Monday, 4 March 2019

The Haunted Tunbridge Wells – Part 2 on the Pantiles

The Pantiles is a delightful pedestrianized colonnaded walkway named after the small tiles laid to prevent slipping on the muddy ground in 1689 – now replaced by flagstones. Peaceful, beautiful and inspiring, this assembly point for visiting 1700s gentry is where you’ll still find the original Chalybeate Spring, and in the summer you can actually sample the waters, served by a costumed dipper. This area is packed with lovely antique shops, boutiques and art galleries, and there’s a Farmers Market on the first and third Saturday per month.  It is a lovely place to visit in the summer.
In 1687, a fire broke out in the house … at the bottom of the walk, by which the life of one poor child was lost, and all the shops, and other buildings, so lately erected on the green bank, were entirely consumed but was rebuilt quickly.
Check out the Story of Tunbridge wells and the famous Composer George Frideric Handel .
I found this handy little history book you can read online or download for free:

In February 2012, the 6th Marquess of Abergavenny bought the Lower Pantiles which had previously been owned by the Nevill family until 1939.  A management company has been established to oversee a sympathetic development of the area to maximise the opportunities and benefits for the local community while enhancing the attractive historic inheritance and part of the area is currently going through regeneration process, so who know what spirits are stirring with all the activity in the area at present.
As for the Haunting Happenings in the area, there have been many reports over the years of several apparitions or paranormal activity witnessed in the Pantiles area……
THE CORN EXCHANGE – Sarah Wakelin toured the fairs with her mother’s acrobatic dance company, and later married an acrobat called Baker. When he died she put her three children on donkeys and toured the fairs with a puppet show. She would come to the fair in Tunbridge Wells in the early 1780s. Then in 1786 she stopped touring and set up a theatre on Mount Sion, as well as several others in Kent. She ruled the Kentish roost so far as drama being concerned, and managed ten theatres without being able to read or write, keeping her money in bowls on her desk instead of in a bank.
In 1789 she rebuilt the Temple on the Lower Walks. It was a small theatre but popular. Sarah ran the box office herself. Her son-in-law William Dowton, a distinguished actor, trod the boards here, as did Grimaldi, the great original of stage clowns. Charles Kemble also played here, as did Edmund Kean when he was a seventeen year-old beginner in 1806. Charles Dibdin was part of Sarah’s company mucking in by painting scenery and concocting songs and farces to round off the evening. Before the alteration of the County Boundary, the Theatre had the stage in Sussex and the Auditorium in Kent.
Sarah Baker died in 1816, and Dowton her son-in-law took over. Charles Kean appeared in 1833, following in the footsteps of his father, who had died a few months earlier. Two years later Paganini drew gasps of astonishment with his virtuosity. Despite these big draws, however, Kentish Theatre was in decline and the Temple was forced to close in 1843 and was eventually reconstructed and opened as the Corn Exchange. The original frontage of the Theatre still forms the frontage of the Corn Exchange but its interior was lost in the reconstruction. The building was also extensively reconstructed in 1989.
Today it is home to Rosemary Shragers Cookery School – a TV Chef and this is where the programme Chopping Block is filmed. She is one of few, that currently use the building, it has a lot of disused space/offices in there atm and spooky quiet even during the day and has an unusual piece of Dragon art taking pride of place at the end wall in the central area (see pic below) so I hope this soon becomes the bustling place it used to be.
So could the apparition of a Victorian lady, witnessed wandering the Corn Exchange, be that of Sarah Baker or maybe another theatre goer, who frequented the Temple when it was a bustling theatre.
THE COACH & HORSES PASSAGE – c&h passageThis passage is situated near to the Corn Exchange in the lower walk and leads you from the Pantiles through to the Sussex Mews area with the old stabled area, that is now offices/business and other areas have been transformed into homes. It is also where the The Sussex Arms pub stands with its 17th Century foundations, the area was first built to serve the needs of the Coachmen and servants who would park in Sussex Mews while their Gentleman owners enjoyed the nearby Walks. Then becoming the Sussex Tap, connected to the Sussex hotel (later to become The Royal Victoria & Sussex Hotel) built next to the Theatre (corn exchange)  Witnesses have reported hearing a creaking noise, as they walk through the Coach & Horses passage. The story goes a local man who lived in the 19th Century, is said to have been in severe debt from gambling, another report said he was robbed of his money but all reports say he hung himself, out of despair in the passage and the eerie noises are said to be that of the Rope, swinging  under the strain of his body.
The was also a fatal accident in 1860. An elderly man, named Bellchambers, who had been in the employ of Messenger. Pickford carriers, as a porter, for years. It is said that around 5 o'clock, Bellchambers was leading a horse attached to one of the Pickford’s vans down Frant Road and on reaching a sharp descent, at the entrance to the Coach and Horses inn, (situated at 31 Pantiles) the horse being startled, ran off. The old man was dragged some distance, then fell to the ground, and was run over. The wheels passed across his chest, and the unfortunate man received injuries resulting in almost immediate death. he was taken to the Coach and horses Inn, where Mr. Henning, the surgeon attended  but the old man’s injuries were fatal and he  left a widow and large family, so could the noises heard be the residual energies of this accident.
FRIENDS PASSAGE – which cuts through the pantiles but is kept closed to the public now. Witnesses have reported a female ghost haunting the passage, it is said that it is the spirit of the wife of James friend, once an owner of the Hand & Sceptre Hotel that once stood at 45 Pantiles in the 19th Century, although I have been unable to confirm this fact.

