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Hall affair

From EverybodyWiki Bios & Wiki

The Hall affair resulted in the temporary halting of the demolition of The Hall, Gosport, Hampshire, England in January 1965 and marked a landmark change in attitudes towards conservation in post-war Britain. The events empowered ordinary people to take a stand against the destruction of their heritage in the name of modern development or redevelopment.[citation needed]

Background[edit]

Gosport is a town situated on the west side of Portsmouth Harbour on England’s south coast. It has, since the 18th century, been the repository of large establishments connected to Portsmouth’s Royal Navy Dockyard, which were not able to be accommodated within the Dockyard or within the crowded city of Portsmouth that surrounds it. These establishments included the R.N. Armaments Depot of Priddy’s Hard, the Clarence victualing yard, Haslar Royal Naval hospital, HMS Dolphin submarine base and the Lee-on-Solent Fleet Air-Arm base. Gosport had almost all its workforce working either in Portsmouth’s Naval establishments or in the Dockyard itself. In the 18th and 19th centuries the town was crowded with public houses and was set in elaborate fortifications protecting it from a landward attack.[1]

During the Second World War the town escaped much of the bombing of both Portsmouth City and Dockyard. Soon after the Town and Country Planning Act came into force in 1947, a large number of buildings in Gosport were listed by the Ministry of Housing and Local Government as being 'of architectural or historical interest'. The town was highly significant as a surviving Georgian seaport. However, in the early years of 1960 the politics of the town were dominated by a Labour council which was determined to replace the old seaport with a series of tall ‘system-built’ blocks of flats, inspired by seeing similar buildings on a to Moscow.[2]

By 1965 the redevelopment of the town centre had included the demolition of groups of buildings at Clarence Square, Chapel Row and The Green – and in the path of the next phase of tower blocks was a small enclave to the east of Holy Trinity Church comprising, in the last moated raveling of the town’s fortifications, the former military governor’s house (an 18th-century building once visited by Jane Austen whose uncle had been Governor, and then in use as Holy Trinity’s vicarage) and The Hall, a Regency house, built in about 1830 for a shipyard proprietor, in yellow brick with a gallery and cupola designed to catch views of the open sea beyond the harbor. The Hall had been purchased by Gosport Borough Council, and had been used as offices for the Borough Engineer.[3]

Stephen Weeks[edit]

Born in 1948, Stephen Weeks – whose childhood was lived mainly in Portsmouth – was early on fascinated by the past. In 1959, aged 11, he became a member of the Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies in London in order to pursue his then interest in Roman Britain. The following year he became the youngest member of the archaeological team under Barry Cunliffe, which discovered and then uncovered (over the next two years) Fishbourne Roman Palace, Chichester.[4] At Fishbourne Weeks met a Cambridge student of architecture, Nicholas Taylor – who later wrote for the Architectural Review – who convinced Weeks that he should take in interest in threatened 18th and 19th century buildings – particularly as in 1962 Weeks' family moved to Gosport, but not before he had identified a very important building in Portsmouth. In 1962 he found, buried in later construction, The King’s Storehouse – the store commissioned by King Henry VIII to store, among other things, the masts and tack of his new flagship, The Mary Rose. Weeks – and at 14 without any connections – tried unsuccessfully to fight its demolition by a neighboring power station, which needed to extend its coal heaps. This was reported by ‘’Hampshire Magazine’’ in 1963.[5] In filming the building, a demolition worker broke his nose.

