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Meads

Meads is an area of the town of Eastbourne in the English county of East Sussex. It is situated at the westerly end of the town below the South Downs.

Meads
View of Meads Street looking north to south from the junction with Matlock Road. The first white building on the left is the pub known as The Ship. This previously stood on the site of the red brick house below the line of parked cars on the left – a plaque to this effect can be seen on the side wall.
Meads
Location within East Sussex
Area12.5 km2 (4.8 sq mi) [1]
Population10,725 (2011.Ward)[2]
• Density2,253/sq mi (870/km2)
OS grid referenceTV590972
• London54 miles (87 km) NNW
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townEASTBOURNE
Postcode districtBN20
Dialling code01323
PoliceSussex
FireEast Sussex
AmbulanceSouth East Coast
UK Parliament
Websitehttp://www.meadsvillage.com/
List of places
UK
England
East Sussex
50°45′N 0°15′E / 50.75°N 0.25°E / 50.75; 0.25

Boundaries edit

The local government ward of Meads is extensive, stretching from Birling Gap in the west to almost the pier in the east; it encompasses the famous cliffs of Beachy Head and the former fishing hamlet of Holywell.[3] In recent years, the unofficial terms 'Upper Meads' and 'Lower Meads' have been coined to differentiate between that section of the ward on higher ground to the west, and the lower part nearer to the town centre. Although there are no official boundaries, it can be said that 'Upper Meads' (the part originally known to locals as Meads) lies approximately within the bounds of the Meads Conservation Area.[4]

Councillors edit

The ward is currently represented on Eastbourne Borough Council by three councillors – all of whom are Conservative. One of the councillors also represents the Meads division on East Sussex County Council.[5]

History edit

A 1783 map of Eastbourne shows but a couple of farms in what was then the hamlet of Meads.[6] However, it is known that there were three in the 19th century: Place Farm, whose farmhouse survives as the listed building now known as Meads Place in Gaudick Road, Colstocks Farm, which stood on the site of St Andrew’s School and Sprays Farm, which was at the corner of Meads Street and Matlock Road.[7] In 1859, Henry Currey, the agent of the 7th Duke of Devonshire, drew up plans for large residences with gardens of commensurate proportions. In 1871, the population of the town having trebled to 11,000, the Eastbourne Chronicle describes Meads as ‘the unrivalled Belgravia of a salubrious and flourishing health resort'. The spiritual needs of the inhabitants were catered for with the consecration of the parish church dedicated to St John the Evangelist in 1869.[7]

 
The Pilot – one of the two pubs in Meads Street. The stained glass windows depict aircraft and ships, thus evoking both meanings of the term ‘pilot’. Hart's Cottages at the side were mainly occupied by workmen and their families, and were demolished in the 1960s to make way for a car park. During World War Two, business was brisk at both pubs with Canadian soldiers thronging the bars and singing around the piano in the Pilot.
 
The Ship – the other pub in Meads Street. As is the case with many pubs, the three original bars have been knocked through to create a single area for food and drink. The site of the first Ship Inn, built in about 1600, lies some hundred metres up the street, and is marked by a plaque. Another plaque displayed in the bar of the Ship was presented to their local by gunners of the 23rd Field Regiment, Royal Canadian Artillery.

By 1890, imposing houses in neat tree-lined roads stood on what had been grazing land and cornfields – Meads had become the smart end of town. Its residents were the well to do, and included professionals, self-made men, retired officers and former members of the Colonial Civil Service.[6]

The absence today of street directories, makes it hard to determine the social standing of householders but even the 1940 street directory of Eastbourne (prepared in 1939) lists Lady Foley, Sir John Alexander Hammerton and Admiral Sir Robert John Prendergast KCB all living within 100 metres of each other at the top of Meads hill.[8]

Many domestic servants lived in; others made their way to work from other parts of the town, or occupied cottages clustered around the three pubs – the Pilot, the Ship and the Blacksmith’s Arms, the latter demolished before the turn of the century.

