Converted to two houses in 1923 it was sold to Hove Council in 1925 the year after the death of Vallance's widow. Named from the new church of St Philip.ġ9, Hove Museum and Art Gallery, formerly a private residence known as Brooker Hall, was designed in 1876 by Thomas Lainson for John Olliver Vallance. Sackville Gardens conservation area (50-68 evens). Pembroke and Princes conservation area (1-27 odd, 2-36 even, Hove Museum, Blenheim Court, Pembroke Court, Aymer House). Small inter-war (?) development off Falmer Road. Sir William Nicholson (see The Grange on The Green, Rottingdean) produced a woodcut based on the mill for use as the logo of the publisher William Heinemann. Rottingdean Windmill is a smock mill of 1802, built on land that had been used as a cricket pitch during the 18th century. No 20 bears a monogrommed A above the date 1891. Named after William Nevill, 1st Marguess of Abergavenny.ġ8, 20, 22 are on the local B&H list. Rottingdean conservation area (2-12 consecutive, Post Office sorting office). Nevill Road was seen in Lady Godiva Rides Again (1951). Ph 214, The Nevill was designed by John Leopold Denman as The Nevill Hotel and opened in 1933. Waterworks Cottages are adjacent to Goldstone Pumping Station (see Woodland Drive). Denman & Son also built the adjacent church hall in 1951.ġen./wiki/ Hounsom_Memorial_Churchĭog Racing Stadium, which has the capacity for 2,200 spectators, held its first race on 2 June 1928. The dedication was held on 22 October 1939 1. Construction began on 16 March 1938 and was completed on 17 September 1939. Rutland Hall in Rutland Road was sold to finance the work. It was designed by John Leopold Denman in neo-Georgian style and cost £2,700. Hounsom Memorial United Reformed Church commemorates landowner and developer William Allin Hounsom, a leading Congregationalist. Nevill is the family name of the Marquesses of Abergavenny, who owned the Manor of Blatchington from the 16th century onwards.īishop Hannington Memorial Church. No properties listed in To1903.Ĭircular development off Bexhill Road of mostly social housing on the inner arc and (dormer) bungalows on the outer. Named after the hero of the East African wars, Major Randolph Cosby Nesbitt VC (1867-1956) (cf, Baden Road, etc). † Brighton Technical College & College of Art Canteen was here from c1949 until the late 1960s. No properties listed in Ke1970.Īt 16 Carlton Row, leading to Sussex Street (1854)ġ7 was Brighton Girls Club before its removal to Tilbury Place.įormer name of John Street between Carlton Hill and Sussex Street. Rose in Graham Greene's Brighton Rock lived here. Only the name remains in a three-storey block of flats below Ashton Rise on the north side of Morley Street of what was once one of the Carlton Hill area slum streets between Carlton Hill and Sussex Street the street itself was replaced by Kingswood Flats (see Sussex Street). Natal is a former British colony, now a province of South Africa, scene of the siege of Ladysmith, relieved by Sir Redvers Buller (see also Ladysmith Road.Īdmiral Viscount Horatio Nelson (1758-1805) was the naval commander killed at the battle of Trafalgar. Part of a complex of streets to the east of Lewes Road commemorating the Boer War, built c1905-10 (cf, Buller Road, Milner Road, etc). John Talbot Nanson was mayor of Brighton for three terms 1938-1941. The mews now comprises workshops and retail units. Namrik House (1881) was here but the origin of the name remains obscure: there is a place of that name in Iraq and it is a personal name. The unnamed mews existed by the early 1870s.
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