There are several pubs on the Pantiles THE RAGGED TROUSERS THE TUNBRIDGE WELLS HOTEL  & THE GREY LADY. whose buildings that have paranormal reports over the years but you will have to check out out Haunted Hostelries and Hotels etc on the website for the details on those.
MAJOR YORKS ROAD – situated behind the Pantiles on the main London Road at the mini roundabout, outside MW Solicitors stands an old milestone. Witnesses have reported seeing an apparition of young girl around 19 years old, dressed in Georgian clothing, standing by it, seemingly waiting for someone.
Who knows what other spirits wander unseen among the visitors and local residents, who go about their days around the Pantiles.
Look out for the next blog, as the GofEPS blogs about the Bilsington Priory investigation hosted by the Ghost Hunt Events team.


Reference Sources

Haunted History of Tunbridge wells -Part 1 on The Common

The earliest known inhabitants of what are now the Commons were the Mesolithic hunter-gatherers of c.4500 BC who led a nomadic lifestyle and employed the various rock outcrops in the Tunbridge Wells area as regular encampment sites. The rocks were prominent landmarks in the vast Wealden forest, and their sandstone cliffs had convenient overhangs which could be used to provide shelter and protection. These people probably encouraged the development of heathland in the vicinity of the rocks by maintaining open areas through burning in order to attract grazing deer.
Until the development of Tunbridge Wells as a spa resort, it remained no more than a scattering of dwellings in an outlying corner of Speldhurst parish, the land belonging to the Lord of Rusthall Manor.
With settlements came more extensive clearance of tree cover and the spread of heathland vegetation over a much wider area and before the development of the Pantiles in the late seventeenth century, the Common was continuous with the heathland of Waterdown Forest, the landscape of the future town being described in 1656 as ‘a valley compassed about with stony hills, so barren, that there growth nothing but heath upon the same’.
In 1606 Dudley Lord North, in poor health due to over-indulgence at Court, was staying at Eridge Castle with Lord Abergavenny, whose estate was contiguous with the Manor of Rusthall. While riding along what we now know as Eridge Road, he spotted some orange coloured water on the edge of the Common which he recognised as coming from a chalybeate (iron bearing) spring similar to those at Spa in Belgium which were already famous for their supposed health giving properties. Subsequently, Lord North began to drink the spring water regularly and claimed that it restored him to perfect health. News of the discovery spread rapidly, and in 1608 Lord Abergavenny obtained permission from the Lord of the Manor to sink the first well on the site for the convenience of visitors. Since then Visitors have been coming to Royal Tunbridge Wells to enjoy the healthy water of the Chalybeate Spring in 1606.
Over the subsequent years, the town grew in popularity and gained its reputation as the place to see and be seen. It became a favourite destination for fashionable society.
By the early nineteenth century Tunbridge Wells experienced growth as a place for the well-to-do to visit and make their homes. It became a fashionable resort town again following visits by the Duchess of KentQueen Victoria and Prince Albert.   Other notable people include Daniel Defoe (famous for Robinson Crusoe)  Samuel Pepys (Member of Parliament) Sir David Salomons, 1st Baronet  (1st Jewish Lord Mayor of London, Fighting for Jewish rights) & Sarah Grand (writer & active in the local women’s suffrage societies)