In 1894, a small square of cottages was built for working class occupation. Originally known as Wallis’s Cottages, the square was subsequently named The Village. Coachmen and grooms, followed in due course by chauffeurs, lived above the stables of De Walden Mews, the property of Lady Howard de Walden. Her mansion, De Walden Court (1884), in Meads Road is now a listed building.[9] The inhabitants of Meads were traditionally known as ‘Meadsites’, the term remaining in current use until at least the 1950s.[10]

All Saints Hospital was built between 1867 and 1869 on land given by the 7th Duke of Devonshire; its chapel was added in 1874. All Saints was built as an Anglo-Catholic nunnery and convalescent home and designed by Henry Woodyer. The listed chapel in the style of High Victorian Gothic Revival is noted for polychrome effects, geometric tiling and an unusual gallery, supported on marble pillars.[7]

The street names of Meads edit

 
View of Meads Street looking south to north from the junction with Darley Road. The pub known as The Ship can be seen on the right of the picture. The boulder-flint boundary wall of the flats to the right is all that remains of a group of cottages which stood on the site until c.1970.

Many of the roads in Meads owe their names to towns and villages in Derbyshire around Chatsworth House, the seat of the 7th Duke of Devonshire, who developed the town in the 19th century. One obvious example is Chatsworth Gardens, the terrace of houses erected in 1891 on King Edward's Parade. Baslow Road dates from 1907 and is named after a village just north of Chatsworth House. Chesterfield Road (1888) owes its name to the important coal and iron town in Derbyshire, and Derwent Road (1895) is a reminder of the River Derwent which flows through the grounds of the Duke's residence. Others in the same category include: Bolsover (1891), Buxton, (1891), Darley (1890), Edensor (1906), Matlock (1897), Rowsley (1903) and Staveley (1890) Roads. Meads Road and Meads Street derive from the name of the original hamlet whose earlier spellings include 'Mades' (1196) and 'Medese' (1316). The hamlet developed around a manor house later known as Colstocks.[11]

Meads during World War Two edit

Little of significance occurred in Meads during the period of the Phoney War, but with the fall of France in June 1940, many people departed for safety further north. Large houses were shut up as their owners left the anticipated invasion zone and schools were closed.[12] Eastbourne College was evacuated to Radley College in Oxfordshire on 20 June.[13]

Air raids edit

 
The Bf 110 was a twin-engine heavy fighter ('Zerstörer' - German for 'Destroyer'). The one which crashed in Meads on 16 August 1940 (A2 + GL) was the first enemy aircraft to be brought down in the County Borough of Eastbourne.

At about 5.30 pm on Friday 16 August 1940, the first German aircraft to be brought down within what was then the County Borough of Eastbourne crashed in Meads. A Messerschmitt Bf 110 of the Luftwaffe unit known as ZG 2 had left the former French aerodrome at Guyancourt as part of an escort for bombers raiding RAF airfields at Feltham, Heston and Heathrow. Over the South Downs, the Messerschmitt was engaged by a British fighter – almost certainly the Hurricane flown by Pilot Officer H N E Salmon of No. 1 Squadron. The German aircraft broke up in the air, and the pilot, Hauptmann Ernst Hollekamp, was killed when he fell on the roof of Hill Brow School in Gaudick Road, his parachute unopened. Part of the nose fell onto the Royal Eastbourne golf course, close to the end of Gaudick Road. The rear gunner, Feldwebel Richard Schurk, came down in the sea off Holywell and was drowned. The bulk of the aircraft crashed in the grounds of Aldro School in Darley Road — the wreckage was incorrectly identified in the local press as being that of a Heinkel He 111. At the same time, a lorry was hit in Hampden Park by a bomb which had probably been jettisoned by one of the German bombers returning from the raid on RAF airfields. Three Council workmen were killed – two instantly, the other dying the following day from burns.[14]

On 4 May 1942, the first raid on Eastbourne by fighter-bombers took place. One of the casualties was the Meads parish church of St John, which was set ablaze and severely damaged.[15] Until the church was rebuilt in 1957, services were held at the parish hall in Meads Street. The tower, which originally had a steeple, survived the raid but was not attached to the nave when the latter was rebuilt.[7]

