February Pictures

From Dittopedia

28th February

Haymaking at Broom's Farm, Ditton Hill
Haymaking at Broom's Farm, Ditton Hill

27th February

The Rectory, Long Ditton, in May 1925, as seen from the field at the top of Rectory Lane and Sugden Road
The Rectory, Long Ditton, in May 1925, as seen from the field at the top of Rectory Lane and Sugden Road

26th February

Long Ditton Rectory dated back to the 16th century, but was sold in 1936 and subsequently demolished.  Rectory Close was built on the location.
Long Ditton Rectory dated back to the 16th century, but was sold in 1936 and subsequently demolished. Rectory Close was built on the location.

25th February

Long Ditton farmhands Stan and Albert Rainbow, who lived at 6 Rectory Lane.  They worked at Broom's Farm, Summerfield Lane, and Scott's Farm, Sugden Road
Long Ditton farmhands Stan and Albert Rainbow, who lived at 6 Rectory Lane. They worked at Broom's Farm, Summerfield Lane, and Scott's Farm, Sugden Road

24th February

Winter's trot in Woodstock Lane, linking Long Ditton and Claygate, in about 1930
Winter's trot in Woodstock Lane, linking Long Ditton and Claygate, in about 1930

23rd February

1895 Ordnance Survey map of the Ditton Hill area showing osme of the large houses which have since disappeared
1895 Ordnance Survey map of the Ditton Hill area showing osme of the large houses which have since disappeared

22nd February

Prime Minister Harold Wilson used to visit Woodstock, Woodstock Lane, in the 1960s when it was a residential college run by the National Union of General and Municipal Workers
Prime Minister Harold Wilson used to visit Woodstock, Woodstock Lane, in the 1960s when it was a residential college run by the National Union of General and Municipal Workers

21st February

Rootes Service at 122 Portsmouth Road c.1965
Rootes Service at 122 Portsmouth Road c.1965

20th February

Plaque commemorating the Willans and Robinson partnership and featuring a relief of the Willans Triple Expansion Engine
Plaque commemorating the Willans and Robinson partnership and featuring a relief of the Willans Triple Expansion Engine

19th February

Weston Green in about 1895
Weston Green in about 1895

18th February

The Vaudeville Club in its heyday.  The Albany is on the right.
The Vaudeville Club in its heyday. The Albany is on the right.

17th February

The Swan Hotel in Summer Road c.1900
The Swan Hotel in Summer Road c.1900

16th February

A Thames Ditton regatta of about 1905
A Thames Ditton regatta of about 1905

15th February

The Quadriga being taken from Burton's factory to Constitution Hill, London, in 1912
The Quadriga being taken from Burton's factory to Constitution Hill, London, in 1912

14th February

The old post office, No 1 High Street, c.1916
The old post office, No 1 High Street, c.1916

13th February

Richard Porter feeding acorns to deer in his deer farm, on the site of what is now Home Farm Close
Richard Porter feeding acorns to deer in his deer farm, on the site of what is now Home Farm Close

12th February

The High Street in 1905
The High Street in 1905

11th February

George Bernard Shaw, photographed by himself, in his AC light car, which he bought from AC Cars, the car manufactureres which came to Thames Ditton in 1911
George Bernard Shaw, photographed by himself, in his AC light car, which he bought from AC Cars, the car manufactureres which came to Thames Ditton in 1911

10th February

Thames Ditton fire engine, fire brigade and fire station c.1902
Thames Ditton fire engine, fire brigade and fire station c.1902

9th February

Ember Court c.1905
Ember Court c.1905

8th February

The old Cottage Hospital, next to the Lamb and Star inn, about 1885
The old Cottage Hospital, next to the Lamb and Star inn, about 1885

7th February

Burton's foundry, with a statue of the Duke of Cambridge by Adrian Jones c.1912
Burton's foundry, with a statue of the Duke of Cambridge by Adrian Jones c.1912

6th February

The Quadriga in Burton's Bronze Factory
The Quadriga in Burton's Bronze Factory

5th February

Sundial and plaque to Henry Bridges on the frontage of the Almshouses
Sundial and plaque to Henry Bridges on the frontage of the Almshouses

4th February

Thomas Hood (c.1832-1834)
Thomas Hood (c.1832-1834)

The son of Thomas Hood, a bookseller, Thomas Hood was born in London. "Next to being a citizen of the world," writes Thomas Hood in his Literary Reminiscences, "it must be the best thing to be born a citizen of the world's greatest city." On the death of her husband in 1811, Mrs Hood moved to Islington, where Thomas Hood had a schoolmaster who, appreciating his talents, "made him feel it impossible not to take an interest in learning while he seemed so interested in teaching." Under the care of this "decayed dominie", he earned a few guineas—his first literary fee—by revising for the press a new edition of Paul and Virginia.

