Nostalgia: How a Hastings parish church sprang from farmland
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He writes: The Reverend James Morgan D.D became vicar of Christ Church, Blacklands in 1927, replacing George Ruthven Thornton, M.A., vicar since 1921, who had left to become Archdeacon of Stanley, Falkland Islands.
The following year, 1928, he published a small hardback booklet of 44 pages to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the building of the church and, as would be expected, included details of the many generous benefactors in those early days. But the content is much wider, it describes the church in the geographical context of the area 150 years ago.
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Hide AdThe period 1928 - 1878 would have been within the living memory of many local residents and parishioners and they would have been able to contribute their recollections.
This area, originally known as the Blacklands Farm Estate, adjoined the Kite’s Nest Farm, Ore Valley Fields and the large wooded area known as St Helen’s Park. It was almost entirely rural land owned by the Frewen family who had started selling off plots for development in the 1870’s. The original church building was paid for entirely by Charles Frewen who died 16 months after the church was opened leaving the building unfinished for some years. The north side was without heating or lighting and building of the church tower hadn’t started until June 1889 but the vicarage was completed in 1882.
Hastings was expanding, its population of had risen rapidly from 14,016 in 1851, through 25,929 in 1861, 37,842 in 1871 to 49,755 in 1881 (90,000+ today) and farm land was given over to housing to accommodate this increase.
In 1878 the Church appears to have been little more than a mission hall half buried in earth and the road by the Church was an unlit, narrow lane leading to a farm, just wide enough for one cart and there were only three houses in Laton Road, St. Helen’s Road ended about where No. 22 now stands and it used to be considered quite a long walk into the country to reach local historian and five times Mayor, Alderman Ross’ home, nos 70 and 71. They had been built on part of the land belonging to the old Blacklands Farm which had been was situated near the junction of Baldslow, Elphinstone, and St. James’s Roads and gained the name ‘Ross’s Folly’.
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Hide AdRoss went on to be one of the first Churchwardens of the Church. Other residents of Laton Road included Hastings Observer proprietor F.J.Parsons and his family and Robertson Street Jeweller Ebenezer Dobell.
Nearby, part of what is now the Park, close to the railway bridge the area formerly consisted of allotments and gardens, and higher up was Newgate’s Wood. At one time the small portion near the Queen’s Road entrance was known as Shirley’s Pond, and consisted of a private garden and a small lake, forming part of the residence of a Mr. Shirley, a retired Hastings tradesman. It was later bought by Hastings Corporation and developed as public gardens then known as St. Andrew’s Gardens. In 1882 the gardens were enlarged and opened by the Prince and Princess of Wales, and renamed, in consequence, Alexandra Park after the Princess of Wales.
The portion of St. Helen’s Road, known in 1928 as St.Helen’s Terrace was a market garden referred to as ‘Golding’s Gardens’, and opposite, now the Park, was a row of pig-styes. In 1878 there had been a pond near the site of the former Langham Hotel and a brook ran across the road in the dip near the junction of Fearon Road with stepping-stones to cross it. The part of Elphinstone Road from the corner of Laton Road to Fearon Road was known as Pond Bay Hill. A high walled-in garden, with an ornamental pond occupied the site of Mount Pleasant Church which itself was demolished to make way for Hughenden Court.
Until 1882 Queen’s Road was known as St. Andrew’s Road and there was a rubbish tip near the railway bridge. A farm house and cow sheds would have been seen to the right of Elphinstone Lane. Local road names reflect local connections, the Frewen family provided a name for Laton Road, (the contemporary survivor of the family being Colonel Frewen Laton). Elphinstone Road (formerly ‘Lane’) after General Sir Howard Elphinstone who purchased Ore Place. The Rev. Dr. Fearon was Rector of Ore and lived at ‘Oakdene’ the old Ore Rectory and his name is perpetuated in ‘Fearon Road’.
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Hide AdAll illustrations throughout this series are from Ion Castro’s own collection and an A5 card-cover reprint of this featured book can be obtained for £5 (+£1p&p) from Ion (Tel: 01424 437468) and he can make available copies of many of the historic images used throughout the series. There’s more local history on Ion’s website, www.historichastings.co.uk,
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