Showing posts with label St Clements. Show all posts
Showing posts with label St Clements. Show all posts

Sunday, 30 April 2023

Hastings Jack in the Green Weekend & May Day

Yesterday morning I wandered into Hastings Old Town to take some photographs helping to map out how the 40th anniversary Hastings Jack in the Green procession develops, which I wrote about in a blog on Friday. Tomorrow, May Day, the main event kicks off when Jack is released from Hastings Fishermen's Museum (website) in Rock-a-Nore Road at about 10.15 usually. Jack is welcomed, there's a wee bit of music and dancing and twirling around, then the procession begins by heading westwards; see their website for further details of the event.

I am using specific landmarks, including the museum, which I've chosen as pubs en route that are using the Hastings Old Town Cup, as I mentioned in my blog, as a decent attempt to be more environmentally friendly this year, hopefully with significantly fewer plastic cups being thrown away. The first such pub the procession passes will be The Dolphin Inn, 11-12 Rock-a-Nore Road (website).

After passing by, the procession will then turn right and proceed up All Saints Street, where it will pass The Crown, 64-66 All Saints Street (website).

The procession continues up the street and reaches The Stag Inn, 14 All Saints Street (website), just before turning left to cross The Bourne; remember that much of the Old Town will be shut off to traffic for a while to enable the safe crossing, and the safety of the procession and the many members of the public who will be watching/following.

The procession will then continue down the High Street, passing The First In Last Out, 14-15 Hugh Street (FILO - website) before reaching...

The Jenny Lind Inn, 69 High Street (website), where by now participants will need a rest, and a few ales, with about a 45 minutes break at 11.30-ish. Following the break the procession then continues down and turns right to head up Swan Terrace, passing by St Clements church (blog) on the right, and then up Croft Road, heading for the top of the West Hill. Once there, partying continues, music, food and drink (bar run by the FILO), craft wares, including the event T-shirt, and, by now, necessary facilities for those who have already been drinking, phew!

By now you may have realised, not only did I not carry on up the hill yesterday, but that I'd actually been heading in the opposite direction all the time, whilst taking my photographs. I'd decided to have a couple of drinks out of a Hastings Old Town Cup (blog), just to provide you with a relevant image. The things I do for research. 😉


Oh yes, there was dancing around the old town and at the Stade, as I suggested (blog), for example at Winkle Island yesterday (website), above image. And similar today, also drums, and much more happening too (website).


Enjoy the rest of the weekend, and tomorrow's procession folks, which will look something like the photograph above! 👍


Saturday, 4 May 2019

Weekend Jack in the Green!


I wandered into the old town this morning to take some early photographs, which I shall embellish appropriately; yesterday (blog) I mentioned Jack in the Green events today (Saturday), so this blog will mention events tomorrow (Sunday 5th). I took photographs from the Albion, the first pub I found with greenery as I arrived from the west...


So, events tomorrow (website) include the Morris Dancers Church Service at St Clement's (above) from 10.00am, followed by dancing outside at 11.00am, and later, music there with The Copper Family at 4.00pm; doors open at 3.30pm, tickets £8.

Jenny Lind

Greenery in the High Street too... but meanwhile, down at the Stade Open Space tomorrow, a (Morris) Dance Spectacular begins at 12.00 noon...

 Stag Inn

Greenery up at the top of All Saints Street too; meanwhile, down at Butler's Gap at 4.00pm The Drum-Off, when 2 local drumming groups, Sambalanco and Section 5, march and bang their way from each end of the old town to go head to head!


And even greenery (and colours!) at cute local cottages... Oh yes, the programme, from 7.30pm, upstairs in the Cinque Ports Arms, further up All Saints Street from this image, with more traditional music with The Big Squeeze...


And the furthest pub  to the east with greenery, the Dolphin Inn in Rock-a-Nore Road (above)... Though the final event of the day tomorrow is another Ceilidh at St Mary in the Castle from 8.00pm; tickets £12 adults, £5 children, £25 families. 


Greenery even up on the West Hill at the Plough Inn (photograph from Jamie's facebook page, many thanks!), opposite where the Jack in the Green procession on Monday finishes, and I believe  there will be a barbecue there on Monday too...

Plenty to enjoy, and even more on Monday!!

Tuesday, 27 March 2018

What to see in Hastings?