Accommodation was needed, as they would have to camp on the Common and wanted places of entertainment such as coffee houses, gaming-rooms and an assembly room for dances and balls and in 1664, Lord Muskerry having acquired the Manor of Rusthall, improved access to the spring by building a new enclosure with an ornamental arch. In 1682 his widow sold the Manor to Thomas Neale, who negotiated an agreement with the Freeholders allowing him to build shops, lodgings and other facilities for visitors on a strip of the Common adjacent to the spring.  After a fire in 1687, he constructed the colonnade which we now know as the Pantiles. The Freeholders received an annual payment in compensation for loss of grazing rights. In 1732, by which time the Manor had changed hands twice, a lawsuit broke out between Maurice Conyers, the new Lord, and the Freeholders over the question of continued compensation after Neale’s original agreement had expired. The Freeholders were successful in asserting their rights over the Pantiles site, and the resulting settlement was embodied in the Rusthall Manor Act of 1739.
In 1735 Beau Nash came on the scene and appointed himself as ‘Master of Ceremonies’ and there is a pub opposite the common, tucked down an alley, dating back to the 1800’s Originally called Royal Mount Ephraim, the pub was renamed in the early 20th, to Beau Nash (this has been known for its reports of Paranormal Activity over the years) As well as organizing entertainments on the Common, Pantiles and the Town area, Nash established strict rules for correct behaviour and continued til his death in 1761.
There are various houses scattered around the Common like:
BELLEVILLE— Built probably about 1840 on the site of an earlier cottage shown on Bowra’s map of 1738. William Thackeray describes a house on the Common near Rock Villa in which he stayed as a child in 1823; this has been identified with Belleville but may have been Gibraltar, the only one of the three rock built cottages at the apex of the Common known to have been used as a lodging house at that date.
FONTHILL — The present pavilion (which since 1993 has functioned as a live music venue known as The Forum) was built in 1939 by the Borough Council to provide ‘restrooms and general conveniences’ for locals and visitors enjoying the Common. It replaced a forge, coach builders’ workshop, and attached cottage (Fonthill House) dating from 1833. An earlier forge on the site is shown on Bowra’s map of 1738. This is said to be the site of the cottage occupied by Mrs Humphreys, who provided Lord North with a cup to drink from the chalybeate spring when he discovered it in 1606. The buildings on the edge of the Common east and west of Fonthill were from early times an untidy clutter of small cottages and rough working buildings: the present unattractive structures are in lineal descent. The present garage is on the site of the Kentish Stables, then belonging to the Royal Kentish Hotel opposite.
GIBRALTAR COTTAGE — Built as a lodging house between 1814 and 1824 on the site of an earlier and smaller cottage of the same name. It was occupied by members of the Tunbridge ware making family of Burrows from the 1820s to c.1845. Having fallen into decay, it was restored and altered in 1970-71. The name is an allusion to the rocks on which the cottage stands; in the past Gibraltar has been used as a general term for the rocky eastern apex of the Common. Until the mid-nineteenth century, a pond known as Parson’s Pond existed below the cottage alongside London Road.
 MOUNT EDGCUMBE 


