People & Personalities
People & personalities in Bournemouth - in alphabetical
order
Aubrey Beardsley (1872-1898) was one of the most talented and controversial
artists of the late Victorian era. He was associated with Art Nouveau
but much of his work was thought too rude to be accepted by many people
of strict Victorian upbringing.
Beardsley came to Bournemouth in July 1896, staying first at a hotel
overlooking Boscombe Pier. He was only 24 but seriously ill with tuberculosis.
His early days in Bournemouth were quite productive and he published a
volume of his work called Fifty Drawings. Sadly, Beardsley's health deteriorated
and towards the end of 1896 he described himself as "an agonized
wreck of depression, a poor shadow of the gay rococo thing" he had
previously been.
He moved to a guest house known as Muriel (also called Cheam House),
which stood just off Bournemouth Square and was demolished as recently
as 1995. By now he felt the "mere physical exertion" of picking
up a pen but he did manage a few illustrations during his ten weeks at
Muriel. He was also received into the Roman Catholic Church there on 31
March 1897, describing it as "a moment of profound joy, of gratitude
and emotion". Soon after this he moved to London and then to France,
where he died a year later at the young age of 26.
Rev Alexander Morden Bennett
(about 1810-1880) the first Vicar of Bournemouth, was a man of great vision
and drive and one of the most influential figures in the town's early
history. His first priority after taking up his post in 1945 was to establish
a church school.
He believed that Bournemouth would become a large and important town and
organised the expansion of St Peter's Church in stages between 1856 and
1879. He died in January 1880 just one month after the building was completed.
Chang (1846-1893) was a popular character in Victorian Bournemouth.
He was known as the 'Chinese giant' and weighed 26 stones and was 8 feet
tall. Chang Woo Gow
was born in Foochow, China and was used to being the centre of attention.
His height had caused a sensation at the court of the Chinese Emperor
when he was still in his teens. By the age of 19 he was in great demand
on the international show circuit and he toured the world for 25 years.
He came to Bournemouth in 1890 because he was thought to be suffering
from tuberculosis. He was invited to functions and mayoral receptions,
where his appearance in colourful Chinese costume made him a great attraction.
Chang married an Australian woman and they had two sons, but they were
not tall like their father. Chang and his wife bought a house called 'Moyuen'
in Southcote Road, where they opened a Chinese tea-room. Chang's time
in Bournemouth was a happy one but also tragically short. In 1893 his
wife fell ill and died. Chang was devastated, unable even to speak of
her without tears. He died 4 months later the victim of a broken heart.
He was buried in Bournemouth Cemetery.
Christopher Crabbe Creeke (1820-86) was the first Surveyor of the Bournemouth
Commissioners and played a major role in the development and laying out
of the town in its early years of rapid growth. Creeke's
full title was 'Surveyor and Inspector of Nuisances' and he held it from
1856-79. He was also an architect in private practice and designed several
important buildings, including two wings of the Royal
Bath Hotel and the reconstructed Boscombe
Manor, as well as the Central Pleasure Gardens.
Benjamin Ferrey (1810-1880) the Christchurch architect, had recently
opened a practice in London when he was asked to prepare plans for the
'marine village of Bourne'. His drawings are the earliest pictures of
Bournemouth in existence, although not all his schemes came to fruition.
John Galsworthy (1867-1933), the novelist and author of The Forsythe
Saga, became a pupil at Saugeen
Primary School for Boys at 30 Derby Road, Bournemouth, when he was
9 and spent 5 years there. He also sang in the choir at nearby St Swithun's
Church.
Sir Dan Godfrey (1868-1939) became Bournemouth's first Musical Director
in 1893 and went on to turn the town into a world force in the performance
of English classical music. At the age of 24, Godfrey
formed a band of 30 musicians. Dressed in blue and gold uniforms and pillbox
hats the band
made its debut in the newly built Winter
Gardens and played to 10,000 people on the first day alone. Under
Sir Dan's leadership, Bournemouth became the first town in Britain to
have a municipal orchestra. The orchestra changed its name to the Bournemouth
Municipal Orchestra and later the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. Many
famous composers came to conduct their own music such as Sir Edward Elgar,
Jean Sibelius and Gustav Holst. Dan Godfrey was knighted in 1922. He died
in July 1939 and is buried in St Peter's churchyard.
Isaac Gulliver (1745-1822) is known as the 'king of the smugglers'.
He lived for some years at Kinson, from where he controlled a smuggling
empire that covered the whole of Dorset and much of the New Forest. Huge
quantities of brandy, gin, wine, tea, tobacco and other goods were smuggled
across the sea and brought ashore at Bournemouth. Large gangs would assemble
to unload the ships and carry the cargoes to inland towns and cities.