Weeks discovered that 56 'listed' historic buildings had been demolished by Gosport Borough Council without Ministry permission since 1947, and he was determined that The Hall would not be the next. In the autumn of 1964 he sent a warning letter to the Mayor, which was ignored. At this time he was a pupil at Portsmouth Grammar School. However, Gosport Council took the precaution of starting the demolition of The Hall on a Sunday (3 January 1965) when the town center would be mostly deserted. The council did not know that Weeks attended Holy Trinity Church, so he immediately saw the roof of the building being broken up and timbers being burnt. Not confident that his voice would carry any authority, he telephoned a sympathetic Councillor in Portsmouth, who in turn phoned the mayor. In the call, the mayor confused the reference to the Ministry with the Minister himself, and immediately ordered the demolition to stop. By the early afternoon, the wreckers were called off.[6]

The Ministry of Housing intervenes[edit]

Weeks decided to skip school the following day and took a train to London, determined to meet the Minister of Housing, Duncan Sandys. He met with Ministerial staff, and eventually he was able to state his case to the Senior Investigator of Ancient Monuments, Antony Dale. The Ministry immediately phoned Gosport Council and officially ordered the demolition to cease. When Weeks arrived back to Portsmouth Harbour Station that evening, he saw newspaper placards already heralding him as the ‘Sixteen-year-old Schoolboy’ hero of the hour. The following Friday, Mr. Dale was shown not only The Hall by Weeks, but also the sites of the other buildings which had been illegally destroyed – as well as other buildings which were threatened by Gosport Council’s plans.[7]

For several weeks this story was headline news – The Times carried a piece under the headline ‘Youth Blocks Demolition by Council’.[8]’’The New Daily’’: ‘Man versus the Machine. How helpless the individual so often feels in the face of the all powerful state machine!’[9] ‘’The Daily Telegraph’’ reported: ‘ Mr. Dale, who later met Gosport Council officials, said: ‘I can make no comment. I can only report to the Minister. I have never known a young lad with such a detailed knowledge of this kind…’ The boy said: ‘I have already had many letters from local people pledging their support to this campaign, but nothing from the Council. I am writing to the Town Clerk offering to address the Council: perhaps some kind of policy can be adopted to prevent further historic buildings disappearing.’[10] The next day The Sunday Telegraph published a leader: ‘The boy who challenged his elders’[11] – followed by ‘’The Guardian’’ with a piece ‘Schoolboy’s Initiative’ by John Grigg.[12]

Outcome[edit]

It was clear that the partially demolished Hall, which was deteriorating rapidly, would be an impracticable proposition to restore. But, with the national spotlight turned on Gosport, the Holy Trinity Vicarage was spared. The Portsmouth Evening News stated: ‘Few tears are likely to be shed at Gosport or elsewhere should the partial demolition of the 150-year-old Hall be eventually completed. But the incident will have been worth every blush of embarrassment if a somewhat apathetic public is jerked into a realization of what can happen. All about us fine trees are being swathed, nature reserves eroded, familiar paths built over and every spark of interest or individuality threatened with extinction by the advancing tide of bricks and cement.’[13]

Weeks appeared on TV (in one case ridiculing live the Mayor of Gosport, Councillor Coolie, who had come to Southern Television's studios ill-prepared and wearing his mayoral robes for a nearby function), and received letters from many parts of the world as the story spread. Sir John Betjeman, who up to that time had been the lone public voice of 'preservation', wrote to Weeks and they met. Later, Lord Kennet (the environmentalist Wayland Young) wrote up the case in his book on the early history of the preservation movement.[14]

An amenity society in Tavistock Devon was formed, inspired by Weeks’ action. The matter of The Hall had given encouragement to thousands of other people who began to challenge that their historic environment should be destroyed ‘in the name of progress’. And because Weeks was young, it signalled that conservation wasn’t the preserve of the old and fuddy-duddy.

Locally, Gosport Council next made a concerted effort to demolish as much of old Gosport as it could before further listing of buildings took place. Included in this destruction was the first forge building of Henry Cort, the iron master whose twin inventions of the puddling furnace and the rolling mill fuelled the Industrial Revolution. Weeks identified a derelict building on The Green, Gosport, as Cort’s forge where puddling had been experimented. At Fontley Iron Mills, near Fareham, Hampshire, in the summer of 1964 Weeks and a school friend conducted the first industrial archaeological excavation as they uncovered the site of Cort’s first rolling mill. In October 1965 Weeks appeared in the first TV program ever made on Industrial Archaeology, ‘’What’s It All About?’’, made by the BBC.[15] Despite this national coverage, stating that Gosport had a site of international significance on its hands, the Council demolished the building.