Mount Edgecombe

A hillock named after Emma, Dowager Countess of Mount Edgcumbe, who spent the summers of 1795-7 in the town. The group of three buildings here appear as early as Bowra’s map of 1738. They were originally two lodging houses Mount Edgcumbe,  now a Hotel, and Ephraim Lodge and a private house Mount Edgcumbe Cottage. The Arctic explorer Sir William Parry stayed at what is now the hotel in 1839.
SAINT HELENA — Built between 1828 and 1838 on the floor of a small stone quarry and used in early times as a lodging house. It replaced an earlier and much smaller cottage shown on Bowra’s map of 1738 and illustrated in a number of eighteenth and nineteenth century illustrations along with a second small structure to the north, on the other side of the rock. At the foot of the rocks a manhole cover marks the entrance to caves excavated for sand and open to the road until its level was raised in a controversial road levelling scheme carried out by the local Turnpike Trust in 1833. Residents complained that the loss of the caves spoilt the picturesque and much illustrated first view of the town which visitors saw as they traveled in from London. The caves were reopened at the outbreak of World War II to serve as air raid shelters.
Then we have the history of the roads in the area of the Common………
CASTLE ROAD — Possibly named after the Castle Tavern, opened between 1665 and 1670, which stood on Mount Ephraim between the junctions with Church Road and Castle Road. The building, no longer extant, was converted to a lodging house in the mid-eighteenth century. An alternative theory is that the tavern was named after Castle Rock (now Wellington Rocks).
MOUNT EDGCUMBE ROAD— Traditionally known as Donkey Drive, from which animals were hired for riding. This pastime was introduced in 1801, and enjoyed by Princess Victoria in the early 1830s, continuing into late Victorian times. The avenue of flowering cherries (King’s Avenue) was planted in March 1937 for the coronation of George VI.
The LOWER CRICKET GROUND was First used as a cricket pitch in the 1850s by the pupils of Romanoff House School. From 1860 it was the site of an annual bonfire on 5 November, and it was regularly used as a venue for civic celebrations of coronations and jubilees. It was leveled and railed in 1885-6. There was a Territorial Army encampment here in 1914. The original railings, along with those of the Higher Cricket Ground, were taken for the war effort in 1942
Then the rock, which have been discussed in several books over the years……


Mount Edgcombe Rocks

Well-known in Victorian and Edwardian times and a popular vantage point for views across the town. They were known to children of the mid-twentieth century as the Devil’s Dyke. A pond at the foot of the rocks was filled in in 1879. By the 1960s, the open grassy space in front of the rocks had become overgrown by scrub which obscured them completely, but the area was cleared in 1994-5.


Wellington Rocks

Named after the Wellington Hotel. In earlier times they were variously described as the High Rocks on Mount Ephraim, or as Castle Rock (either named after the nearby Castle Tavern, or because of the shape of rocks’ highest point). Early nineteenth century guides report that “small transparent pebbles are found on the paths of the Common, especially after rain. These crystals are called Tunbridge Wells Diamonds, and, cut and polished, form brilliant additions to the jewel-case”. Small rounded pebbles can still be seen here today embedded in the sandstone, and it is presumably the most attractive of these, eroded out of the rock, which were once collected.
Within the Common there is the FIR TREE POND — A noted beauty spot in Victorian and Edwardian times, named from a pair of Scots pines (affectionately named Darby and Joan) with a seat around them which stood on top of the slope above. Having succumbed to old age, they were cut down in 1914 and replacements, still to be seen today, were planted. The pond is situated in a an extensive hollow described in 1957 as an ‘old quarry’. The pond was restored in 1992.
……..And then we have the old RACECOURSE which appears on Bowra’s map of 1738 and remained in use until 1851. Race meetings were held for two days each year, in August or September. The winning post, stand, and enclosure stood on the north side of the present HIGHER CRICKET GROUND. The Duchess of Kent and Princess Victoria attended in 1834. In 1845 residents petitioned for the suppression of the races, on the grounds that they were a cause of drunkenness and riotous behaviour. After races ceased to be held, the course (apart from the section crossing the Cricket Ground) was preserved as a footpath and bridle-way and can still be followed today. and other heathland restoration is in progress.
In 1942, several pieces of land on both Commons had been requisitioned by the military for purposes which included the siting of anti-aircraft guns and searchlight emplacements. The Conservators complained vigorously about the hazards caused by the widespread presence of entrenchments and other concealed excavations, especially when a local resident was injured by falling into an unprotected gun pit.