3rd February

Thomas Hood by William Holl Jr, after Thomas Lewis (c.1840-1845)
Thomas Hood by William Holl Jr, after Thomas Lewis (c.1840-1845)

The Swan Inn is said to have been visited often by Thomas Hood (1799-1845). The well-known Song of the Shirt may have been written there:

With fingers weary and worn,
With eyelids heavy and red,
A woman sat, in unwomanly rags,
Plying her needle and thread--
Stitch! stitch! stitch!
In poverty, hunger, and dirt,
And still with a voice of dolorous pitch
She sang the "Song of the Shirt."

2nd February

Theodore Edward Hook by Daniel Maclise 1834
Theodore Edward Hook by Daniel Maclise 1834

During the tardy scrutiny of the audit board he lived obscurely and maintained himself by writing for magazines and newspapers. In 1820 he launched the newspaper John Bull, the champion of high Toryism and the virulent detractor of Queen Caroline. Witty, incisive criticism and pitiless invective secured it a large circulation, and from this source alone Hook derived, for the first year at least, an income of £2000. He was, however, arrested for the second time on account of his debt to the state, which he made no effort to defray.

In a sponging-house, where he was confined for two years, he wrote the nine volumes of stories afterwards collected under the title of Sayings and Doings (1826-1829). In the early 1820s he helped the singer Michael Kelly compile his Reminiscences, it includes details of working with Mozart. In the remaining twenty-three years of his life he poured forth no fewer than thirty-eight volumes, besides numberless articles, squibs and sketches. His novels are not works of enduring interest, but they are saved from mediocrity by frequent passages of racy narrative and vivid portraiture. The best are Maxwell (1830), Love and Pride (1833), the autobiographic Gilbert Gurney (1836), Jack Brag (1837), Gurney Married (1838) and Peregrine Bunce (1842).

Incessant work had already begun to tell on his health, when Hook returned to his old social habits, and a prolonged attempt to combine industry and dissipation resulted in the confession that he was done up in purse, in mind and in body too at last. He died on the 24th of August 1841.

His writings in great part are of a purely ephemeral character; and the greatest triumphs of the improvisatore may be said to have been writ in wine. Putting aside, however, his claim to literary greatness, Hook will be remembered as one of the most brilliant, genial and original figures of Georgian times.

1st February

Theodore Edward Hook by Eden Upton Eddis, engraved 1839
Theodore Edward Hook by Eden Upton Eddis, engraved 1839

Theodore Edward Hook (September 22, 1788 - August 24, 1841), English author, was born in London.

He spent a year at Harrow, and subsequently matriculated at Oxford, but he never actually resided at the university. His father, James Hook (1746-1827), the composer of numerous popular songs, took great delight in exhibiting the boy's extraordinary musical and metrical gifts, and the precocious Theodore became the little pet lion of the green room.

At the age of sixteen, in conjunction with his father, he scored a dramatic success with The Soldier's Return, a comic opera, and this he rapidly followed up with a series of over a dozen sparkling ventures, the instant popularity of which was hardly dependent on the inimitable acting of John Liston and Charles Mathews.

But Hook gave himself up for some ten of the best years of his life to the pleasures of the town, winning a foremost place in the world of fashion by his matchless powers of improvisation and mimicry, and startling the public by the audacity of his practical jokes. His unique gift of improvising the words and the music of songs eventually charmed the prince Regent into a declaration that something must be done for Hook. The prince was as good as his word, and Hook, in spite of a total ignorance of accounts, was appointed accountant-general and treasurer of the Mauritius with a salary of £2,000 a year. For five delightful years he was the life and soul of the island, but in 1817, a serious deficiency having been discovered in the treasury accounts, he was arrested and brought to England on a criminal charge. A sum of about £12,000 had been abstracted by a deputy official, and for this amount Hook was held responsible.


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