Gosport Council remained unrepentant throughout the furor, continuing to describe its listed historic buildings as ‘eye-sores’,[16] and over the next few years it demolished many more buildings which would have been listed (and protected) in the climate of a growing public appreciation of 18th and also 19th century architecture.

Weeks also tried in vain to save the Gilkicker, a unique 17th or 18th century triangular tower which was built as a navigational marker for ships at sea. Realizing the value of publicity, Weeks was prepared to scale the tower (it was solid), and camp on it in protest. But as Weeks admitted many years later: “I started to climb, but after about 30 feet I realized I had no head for heights! Rather embarrassed I abandoned my attempt. The beautiful structure of brick and stone was demolished.”[17]

Wider aftermath[edit]

The Victorian Society had been founded in 1962, at a time when Victorian buildings were routinely demolished (as portrayed in the exhibitions at the Victorian & Albert museum, ‘’The Destruction of the Country House’’ in 1974, which showed that large, and mainly 19th century, country mansions were being demolished then at a rate of more than one a week, and ‘’Change and Decay – the Future of Churches’’ in 1977, which demonstrated that historic churches were at no lesser risk than mansions). The country, in 1965, was still reeling after the catastrophe of the demolition of the Euston Arch in London, the monumental portico of the world’s first capital city railway terminus. A struggle from 1958-61 had failed to save it, even though almost every architectural specialist in the country – led by Sir John Betjeman – had spoken for it, only to be eventually vetoed by prime-minister Harold Macmillan. However, January 1965 was only three months into prime-minister Harold Wilson's new Labour government, promising a sea change in ideas. But the Hall Affair showed that direct action by an ordinary person could effect change, especially when a local authority was acting in a cavalier – and in the Gosport case, illegal – manner.

The Hall Affair highlighted the disconnect between democratically elected local authorities, concerned with commercial and political interests, and the general public. who wanted conservation and redevelopment on a more humane scale. It also highlighted the scale of development on other historic towns – such as Poole, Worcester, Salisbury and Leek. It wasn’t until the 1980 that conservationists began to permeate elected authorities, and conservation began to become a significant part of local authorities’ agendas. These organisations exist to keep local authorities in check, and now play significant roles in planning applications. Membership of national conservation societies grew exponentially in the two decades which followed, including the National Trust, the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings, the Georgian Group, the Victorian Society and the Civic Trust.

The Portsmouth Councillor, Freddy Emery-Wallis, who had helped Weeks in 1965 went on to lead Hampshire County Council.

References[edit]

  1. The buildings of England – Hampshire / Gosport – Prof Niklaus Pevsner and David Lloyd, Penguin Books, 1967
  2. ’’Gosport From Old Photographs’’ – John Sadden, Amberley Publishing, Stroud 2012-10-24
  3. Monthly leaflet of Holy Trinity Church, Gosport – January 1965
  4. Archive of Fishbourne Roman Palace Museum, Chichester
  5. ’’Hampshire Magazine’’, article by Roger Mills, July 1963
  6. ‘’Portsmouth Evening News’’ – 5 January 1965
  7. ’’The Daily Telegraph’’ – 9 January 1965
  8. ’’The Times’’, London – 7 January 1965
  9. ’’The New Daily’’ – 8 January 1965
  10. ’’The Daily Telegraph’’ – 8 January 1965
  11. ’’The Sunday Telegraph’’ – 10 January 1965
  12. ’’The Guardian’’ – 11 January 1965
  13. ’’Portsmouth Evening News’’, leader – 9 January 1965
  14. Preservation – Wayland Kennet, Maurice Temple Smith, London 1972, pp 153-162
  15. TV programme: ‘’Industrial Archaeology, 1 – What’s it all about?’’ BBCtv 1965
  16. ’’Portsmouth Evening News’’, letter from a Councillor Graham Hewitt – 9 January 1965
  17. Archive of Portsmouth Grammar School, 2012


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