The Mansion of Mirth Sandgate as Seen Through the Eyes of the
Alhambra Music Hall and Rex Cinema
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Prologue
On one side, the sea: on the other, gently rising hills, scattered
with villas, and smudged with the grey smoke of tamarisks. On the
hill top lay Shorncliffe Camp, its barracks and hutments stretching
away towards Cheriton and the Downs. The bugles, in those days,
haunted this stretch of coast perpetually: their sad cries drifting
faintly seawards, as though answering the far, muffled booming of
the foghorns, out in the misty distance beyond Dungeness.
(Jocelyn Brooke The Goose Cathedral 1950)
Sandgate was first mentioned as `Sandygent' in 1256 and was named
after the gate in the hills where the Enbrook stream flowed into the
sea. Henry VIII built a castle there in 1539 as part of his defence
of the south east coast that also included the castles at Sandown,
Deal, Walmer and Camber. Henry visited the castle in March 1541 and
May 1542 as did his daughter Elizabeth I in 1575.
However, a proper village was not established until Fabian (or
Fabius) Clayton Wilson, a shipbuilder from Dover, leased land in the
area from Lord Radnor in c.1773. Wooden tenements were erected for
the shipyard workers (some can still be found at the foot of
Sandgate Hill). Further yards were established and for a time they
thrived when seven 28 gun frigates, four 16 gun sloops and two
fireships were built for the Royal Navy. Shipbuilding in Sandgate
came to an end with the retirement of boat builder Richard Graves in
1873.
The growth of Sandgate was also assisted by the establishment of the
army camp above the village at Shorncliffe in 1794. Shorncliffe had
been used as an army post since at least the time of the Spanish
Armada and was reinforced following the outbreak of war with
Napoleon in 1793. During the invasion scare the old castle was
converted into a Martello Tower while further towers were placed
above the village. In September 1802 Sir John Moore assumed command
of Shorncliffe Camp and lodged in Sandgate at Sir John Shaw's villa,
while his mother and sister were placed at York Cottage in Castle
Road. Moore died at Corunna in 1809, and upon the centenary of his
death a granite plinth was placed upon the Esplanade.
The presence of military men like Moore also helped to assist
Sandgate's embryonic aspirations as a watering place. In 1799 Thomas
Purday established a circulating library that also provided musical
entertainment, a reading room, billiard table and a bazaar selling
fancy goods and souvenirs. Salt water baths and bathing machines
were provided by J.B. Taylor and on 12th September 1809 the
Kentish Express wrote: This place (notwithstanding the
hitherto unfavourable state of the weather) has been fashionably and
numerously attended this season than at any period since it became a
watering place. The lodgings are all full, and in all probability
will for some length of time continue so. Purday's Library, recently
fitted up with an elegant reading room, has become a very
fashionable lounge. The balls at Strood's Rooms (which are every
fortnight) have been fully attended, and have greatly contributed to
the amusements of the place. The sea bathing here is in the greatest
perfection, as the waters are pure. There are varied and pleasant
walks and rides, cliffs of easy ascent (by the grand military
roads), commanding a beautiful view of the British Channel, bounded
at a distance by the undulating line of the French coast, the whole
of the luxuriant level of Romney Marsh, and a large portion of the
neighbouring county of Sussex, with a diversity of interesting and
romantic scenery in the background. Sandgate can claim at least an
equal degree of admiration to any watering place in England.
In 1806 `Belle Vue' was erected by the local landowner the 4th
Earl of Darnley as a holiday home. This later developed into Enbrook
House, while at the other end of the village Encombe was erected by
Henry Dawkins in 1821. William Wilberforce came to Sandgate on
several occasions and in 1812 commented: Sandgate is one of the
creations of modern English opulence. It has a number of very
comfortable houses for warm or even moderate weather, with a
library, a warm bath and other appendages. The country by far is the
most picturesque of any sea coast I have seen in the south of
England. However he also commented on another occasion that it
was `grievous' to see the place without a church or chapel of any
kind! This was remedied by the erection of a Methodist Chapel in
1816, two years after the National School was established (for which
the weekly charge was 1d). Inns established by this time included
the Fleur de Lis, New Inn (later Royal Kent), Ship Inn (later Royal
Norfolk), Martello Tower (later Castle Tavern) and Duke of York. In
1836 Sandgate acquired its own brewery and in the following decade
began its association with a family of publicans who were to provide
the village with its biggest attraction of all.
