was free seats, the outburst did not result in any Fsaved from a long period of decline by the immediate change, and in this respect Brighton was development of seaside tourism, attracting increasing typical of other fast-growing towns in which the numbers of wealthy visitors and residents and many Church of England did little to attract worshippers people who provided the wide range of services that until the s. -
Thomas Read Kemp and the Shaping of Regency Brighton C.1818–1845’, the Georgian Group Journal, Vol
Sue Berry, ‘Thomas Read Kemp and the shaping of Regency Brighton c.1818–1845’, The Georgian Group Journal, Vol. XVII, 2009, pp. 125–140 TEXT © THE AUTHORS 2009 THOMAS READ KEMP AND THE SHAPING OF REGENCY BRIGHTON c . – SUE BERRY he story of the enterprises of Thomas Read their harsh living conditions. The Morning Chronicle TKemp ( – ) can only be understood remarked in on the presence of the Prime within the the context of Brighton’s development as Minister, William Pitt, at Rottingdean (east of a resort. Before , few architects were employed Brighton), along with a number of friends of the in Brighton. Henry Holland enlarged a lodging ministry, contractors, and other people who stayed house to form the first version of the Royal Pavilion; in Brighton and would have had something to lose Robert Adam modernised a large town house for if there was danger. ‘Single Speech’ Hamilton; and William Porden With the Wars over, the long narrow terraces so designed Mrs Fitzherbert’s house. Bath, Brighton’s characteristic of Brighton’s suburban development main rival, owes its present appearance to a series of since were too small to accommodate wealthier architect-developers, first the Woods (from the s visitors who now wanted to use their homes for to the s), then Thomas Baldwin, John Eveleigh entertaining (Fig. ). Regency Square, commenced in and John Palmer (mid s to ) and finally, in , was the first large new scheme. The demand for the early nineteenth century, John Pinch. Although housing is reflected in the increase in population, most of their schemes were not completed as planned, which doubled between and to , and they gave Bath more cohesion than Brighton achieved, then rose to , by . -
Glimpses of Our Ancestors in Sussex; with Sketches of Sussex Characters
THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES GLIMPSES OF n WITH SKETCHES OF SUSSEX CHARACTERS, REMARKABLE INCIDENTS, &c. BT CHARLES FLEET, " " Author of Tales and Sketches? The City Merchant? ' ' I have some rights of memory in this County,' Whkh now to claim my vantage doth invite me." Shahpeare, BRIGHTON : W. J. SMITH, 41, 42, AND 43, NOBTH STREET. 1878. FLEET AND BISHOP, PRINTERS, "HERALD" OFFICE, BRIGHTON. Library DA TO THE READER. The contents of this Volume appeared in the columns of the BRIGHTON HERALD in the years 1875-6-7, under the title of " GLIMPSES OF OUR ANCESTORS," and the Author of them is induced to re-publish them in their present form by the frequent applications which have been made for the numbers of the Journal containing them. With the hope that they may help to fill up a gap or two in the history of Men and Manners in his native County, and with full acknowledgment of the large debt he owes, in respect to the matter of several Papers, to the contributors to the Collections of the Sussex Archaeological Society especially to his old and esteemed friends, the late Mark Antony Lower and William Durrant Cooper he commits his work fo the indulgent consideration of the Public. CONTENTS.- I I. THE SUSSEX DIARISTS . , 2. THE SUSSEX IRONMASTERS . .64. 3. THE SUSSEX SMUGGLERS . .73 4. THE SOUTH-DOWN SHEPHERD . .87 5. THE SUSSEX SHEEP-SHEARER . .98 6. SUSSEX CHARACTERS : THE SUSSEX COTTAGE-WIFE. .105 THE OLD SUSSEX RADICAL . .112 THE OLD SUSSEX TORY . .119 THE SUSSEX COUNTRY DOCTOR . -
East Sussex Record Office Report of the County Archivist April 2012 to March 2014