Recently, I've been asked to suggest what to see in Hastings "apart from the obvious tourist attractions" - hmmm... the only way I think I can answer this, is to list a number of things/places that are mostly free, and if anyone else wants to add anything else in the comments below, please feel free to add, cheers! The comment was added to my blog about Hastings Castle, so I thought I'd say, to start with, the views from the West Hill (above, where the Castle is situated) and the East Hill  are gorgeous! Can be a wee bit tiring walking up to the top of both, but they do both have lifts (not free), from George Street and Rock-a-Nore Road appropriately.


I'm, sort of, starting from east to west, but will go off at a tangent every now and then, eg here, when considering the 2 Hastings parks that recently won national awards (blog), ie Hastings Country Park Local Nature Reserve (above) and Alexandra Park. Hastings Country Park is accessed from the East Hill, running eastwards and along the top of the cliffs, though a deviation is sign-posted thanks to a landslip (I won't go into the politics of that here!), and great views and interesting wildlife! Alexandra Park, meanwhile, is situated further west just above Hastings town centre (blog). 

Rock-a-Nore Road

Coming down from the East Hill (seen in the background in the photograph above the buildings to the left), you get to Rock-a-Nore Road, from here all the way down to the end of Rock-a-Nore, there is plenty to see and do! This is the heart of the local fishing industry, with the fish market a third of the way down to the right, the fishermen's huts to the right, and the Stade, the shingle beach from which the fishing boats are launched (Visit1066 website), and landed; if you turn up at the right time, depending on tides and weather, you could well see a boat coming in to land! As you'd expect, plenty of fish is available to buy, either from the shops to the left, and in front of the market to the right, or direct from the fishermen in huts in-between the road and the beach on the right.

The Stade

If you go down Rock-a-Nore Road, past the market, there is the Blue Reef Aquarium (website), which costs to visit, but well worth the visit! Opposite the Aquarium is the Shipwreck Museum (website), both on the right-hand side as you go down the road, and which is free to enter. And just before that is Hastings Fishermen's Museum (blog), which has great exhibits, and a wealth of knowledge about the local fishing industry and its history, this is also free to enter, and its outside exhibits start well before you reach the museum itself, with RX134 The Stacey Marie (I have to mention this and the blog again!) and a rather large anchor, right opposite the Dolphin Inn, which is below the cliffs in Rock-a-Nore Road.


If you go up the first turning to the left in Rock-a-Nore Road, ie All Saints Street, you will find a wonderful road with many medieval, and newer, delightful buildings. This leads up to one of Hastings two remaining Norman churches, All Saints Church (blog), not often open, but it could be worth checking when it is, as it is a delight inside.


Down in front of the church is the Cyril and Lilian Bishop (blog), the Hastings lifeboat at the time of World War II, and which went to help the evacuation of troops at Dunkirk, and is a great memorial. This is on the corner with Old London Road, and if you walk a little further up Old London Road, on the right, is another retired lifeboat (worked from Eastbourne, I believe), the Priscilla MacBean (blog). In addition, down by The Stade and beach you can visit the RNLI Hastings Lifeboat Station (website).


If you cross the road, The Bourne (roughly above what was the old river Bourne), come back downhill and on the right is High Street (nearly opposite the Cyril and Lilian Bishop), another road full of wonderful buildings, though not as old as in All Saints Street, but most of the way down, just up a road to your right, Swan Terrace, is the other remaining Norman church of Hastings, St Clements (blog). Also, in this road, and in George Street, a little further down towards the seafront and on the right as you walk down the hill, there are a whole stack of shops full of interesting things to peruse!


But, if you want to explore above High Street and up to the West Hill, or back in All Saints Street and up to the East Hill, there are a maze of old lanes and alleys, which in Hastings are called twittens, another free delight, with a few dead ends here and there!


Coming back down to the front, obviously there are a couple of miles of promenade to enjoy, and below the castle up on West Hill there is St Mary in the Castle and Pelham Crescent, built nearly 200 years ago (blog). The restaurant below has access to the crypt (the toilets are there), now and then an exhibition is on in the crypt, and if you can get to visit the old church itself (eg if a concert is being played in there), it's well worth the visit, gorgeous building! Carry on westwards and you reach Hastings Pier, where you may promenade, or investigate, or have a drink or meal.


But before you walk too far, have a walk up Cambridge/Bohemia Road and you will reach Hastings Museum and Art Gallery (blog), well worth the visit!

Marine Court

Indeed, there are some amazing buildings along the front, not to mention in-between the Pier and Warrior Square Gardens (worth looking at) on the Lower promenade there is Bottle Alley (blog), quite a thrill to walk through there after dark with it's lighting display, which seems to begin as soon as dusk arrives! You are now at St Leonards (still Hastings Borough), and you reach the wonderful art deco/modernist Marine Court (website), built copying the design of the Queen Mary ship, this was the tallest apartment block in the country when it was built in the 1930s!


