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Ruskin Place



KneeOn

Well-known member
Jun 4, 2009
4,695
I'm interested in what stood on the site of 9 houses in Poets Corner before they were built around 2000/2001.

As far as I know it was a factory but what happened to it? What did it make? Details like that.

Anyone know?
 
















KneeOn

Well-known member
Jun 4, 2009
4,695
No, I'll ask my old man tonight, he might know.
They had another bit to there factory that made metal doors - this was through the gap in the houses on Mortimer Road.

street view

The bit I worked in was wooden doors.

Wow, i never knew Mortimer Mews was part of the factory! Thanks! :wave:
 


Uncle C

Well-known member
Jul 6, 2004
11,713
Bishops Stortford
It was a factory called TB Colman, they made revolving doors.

I met my girlfriend there in 1995 and we've been going round together ever since.
 




8ace

Banned
Jul 21, 2003
23,811
Brighton
I asked my old and he said they went out of business.
He said he bumped into someone who used to work there at a golf event a few years later and they were still a bit pissed off about it and that the closure could have been avoided. I believe the company had been around for a good few years - maybe even a hundred.
 


8ace

Banned
Jul 21, 2003
23,811
Brighton
'GREATER BRIGHTON'S GREAT DAYS
Visit of Duke and Duchess of York.
Sunlit Decorations and Illuminated Nights.
Carnival of Pageantry and Festivity.
Greater Brighton has had its baptism of splendour. Officially born two months ago, leaping at a bound to the dignity of its widened area and responsibilities, it has this week been given a ceremonial investment with its new name. For this ceremony, prolonged over days and nights of glittering festival, it has had as sponsors their Royal Highnesses the Duke and Duchess of York. As witnesses of its new name it has gathered around it Lord Mayors, Mayors, Aldermen and Councillors from great cities and towns all over England, and municipal dignitaries from France as well. It has been bathed in sunlight by day - sunshine that on Tuesday and Wednesday attained an almost tropical warmth. It has blazed with illuminations by night. The Sea Front, the Steine, the Valley Gardens, have been turned by thousands of coloured lights into a fairyland. The tramcars, blazing with coloured light, have carried their vivid radiance into the uttermost parts of the town. Bonfires have flamed from the hills. Rockets have scattered their golden and coloured rain into the still night sky, and have been reflected in the calm waters. Moreover, at night, hundreds upon hundreds of motor-cars, from the Baby Austin to the giant motor-coaches, crowding the Sea Front in continuous lines four and five deep, have, by their headlamps and the reflections from their polished surfaces, added to the illumination and glitter. And high above, during these crowded, fascinating nights, the moon has ridden in silver splendour. Indeed, it might almost be claimed that the sun and moon have combined with the lights of earth to do honour to Greater Brighton… A great Pageant of Brighton was performed in Preston Park - the largest and best dressed effort of the kind that Brighton has known. Military tournament, horse show, Fire Brigaed display, sports of all kinds, dancing, military bands - all have been in the mammoth programme of diversions… It was also for the sake of the children that the Duke and Duchess visited the Royal Alexandra Hospital in Dyke Road, to open the new wing. So there was full recognition of the fact that Greater Brighton is essentially the Brighton for the coming generations… The greatest moments of the great day occurred at the new boundary on the London road. It was not a long ceremony, but it was eloquent with meaning. It showed how Brighton has stretched out from its urban confinement, and has taken under its protecting care the unspoiled beauty of the Downs. It was a day on which the wilderness and the waste places rejoiced. On all the long road that connects London with Brighton there is no more lonely, no wilder spot than that where the great Pylons will rise to mark a gateway into Brighton. In its ordinary state it is fold upon fold of open downland, whose undulating waves of green are broken by stretches of furze and hawthorn. On Wednesday their green simplicity was strangely decorated. Against the background of sunlit downland were erected scaffoldings, surrounding the great squared stones that form the bases of the Pylons. There was a gaily ornamented canopy, bearing prominently the arms of the Duke and Duchess. Drawn up in the roadway, their white hats and accoutrements vivid in the sunlight, was a guard of honour, mainly of the Royal Naval Volunteers. A group of Aldermen of the Borough added a gorgeous splash of scarlet, heightened by the fact that there was also a Councillor (Councillor Aldrich, Chairman of the Parks Committee) in blue. Hundreds of people clustered on the hillsides, whitened now with the blossoms of the hawthorn… Into this fascinating scene of natural loveliness and decorative art came the Duke and Duchess of York. They arrived in the small procession of motor-cars, which, led by the Chief Constable, and the Mayor and Mayoress, had made the tour of the decorated roads. The Duke bore himself with his upright, alert carriage. The Duchess was what we have always known her to be - all charm and glorious smiling. She was brightness personified and dainty grace. Her dress was of light summery material of a bright beige-coloured crepe de chine, with long coat of georgette, with fox-fur collar. Her closely-fitted hat bore a diamond brooch and a plume of osprey.' During his dedication speech, the Duke referred to Brighton as the ''Queen of Watering Places''.
(Brighton & Hove Herald 26 May 1928)

The Brighton and Hove Herald put out a request to the general public for suggestions as to a suitable inscription to be placed on The Pylons. Alderman Carden who paid ⅔ of the cost of the structures and who supervised the work made the choice with the assistance of Alderman C. Thomas-Stanford.
(Brighton & Hove Herald. 17 November 1928.)