MR RIGDEN TREADS THE BOARDS
The establishment of the Bricklayers Arms
In
the mid-1840s a family named Elgar, who had lived at Burmarsh for
centuries, moved to Dover. John Elgar moved to Sandgate where he
carried on the trade of butcher. One of his brothers, Benjamin
Butcher Elgar, had a son Benjamin, born at Dover in 1814. The young
Benjamin moved to Deptford, where he married Martha (or Mary Ann)
Wilson from Wiltshire on 12th July 1843. Benjamin and Martha moved
back to Sandgate soon afterwards and took over a little beerhouse
from a Mrs Sarah Chester. The beerhouse had a forge alongside, for
Mrs Chester's late husband had been a blacksmith by trade. They
named it (or renamed it) the Bricklayers Arms (locally
known as the Bricks) and may have extended it into the
old forge. Benjamin died in 1846 and Martha carried on alone until
her marriage to Robert Rigden, a gardener at Cliff House, who then
took over the beerhouse. He is listed in an 1849 directory as a beer
retailer, and from 1851 as proprietor of the Bricklayers Arms
in the same property. The 1851 census lists the occupants of the
house as Robert Rigden (31) publican, Mary Ann (37) wife, Harriet A.
Elgar (7) daughter, Benjamin E. Elgar (4) son, Elizabeth Rigden (2)
daughter, Mary A. Rigden (1) daughter and William Wilson (12)
nephew.

1. The man with the beard is believed to be Robert Rigden, founder
of Sandgate's music hall.
Eamonn Rooney
Public and resort health
Following the passing of the Public Health Act in 1848 to combat
cholera, a Local Board was formed two years later (1850) to
administer Sandgate. In 1849 it was reported that the village was in
`a destitute sanitary condition' with 23 dunghills, 19 piggeries and
4 slaughterhouses. A further report recorded that 60 houses had no
drains and there was no rubbish collection.
The establishment of the Local Board gave Sandgate its bye-laws, and
a local rate was charged to pay for an improved water supply, waste
water removal and gas lighting. Public officers were appointed,
including a surveyor and an inspector of nuisances. In 1844 a
peoples' dispensary had been opened by a retired naval officer Dr.
William Donnelly.
These improvements however failed to prevent an outbreak of cholera
in 1854; there were 94 reported cases in the village of which 46
proved fatal. The outbreak was due to the poor water supply and the
defective drains. Four years later, two springs above Seabrook were
purchased to give Sandgate a more sustained supply of fresh water.
Notwithstanding its health problems, in 1852 Dr. George
Mosely, author of `Sandgate as a Residence for Invalids' claimed it
was the healthiest spot on the South Coast, being free of the sea
fog that plagued other watering places! All manner of ailments could
be cured at Sandgate, including tuberculosis!
Dr. Tanners work `Climates for Invalids' concurs claiming:
Sandgate offers a milder winter climate than Folkestone with an
exception from fogs. The mean winter temperature is 41.6 degrees F,
consumptive and dyspeptic invalids who find Brighton too bracing,
and Hastings too relaxing may well winter at Sandgate, especially if
they need quiet and seclusion. The town is in a good sanitary
condition, great improvements have been made to every house and
fitted with domestic appliances necessary to good health. Sandgate
demands some delightful prospects. The Hythe Bay, the distant
lighthouse at Dungeness and the Marsh are seen from most of the
houses in the neighbourhood.
The permanent establishment of Shorncliffe Camp
During the Crimean War of 1854-6 Shorncliffe Camp was permanently
established for the British German Legion (formerly the Foreign
Legion). Rows of wooden huts were erected to house them and a
permanent church was consecrated. A commandant's house, schools and
a canteen were also provided. Queen Victoria viewed the troops on
the 9th August 1855 and the entourage passed through Sandgate.
However, an armistice (Treaty of Paris) was signed in March 1856 and
consequently the camp saw little action; with the majority of the
Germans being relocated to South Africa.
A rough and ready place
Unfortunately, Sandgate's association with the camp led to it
becoming a rather rough and ready place with a cluster of low class
beerhouses catering for the thirsty soldiers. These included the
Alma, Sebastapol and Inkerman Arms, all named
after Crimean War battles. The 1830 Beerhouse Act had allowed any
ratepayer of `good character' to open a beerhouse on the payment of
2 guineas to the licensing authorities. A picquet of 25 soldiers
patrolled the village during Saturday evenings to keep an eye on the
behaviour of the soldiers in the inns and beerhouses.
2. The Bricklayers Arms in the 1850s. Note the ornate lamp
engraved with `Rigden wine & spirit merchant.
Alan F. Taylor
The Bricklayers Arms Music Hall
The
Local Board records show that in April 1854 permission was granted
to Robert Rigden to rebuild the Bricklayers Arms. On
4th October 1858 Rigden opened a newly built room on the back of the
premises as a music hall, and five days later the Folkestone
Chronicle announced: On Monday evening last, Mr. Rigden, the
landlord of the `Bricklayers Arms,' opened a new room he has
lately erected on the rear of his premises for the purpose of having
musical entertainment etc. The hall, which is 65 feet long by 25
feet wide, and proportionately high, is lit by three handsome
chandeliers descending from the roof, with branches for gas at
intervals along each side. The spirit, which has dictated the
erection of this fine room, is creditable to Mr. Rigden. A concert
was given on the above evening, when Madame Blewitt (pianist and
vocalist), Mrs. Marion (a pleasing ballad singer), Mrs. Barnes, Mr.