At lunchtime on Sunday 7 March 1943, a raid by Messerschmitt Bf 109 and Focke-Wulf Fw 190 aircraft caught Eastbourne unawares. In what is now known as ‘Upper Meads’, a bomb destroyed 22 - 28 Meads Street and others fell in the gardens of 3 Staveley Road and 41 St John’s Road. There were 14 civilian fatalities; 50 persons were injured.[15] Houses used as billets by the Canadian army were damaged in Milnthorpe Road. The following evening, the German Home Service (not the broadcasts in English by Lord Haw Haw) carried interviews with two pilots who had taken part in the raid. The aircrew vividly described the effects of a bomb on a large block of buildings (“it seemed to disintegrate into a cloud of blue-black smoke”) as they were making for the town.[12]

Canucks in Meads edit

 
St Rita’s in Paradise Drive was the headquarters of the Black Watch of Canada for some two months from mid December 1941. An alternative battle HQ was prepared in Paradise Wood, and the Officers’ Mess was at Cloona in Carlisle Road.

The first major influx of Canadian troops to the Eastbourne area was in July 1941 with the arrival of three regiments of the 5th Canadian Infantry Brigade: The Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment) of Canada, Le Regiment de Maisonneuve, and the Calgary Highlanders. During the course of the war, thousands of Canadians from scores of units would pass through the town.

As far as Meads was concerned, The Black Watch arrived from Willingdon on 18 December 1941. It was, however, a brief stay for they returned to Willingdon in February 1942. Canadian light anti-aircraft units were based in Meads at various times, setting up fixed and mobile gun positions on the Downs and seafront. August 1943 saw the arrival of The 23rd Field Regiment, RCA of the Royal Canadian Artillery with their Sexton self-propelled guns. There were three gun batteries: the 31st was centred on Milnthorpe Road, the 36th and 83rd were around Edensor Road. The HQ battery was located behind the Grand Hotel. The regiment stayed in Meads until it moved to Pippingford Park in March 1944 in preparation for Operation Overlord.

The Canadians were welcomed by the locals, who invited them into their homes and organised entertainment. By the same token, the troops left with happy memories. Approximately 150 Eastbourne girls sailed to Canada as war brides, some of them from Meads.[12]

Conservation and change edit

 
Highmead in Buxton Road – typical of the large houses in Meads built in Victorian and Edwardian times for wealthy families. It has since been converted into flats.

Meads Street still has its shops, but there have been considerable changes to the trades in recent years. The sub-post office has returned to the premises it formerly occupied in the 1950s when the shop was a traditional grocer's — today it is a self-service store. For comparison, the 1940 street directory lists 21 types of business premises in Meads Street: a baker, three banks, two boot repairers, two builders, two butchers, three garages, two grocers (one with sub-post office), a car hire firm, a chemist, a confectioner, two dairies, a fishmonger, a fruiterer, a greengrocer, a hairdresser, an ironmonger, two pubs, a stationer, a tobacconist, a wine merchant and a wool shop.[8]

 
The building of the 19-storey South Cliff Tower in 1965 caused such controversy that a local protest committee was formed.

In 1965, the 19-storey South Cliff Tower was built on the seafront at the junction of Bolsover Road and South Cliff. The storm of protest which followed led to the formation of The Eastbourne and District Preservation Committee, which in due course became Eastbourne Civic Society and has subsequently been renamed The Eastbourne Society.[7]

Despite demolitions over the years, Meads still retains many of its large Victorian and Edwardian houses, most of which have been converted into flats. A powerful lobby in the latter regard is The Meads Community Association, which was created in 1990. With some 700 members, its two principal aims are ‘to preserve the unique character of the Meads area of Eastbourne consistent with change which does not interfere with this aim’, and ‘to alert the residents of Meads to plans for development or redevelopment of property which the Committee are of the opinion should be resisted’. The association also organizes social activities to foster a community spirit and liaises with local traders.[16]

The former All Saints Hospital, a Grade II listed building, was converted into 53 flats, with a further 52 newly built apartments within three separate buildings in the grounds.[17] The listed chapel, however, was retained.[18]

Population edit

The total population of Meads is 11,769.[19]

Demographics edit

Population by age groups
Population by age Total 0-14 yrs 15-29 yrs 30-44 yrs 45-64 yrs 65-74 yrs 74-84 yrs 85+ yrs
Eastbourne 94,816 16.0% 17.3% 18.4% 24.8% 10.2% 8.9% 4.3%
Meads 10,867 6.8% 19.4% 10.2% 21.0% 14.3% 18.5% 9.9%

