Judy Middleton 2022
The house was built in around 1785 and it is a
unique structure in Portslade. The brick-built house was stuccoed in
what was to become a common feature in the squares and terraces of
Regency Brighton and Hove, There are bay windows and a charming
hooded veranda along the whole frontage supported on wooden columns
with a trelliswork balustrade. It was built unusually close to the
road for a house of this substance but of course in those days the
traffic would have only consisted of an occasional horse-drawn cart
or carriage.
Marriage Settlement
It is interesting to note that legal documents
appertaining to this property have been preserved in The Keep.
In 1789 Portslade Lodge formed part of the
marriage settlement when Mary Bull, daughter of John Bull of
Pangdean, married James Newnum of Portslade; the property was settled
on Miss Bull.
It was a second marriage for James Newnum, his
first wife being Elizabeth, an heiress of Portslade, and he was
described as James Newnum, the younger, of New Shoreham. But the
marriage lasted only for around two years because Elizabeth died in
September 1787. By the time of his second marriage James was resident
in Portslade and had kept the land belonging to his first wife. His
second wife was also an heiress, which is perhaps the reason her
family insisted on a marriage settlement plus an investment of £1,500
in consideration of his future wife’s fortune. In those days,
unless specific provision was made, a wife’s fortune automatically
became the property of her husband upon marriage.
It seems to have been a prescient move on the part
of Mary Bull’s family because on 25 October 1817 James Newnum was
declared bankrupt.
A New Owner
Wine merchant John Wallis then purchased Portslade
Lodge. Perhaps Wallis had the bankruptcy in mind when he wrote
his will on 16 May 1837 because he left land to Richard Fuller of
Cornhill, London, and John Hamlin Borrer, who were instructed to pay
the rents and profits to his grand-daughter Catherine Cordy for life
‘free from the control or debts of any husband’. John Hamlin
Borrer was the son of John Borrer, gentleman, of Henfield. In 1822
J.H. Borrer was one of the trustees of the Turnpike Trust set up to
provide a new road from Brighton to Shoreham that included a bridge
over the River Adur. The Portslade part of the road cost the enormous
sum of £18,250 and by 1851 there was still £11,341 to pay off.
Meanwhile John Wallis died 21 June 1837 and
Portslade Lodge was leased to James Cordy.
John Borrer (1785-1866)
Although he was born at Hurstpierpoint, John
Borrer had been resident at his newly-built mansion Portslade Manor since 1807, with the remains of the medieval manor still
in the grounds. John Borrer was married three times but his wives all
pre-deceased him, as did six of his children. He was a churchwarden
of St Nicolas Church and would have needed a strong faith to survive
such tragedies. He was involved in the move to have the north aisle
built because the church was too small for the congregation.
John Borrer came to own a great sweep of land in
Portslade totalling some 764 acres. The following are names of some
the fields he owned in the Mile Oak area.
Hangleton Bush
New Barn
Distance Rest
Cock Roost Piece
Shepherd’s House Piece
Dimbledee Cow Down
Freeman’s Court
Then there were the farms:
North House Homestead (later North House Farm)
Stonery Gardens
Benfields’ Side Hill
There were also:
Hack Track Cottage (Foredown)
Part of the seashore and cliffs
Part of railway to Shoreham
He was said to own (with others) Tenantry Hill and
Foredown Hill although strictly speaking these remained common land
until 1861.
The 1841 census recorded John Borrer living at
Portslade Manor with his third wife Sarah Anne, two unmarried
daughters and his mariner son William Arthur who would later perish
in the China Seas during a hurricane in 1845. There were five
servants in the household.
In 1841 John Borrer, by then Lord of Portslade
Manor, purchased two further plots of land at Portslade:
One lot costing £1,700 from Richard Fuller and
John Hamlin Borrer; the other costing £740 from Richard Fuller, John
Hamlin Borrer and Catherine Cordy.
The latter was Portslade Lodge and
Catherine Cordy and her trustees agreed to sell. The property
consisted of the house, garden, field, close, pleasure grounds and
shrubbery plus North Church Piece and South Church Piece, which were
both over one acre each. On 30 April 1841 James Cordy agreed to sell
his interest in Portslade Lodge and premises to John Borrer
for £600.
Catherine Cordy married John Campion of Brighton
on 24 August 1841 but she died without issue on 29 September 1843.
Tenants
It appears that John Borrer let the house. The
1851 census recorded Terrick Haultain as the occupant; he was a
74-year old Justice of the Peace who lived there with his wife,
unmarried daughter and three servants. Haultain was a former Assistant Paymaster General of H.M. Horse Guards he died in 1858 and is buried in his family's vault at Banstead, Surrey.
In 1861 Matthew Wood was the resident. He was aged
44 and was a retired Major of the Indian Army. Apart from three
servants, he was alone in the house on census night.
The Borrers Again
When John Borrer died in 1866, his unmarried
daughter Kate came to live in Portslade Lodge. In 1871 Kate,
by then aged 60, lived in the house with four servants, including a
footman, a cook and a lady’s maid. By 1874 Kate’s spinster sister
Sarah Anne had moved in to keep her company. Kate died in 1890 aged
79 and Sarah continued to live in the house.
In May 1893 the outside of Portslade Lodge was
repaired and painted with three coats and the front door and shutters
were grained and varnished. Work was also done on the stables and
coach-house while the gates leading to the stables and gardens were
lime-washed. Isaac Holland, landlord of the George Inn in the
village, and seemingly a jack-of-all-trades was responsible for the
work for which he charged Miss Borrer £26-10s.
