Local History Articles

Gilmerton House

On Sunday 10th December 1911 a severe gale struck Ventnor. The seas were mountainous, breaking over the pier and washing the sea wall from end to end. Repairs to the landing stage had been underway for some weeks and the contractor suffered severe losses with piles stacked ready for driving washed into the sea, some… read more »

Postal delivery in Ventnor in the 1920s

Cecil Stanley Dennes (known as Tommy), was born in South Street, Ventnor in 1896 and began his working life as a fruiterer’s porter, according to the 1911 Census. A few years later, he had become a butcher, before enlisting in the 8th Btn Hampshire Regiment as a Rifleman in January 1914. He served for 3… read more »

Madeira Hall

Madeira Hall is one among many of Bonchurch’s finest mansions. Located down a long drive leading south off the easterly end of Trinity Road, it is thought to have been built by a Mr. Claxton sometime between 1800 and 1820. ‘The Hall’, as it was for many years once known, was briefly the home of… read more »

Ventnor Esplanade: the west end about 1865

The west end of Ventnor’s Esplanade was a popular place for the middle-classes to promenade in the 1860s and 1870s. Walkers on the esplanade would have had clear views of Danebury House on the bend of Bath Road with just beyond it, but facing seaward, three further buildings: Landsdowne House, Brooklyn Villa and Milanese Villa, all… read more »

Society Meeting Friday 27 January 2023

Just a quick reminder to all our members of our first 2023 meeting which is today, Friday 27 January. The speaker will be Alex Peaker, Collections Officer, Dinosaur Island Museum, on ‘The Geology and Paleontology of the Isle of Wight’. The meeting / talk is at the Masonic Hall on Grove Road at 7:30 pm…. read more »

Fred Nobbs, a great raconteur

Fred was born at 80 Albert Street in 1910 and attended the National School on that street, taught by F J J Macey. He was the son of Frederick Nobbs, a ‘four-in-hand’ coachman. Driving in some shape or form seems to have been in the blood, for the young Fred started driving a motor vehicle… read more »

Bill Bates: motor coach proprietor and carrier

Bill Bates was born in Birmingham in 1898 and came with his family to Ventnor in 1911. His parents had taken on the Globe Hotel in the High Street and Bill became an apprentice with Martins, the local coachbuilders. Returning from the War in 1920, he started up a road carrier business, running motor lorries… read more »

Albert Bull’s funeral cortège, 1912

Albert Bull died at the age of 67, a prominent local figure with a lively interest in local affairs, becoming Chairman of the Ventnor District Council. He had been born in 1845, the son of William and Peggy Bull who lived at Rock Cottage on Belgrave Road. He started his working career assisting in his father’s business… read more »

Miss Margaret Catherine Dick, once of Madeira Hall, Bonchurch

Margaret Dick lived at Madeira Hall where she was attended upon, probably up to her death in March 1879, by Dr. James Mann Williamson who was a doctor who had come to the Royal National Hospital in 1868 and later set up practice in Ventnor in 1876. He prescribed various medication for her, whilst also… read more »

The YWCA in Ventnor

At one time, Prospect House (near the bottom of the south side of Grove Road), provided regular rooms for the YWCA, the Young Women’s Christian Association. It appears, ostensibly, to have been a boarding house, but its specific use may also have included being a hostel and club for working women. In the Ventnor Red… read more »

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