Meads has an average age of 54.1 and the national average is 39.8, that is a difference of 14.3 years.[20]

Population by ethnic group
Ethnicity All people White Mixed Asian or Asian British Black or Black British Other ethnic group
Eastbourne 94,412 94.1% 1.8% 2.8% 0.8% 0.5%
Meads 10,725 93.0% 1.7% 3.8% 0.8% 0.6%
Population density
Year 2001 2011
Eastbourne 20.3% 22.5%
Meads 7.8% 8.6%

[21]

Educational establishments edit

University of Brighton edit

In 1947, a teacher training college opened in Meads, the first students being troops who had recently returned to civilian life.[6] The college was centred on Darley Road at two schools which had evacuated because of the war — Queenwood Ladies' College and Aldro. Also in 1947, Chelsea College of Physical Education moved from London, establishing itself at the former Hill Brow School in Denton Road. In 1966, a new building was opened on the site by the Queen.[6] The buildings and grounds of both the above colleges now form part of the Eastbourne campus (in Meads — Darley Road Site, Hillbrow and Welkin Site) of the University of Brighton.[22]

Schools edit

Private sector edit

 
St Bede’s Preparatory School - one of the two remaining independent schools in 'Upper Meads'.

In Victorian times, Meads became a favoured area for private boarding schools — a tradition which persisted until economic factors brought about their gradual demise. Examples of the latter include Clovelly-Kepplestone girls' school which closed in Meads in 1934[23] and St. Christopher's Girls School which closed the same year.[24]

Pike's Eastbourne Directory of 1911-12[25] shows five 'Ladies' Schools located in Bolsover Road, together with Hill Brow boys' school which subsequently took over the premises of St. Christopher's girls school in Denton Road when that school closed in 1934.

A street directory for 1940 (prepared in 1939) lists ten private schools in 'Upper Meads' alone.[8] However, the war signalled the final phase for private schools, and only eight of those which evacuated from the town returned to Eastbourne.[6] One of the post-war returners was Ascham St Vincent's School, a preparatory school for boys in Meads which subsequently closed in 1977. The site was sold for property development and a merger with St. Andrew's took place. The 'Ascham Memorial Arch' in Carlisle Road commemorates former pupils who lost their lives in the First World War.[26]

Two independent schools now remain in 'Upper Meads' - St Andrew's Prep and St Bede's Preparatory School (now called Bede's Prep School). The public school, Eastbourne College is in 'Lower Meads'.

State sector edit

St. John's Meads is a Church of England Aided Primary School, with approximately 215 children on its roll. Undergoing many additions and changes over the years, the school has been located on its present site for over a century.[27]

