George Orwell in Kent and the Old Sundridge Hospital

George Orwell in Kent and the Old Sundridge Hospital,

19th October, 2022

Neil Smith from The Orwell Society

Neil Smith from The Orwell Society

The Ide Hill Society’s first autumn meeting was a talk entitled: George Orwell in Kent and the Old Sundridge Hospital. The evening was a great success with the village hall filled with over 40 people some of whom were new faces. Unusually, it was a meeting with three speakers – Neil Smith from The Orwell Society, Liz Gandon a well-known local resident, and Mike Bolton a local historian.

Neil Smith provided us with an excellent PowerPoint presentation which included maps, photographs and historical details. He briefly outlined Orwell’s life – his rather privileged early life (Eton educated); his ambition, expressed at a very young age, to become a writer; his decision to go ‘down and out’; his family life and his very premature death at the age of only 46 in 1950. Orwell was in fact the writer’s pen name, his real name being Eric Blair. As Neil suggested had he continued to use his real name we would now be using the term ‘Blairite’ rather than ‘Orwellian’!

Orwell’s decision to live rough had been based on the hope that it would provide him with subject matter for his writing. So, between 1927 and 1930 he began to regularly join the tramps in the London area, whilst trying to get his work published. Eventually, this paid off for in the following year he had an essay published that recorded his experience of hop-picking throughout Kent: Hop-picking (1931).

Neil’s main focus for the evening’s talk was Orwell’s connections to Kent and for this he mainly referenced Orwell’s Hop-picking Diary (first published in 1968) which documented the journey he had taken through the county in 1931. He had begun at the Elephant and Castle and continued all the way to Wateringbury in Kent, with a stopover in Ide Hill, the details of which were of particular interest for our audience. Neil pointed out that both the hop-picking essay and the diary could be read online for free at: www.orwellfoundation.com

Orwell’s first full work: Down and Out in Paris and London (published 1933), had included some unflattering references to Ide Hill:

‘I turned north for London. Most of the others (tramps) were going on to Ide Hill, said to be about the worse spike in England.’

‘(the tramps) warned me to steer clear of…Ide Hill…’

He does add a conciliatory note: ‘I have been to it since, and it is not too bad’.

The ‘spike’ he refers to formed a part of the workhouse which provided tramps with one night’s accommodation in the casual ward. Mike Bolton, a local historian, gave us a brief history of that institution that stood at the junction of New Road with Sundridge Road, where it still stands today, although it is no longer used as a workhouse. Although Orwell referred to it as the Ide Hill ‘spike’ Mike confirmed it was officially the Sevenoaks Union Workhouse and had been built between 1844 and 1845, shortly after the 1834 Act, on land which was a part of the Amherst estate. It was a grim intimidating place, almost akin to a prison. The inmates didn’t even escape on death, as many were buried in a communal grave in the grounds.

The workhouse subsequently became the Sundridge Hospital catering for what were known at the time as psychogeriatric patients, now correctly termed long stay elderly infirm. This hospital eventually closed in 1988 and fell into disrepair before being converted, whilst maintaining its Grade II Listed status, into a residential development (Birchfield).

When Orwell and Ginger arrived at the Ide Hill ‘spike’ in 1931, they found the Tramp Major very unwelcoming and therefore decided to move on. Orwell records in his diary that they continued up the road to Ide Hill village where they had sausages for supper:

‘… Ginger tapped the local butcher, who gave us the best part of two pounds of sausages…Ginger and I went and kipped on the edge of the park near the church. It was beastly cold, but a little better than the night before, for we had plenty of wood and could make a fire.’

‘The next morning the clergyman…caught us and turned us out, though not very disagreeably.’

Liz Gandon provided some insight into the probable location for the ‘park’ illustrating the site with a map of the churchyard as it appeared at that date. It seems likely that Orwell and Ginger put their heads down in a section of the churchyard that was at that time relatively devoid of graves to the right of the church as you approach the porch. Their proximity to the vicarage made their discovery by the vicar in the morning almost inevitable.

Underwood’s, the village butcher in 1931, was located in what is now the garage of Prospect House and this was where they received their gift of sausages. Freda Leigh (born 1922), who sadly died this summer, recalled moving to Prospect House in 1934 and spoke of the ‘tramps’ that would often call at her family’s front gate to have their drums filled as they passed through the village.

It seems that Orwell and Ginger were dealt with pretty generously as they passed through our village both by the butcher and the vicar!

The meeting closed with questions and time was allowed for the audience to browse through Orwell’s many other publications, alongside other relevant material regarding the Orwell Society which Neil had kindly brought for us to see. It was a memorable evening!

To find out more about The Orwell Society go to: www.orwellsociety.com

Maggie Palmer
Ide Hill Society

Stubbs Wood Viewpoint Clearance Project – Starting July 2021

Stubbs Wood Viewpoint Clearance Project – Starting July 2021

The Sundridge with Ide Hill Parish Council has employed Japa Forestry and Fencing to undertake part of the viewpoint clearance work and coppicing identified in the Stubbs Wood Management Plan at no cost to the Parish Council.

