23rd June 2023 at 2pm: Ide Hill Society Summer Outing to Down House

23rd June 2023 at 2pm: Ide Hill Society Summer Outing to Down House 

Theory of evolution by natural selection

Theory of evolution by natural selection

For our summer outing this year we are offering our members a trip to Down House, Downe, with a guided tour of the garden. This has been arranged for Friday, 23rd June at 2pm. Down House was built in the early 18th century and was, as you know, the home of Charles Darwin and his wife Emma. They moved to the house in 1842 to accommodate their growing family and Darwin remained there for 40 years until his death in 1882.

It was whilst living there that Darwin developed his theory of evolution by natural selection and wrote his ground breaking work: On the Origins of Species by Means of Natural Selection (1859). During our guided tour of the garden, we will hear about the experiments Darwin conducted to help prove his theories on evolution, including those on plant and insect life which have been recreated in the garden and greenhouse.

We will also learn how the garden has been restored to its original Victoria layout complete with authentic planting. The talk will last 60 minutes. This will allow sufficient time afterwards for participants to explore the garden and/or house at their leisure, and visit the café before the house closes at 5pm. The guided tour is limited to a group of 15 maximum. The cost of the guided tour is £75 (divided between the number in the group). In addition, there is an entry charge: £16.30 (Adult); £14.50 (over 65s)

If we are a group of 11, or more, we will get 15% discount on the cost of entry. As we will be limited to 15 attendees, please let me know if you wish to join me for this visit before May 31st.
In addition, please indicate whether you require an adult or over 65s ticket, as group members cannot pay individually. We will be required to make a single payment.
When I know who is attending, I will send out payment details, in addition to sorting out car-sharing.

Once again, please ensure you contact us before 10th June if you wish to attend at: events@idehillsociety.org.uk


 

14th March, 2023: AGM & Talk

Ide Hill Society Events 2023

 

 

14th March, 2023: AGM & Talk

  1. AGM at 8pm in Ide Hill Village Hall.
  2. After the AGM there will be a talk by Peter Wade on the Restoration of Cadogan Hall from its previous life as a place of religion to its now renowned place as a premiere venue for Classical Music and the current “home” of The Royal Philharmonic.

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

Sevenoaks Town Council rescues the Stag Theatre and Cinema – for a second time

Sevenoaks Town Council rescues the Stag Theatre and Cinema – for a second time

At the Sevenoaks Town Council Meeting held on 29th June 2020 Town Councillors unanimously voted to provide the Stag Theatre and Cinema with a financial lifeline to enable it to re-open and progress with its Recovery Plan from the impact of COVID 19.

The Mayor, Cllr Nicholas Busvine OBE said “It was a tough two hour meeting – as anyone watching on You Tube will have seen – but I am very glad to say that your Town Council was able to reach a unanimous consensus on a strategy to Save Our Stag. However, this still relies on ongoing participation from the local community.”

In 2008 Sevenoaks Town Council took the bold step to take over the management of Stag using a different business model following its second bankruptcy by other management companies.

The Town Council’s original aims were set out in its 2008 Business Plan and remain the same today:

  1. Assisting the sustainability of the local economy of the town, particularly the night-time economy and tourism economy.
  2. Retaining the valuable social and leisure facility for both performers and audiences
  3. Enabling the development of youth services both in performing arts and youth outreach services.
  4. Retaining an iconic building in the town and preserving the street scene.

An independent charity was subsequently created to operate the Stag and the Town Council supported with an annual grant of £27,000.  Town Councillors, Trustees, Staff, Volunteers, Customers and Local Businesses invested considerable time and effort to make the Stag the success it had become, a vibrant local leisure facility underwriting the local economy. Pre COVID 19 the Stag was 99% grant free and debt free.

Unfortunately, the Stag as per many leisure facilities finances are now critical due to the impact of COVID 19 and social distancing restrictions.

Town Councillors initially considered financially assisting the Stag at a Meeting on 8th June 2020.  At the meeting Town Councillors stated that they wanted to see evidence of public support for the facility both in communications and fundraising.

Three weeks later Town Councillors were delighted to receive 1,600+ emails of support for the Stag and offers of practical help.  In addition, that the public had raised £18,000 to date via the Save Our Stag campaign.

Sevenoaks Town Councillors unanimously voted for the following:

Sevenoaks Town Council is committed to keeping the Stag open and operating for the benefit of the residents of Sevenoaks.  Therefore, Sevenoaks Town Council proposed to help the Stag achieve funding in the current fiscal year, in line with the Stag’s Recovery Plan.  It is the noted that the Stag’s Recovery Plan will develop as circumstances change and will need to demonstrate how the Stag will recover to a viable operation, as follows:

1.      Sevenoaks Town Council will initially grant the Stag £65,000 in line with the request in the Recovery Plan, to cover the first three months of the Stag reopening.

2.      The Stag launches a fundraising appeal, with Sevenoaks Town Council agreeing to match fund up to £60,000 achieved by the Stag.

3.      Sevenoaks Town Council commits to revisit the Stag’s financial situation on a quarterly basis, offering further grants if needed at the same time being mindful that the Town Council’s revenue reserves should not fall to levels which would put at risk its own services to the Town.

4.      A Working Group of 4 Town Councillors and appropriate Town Council and Stag officers to regularly review the financial position of the Stag and its Recovery Plan.

5.      A Working Group of 4 Town Councillors and appropriate Town Council and Stag officers to review alternative governance arrangements to those currently operated.

Members of the public can donate via the Stag’s website https://stagsevenoaks.co.uk

Due to COVID 19 Sevenoaks Town Council has had to hold meetings virtually rather than within the Council Chamber.  For the first time Sevenoaks Town Council streamed its meeting on YouTube which can be viewed at https://youtu.be/BANwquqPOh0 or searching for Sevenoaks Town Council on YouTube.  Over 100 people viewed the meeting live, by the following morning views had risen to 400+.


Linda Larter MBE

Chief Executive / Town Clerk

Press Release issued on 30th June 2020 by Sevenoaks Town Council


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.

Ide Hill Society: Clink lunch, 24 September, 2019

Clink lunch, 24 September, 2019 

Tuesday, 24 September, 12 noon we have a visit to the Clink Restaurant, HMP High Downs, Sutton for a unique dining experience, within the walls of this category B prison. You will be served in a modern spotlight dining room with a delicious 3 course lunch, cooked using fresh, seasonal ingredients and latest cookery techniques, all in an open kitchen and prepared and served by prisoners. The restaurant is a major part of the Clink Charity’s prisoners rehabilitation initiative.