References edit

  1. ^ "East Sussex in Figures". East Sussex County Council. Retrieved 27 September 2008.
  2. ^ "Eastbourne Ward population 2011". Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  3. ^ , Eastbourne Borough Council, archived from the original on 28 March 2009, retrieved 17 April 2009
  4. ^ Meads Conservation Area Map, Eastbourne Borough Council
  5. ^ . Eastbourne Borough Council. Archived from the original on 20 October 2014. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  6. ^ a b c d e Surtees, John (2005), Eastbourne's Story, Eastbourne: SB Publications, ISBN 1-85770-298-0
  7. ^ a b c d e Spears, Harold; Stevens, Lawrence; Crook, Richard; Hodsoll, Vera (1981), Eight Town Walks in Eastbourne, Eastbourne: Eastbourne Civic Society
  8. ^ a b c Kelly's Directory of Eastbourne, London: Kelly’s Directories Limited, 1940
  9. ^ Listed Buildings-Eastbourne, Eastbourne Borough Council, retrieved 17 April 2009
  10. ^ Eastbourne Society Newsletter (140) {{citation}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  11. ^ Milton, John (1995), Origins of Eastbourne's Street Names, Eastbourne: Eastbourne Local History Society, ISBN 0-9504560-6-3
  12. ^ a b c Ockenden, Michael (2006), Canucks by the Sea, Eastbourne: Eastbourne Local History Society, ISBN 0-9547647-1-4
  13. ^ Allom, V M (1966), Ex Oriente Salus – A Centenary History of Eastbourne College, Eastbourne: Eastbourne College
  14. ^ "Black Friday", Sussex Life, August 1980
  15. ^ a b Humphrey, George (1989), Wartime Eastbourne, Eastbourne: Beckett Features, ISBN 1-871986-00-1
  16. ^ , Meads Digital Arts, archived from the original on 9 May 2008, retrieved 30 May 2008
  17. ^ Berkeley Homes News, Berkeley Homes, retrieved 5 June 2008
  18. ^ All Saints Hospital Site, Eastbourne Borough Council[permanent dead link]
  19. ^ "East Sussex in Figures Population". 2017. Retrieved 19 October 2023.
  20. ^ "East Sussex in Figures Median age". 2017. Retrieved 19 October 2023.
  21. ^ "East Sussex in Figures". 2011. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  22. ^ (PDF), University of Brighton, archived from the original (PDF) on 14 June 2011, retrieved 5 June 2008
  23. ^ Eastbourne Local History Society Newsletter (179) {{citation}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  24. ^ Wickens, P. & Stimpson, J. (2006), The Intriguing Story of Saint Christopher's Eastbourne, Jose E. Stimpson, Eastbourne, ISBN 0-9553556-0-5
  25. ^ Pike's Eastbourne, Hailsham and District, Blue Book and Local Directory, 1911-12, Garnett, Mepham & Fisher, Limited, 112 Gloster Road, Brighton
  26. ^ History – Lost Generation – Find a Memorial, Channel 4, retrieved 1 June 2008
  27. ^ , Meads CE Primary School, archived from the original on 4 June 2008, retrieved 30 May 2008

External links edit

  • The Meads Website
  • St John's Church Meads
  • Eastbourne College
  • St Andrew's Prep
  • St John's Meads C of E Primary School
  • Aldro School