In 1804 it was estimated that 80,000 gallons (364,000 litres) of brandy
were landed on the beach between Sandbanks and Hengistbury Head each year.
Thanks to smuggling and his natural talent for making money, Gulliver
died a very rich man.
Sir Henry Irving (1838-1905) was a famous Victorian actor and the first
actor to be given a knighthood in 1895. Irving
was a close friend of Annie and Merton Russell-Cotes and came to the Royal
Bath Hotel on many occasions and even planted trees in the garden. After
his death in 1905, his belongings were sold at auction and Sir Merton
was able to buy many souvenirs of his friend which he used to set up his
'Irving Museum' in East Cliff Hall. The museum is still there today.
Lucy Kemp-Welch (1869-1958) is one of England's foremost painters of
horses, and is fondly remembered as the illustrator of the 1915 edition
of Anna Sewell's 'Black Beauty'. Lucy Kemp-Welch was born in Poole where
her father was a solicitor in the firm of Watt and Kemp-Welch. The family
moved to Bournemouth shortly afterwards, where it was noticed the young
Lucy was very fond of animals. She loved the New Forest and this is where
a lot of her inspiration came from. Lucy's father did not think it right
that women should have careers but her artistic talents were encouraged
by her mother and eventually in 1892 Lucy went to the Herkomer School
of Art in Bushey, Hertfordshire.
One of her paintings, now in the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne,
Australia, 'Horses Bathing in the Sea' was inspired by a visit to Parkstone.
Lucy painted many large canvases, but her smallest painting is the size
of a postage stamp and is in the Queen's Dolls' House in Windsor Castle.
See her picture Foam
Horses
Lillie Langtry (1853 - 1929) the mistress of the Prince of Wales (later
King Edward VII ) lived in the town. He had the Langtry Manor Hotel in
Derby Road built for her in 1877. With its red bricks and roof tiles,
the romantic retreat on the East Cliff was originally known as the Red
House and was Lillie's home for several years. The house is now a hotel
and restaurant with portraits of Edward and the "Jersey Lily"
looking down on diners, while high on the wall in the dining room is a
tiny hatch from where the Prince of Wales could inspect his guests before
joining them for dinner. Embossed into the dining room fireplace are Lillie's
initials, E.L.L.
Guglielmo Marconi (1874 - 1937) the radio pioneer involved Bournemouth
in his experiments in 1898. Four months after setting up the world's first
permanent wireless transmitter on the Isle of Wight, Marconi established
a second station at the Madeira Hotel on Bournemouth's West Cliff with
the intention of transmitting between the two. The Madeira radio station
was short-lived because Marconi fell out with the management and moved
his equipment to a nearby house known as Sandhills. Here he used a 125-foot
mast to exchange messages with the island station and vessels in Poole
Bay and the Solent. Sandhills also had the honour of receiving the world's
first paid radiogram, transmitted from the Isle of Wight on June 3, 1898.
The following September Marconi moved his operation to the Haven Hotel
at Sandbanks, Poole. In 1901 he sent the first trans-Atlantic radio message
from Cornwall to Newfoundland.
Queen Sophia Wilhelmina of Sweden (1836 -1913) made several visits to
Bournemouth, the first in January 1881 to help her recovery after years
of illness. In the 19th century many royal visitors came to
Bournemouth, sometimes for their health, King Oscar II, Elisabeth Empress
of Austria and Queen of Hungary, Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany and Empress
Eugenie of France. Queen Sophia returned in May 1881 with her husband,
King Oscar II of Sweden and Norway, who laid the foundation stone of the
Monte Dore Hotel, now Bournemouth Town Hall. Queen Sophia Wilhelmina stayed
in Bournemouth again for several weeks in 1888 and attended the wedding
of her second son who was married at St Stephen's Church.
Sir Merton (1835 - 1921)and Lady Annie Russell-Cotes (1835 -1920), married
in 1860, had a great influence on the development of Victorian and
Edwardian Bournemouth. Like many others, Sir Merton first came to Bournemouth
because of his health. He arrived with his wife in 1876 and soon after
bought the Bath
Hotel. They quickly enlarged the hotel and renamed it the 'Royal
Bath Hotel' because the Prince of Wales had stayed there in 1856.
Merton was elected to the Board of Commissioners in 1883 and fought
hard to enhance the town's reputation as a health resort. He called for
a direct railway link from Brockenhurst to Bournemouth to avoid having
to change trains at Ringwood. He also campaigned for an Undercliff Drive
to enable invalids to take a carriage drive beside the sea. He became
Mayor in 1894 and when Undercliff
Drive opened in 1907, he and Annie were granted the Freedom of the
Borough in 1908. He received a knighthood the following year.