On Sunday afternoon August 6,1944. George Gearing of Stanley Road, Tunbridge Wells, who was sitting in one of the thatched seats in the Common watching fighter planes overhead chasing two V1’s. Both of the V1’s had been shot down , one crashing at Pembury Road and one that came down near George Gearing. George was badly injured from the blast and later died in Hospital. George Gearing was age 75 when he died. His wife was Blanche Alice Gearing of 2 St Stephen’s Cottages, Stanley Road who he had married in the 1st Qtr of 1893 in Tunbridge Wells.  The Kent & Sussex Courier of Friday August 3,1945 reported “ In Memorium: Gearing…In loving memory of my dear husband, George Gearing, who lost his life through enemy action in Tunbridge Wells on August 6,1944. Also of my only son, Frederick Gearing, killed in France August 4,1916…Sadly missed”. At the time of the 1911 census George was living with his wife and two children at 2 St Stephen’s Cottage. Among the children was his son Frederick, who had been born in Tunbridge Wells in 1895. George at that time was a stoker at the gas works and his son Frederick was a milk carrier. The brother of George’s wife was also living there as was his daughter 13 year old Alice. Frederick Gearing was killed in France August 6,1916 while serving with the Queen’s Own RWK Regiment 6th Btn (service No. G/9222). This shelter was located near the north west corner of the Commons .This site was formerly marked by a plaque but it appears to be gone now.
Hidden in the undergrowth north of the car park where the race course meets Fir Tree Road is the site of a small sandstone quarry, what accidents may have occurred there?
So steeped in such history, activity and deaths within just this area of Tunbridge wells over the centuries, It is no wonder, there are some ghostly sightings reported over the time………..
Tunbridge wells Common is said to be haunted by a couple of reported ghosts and one is of visitors to the common reporting about hearing a phantom female voice, calling out the name ‘Daniel’. The woman is never seen, but is thought to be a lady who was engaged to a soldier and feeling the loss of her loved one, killed in battle around 1917, she ran crying to the rocks, where they used to spend time or may have met and it is said she either fell to her death or jumped in grief from the nearby Wellington Rocks and she is heard calling his name in sorrow.

 In 1969, It was reported by Kim Waller – a reporter for the local newspaper: Kim had been standing with a friend one evening, sheltering from the rain under some trees on the common, when they noticed what appeared to be 2 people walking closely together, were approaching them at about 50 yards away. As the form got closer, they realized the form was, in fact, one individual, tremendously broad around the middle and clothed in a long grey gown with what looked like frills at the bottom. The startled couple could not make out any limbs and just a dark shadow, where the head should have been. It grew closer and seemed to have stumbled, just a few yards away and squatted into a crouching position, where it remained for a few seconds, swaying and bobbing about and making a squelching sound, like someone wearing rubber boots, filled with water. As the men prepared to move towards the figure, it moved slowly away, the couple followed but soon it had disappeared with no trace or evidence it had been.

The Curator of the local museum was intrigued by the story and suggested that it could be the ghost of a local character and drunkard of the town, enormous Mary Jennings, she was about 30 years when she died in 1736. (I have not found a Birth/Death record that supports this fact) She was described by a contemporary as ‘not unlike a barrel’ ……….

……….and other stories of sightings of her, reported that she shouts at people in her drunken stupor, as they walk past.

But if you're planning an investigation….. Be warned of our Local Kent  Bigfoot, has been seen lurking in the woods!
pexels-photo-156731.jpeg  Til the next Blog……Haunted History of Tunbridge wells -Part 2  on the Pantiles…..Happy Hauntings!

Saturday, 2 March 2019

WELCOME NOTE

Hi and welcome to the Garden of England Paranormal Spirits Blogger

Here we will be sharing stories about the haunted places around the Kent areas and the paranormal stories and ghostly sightings within them and also writing reports on events we attend.

You can check out the Garden of England Paranormal Spirits  website, currently under construction, which gives you information on where you can go, visit, stay or investigate. Take a look through each Haunted District.  We share the history of each district and give you an insight into the paranormal hot spots to check out, along with a bibliography and reference page for further researching.

Check out the Hostelries with a haunted story or two in the county or even stay in a haunted hotel/room and there is an Events in Kent page, which gives you a list of Paranormal investigations and tours, being hosted with the Kent area each month.
we have pages on Churches, Graveyards & other Religious buildings, Cinemas, Theatres & Entertainment Centres , Forts & defences, Stately Homes, Manor Houses, Castles & Towers, Train Stations and coming soon RAF Bases and other Military areas, Hospitals & Medical, Workhouses & Childrens Homes

Follow us on Social media, TWITTER  FACEBOOK  & INSTAGRAM where updates will be given for our new blogs, sharing of haunted news in Kent and to alert our followers to updates made on the website. Our PINTEREST page and YOUTUBE channel to give you links to websites and videos relating to the ghosts and paranormal activity found within the Garden of England County of Kent.

We hope you enjoy.