meads, other, uses, disambiguation, area, town, eastbourne, english, county, east, sussex, situated, westerly, town, below, south, downs, view, street, looking, north, south, from, junction, with, matlock, road, first, white, building, left, known, ship, this,. For other uses see Meads disambiguation Meads is an area of the town of Eastbourne in the English county of East Sussex It is situated at the westerly end of the town below the South Downs MeadsView of Meads Street looking north to south from the junction with Matlock Road The first white building on the left is the pub known as The Ship This previously stood on the site of the red brick house below the line of parked cars on the left a plaque to this effect can be seen on the side wall MeadsLocation within East SussexArea12 5 km2 4 8 sq mi 1 Population10 725 2011 Ward 2 Density2 253 sq mi 870 km2 OS grid referenceTV590972 London54 miles 87 km NNWDistrictEastbourne BoroughShire countyEast SussexRegionSouth EastCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townEASTBOURNEPostcode districtBN20Dialling code01323PoliceSussexFireEast SussexAmbulanceSouth East CoastUK ParliamentEastbourneWebsitehttp www meadsvillage com List of places UK England East Sussex 50 45 N 0 15 E 50 75 N 0 25 E 50 75 0 25 Contents 1 Boundaries 1 1 Councillors 2 History 2 1 The street names of Meads 2 2 Meads during World War Two 2 2 1 Air raids 2 2 2 Canucks in Meads 3 Conservation and change 4 Population 4 1 Demographics 5 Educational establishments 5 1 University of Brighton 5 2 Schools 5 2 1 Private sector 5 2 2 State sector 6 References 7 External linksBoundaries editThe local government ward of Meads is extensive stretching from Birling Gap in the west to almost the pier in the east it encompasses the famous cliffs of Beachy Head and the former fishing hamlet of Holywell 3 In recent years the unofficial terms Upper Meads and Lower Meads have been coined to differentiate between that section of the ward on higher ground to the west and the lower part nearer to the town centre Although there are no official boundaries it can be said that Upper Meads the part originally known to locals as Meads lies approximately within the bounds of the Meads Conservation Area 4 Councillors edit The ward is currently represented on Eastbourne Borough Council by three councillors all of whom are Conservative One of the councillors also represents the Meads division on East Sussex County Council 5 History editA 1783 map of Eastbourne shows but a couple of farms in what was then the hamlet of Meads 6 However it is known that there were three in the 19th century Place Farm whose farmhouse survives as the listed building now known as Meads Place in Gaudick Road Colstocks Farm which stood on the site of St Andrew s School and Sprays Farm which was at the corner of Meads Street and Matlock Road 7 In 1859 Henry Currey the agent of the 7th Duke of Devonshire drew up plans for large residences with gardens of commensurate proportions In 1871 the population of the town having trebled to 11 000 the Eastbourne Chronicle describes Meads as the unrivalled Belgravia of a salubrious and flourishing health resort The spiritual needs of the inhabitants were catered for with the consecration of the parish church dedicated to St John the Evangelist in 1869 7 nbsp The Pilot one of the two pubs in Meads Street The stained glass windows depict aircraft and ships thus evoking both meanings of the term pilot Hart s Cottages at the side were mainly occupied by workmen and their families and were demolished in the 1960s to make way for a car park During World War Two business was brisk at both pubs with Canadian soldiers thronging the bars and singing around the piano in the Pilot nbsp The Ship the other pub in Meads Street As is the case with many pubs the three original bars have been knocked through to create a single area for food and drink The site of the first Ship Inn built in about 1600 lies some hundred metres up the street and is marked by a plaque Another plaque displayed in the bar of the Ship was presented to their local by gunners of the 23rd Field Regiment Royal Canadian Artillery By 1890 imposing houses in neat tree lined roads stood on what had been grazing land and cornfields Meads had become the smart end of town Its residents were the well to do and included professionals self made men retired officers and former members of the Colonial Civil Service 6 The absence today of street directories makes it hard to determine the social standing of householders but even the 1940 street directory of Eastbourne prepared in 1939 lists Lady Foley Sir John Alexander Hammerton and Admiral Sir Robert John Prendergast KCB all living within 100 metres of each other at the top of Meads hill 8 Many domestic servants lived in others made their way to work from other parts of the town or occupied cottages clustered around the three pubs the Pilot the Ship and the Blacksmith s Arms the latter demolished before the turn of the century In 1894 a small square of cottages was built for working class occupation Originally known as Wallis s Cottages the square was subsequently named The Village Coachmen and grooms followed in due course by chauffeurs lived above the stables of De Walden Mews the property of Lady Howard de Walden Her mansion De Walden Court 1884 in Meads Road is now a listed building 9 The inhabitants of Meads were traditionally known as Meadsites the term remaining in current use until at least the 1950s 10 All Saints Hospital was built between 1867 and 1869 on land given by the 7th Duke of Devonshire its chapel was added in 1874 All Saints was built as an Anglo Catholic nunnery and convalescent home and designed by Henry Woodyer The listed chapel in the style of High Victorian Gothic Revival is noted for polychrome effects geometric tiling and an unusual gallery supported on marble pillars 7 The street names of Meads edit nbsp View of Meads Street looking south to north from the junction with Darley