Carry on past Marine Court and you soon reach the Royal Victoria Hotel, turn right just after and walk up past the Freemasons Hall, and you reach St Leonards Gardens (blog), another beautifully designed oasis of peace to walk around!

Of course, in addition to all this and the shops, there are numerous restaurants, bars and pubs to enjoy, not to mention a fish & chip shop or twenty, and much more...

I trust this helps someone to enjoy the wonderful town that is Hastings!

Tuesday, 25 October 2016

2 Norman churches in Hastings: first, the Church of St Clement.


The first of the two Norman churches we are blessed with in Hastings, St Clements, which was originally built in the 11th century, but had to be rebuilt about 1380 due to fire damage when Hastings was attacked by the French a few years earlier. This is a Grade II listed building, built of sandstone and its tower is chequered with knapped flint; with the Victorians adding their bit as they usually did, consequently, a 19th century Chancel extension, south porch and re-roofing (for more detail see Listed Buildings website). 


One of my earlier blogs looked at the Pre-Raphaelites in Hastings and mentioned the marriage of Lizzie Siddal and Dante Gabriel Rossetti at St Clements on the 23rd of May 1860; a sanctuary lamp was donated as a gift to the church by Rossetti.

Friday, 5 August 2016

Carnival Day! Saturday 6th August 2016


There is plenty going on, of course, so I shall mention the events that I feel are most important, and the ones I tend to support (you'll probably know which interests I tend to follow by now, if you're a regular reader!), however, the full details are at the website, and don't forget, there will be music in other pubs and bars not mentioned too, after all, this is Hastings on a Saturday! There is an Arts & Crafts Fair, together with refreshments appropriately, at St Clements Church 10am to 2pm, where friend of William Morris, Dante Gabriel Rossetti married Elizabeth Siddal in 1860 (see my blog of 7th March 2015).


From 11am to 4pm Mick Barrow is on duty in Rock-a-Nore Road talking about Fishing, Past and Present at an Open Net Shop and Display of Nets and Pots; any donations will be passed on to Prostate Cancer UK. Old Hastings Preservation Society (OHPS) have organised for their 2 regular walks on the one day, so, meeting at Hastings Fishermen's Museum at 11am for their Stade Guided Walk and at 2.30pm by the top of West Hill Lift for their Original Old Town Walk, for which donations to the Fishermens Museum and OHPS respectively would be appreciated, many thanks.


Of course, the climax of the day will be the Firework Display up at the Castle at dusk, following the Carnival Parade, which starts at Rock-a-Nore Road at 5pm and wanders around the old town for a few hours, with breaks for music at various locations; for further details of the organisation of this event, please go to the website

Enjoy Carnival Day!

Monday, 20 June 2016

Jo Cox Vigil...


Congregating outside St Mary in the Castle yesterday afternoon...


Before we set off for Swan Terrace there were a few moving eulogies and speeches, we were filmed by the BBC, a local businessman gave out free bottles of cooled water, very kind, many thanks, and passers by mostly weren't really sure what was going on!


From the front, the 2 main organisers (I believe) and one of our mayors, leading the way, walking up the High Street to Swan Terrace. This photograph I have borrowed from the Vigil's facebook page, many thanks, as I was towards the back of the demo, though most of these images are my own.


Entering Swan Terrace, the Old Town's  Peace Gardens, in effect, and an image of the woman whose assassination, sadly, led to this demonstration, this afternoon, against violence against women, and in memory of Jo Cox.


Looking up towards where speeches and eulogies were again made by the event's organisers and our Mayor, and including one from our local C of E Parish Priest, who also stated that the Seven-Day Candle he was holding would be returned to inside St Clements Church, opposite, later in the afternoon, and where it continues to burn.


Finally, a photograph from the event's facebook page, many thanks again, looking back down towards many of those who attended (I estimated that 150 people attended at Swan Terrace), including me, though the foliage mostly hides me. A very good turn-out considering it had been arranged so swiftly: In Memory of Jo Cox R.I.P. 

And this was all captured by the BBC (from facebook), see video...   

Saturday, 7 March 2015

The Pre-Raphaelites in 19th Century Hastings

St Clements

Whilst in my arty mood, I thought today I'd look at the fascination some of the members of the 'Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood', and their friends and families, had for Hastings and its environs in the 19th century. In particular, I'll discuss Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828-82) and his model, lover, muse and wife, Lizzie Siddal (1829-62), their time together in the High Street, and their marriage at St Clements Church. 