A. J. Gellis, not forgetting Herr Rosencrant the negro melodist and
tambourine player who - astonished many by his extraordinary
performances on three tambourines at once - gave a very pleasing
entertainment, which was further enlightened by some very capital
dancing in ballet costume by Miss. Anne Zeletta, from the London
theatres. A large number of persons were present and seemed to enjoy
the entertainment provided for them.
The origins of Music Hall
The
origins of music hall could be said to date back to the Elizabethan
period. The Elizabethans had an intoxication not only for words, but
also gymnastics and juggling and sports which were a national
pastime, particularly archery. Following the restoration of the
monarchy in 1660, the Theatre Royals at Drury Lane and Covent Garden
were granted a patent in 1663 for theatre performances. Other would
be theatres had to get round the patent by adding a circus or fair.
The patent would remain in force until the passing of the Theatre
Act in 1843, which stipulated that provincial theatres were approved
by local Justices of the Peace (London theatres by the Lord
Chamberlain), who were to scrutinise each play that was presented.
Stage plays were defined as `to include every Tragedy, Comedy,
Farce, Opera, Burletta, Interlude, Melodrama or other entertainment
or any part thereof.'
Eating and drinking were not allowed in the theatre auditorium, yet
refreshments were very much part of the evening out at the penny
gaffs of the East End of London. These predecessors of the music
halls were often dark and dismal places where the poor went to see
comics, singers, conjurors, magicians, short sketches and
`speciality acts'. Entrance cost a penny (although reserve seats
could be had for tuppence) and as a result the halls became very
crowded, and pick pocketing was rife. Heckling the performers became
the favourite pastime of the audience. Those that were particularly
disliked were given the `bird' or if they were really bad the
`scarlet bird' where the audience would rise and shout until they
were red in the face and the curtain came down. One of the most
notorious of the old penny gaff style halls were the disreputable
cider cellars in Maiden Lane. These were opened around 1830 by
William Rhodes, who also acted as Chairman of the entertainment on
offer, a tradition later adopted by many music halls.
As was the case with the Bricklayers Arms, music and
supper rooms/saloons attached to public houses were the forerunner
of many music halls. This was particularly the case in London; such
as the Canterbury Arms in Lambeth and the Eagle in the
City Road: the latter inspiring the popular ditty up and down the
City Road, in and out of the Eagle, that's the way the money goes,
pop goes the weasel.
However, the 1843 Theatre Act attempted to clamp down on the music
and supper rooms by forcing them to become legitimate theatres or
licensed music halls. Nevertheless the halls could get around the
constraints of the Act by avoiding dialogue (as used in a
`legitimate' play) and using mime, song or printed cards.
Furthermore, their patrons could still eat and drink whilst watching
the show as the halls, which with their tables and chairs rather
than rows of seats, were not classed as theatres. Some of the music
halls openly flouted the law by introducing dialogue and were
pursued in the courts by the enraged `legitimate' theatres.
In 1840 one of the first purpose-built music halls, the
Winchester, was opened in Blackfriars Road, followed eight years
later by the Surrey Music Hall at the Grapes Inn,
Southwark Road (which is thought to be the first to use the term
`music hall'). Nevertheless it is Charles Morton who is usually
credited with seizing on the Act by creating the Music Hall, with
its blend of variety entertainment and liquid refreshment, as we
know it. He rebuilt the Canterbury Arms into the New
Canterbury Music Hall in May 1852 where 700 patrons could eat,
drink and watch the acts on stage beneath huge gas chandeliers. The
hall proved to be so popular it was rebuilt in 1856-7 to hold 1500
people. Tickets were priced at 3d or 6d, which included a
refreshment ticket. Programmes were also provided, containing lyrics
to all the songs. Morton engaged the top performers of the day, who
usually earned around £40 per week. The exception was Sam Cowell,
the top performer of the day with a weekly wage of around £80 a
week. With his tall stovepipe hat and neck handkerchief, Cowell
resembled a Dickensian character and often sang songs with a Dickens
theme. He also performed at the famous Evans' Supper Rooms in
Covent Garden, situated in the basement of the Grand Hotel, whose
patrons included Dickens and Thackeray. Unfortunately, Cowell's hard
drinking lifestyle was to lead to his early death at the age of 44
on 11th March 1864.
In addition to the Canterbury, Morton additionally opened the
Palace and the Oxford. The latter was situated at the
junction of Oxford Street and Tottenham Court Road and was formerly
the Boar and Castle. However, only seven years after Morton
acquired it the Oxford was destroyed by fire in 1868 and the
site was sold. Nevertheless Morton remained an influential figure in
the business and later presented operettas at the Philharmonic
Hall up until his death aged 85 in 1904.
