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Golden
Street, Deal, Kent
Edith Elizabeth Appleton
was born on 9 June 1877 in Deal, Kent, 10th of 13 children.
The family home for many years was 9 Golden Street (also known as Sea
Valley House) in Deal and here is
some information about the house.
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Sketch made by Ted
Appleton on 2 October 1879
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Recent photos of 9 Golden
Street
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The Appleton/Rowland
grandfather clock
1. 1879 sketch of 9
Golden Street
First of all a very charming sketch and letter sent by Edie's older
brother, Percy, to his younger brother, Ted; it is dated 2 October 1879.
Edie would have been two years old. Tragically, Percy died, aged 15,
before the year was out.
Thanks to Ted's daughter, Dorothy West, for providing the sketch and
letter. Dorothy celebrated her 101st birthday on 7 January 2009.
Congratulations!
2. Photos of 9 Golden
Street
Here are some photos the first two taken in about 1999, one before restoration and the
one in the centre a bit later. The one on the right is from Chris
Feltham when he visited in 2007.
3. The Grandfather Clock
A sound that would
have been familiar to all those Appleton children was that of the
grandfather clock which came into the family, according to Edie's
younger brother, Sydney, from the Rowland branch; i.e. their mother's
family. The clock had a pretty tranquil existence, as far as we know, for
its first 200 years. However, after it passed to Sydney Appleton in the
1920s and particularly since the 1930s it has travelled extensively - to
say the least! See Sydney's account
below.
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The dial
reads: W. Dowell Swan, Margate. |
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Here is Sydney's account
which he stuck to the back of the door 50 years ago. It is
still there.
THIS CLOCK
Information in Britten’s book
suggests that this clock was built about 1720. It belonged
to my maternal grandfather, John Meredith Rowland, who lived
at Faversham. I remember it from my earliest days at Sea
Valley House, Deal, when it belonged to my mother. The
first 200 years of its life were spent in Kent. My mother
left it with me when I was living at Bushey, Herts, about 10
years before her death which occurred in 1922. It was there
for the next 10 years then went with me and my family to
Tobago, B.W.I. In 1937 we returned very hurriedly from
Tobago to England, on account of the sudden illness of my
first wife, leaving all our furniture – except the clock –
behind. The limited facilities in the Island made it
necessary to cut about a foot off the back of the case
before the clock could be safely packed. From 1937 to 1940
it remained in storage in Southsea. In the “Blitz” of 1940
a German incendiary bomb set fire to the store, but the
clock was among some of the contents that were salved, only
slightly damaged by water. From that time for 16 years, it
was stored in private houses, of my sister in the Isle of
Wight and, later, of my daughter Elizabeth, in Oxted. In
1956 I asked for it to be sent to Montreal, where I had been
living for 12 years. The crate containing the works and
upper case had been dropped in transit. The works had broken
loose and damaged themselves and the case. Besides this
recent damage, much of the glue had become desiccated;
eleven or twelve strips of moulding were detached. Some
pieces of the inside timbers were dry rotted. The door had
shrunk ¼ inch since the clock was built. The lead had been
removed from the weight cases, for shipment. All the glass
in the upper case was broken. . . . Restoration seemed a
formidable task but, in the course of a few months, all the
defects mentioned were made good. In the re-joining a
strong, white glue was used which should last a great many
years. As the calendar is never needed, the date mechanism
was removed and stored inside the clock; it can be replaced
at any time. A check was added to the face door to protect
the hinges and to prevent opening so far as to damage the
capital and plinth of the pillar. Tradition ascribes the
straggling star scratched on the middle of the door, to the
mischevous effort of an older brother, Walter, when a very
small boy, probably about 1880 ! (Care was taken not to
remove this). On the 28th May 1957 the old clock
ticked again for the first time in exactly 20 years and,
after a few adjustments, resumed perfect time keeping.
Sydney Edward Appleton |
Other notices have
since been stuck to the back of the door and tell of the clock's busy
schedule between 1963 and the present day. It may seem like a bit too
much information but, given the clock's significance and great age,
here's a summary of its further travels:
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When Sydney died
in Montreal, Canada on 6 November 1963
the
clock came to his daughter, Elizabeth Gwendoline Robinson and was
shipped from Montreal to Oxted, Surrey during the summer of 1964.
In December 1964 it was reassembled and put back in working order
and keeping time to within a few seconds a day.
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After that it moved to
Ebbs House, Combs, Stowmarket, Suffolk on 26 March
1968 and thence to Chequers Lea, Butlers Cross, Bucks on 20
May 1971.
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Elizabeth's husband, Robby, died in 1975 and then in 1978 it moved
to Great Missenden, Bucks. On 2 December 1983 it moved to Half Moon
House, Cumberland Street, Woodbridge, Suffolk - Elizabeth's new home
opposite her son, Dick, and his family.
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Elizabeth died in 1997 and
the clock passed to Dick who was now living in De Freville Avenue,
Cambridge. Given all this gallivanting the clock case was in
need of some sympathetic restoration and this was undertaken by Dick
in a furniture restoration evening class in Cambridge. Once
reassembled the clock stayed in Cambridge until June 2001 when Dick
and Lisa moved to Blockley in the North Cotswolds. It still keeps
time to within a couple of seconds a day. Not bad after almost
300 years!
DR
3 February 2009
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