Sarah Borrer must have been satisfied with the
quality of his work because she engaged him again in 1898. The work
included various repairs, a new cover for the well and fencing around
a field. In addition Holland made good a wall using 70 bricks, 4
bushels of mortar, cement and compo sand. The bill came to £32-18-5d.
It seems as though Portslade Lodge and its
grounds needed continuous maintenance and repairs were again
necessary in October and December 1899. This time the stable pump
required attention and cost 9/6d to fix while the flue of the
greenhouse was put right for the sum of 14/8d.
Important Reception at Portslade Lodge
Revd Vicars Armstrong Boyle was inducted as vicar
of St Nicolas, Portslade, and St Helen’s, Hangleton in June 1899.
In the afternoon and before the service Miss Sarah Anne Borrer gave a
reception in her home for several important personages. They included
the Bishop of Chichester, Lord Sackville (patron of the parish) the
Archdeacon of Lewes, the Rural Dean, the churchwardens and
neighbouring incumbent.
Copyright © D.Sharp Looking towards the rear of Manor Lodge from Easthill Park |
The Blakers
Miss Borrer died in 1908 at the age of 84. She
left her property to her nephew Arthur Beckett Blaker (1842-1914) son
of Mary, her eldest sister. He moved into the Lodge the following
year with his wife Elizabeth Jane who also happened to be his second
cousin, being one of the twelve children of Edward Blaker of Easthill House, Portslade. The couple had five children:
Dorothy Kathleen Blaker (7
February 1888 – 16 December 1966)
Arthur Wilfrid Blaker (1889 - 18
March 1915)
Brenda Mary Gordon Jones 12 March
1891 – 5 March 1962)
Geoffrey Beckett Blaker (15 March
1893 – 2 May 1963)
Barbara Joan Graham (24 December
1894 – 30 May 1948)
Before moving to Portslade Arthur Beckett Blaker
lived at Isfield and Lewes. He took a keen interest in history and in
1882 he was elected to the Council of the Sussex Archaeological
Society. In 1892 he donated several items to the Society’s Museum
at Lewes including the following:
Several items from St Pancras’s
Priory, Lewes
7lb cannon shot found near Devil’s Dyke
Three iron keys from St Nicolas
Church, Portslade ‘two of them being of fine design and
workman-ship’.
Arthur Beckett Blaker died on 25
August 1914. His son Lieutenant Arthur Wilfrid Blaker of HMS
Invincible aged 26 was killed in action at the Dardenelles on
18 March 1914 and buried at sea. His mother donated the oak reredos
in St Nicolas Church in his memory. It is somewhat ironic that at the
time the anniversary of the Great War is being remembered, there are
plans afoot to move the oak reredos out of the chancel.
Mrs Elizabeth Jane Blaker thus
became a widow and lost her son within the space of five months. Her
husband wrote his will on 29 July 1913 and he made his widow plus
Reginald Blaker and Smithers & Sons the vendors of Portslade
Lodge. The property was put up for auction on 2 July 1919 at the
Old Ship Hotel, Brighton. Arthur Lloyd Jones, brewer,
purchased it for £2,250.
The property included five acres
and 19 perches. The auction brochure described the house as a fine
old-fashioned residence with stuccoed front, louvre window shutters
and a veranda. Inside the house were the following:
Attics
Eight bedrooms
Dressing rooms
Drawing room measuring 23 feet by
20 feet with a tiled hearth and marble mantel, bay window on the
south, French casements opening onto the veranda
Dining room measuring 18 feet 3
inches by 15 feet, 6 inches with French casements onto the veranda
Morning room measuring 16 feet by
14 feet.
Large entrance hall measuring 15
feet 9 inches 13 feet 9 inches
Kitchen measuring 20 feet by 15
feet containing boiler, range, dresser, cupboards
Butler’s pantry
Three cellars with bins and
shelves
Paved courtyard
Outhouses
Timber and tiled wood shed and
stove
Brick and flint Fowl House
Two piggeries
Cow house
Potting shed
Brick and flint stabling
containing 4 stalls
Harness room
Large coach house
Tennis lawns
Two summer-houses
Shady walks
Kitchen garden
Fruit trees
Heated vinery with sturdy vines
Arthur Lloyd Jones lost no time in
giving Mr D. Green, tenant of two fields, notice to quit. Jones
continued to live in the house until 1929. Meanwhile Mrs Elizabeth
Jane Blaker had died on 15 March 1924 aged 69 years.
Copyright © G. Osborne With thanks to Mr G. Osborne for granting permission for the reproduction of the above photograph from his private collection. 1930s view of Locks Hill with Manor Lodge on the left |
During the 1930s the house seems to have spent
some time unoccupied but by 1938 the splendidly named Mr Ford
Ford-Dunn was in residence. William Hawkins was the occupant by the
1950s while in the 1960s there was frequent change:
1962 – Michael Deasy
1966- John Deek
1969 – William H. Stannard
During this time the house came to
be called Manor Lodge most probably to provide a visible
connection with Portslade Manor, by then called St Marye’s Convent, which was owned by the Poor Servants of the Mother of God.
This organisation still owns Manor Lodge although the convent
was sold to Emmaus in 1997.
By 1970 Manor Lodge was
split into two residences while today it is divided into four
apartments.
On 10 September 1971 the house
received Grade II listed building status.
Directories
J. Middleton Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
The Keep
How 10/9 Portslade Lodge, deeds and
bills
How 11/11 Portslade Lodge, conveyance
1-9 South Street
Copyright © J.Middleton 2017
page layout by D.Sharp
Copyright © J.Middleton 2017
page layout by D.Sharp