eastsussex.gov.uk East Sussex Record Office Report of the County Archivist April 2012 to March 2014 2014/15: 458 Introduction The period covered by this annual report – the financial years 2012-2014 – has probably been the most momentous in ESRO’s history as it saw the completion of the project to build and open The Keep. It marked the culmination of seven years’ work by the project partners, East Sussex County Council, Brighton & Hove City Council and The University of Sussex to re-house their archives and other historical resources in a state-of-the-art building, both to ensure their permanent preservation and to increase and broaden access to this unique and irreplaceable material. Practical completion was achieved on 17 June 2013 when the building was handed over by the contractors, Kier. We immediately began to move ESRO material into The Keep, which was not as easy as it sounds – the work required to prepare the archives for transfer and then to move them is described elsewhere in this report. Staff worked long, hard hours preparing and supervising the ESRO removals. It was a remarkable feat and as a result all ESRO’s archives have been listed to at least collection level, packaged and shelved appropriately in a single building and can be tracked around it via the inventory management (barcoding) system. The service we now offer is not merely ESRO in a new building, but has been transformed into a fully integrated partnership, working not just to better but rather transcend what we previously provided. Behind the scenes each partner continues to maintain their individual collections in their separate databases but from the user’s point of view the service is seamless: the online catalogue and ordering system combine information from the three databases and presents them as a single resource on The Keep’s new website, www.thekeep. -
Annual Accessions Website 2016 Master
EAST SUSSEX RECORD OFFICE East Sussex Accessions 2016 A list of the principal East Sussex accessions received during the year. The accession number of the documents is given in brackets; not all deposits are yet listed in detail and may not be available for consultation, and others may now be listed under permanent references. County Council: • Bexhill Borough Council: inherited records of private street works, 1911-1967 (12464) • Charnock, Denys, Borough Engineer, papers and photographs, 1970s - 1980s (12463) • Deeds of sold properties: 1 Garfield Road, Hailsham, [1807]-[1924] (12558); 7 Terminus Avenue, Bexhill, [1877-2016] (12569) • Democratic Services, committee minutes, 1994-2015 (12422); council and committee minutes, 2013-2016 (12685) • Education: Children's Officer, papers relating to the placement of children in residential care, 1912-1956 (12516) • East Sussex Record Office: Shared Journeys Oral History Project, 2012-2013 (12648) • Highways: highway terrier 1942-1992, Land Charges Register maps 1925-1974, maps and lists of roads 1930-1933, aerial photographs 1987-1991 (12431) • Libraries and Information: antiquarian volumes from Eastbourne Library, 1730- 1886 (12428) • Lord Lieutenancy papers, c2000-2016 (12726) • Olesen, Ralph, formerly of ESCC Highways, papers, 1970s - 1980s (12424) • Registration Service, Eastbourne and Hailsham Districts marriage notice books, 1930-2009 (12561) • Schools Library and Museum Service, papers and photographs, 1809-c1930 (12643); glass lantern slides including travellers, c1900-1930 (12662) • -
Hove Library - World War 1 - Special Collections and Stock
Hove Library - World War 1 - Special Collections and Stock Special Collections Access to these collections requires Special Collection Membership - if you wish to join we require two passport photos, documentary proof of address and proof of signature. Alderman and Mrs A.R. Sargeant - Mayor and Mayoress of Hove 1914-1919 in grateful remembrance (Bound Collection of Cuttings, Pamphlets and Photographs) Collection of newspaper cuttings, pamphlets and photographs from wartime Brighton and Hove. Collected by the Mayor and Mayoress of Hove. 2 Volumes covering the years 1914-1919. Borough of Hove – Proceedings of Committees 1914-1918 Collected minutes of council meetings. The Brighton Season: a record of the season’s social happenings, 1916-17 autumn and winter (Book) 1916 -1917 Articles, photographs and adverts about people and places from Brighton during wartime. Francis Wolseley – Cuttings, common place book – women and the land (Scrapbook). Writings and ephemera collected by Francis