The grandest of the early halls was the Alhambra in Leicester
Square, which was opened in 1854 and is said to be the model for the
famous Follies-Bergerie. The building was later enlarged to
accommodate up to 3,500 patrons and it is interesting to compare it
with the Bricklayers Arms as they represent the two
types of music hall that emerged as the genre grew in popularity.
There were the smaller, more intimate halls (such as the
Bricklayers Arms), derived from the music and supper rooms
and smaller pub concert halls, whilst the purpose-built halls (like
the Alhambra, Leicester Square) or those converted from
theatres or public houses, came to resemble the theatres in all but
name. The latter were often grand edifices with elaborate internal
decoration such as huge chandeliers and even fountains in the foyer.
In these types of establishment the `riff-raff' was firmly
discouraged and the high prices charged reflected this. Halls such
as the Bricklayers Arms however could not afford to be
so choosy.

3. The Papillion's Soldier's Institute, opened in 1858 as a
temperance alternative to the licensed public houses in Sandgate.
Alan F. Taylor
Local entertainment venues
Nevertheless, the Bricklayers Arms had no other local
music halls as competition in the 1850s, and there was generally
very little other entertainment on offer. Hythe's Town Hall was used
for a variety of uses, including shows (but not spicy music hall),
but the town's theatre had closed back in 1837. Folkestone's rather
restrained theatre based in the Harevian Theatre on the Bayle
was revived in 1858 yet that's all the town had: the Apollo
Assembly Rooms having succumbed following the coming of the
railway in 1843.
In Sandgate itself, the Papillon Soldier's Institute was opened in
1858 by sisters Octavia & Lucy Papillion in Chapel Street. The
building grew to house a mission hall, library, refreshment room,
bar and amusement room. A further institute was established at Lydd
before Miss Lucy's death in 1885. Sandgate also boasted a working
men's library and institute opened in 1855. The Castle Inn
had acquired a concert room and other rivals to the Bricks
included the long-established Sandgate inn Fleur de Lis and
the Marine Hotel, as indicated by these two newspaper
reports:
10th July 1858 Folkestone Chronicle, in the case of Charles
Stewart charged with stealing an Albert gold chain. Alfred
Middleton, upon examination, said I am a professor of music,
living at Dover. On 26th
February, we left Folkestone for Sandgate, and were building our
Theatre at the back of the `Fleur de Lis' when the prisoner came and
offered two shirts for sale, which I purchased for 4s. Two or three
days later he returned and offered me the gold Albert chain, for
which I gave him 7s.
19th May 1860 Folkestone Chronicle: MARINE HOTEL, SANDGATE
NEW MUSIC HALL AND PLEASURE GARDENS - the proprietress of the
above Hotel informs her Friends and the Public that the above Hall,
together with spacious Gardens attached, are now open for the Summer
Season, under the management of Mr A Cherry. The following talented
company will appear - Miss Maskell, the celebrated Drum Player; Miss
J Clifton, the pleasing Ballad Singer; Mr Alfred Cherry. Admission
free. Commence at six o'clock, open Sundays at five o'clock.
Sandgate's Assembly Rooms were also improved:
6th
December 1862 Folkestone Chronicle: Mr Michael Valyer opened his
new Assembly Rooms on Thursday evening last. The room is a compact
one, situated close to the Castle, is over 50 feet long and of
proportionate width, well lighted with eight handsome crystal
bracket gas burners.
Improvements to the Bricklayers Arms
To
fight the potential competition from rivals such as that at the
Fleur de Lis and Marine Hotel, Robert Rigden endeavoured
to improve his music hall and on 2nd April 1859 the Folkestone
Chronicle reported: The proprietor of this popular place of
entertainment has certainly done all that can be desired to cater
for the qualification of the public, there has been lately added to
the room, a gallery, from whence the performances can be witnessed
in a perfectly private manner.
Two months later, on 18th June 1859, the Folkestone Chronicle
reported in the case of attempted robbery at Sandgate the culprit
was restrained and handed over by Robert Rigden. Indeed, Rigden
was described as a well-built, striking figure of a man, who used to
stand at the entrance to his premises wearing a velvet smoking cap
ready to prevent any drunken soldiers from entering! He was also
said to be equally adept at removing them once the effects of his
alcohol began to cloud their judgement! However a photograph of
Rigden shows him to be a slight figure.
On Tuesday 29th January 1861, the Royal Good Intent Lodge of the Odd
Fellows held a ball at Rigden's. The Folkestone Chronicle
reported that: At 2am supper was served, after which dancing was
resumed, and carried on with great animation, until nearly dawn.
About two weeks later a Military, Tradesmen's and Volunteers Ball
was held
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