An 1898 auction of houses and shops on Marina, St Leonards on Sea

I came across this citation in the Hastings and St Leonards Times (HSLT), 23 April 1898:

A PROPERTY sale was held by Messrs John and A Bray, at their Auction Rooms, Claremont, on Tuesday afternoon. The following properties were put up for sale: Nos. 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 42, 43, 44, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, and 56 Marina. The bidding was very slow, and all the properties were withdrawn with the exception of 43 Marina, which was knocked down at £2,800.

A large sale like this gives us a lot of evidence about ownership of a long street like Marina, and I wanted to know more. Two days before, the 21 April 1898 issue of the Hastings and St Leonards Advertiser added that no. 43 had been sold to a Mr Addison, and that nos. 36-44, and nos. 50-56, were for sale (the first named citation had omitted nos. 41 and 55). That is a total of 16 properties. The fact that these were blocks of connected rather than scattered properties suggested that they had been originally bought on a single occasion, rather than one by one. Below are photos showing the same properties today.

View of 50-56 Marina, St Leonards on Sea, to the east of the low building which is Crown House, 57 Marina
View of 36-44 Marina, St Leonards on Sea, with the tall Marine Court beyond. The Royal Victoria Hotel with scaffolding is on the left

The Mr Addison mentioned was Walter Stride Addison, a confectioner at 43 Marina in the 1898 Pike’s Directory, who had purchased his own building’s freehold. Most if not all of the houses had shops on the ground floor. The house entrances would have been at the back.

To the east of the Royal Victoria Hotel is nos. 36-44, with the later Marine Court building from the late 1930s immediately to the east. Nos. 50-56 is immediately to the west of the hotel. The Greeba Hotel, replaced after bomb damage in World War II by Greeba Court’s block of flats, was later at nos. 55-56. Beyond, and not for sale, Crown House was and is no. 57, and is quite different in appearance from its neighbours, and was the first house to be built by James Burton in the development of the town. Allowing for the Greeba, the ground floors of the houses involved in the auction all have, today, the same arched, colonnaded appearance.

So who sold these 16 properties ? The HSLT, 16 April 1898, has a notice stating that nos. 36-44 were one lot, with a rental value of £1229, and nos. 50-56 another lot, rental value £800. They were being sold by the executors of W.H. Goodwin.

William Henry Goodwin was a solicitor who had died in 1887 – eleven years earlier ! — at White Rock House, Hastings, aged 60. He was a partner in Young and Goodwin, solicitors at Bank Buildings, Hastings. Judging from newspaper mentions, the firm did a great deal of conveyancing.

Sometimes the newspapers have other details. For example, on the 21 May 1898, in the Hastings Observer, Bray offered to sell by private treaty nos. 36, 39, 40 and 42, all first class shops with a capital house over, and all let on long leases, with a combined annual rent of £627.

We still don’t know when Goodwin purchased the properties, of course.

Detail from Ordnance Survey map, surveyed 1872 and published 1875, showing the houses either side of the Royal Victoria Hotel, St Leonards on Sea

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Discover more from The Burtons’ St Leonards Society

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading