Judy Middleton 2002 (revised 2023)
Speculation
It is interesting to speculate on the age of the forge in Foredown Road or
its predecessors at Foredown Hill and it is instructive to note that during the
time of the English Civil War (1642-1649) a law was passed enabling anybody who
provided the king with a certain number of horse shoes, nails and weapons to
build a forge on common land. Who knows whether or not an enterprising
blacksmith at Portslade took up the challenge because until 1861 Foredown Hill
remained common land.
On the other hand, Sussex was not known for its royalist
sympathies and indeed most Sussex folk were solidly on the Parliamentary side.
For example, King Charles II fleeing through Sussex in 1651 after his forces
were defeated at the Battle of Worcester, only narrowly avoided being caught
before his escape to France. But there again, Foredown Hill was remote enough
for the putative blacksmith to please himself as to his customers and by nature
of his necessary strength a blacksmith was a brawny individual well able to
take care of himself.
William Borrer
By the early 19th
century the Duke of Norfolk owned Foredown Forge and William Borrer, who died
in 1832, purchased it from the Duke and Thomas Philip Lamb. William Borrer was
a remarkable man who came from humble origins and worked his way up to become a
person of note and property.
Somers Clarke (1802-1892)
remembered old William Borrer, founder of the successful family. He wrote:
‘He was a quiet,
respectable-looking old country farmer and very unpretending in his manner. He
was formerly a retail butcher at Ditchling and … became a large contractor in
supplies of meat and forage for the Army and with the then Government – in
those days there was not the competition there is now.’
On 8 February 1788 Borrer
purchased 24 acres in Ditchling for £860 from Robert Davis of Brighthelmstone,
coal merchant, and his sister Joanna Davis.
By that time he was a man of
substance and lived in Pakyns Manor, Hurstpierpoint, having been appointed High
Sheriff of Sussex in 1801
In 1802 Borrer purchased some land at Portslade:
In 1802 Borrer purchased some land at Portslade:
A messuage called Dumbrell’s.
(Dumbrell’s is still a name familiar in Ditchling)
The Pryor’s
A small piece of wasteland
adjoining Henry Chatfield’s Mansion House in Portslade (Portslade House)
A parcel of land in Aldrington
(but this might mean south Portslade, which was also known as West Aldrington
in former times)
In 1803 the Deputy Lieutenant of Sussex reported to the Government that in the event of an invasion, William Borrer would be willing to provide one wagon and four horses for the use of the Government.
In 1806 Borrer purchased
Portslade Manor
It appeared that William Borrer
accumulated a large fortune of three or four hundred thousand pounds – an
enormous sum – and spent none of it on himself apart from property
acquisitions. Consequently, he was able to leave large fortunes to his three
sons William Borrer of Barrow Hill, John Borrer of Portslade, and Nathaniel
Borrer of Hurstpierpoint.
The Burgess Family
In 1841 55-year old Abel Cooms
was the blacksmith and he lived in Forge Cottage.
The Burgess family had a
remarkable record because they worked the forge from 1849 to 1956. The
blacksmiths were:
John Burgess (1822-1914)
Hugh Burgess (1875-1956)
At first Foredown Forge was
rented and John Burgess was described as wheelwright, farrier and blacksmith.
The 1861 census recorded the
family living in Forge Cottage
Isfield-born John Burgess, aged
39
Wife Eliza, 40
Son Charles, 11
Son Ronald, 9
Daughter Eliza, 4
In July 1881 John Burgess
purchased the forge and the cottage.
In 1882 when a Public Inquiry was
held as to whether or not an isolation hospital should be built on Foredown
Hill, Burgess stated that had he known about such a proposal he never would
have purchased the property.
By 1882 his first wife had died
and he married a much younger woman. The 1891 census showed that John Burgess
was then aged 68 while his wife Emma was aged 41, and their son Hugh was sixteen
years old.
John Burgess died aged 92 on 16
March 1914.
Incidentally, the 1881 census
recorded a Walter Burgess, blacksmith, who lodged at Robin’s Row. By 1891
Lewes-born Walter Burgess, aged 39, lived at 6 Belgrave Square, Portslade with
his wife Alice, 27, and their children Arthur, 3 and two-year old Emily.
Recent Times
copyright © D.Sharp The Old Riding Stables in Drove Road were in operation from the 1960s through to the 1980s, the whole site was redeveloped in the late 1980s. Horses were regularly taken to the blacksmith at Foredown Forge. The flint building on the left was the original stables' barn, the other buildings date from 1989. The former Portslade Brewery is in the background. |
In the early 1960s a local young lad
intent on completing his newspaper round before having to go to school, used to
pass by the old forge and can clearly remember seeing the farrier working away
inside. His paper round included a trek up to Foredown Hospital and New Barn Farm.
In 1989 the forge and Forge
Cottage were on sale through Parsons, Son & Basley for £69,000.
In March 1990 blacksmith Arthur
White wanted to take over Foredown Forge and use it for its original purpose.
He lived in Poplar Avenue, Hove but his workshop was in Chapel Mews, Hove. He
had to leave there because it was being redeveloped and he wished to rent the
old forge with a view to buying the property at a later date.
It is sad to note that apparently
Brighton Council were well aware of his plans but went ahead and sold the
property anyway. A spokesman justified the action by saying the Council was short
of money and needed a capital receipt.
The forge and Forge Cottage went
on sale through King & Chasemore in 1990 for £125,000 – a sum well beyond
Mr White’s means.
copyright © D.Sharp The old forge and Forge Cottage in 1999 |
copyright © D.Sharp The old forge and Forge Cottage photographed in 2016 |
One aspect of owning an ancient building is that you never quite know
what might turn up because sometimes history likes to make you more
aware of what went before. For example, in 2023 the owner of Forge
Cottage decided to make some interior improvements to the premises by
installing a mezzanine floor, and what could be more modern that
that?
He asked the builders to remove a false wall between the forge part and the cottage, which was in the way, and ugly as well. The removal of the wall revealed a very, ancient flint structure that went all the way to to the roof. So the old outlines of the forge were there all the time. It almost makes you want to listen out for a horse-shoe being struck on the anvil by a sweating blacksmith.
The surface is to be sand-blasted so that the old flint-work can be properly appreciated, and then clear lacquered to preserve it.
Sources
copyright © S. Lewis |
He asked the builders to remove a false wall between the forge part and the cottage, which was in the way, and ugly as well. The removal of the wall revealed a very, ancient flint structure that went all the way to to the roof. So the old outlines of the forge were there all the time. It almost makes you want to listen out for a horse-shoe being struck on the anvil by a sweating blacksmith.
copyright © S. Lewis |
The surface is to be sand-blasted so that the old flint-work can be properly appreciated, and then clear lacquered to preserve it.
Sources
Argus
Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Mr. S. Lewis
Mr. S. Lewis
The Keep
LLD/2/E2 – Deputy Lieutenant Of Sussex, Defence Report on
wagons and animals 1803
QDD/6/E10 – Enclosure of Tenantry
Hill and Foredown Hill 1861
Copyright © J.Middleton 2016
page layout and additional research by D.Sharp