News

Society Meeting 28 April 2023

An Introduction to the Commonwealth War Graves Commission Archive Just a quick reminder that the April meeting/talk is tomorrow evening, 7:30 pm at the Masonic Hall on Grove Road. The speaker will be Gary Newman, whose subject will be ‘An Introduction to the Commonwealth War Graves Commission Archive. Admission is free to members, visitors are… read more »

Brenda Creese

Brenda Creese is well-known to older Ventnor residents as someone who gave extraordinarily wide vocational service to her community, a contribution that was honoured in 1993 when Ventnor Rotary Club presented her with a citation certificate and cheque. Over the years, she helped countless local causes, including St. Alban’s Church, the Mission for Deep Sea… read more »

2023 Annual General Meeting: Friday 24 March

Ventnor and District Local History Society 2023 Annual General Meeting The 2023 Annual General Meeting of the Society will be held on Friday 24 March 2023 from 7:30 to 9:00 PM in the Masonic Hall on Grove Road, Ventnor. Only members in good standing are eligible to vote at the meeting. If you have not… read more »

Laura Hortense Richards

One of several impressive graves in Ventnor cemetery is the one dedicated to Laura Richards, wife of John Morgan Richards, the owner of Steephill Castle from 1903 to 1918. John Morgan Richards was an American businessman who made his fortune from the promotion of patent medicines (the most well-known being  ‘Carters Little Liver Pills’). He was… read more »

Villa Amanti as a Sauna and Solarium

Many people will be familiar with Villa Amanti on Ventnor Esplanade, dating from 1843, and now wonderfully restored. But what many will not know is that, in the late 1970s, it became the location of the first commercial sauna complex in Ventnor. Finnish sauna baths and solariums had been installed there, the idea of Brenda… read more »

When Ventnor lost its railway

By the early 1960s, Ventnor Station was rather ‘down at heel’. The ‘Southern Railway’ signage, a relic of railway ownership before ‘British Railways’ took over in 1948, had not been replaced, perhaps an ominous portent.  The solution offered to the problems of the ailing rail network was drastic pruning under the ‘Beeching Plan’, including all… read more »

Wollescote, Spring Hill, Ventnor

Wollescote occupied a very large land plot on the north side of Spring Hill and was built sometime in the 1860s for a Mr. Thomas Pargeter who came to Ventnor for his health. He figures in the 1871 Census, along with his unmarried 34-year-old sister, Caroline, the house then described as Wollescote Villa. They employed… read more »

Upper Ventnor Children’s Welfare Group

At the end of the Second World War, Lowtherville (or Upper Ventnor as it is known today) was less than half the size it is now with just a few roads. There wasn’t a lot for children to do, with very little in the way of entertainment. In 1946 an organisation called ‘The Upper Ventnor Childrens Fund’… 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 »

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 »

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