The Russell-Cotes Art Gallery and Museum was originally built by Merton
Russell-Cotes as a birthday present for his wife and called East
Cliff Hall. It was highly decorated in the style of the day and a
place where they could show off the paintings, objects and many beautiful
things they had purchased during their travels abroad. At the grand opening
of the Undercliff Drive in 1907 it was announced that Annie and Merton
wanted to give their home and many of their objects to the people of Bournemouth.
'Probably no-one has done more to enhance the prosperity of Bournemouth
than Russell-Cotes,' commented the Bournemouth Observer newspaper at the
time. Sir Merton and Lady Russell-Cotes were great benefactors and supported
many charitable causes in the town. They died in 1921 and 1920 respectively.
Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792 - 1822), the great poet who tragically drowned
in a boating accident in Italy in 1822 aged 27, has a strong family association
with Bournemouth. Although the poet himself never lived in the town the
connection began in 1849 when his son Sir Percy Florence Shelley bought
an isolated house and some heathland at Boscombe. He had the house greatly
altered and extended and in 1873 renamed it Boscombe
Manor.
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (1797 - 1851) was Sir Percy's mother. She
was the author of the novel Frankenstein. Percy hoped she would join him
and his wife at Boscombe but she was unable to do so and died in London
in 1851. Their home became a great centre for culture, drama and literature,
attracting many famous people of the time. The couple even had a 300-seat
theatre built
which survives to this day at Shelley Park. Lady Shelley also had a room
devoted to her father-in-law's relics, including two of the poet's manuscripts,
items which were in his pockets when he died, and his heart, which was
snatched from his body as it lay on his funeral pyre in Italy. Sir Percy
and Lady Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley and other family members
are buried in a large family vault in St Peter's churchyard, Bournemouth.
Robert Louis Stevenson (1850 -1894), best known as the author of 'Kidnapped'
and 'Treasure Island' is one of several greater writers associated with
Bournemouth. Treasure Island was published in 1883 and it was in August
the following year that Stevenson arrived in Bournemouth. Stevenson
had tuberculosis and was attracted by the town's reputation as a health
resort.
The Stevenson family stayed at four different addresses in the area,
the fourth being a house called Skerryvore,
near Alum Chine Road in Westbourne. Originally called Sea View it was
renamed after the Skerryvore Lighthouse, built by the family firm off
the coast of Argyll.
It was at Skerryvore that, to use his own words, Stevenson lived "like
a weevil in a biscuit". In other words, despite his poor health,
he dug himself in and bored away at his work, pouring words on to the
page day after day, month after month. He found Bournemouth's heaths and
pine woods inspiring and the landscape reminded him of his native Scotland.
'Kidnapped' and 'The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde' were among
several works written at Skerryvore.
Stevenson left Skerryvore in August 1887, never to return. He finally
settled in Samoa in the South Seas, where he died in 1894 at the age of
44. Skerryvore itself was badly damaged by German bombs in 1940 and later
demolished, despite appeals for its restoration as a building of historic
interest. Instead Stevenson's time at Bournemouth is commemorated by the
small public garden on the site, which features a model of the Skerryvore
lighthouse.
Georgina (d.1870) and Marianne Talbot were sisters and the founders
of Talbot Village. They made a big difference to the lives of people living
in the area. Georgina in particular was shocked at the poverty she saw
among working families when they moved from London in 1842. She bought
465 acres of land from the Lord of the Manor, Sir George Gervis and used
it to create a self-supporting village for unemployed workers prepared
to maintain themselves and their families by their own efforts.
Talbot Village included six farms and 16 detached cottages, each with
an acre of land, a pigsty and a well. She also allowed public access to
Talbot Woods, which continues to this day. In 1862 Georgina had seven
almshouses built for elderly and infirm people and also a village school.
Georgina did not live to see the completion of St Mark's Church but Marianne
ensured that the church was finished and carried on her sister's good
work.
Captain Lewis D G Tregonwell (1758-1832) is known as 'the founder of
Bournemouth'. Tregonwell
was a friend of the Prince Regent (later King George IV). The Tregonwells
lived at Cranborne, a small Dorset town about 20 miles from Bournemouth,
but Captain Tregonwell knew Bourne Heath well because he had led clifftop
patrols by soldiers of the Dorset Yeomanry during the French Revolutionary
Wars, between 1796 and 1802
After building their seaside mansion between 1810 and 1812, Tregonwell
and his family divided their time equally between Cranborne and "Bourne".
Captain Tregonwell died in 1832 and was buried at Winterborne Anderson
but in 1846 his widow Henrietta had his remains transferred to a vault
in St Peter's Churchyard
at Bournemouth. Henrietta died a few weeks later but the family's association
continued for many years through their sons
St Barbe Tregonwell, who lived there until his death in 1859, and John
Tregonwell (1811-1885), who was one of the Bournemouth Commissioners from
1856-67.
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