Wolseley concerning horticulture during WW1. The Great War (Books), edited by H.W. Wilson 13 Volumes, published throughout the war. 1914-1919. A summary of the whole of the First World War, with historical analysis and images. The Hove Roll of Honour (Catalogued Archive of Collected Documents and Photographs) The Hove Roll of Honour is a collection of municipal war records, photographs and ephemera of service personnel who lived in Hove and died fighting in the First World War. 6 volumes of collected records and 5 Volumes of collected photographs - over 400 images. WW1monument in Hove Library foyer, a large brass plate with 631 surnames and initials. Ways of viewing the Hove Roll of Honour: 1: Join the Special Collections Membership Scheme. -
The Gardens of No 32 Sussex Square Kemp Town Brighton
Institute of Historical Research MA Garden and Landscape History Student Number: 1645315 Date of submission: 2 February 2017 Word count: 5266 The gardens of No 32 Sussex Square Kemp Town Brighton Figure 1. OS Brighton & Hove Explorer map 122, scale 1:25000, 2009, showing location of Sussex Square and Kemp Town Contents Page ____________________________________________________________________________ Introduction 3 The development of Kemp Town 4 Enlargement of the gardens 6 First occupiers of No 32 6 Garden walls 7 Plants and planting 9 Sale in 1900 11 Tunnels and cellars 13 Pavilion, conservatory and glasshouses 15 Ownership after 1900 17 1950 onwards 19 Conclusions 21 Bibliography 24 2 Introduction This research focuses on the gardens of No 32 Sussex Square, a large terrace house within Kemp Town, a late Regency development in east Brighton (Fig. 1). Today only the back garden to the 8 flats making up number 32, together with a piece of land across the road, called the Secret Garden, remain (Fig. 2). The Trustees of the Antony Dale Trust, who own the Secret Garden wanted background information about the origins of the garden to use in promotional material and this was the original goal. An understanding of the development of the gardens, however, required consideration of the whole block from 32 to 40 as their histories are intertwined and this determined the scope of this exercise. Figure 2. The original extent of the garden (red) and what is left today (green). North to the left. Image: Google Earth, 2015 The key questions surround the acquisition of land east of Bristol Place for ‘extended’ gardens for No 32 and its neighbours (Fig. -
SUSSEX. )Jrighfo:X and HOVE
DIRECTORY] SUSSEX. )JRIGHfO:X AND HOVE. 9l 'fhe followmg schools are under the control of the Hove London Road Station, Shaftesbury place, James Raw Borough Education Committee, lings, station master .Connaught road, Higher Grade, for 260 boys, 230 girls, Portslade Railway Station & Telegraph Office, Portland 238 junior mixed & 250; infants;. average attendance, rd. Hove,. Brighton, Chas. Stuart Sisley, station mastr 230 boys, 185 girls, 189 mixed & 140 infants; William Preston Park Station, Clermont road, Preston, Albert Bees, master; Miss Helen Woolgar, mistress (girls); James Prevett, station master Miss H. Batting, mistress (mixed); Mrs. M. M. Moore, infants' mistress . Carriers to & from London. East Hove, Da vigdor road, Higher Grade, for 254 boys, Durtnall & Co. goods by luggage train, every evening at 254 girls & 244 infants; averJ.ge attendance, 204 boys, 6 p. m. & general carriers to all parts; offices, 149 r82 girls & II3 infants; Laurence Ives, master; Miss North street & 2-4 Upper Gardner street, Brighton; F. E. Yeomanson L.L.A. mistress; Miss A. Newton, & 4 Bartholomew close, London E C infants' mistress Foster's Parcel Express, R. Huggett, agent, 8 Shaftes Ellen street, for 272 boys, 252 girls & 240 infants; aver bury road age attend~nce, 264 boys, 232 girls & x64 infants; Pickfords Ltd. general carriers to all parts; office.il, 46 Robert Redish. master; Miss Sarah Jane Hannah Queen's road & Frederick place, Brighton; & 57 L.L.A. mistress; Miss Dovey, infants' mistress Gresham street, London E C Portland road, for 320 boys, 28o girls & 270 infants ; Sutton & Co. for parcels; H. M. Perkins, manager; 1nl., average attendance, 211 boys, 208 girls & 227 infants; Market street F.