I shall also discuss other members of the Rossetti family, and a group of artists, including the 2 other Pre-Raphaelite founders, William Holman Hunt (1827-1910) and John Everett Millais (1806-73), and Edward Lear (1812-88), perhaps better known for his other artistic leaning that uses words.  

5 High Street

There is a blue plaque at number 5 in the High Street that refers to Lizzie's visit to Hastings in 1854 (for health reasons, though the plaque doesn't say this of course), and to Rossetti. However, this wasn't her first visit, having previously stayed at number 5 for health reasons in 1852 as well. Gabriel joined her in Hastings after attending his father's funeral. He too had visited before, though, with his family, when he was 8 years old in 1836, having stayed a few doors further down the High Street.   

Rossetti's sketch of Lizzie

Lizzie had become an accomplished artist under Gabriel's tutorship, and received a stipend from John Ruskin, who favoured and supported her work. Whilst in Hastings, Gabriel drew many sketches of Lizzie; a well known pen & ink drawing of her, by an upstairs window at number 5, is now in the Victoria & Albert Museum, South Kensington, London. 

When Gabriel came down in 1860 and proposed to Lizzie, who was already in Hastings at number 5, again convalescing, they moved to lodgings next door to the Cutter pub, at number 12 East Parade. The husband and daughter of their new landlady, Alfred and Jane Chatfield, were the witnesses at the couple's wedding.   

81 High Street

Years later, Gabriel's sister, the poet Christina Rossetti (1830-94), who had already visited with the Rossetti family in 1836 too, rented an apartment at 81 High Street, for the winter and spring of 1864-65. She returned again in 1873, staying at Robertson Terrace, the address and its neighbouring buildings now occupied by Debenhams. 

Christina was very fond of Hastings and wrote a short novel based in the town, 'The Waves of this Troublesome World: a Tale of Hastings Ten Years Ago' (1867). She wrote poetry whilst in the town on both later visits, and declared Hastings to be "almost my favourite spot in England." 

Cayley's rather overgrown grave

Christina's good friend, who is now buried in Hastings Cemetery, Charles Bagot Cayley (1823-83), had asked her to marry him, but she refused as he was an agnostic, and she a catholic. She wrote a poem about Cayley called 'The Wombat', which was a nickname he received from Gabriel (who had quite a thing about wombats, note the self-portrait below where he mourns the loss of 'Top' one of two wombats he owned, amongst other exotic animals!), and she also wrote 'One Seaside Grave' about the grave of Cayley.  

Rossetti's self-portrait mourning 'Top'

That is enough of the Rossettis for now, and so I move on to the artistic trio of Holman-Hunt, Millais and Lear. Hunt had heard of Hastings through one of his pupils, Robert Martineau, whose parents lived up at Fairlight Lodge. In 1852 Martineau introduced Hunt to Edward Lear, who was already self-taught as an artist, but who wished to improve his technique by learning from Hunt. 

Fairlight Lodge

Hunt had just obtained a commission for a painting, and decided to paint near Fairlight, in addition, tutoring Lear whilst down here, who had found them lodgings at Clive Vale Farm. They stayed at the farm for the summer and autumn of 1852, receiving regular visits from other artists whilst there, including from Millais. When Millais  and Hunt visited in later years they stayed at Fairlight Lodge.  

Our English Coasts aka Strayed Sheep

Hunt's commissioned painting, 'Our English Coasts', later known as 'Strayed Sheep', (1852) looks across Fairlight Glen westwards towards Hastings, and is now at the Tate Gallery, Millbank. Hunt also painted 'Fairlight Downs, Sunlight on the Sea', although he didn't complete this painting until he returned to Fairlight Lodge with Millais in 1858; this painting is now in Andrew Lloyd Webber's private collection.  

The School-Girl's Hymn

Whilst staying in the area, Hunt also painted the delightful 'The School-Girl's Hymn' in 1859, the model being Miriam Wilkinson, the daughter of a Hastings labourer; this can be seen at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford.   

Lear returned to Clive Vale Farm in September 1861, following the death of his sister, and having completed a commissioned painting in Florence. He describes making regular walks to Hastings in his diaries, having made friends here. Clive Vale Farm was sold in March 1862, and became a housing development, which is now part of Hastings.  


Many thanks to relevant owners for images shown that are not my own. This is a re-written, slightly extended, article that I originally penned last year.