Archive for December, 2011

The People’s Palace Quiz

Oil painting showing the grand re-opening of the Music Room in the Royal Pavilion, 1851, by Aaron Penley (FA000389)

The Music Room, Royal Pavilion: the Grand Re-Opening Ball. Oil painting by Aaron Penley, 1851 (FA000389)

Now that Christmas is over, many of us are looking forward to the New Year. With the Queen celebrating her Diamond Jubilee in 2012 and our Princess Charlotte exhibition opening in the Royal Pavilion in March, royalty will be a prominent theme of the year. But we will start the year by celebrating the Pavilion’s role as a People’s Palace.

On Sunday 22 January, the Royal Pavilion will hold its annual free open day. In the run up to this, we will be exploring the often forgotten history of the Pavilion as a civic building. Purchased for the town in 1850, the Pavilion has served a variety of purposes, from ballroom venue to a home for local Freemasons.

We’ll kick off with a quiz. The Pavilion has had a number of brushes with fame in the last 161 years, and we’ve  six questions on this theme. Answer the questions below, and you may stand a chance of winning a cream tea for two and free admission to the Royal Pavilion. Answers can be submitted up until the end of Sunday 22 January.

This competition has now closed.

Favourites from the Royal Pavilion Gardens – Ruscus aculeatus, Butcher’s Broom

Ruscus aculeatus: Butcher’s Broom

Ruscus aculeatus: Butcher’s Broom

Had you considered for Christmas to look
at Ruscus aculeatus. Fit for a book.
The red berries so jolly
Outshine the more usual holly.

Growing well in the Royal Pavilion gardens,
In beds A, B, C and T
with its green flat sharp shoots
presented so proudly
for all people to see.
brought from Eurasia in the 18th century.

Now found in deep shaded woods,
hedgerows,
coastal cliffs
as a garden escapee.

In spring, this sturdy plant sports small green flowers,
turning later to red berries
which by distributing birds are devoured.
By its own rhizomes it can reproduce as well,
which makes this an interesting tale to tell.

Also known as Kneeholly or (holy), Keenholm and Sweet Bloom,
Jew’s myrtle, Pettigree and Butcher’s broom.

Ruscus aculeatus: Butcher’s Broom

Ruscus aculeatus: Butcher’s Broom

And indeed, as implied by the last,
it was used by butchers to sweep, in the past.

Medically, if applied, it brings some gains
and is used to treat hemorrhoids and varicose veins
also works against water retention and constipation
thus being good for the whole circulation.

Thus endeth my Christmas tale of a member of the asparagus family.

Volunteer Gardener, Royal Pavilion Gardens

With season’s greetings from the Royal Pavilion Garden Volunteers
Merry Christmas to all and many happy New Years.

Personality of the Month – Dorothy Stringer (1894-1977)

On 19 December 1968, Dorothy Stringer was granted Freedom of the Borough of Brighton. She was only the second woman to have been honoured in this way but, given her record of service to the town, it must have come as no surprise. Best known for her contribution to education, Stringer was a former Mayor, Alderman and senior council member who was awarded an OBE in 1960. In 1969, when she was in her mid-seventies, she still served on countless committees.

Stringer was born in 1894 into a Brighton family that was active in public life. Her father Joseph was an Alderman, her mother Emma was a member of the Board of Guardians and her cousin, Herbert Galliers, was Mayor of Brighton in 1929. She joined the Council’s Education Committee in 1923 and served on it for an incredible 50 years. During this time, she became the committee’s first female chair and, in 1955, a new secondary school was named after her.

As a young woman, Stringer was a talented singer and pianist, and a member of St Bartholomew’s Church Choir. During the First World War, she is said to have taken part in performances put on to entertain wounded soldiers who were being cared for in Brighton’s military hospitals, including the Royal Pavilion.

She was first elected to Brighton Council in 1933 and was made the town’s Mayor in 1952. Two scrapbooks of newspaper cuttings, invitations and other ephemera documenting her mayoral year are held at Brighton History Centre, and these show just how involved she was in the life of the town. From the opening of local businesses to visits to schools, sporting events, conferences and exhibitions, Dorothy Stringer seems to have been an ever-present figure.

Going to balls, banquets and concerts may have been part of the job but, evidently, Stringer also concerned herself with the welfare of vulnerable people, including children and the elderly. At the Mayoral Banquet, which was held at the Royal Pavilion, she made this clear,  promising to, ‘join in the laughter and joy of children and of youth, give a little happiness to the old folk, have courage when the need arises and try to make the right decisions.’

She also paid tribute to the women of Brighton, those who had served in the war, and those who were at home, ‘doing noble work’. At the end of her year of office, fellow councillor Stanley Deason had this to say:  ‘If you have done nothing else, you have made it plain that a woman of ability and integrity can take her place with men and do what they do, and you have done it magnificently. You have performed a service to women, the council and the town.’

Dorothy Stringer continued her work until 1974. She died in 1977 and is buried in Brighton’s Extra Mural Cemetery.

Kate Elms, Brighton History Centre

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