There are two areas to be cleared at Stubbs Wood:

  • 0.28 ha of woodland shown as Coupe 1 and light green on the attached plan, located to the South of the main Stubbs Wood Car Park which will provide a clear viewpoint over to Bough Beech reservoir. The felled timber will be extracted through the main car park.
  • 8ha of woodland located to the East of Hanging Bank shown as Coupe 2 and light green on the attached plan, which will involve the coppicing and extraction of sweet chestnut trees. The extraction will be undertaken by horses to reduce the damage to pathways etc along the route shown as a red line up to the old/disused car park on Wheatsheaf Hill.

The Parish Council has tried to reduce the impact of extraction and these works on the residents in Hanging Bank and pathways through the woods by undertaking the extraction in the summer and by employing a company who extracts the timber by working horses.

The work is scheduled to start in the week commencing the 12th July 2021.

Stubbs Wood will remain open to walkers and riders throughout the work although extra caution should be taken when approaching the working areas.


Press Release, from the Sundridge with Ide Hill Parish Council, 12th July, 2021


 

Ide Hill Toilets: The Views of the Ide Hill Society

Ide Hill Toilets: The Views of the Ide Hill Society

Dear Member or former Member

The Committee of the Ide Hill Society recently attended a Zoom meeting led by Don Baker with other Ide Hill Ward Parish Councillors Polly Furse and David Miller attending. They explained the background to the consultation/survey on the Ide Hill public toilets and sought the support of our membership for the keeping this facility fully open.

The projected annual cost of cleaning and maintenance is £7500, which amounts to roughly £5 per resident of the Parish Council. In the absence of any explanation we can only assume that Sundridge Ward councillors feel that it is not in their residents’ interest to maintain this commitment or that the money is better spent elsewhere.

It is the unanimous and strongly held view of your Committee that the toilets should remain fully open. Without this facility the cafe will be unable to re-open after lockdown unless [and even then until] alternative facilities can be provided. The shop and its amazing team of volunteers is at the heart of our community and widely admired. The cafe is an integral part and without it the shop is scarcely profitable and its long term viability therefore uncertain.

The toilets are also a heavily used facility for cyclists, walkers and other visitors, many from afar, who will not suddenly disappear if the café closes, as we have seen in lockdown. Closure of the facilities would therefore have unmentionable implications for decency and public health.

It is of course your decision on how, or whether, to respond to this consultation but our Committee will be voting for keeping the toilets fully open and adding a comment that this should be on a permanent basis.
We strongly encourage you to do so too.

Paul Meredith

Chair of the Ide Hill Society


 

Save Our Ide Hill Public Conveniences

Ide Hill Public Conveniences consultation:

The Public Convenience With a View

 

Sundridge with Ide Hill Parish Council Consultation/Survey Ide Hill Public Toilets

Sundridge with Ide Hill Parish Council is seeking the public’s views on its public toilet strategy for Ide Hill Public toilets. As part of the preparation for the strategy, residents and visitors are asked whether the Ide Hill Public toilet facility should be retained or closed and/or redeveloped. The Public Convenience is adjacent to car park by the Ide Hill Community shop and village hall on Wheatsheaf Hill, B2042.

The toilets are used by many walkers and cyclists who visit this Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB). It is literally The Public Convenience with one of the most popular views of the local countryside and Bough Beech Reservoir in the area.

This consultation is taking place on the Parish website at and closes on 31st August 2020. General information can be found here.

To take participate in the consultation regarding the public conveniences at Ide Hill please click on this link below: https://www.cognitoforms.com/IdeHillParishCouncil/SundridgeWithIdeHillParishCouncilConsultationSurveyIdeHillPublicToilets


 

Toys Hill Archive Exhibition: 16-17, November, 2019

Toys Hill Archive Exhibition, 16-17, November, 2019 

The Toys Hill Village Hall will be exhibiting the Toys Hill Archive Exhibition on the weekend of the 16th and 17th November. The archive of documents and photographs highlight changes since the end of the 19th Century.

The Toys Hill Village Hall will be open from 11.00am to 4.00pm on both days. Free admission.

Consultation on cleaner domestic burning of solid fuels and wood

Consultation on cleaner domestic burning of solid fuels and wood 

The Clean Air Strategy states that air pollution is the top environmental risk to human health in the UK. We often think of air pollution as being caused by transport or industrial level burning of fossil fuels. The Strategy is clear that we now need to tackle these other sources of air pollution, including emissions caused by heating our homes.
Get involved in the consultation by completing an online survey
NB Survey closes 12 Oct 2018

Stubbs Wood, Kent

Stubbs Wood

Stubbs Wood is situated on top of the Greensand Ridge. It is 38.59 ha (95.36 acres) and owned by the local Parish.

There are excellent views over the Weald of Kent. The photo on the right is a view of Bough Beach Reservoir taken from Stubbs Wood.

Ide Hill Village is within a Conservation Area

Conservation Area

Ide Hill Village is within a Conservation Area. A Conservation Area is an area of special architectural or historic interest, the character or appearance of which should be preserved or enhanced.

What is an areas of outstanding natural beauty (AONBs)?

Areas of outstanding natural beauty (AONBs)*

An area of outstanding natural beauty (AONB) is land protected by the Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000 (CROW Act). It protects the land to conserve and enhance its natural beauty. The CROW Act sets out the roles and responsibilities that different organisations must follow to manage AONBs. There are 34 AONBs in England.

Under the CROW Act, all decisions must have regard for the purpose of conserving and enhancing the natural beauty of the AONB. Only local authorities or the Secretary of State can give permission for development in, or affecting, an AONB.

Ide Hill is within an area of outstanding natural beauty (AONB).