Sir Herbert Carden, Brighton Town Councillor in 1895, developed 'greater Brighton'. In May 1928, the foundation stone for the two large pylons was laid by the Duke and Duchess of York (George VI and Queen Elizabeth). They mark the entrance to the enlarged Borough (with the A23 now a dual carriageway, one stands in the central reservation.

The stone gate pillars are more properly known as the 'pylons'. They were erected to mark the northern limit of 'Greater Brighton' which was created on 1st April 1928. They ''were designed by John Denman and have foundation stones laid by the Duke and Duchess of York on 30th May 1928 (later King George VI and Queen Elizabeth). Buried inside are coins, copies of the Brighton & Hove Herald and the Sussex Daily News and also a bound book recording the laying of the foundation stones given by Mr. J.S. North. The cost was born by a public subscription of £993 and a contribution from Herbert Carden of £2,555. The western pylon bears the message: 'Hail guest, we ask not what thou art. If friend we greet thee hand and heart. If stranger no longer be. If foe our love shall conquer thee.'''
(http://www.mybrightonandhove.org.uk/page_id__5252_path__0p114p201p803p.aspx and the Brighton Herald)

'Underneath the foundation stones of one pylon will be laid the commemorative album given by Mr. J.S. North. The cover is of beautiful Niger skin and bears in gold the borough coat of arms. The book is being illuminated by Mr. W.H. Evans, A.R.C.A. (Lond.), Principal of the School of Art, and contains the borough coat of arms and an inscription describing the circumstances of the ceremony, followed by the names of the subscribers. The inscription refers to Their Royal Highnesses the Duke and Duchess of York as ''son and daighter-in-law of King of England George V, a descendent of his Majesty, King George IV, of England, who reigned in the 19th. Century, and who built the Royal Pavilion at Brighton.'' The album will be enclosed with current coins of the realm and copies of newspapers containing reports of the celebrations, in a teak box which has been made by Messrs. T.B. Colman and Sons, Ltd., of Hove. As mementoes of the occasion, the Royal visitors will each be presented with beautifully chased golden trowels with ivory handles. The ceremony at the Pylons will commence at noon. The procession will leave the Pylons at 12.30 pm. For the Dome, visiting the Horse Show in Preston Park on the way.'
(Brighton & Hove Herald 26 May 1928)
 


KneeOn

Well-known member
Jun 4, 2009
4,695
Cheers :thumbsup: Interesting to know! All inspired by that picture game about Brighton!
 




H2O

Member
Jul 27, 2004
541
Hove
Cheers :thumbsup: Interesting to know! All inspired by that picture game about Brighton!

There was a fire there not so many years ago i think iit might have already been empty at that point. I only say that as I used to no the little git that started it! I live 30 seconds away
 


Freddie Goodwin.

Well-known member
Mar 31, 2007
7,186
Brighton
I remember reading about that fire.

Your mate should be careful, what goes around comes around, especially where revolving doors are involved!
 


H2O

Member
Jul 27, 2004
541
Hove
I remember reading about that fire.

Your mate should be careful, what goes around comes around, especially where revolving doors are involved!

no mate of mine i can assure you!!

Do you remember when that actually use to be a road? not a pedestrian walk way?
 




8ace

Banned
Jul 21, 2003
23,811
Brighton
Think it might have been just a passage way then or a dead end road when the factory was there.
Bit hazy though. :shrug:
 


H2O

Member
Jul 27, 2004
541
Hove
Think it might have been just a passage way then or a dead end road when the factory was there.
Bit hazy though. :shrug:

Was Defo a road at one point, I can always remember my Dad driving up there and nearly hitting a car coming the other way!! I think they closed it for cars for some time then obviously they built those houses
 




H2O

Member
Jul 27, 2004
541
Hove
Fair enough was only there a week, think that would have been 1991 or 1992.

i think i must have been doing my work experience around that time only my was at American Express!!
 




KneeOn

Well-known member
Jun 4, 2009
4,695
There was a fire there not so many years ago i think iit might have already been empty at that point. I only say that as I used to no the little git that started it! I live 30 seconds away

My mum always said it was a Colman factory fire some kids were asked to start for insurance or somthing and then a few years later houses were built and being a bit strange I always searched it hoping to find out about it. But nothing, i thought i was doomed to not know, but then lots of old pictures on that thread TLO made inspired me to ask! Thank you, NSC! :bowdown: S
 


glasfryn

cleaning up cat sick
Nov 29, 2005
20,261
somewhere in Eastbourne
strange how when you don't look at a thread then when bored go back to look again.
looking at the google picture the bloke sitting outside the shop in Mortimer rd made me stop and blink ...my Mum used to own that shop when it was a bit of everything back in the early 60's.
and I'v done some maintainance work at Colmans on the electrics in the 90's and then went there to pick up a stray cat in 2002 some time.


I spend many hours in Tamworth park and my first girlfriend came from that area and who went to the Granada Saturday morning pictures then?
 


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