Road The pub known as The Ship can be seen on the right of the picture The boulder flint boundary wall of the flats to the right is all that remains of a group of cottages which stood on the site until c 1970 Many of the roads in Meads owe their names to towns and villages in Derbyshire around Chatsworth House the seat of the 7th Duke of Devonshire who developed the town in the 19th century One obvious example is Chatsworth Gardens the terrace of houses erected in 1891 on King Edward s Parade Baslow Road dates from 1907 and is named after a village just north of Chatsworth House Chesterfield Road 1888 owes its name to the important coal and iron town in Derbyshire and Derwent Road 1895 is a reminder of the River Derwent which flows through the grounds of the Duke s residence Others in the same category include Bolsover 1891 Buxton 1891 Darley 1890 Edensor 1906 Matlock 1897 Rowsley 1903 and Staveley 1890 Roads Meads Road and Meads Street derive from the name of the original hamlet whose earlier spellings include Mades 1196 and Medese 1316 The hamlet developed around a manor house later known as Colstocks 11 Meads during World War Two edit Little of significance occurred in Meads during the period of the Phoney War but with the fall of France in June 1940 many people departed for safety further north Large houses were shut up as their owners left the anticipated invasion zone and schools were closed 12 Eastbourne College was evacuated to Radley College in Oxfordshire on 20 June 13 Air raids edit nbsp The Bf 110 was a twin engine heavy fighter Zerstorer German for Destroyer The one which crashed in Meads on 16 August 1940 A2 GL was the first enemy aircraft to be brought down in the County Borough of Eastbourne At about 5 30 pm on Friday 16 August 1940 the first German aircraft to be brought down within what was then the County Borough of Eastbourne crashed in Meads A Messerschmitt Bf 110 of the Luftwaffe unit known as ZG 2 had left the former French aerodrome at Guyancourt as part of an escort for bombers raiding RAF airfields at Feltham Heston and Heathrow Over the South Downs the Messerschmitt was engaged by a British fighter almost certainly the Hurricane flown by Pilot Officer H N E Salmon of No 1 Squadron The German aircraft broke up in the air and the pilot Hauptmann Ernst Hollekamp was killed when he fell on the roof of Hill Brow School in Gaudick Road his parachute unopened Part of the nose fell onto the Royal Eastbourne golf course close to the end of Gaudick Road The rear gunner Feldwebel Richard Schurk came down in the sea off Holywell and was drowned The bulk of the aircraft crashed in the grounds of Aldro School in Darley Road the wreckage was incorrectly identified in the local press as being that of a Heinkel He 111 At the same time a lorry was hit in Hampden Park by a bomb which had probably been jettisoned by one of the German bombers returning from the raid on RAF airfields Three Council workmen were killed two instantly the other dying the following day from burns 14 On 4 May 1942 the first raid on Eastbourne by fighter bombers took place One of the casualties was the Meads parish church of St John which was set ablaze and severely damaged 15 Until the church was rebuilt in 1957 services were held at the parish hall in Meads Street The tower which originally had a steeple survived the raid but was not attached to the nave when the latter was rebuilt 7 At lunchtime on Sunday 7 March 1943 a raid by Messerschmitt Bf 109 and Focke Wulf Fw 190 aircraft caught Eastbourne unawares In what is now known as Upper Meads a bomb destroyed 22 28 Meads Street and others fell in the gardens of 3 Staveley Road and 41 St John s Road There were 14 civilian fatalities 50 persons were injured 15 Houses used as billets by the Canadian army were damaged in Milnthorpe Road The following evening the German Home Service not the broadcasts in English by Lord Haw Haw carried interviews with two pilots who had taken part in the raid The aircrew vividly described the effects of a bomb on a large block of buildings it seemed to disintegrate into a cloud of blue black smoke as they were making for the town 12 Canucks in Meads edit nbsp St Rita s in Paradise Drive was the headquarters of the Black Watch of Canada for some two months from mid December 1941 An alternative battle HQ was prepared in Paradise Wood and the Officers Mess was at Cloona in Carlisle Road The first major influx of Canadian troops to the Eastbourne area was in July 1941 with the arrival of three regiments of the 5th Canadian Infantry Brigade The Black Watch Royal Highland Regiment of Canada Le Regiment de Maisonneuve and the Calgary Highlanders During the course of the war thousands of Canadians from scores of units would pass through the town As far as Meads was concerned The Black Watch arrived from Willingdon on 18 December 1941 It was however a brief stay for they returned to Willingdon in February 1942 Canadian light anti aircraft units were based in Meads at various times setting up fixed and mobile gun positions on the Downs and seafront August 1943 saw the arrival of The 23rd Field Regiment RCA of the Royal Canadian Artillery with their Sexton self propelled guns There were three gun batteries the 31st was centred on Milnthorpe Road the 36th and 83rd were around Edensor Road The HQ battery was located behind the Grand Hotel The regiment stayed in Meads until it moved to Pippingford Park in March 1944 in preparation for Operation Overlord The Canadians were welcomed by the locals who invited them into their homes and organised entertainment By the same token the troops left with happy memories Approximately 150 Eastbourne girls sailed to Canada as war brides some of them from Meads 12 Conservation and change edit nbsp Highmead in Buxton Road typical of the large houses in Meads built in Victorian and Edwardian times for wealthy families It has since been converted into flats Meads Street still has its shops but there have been considerable changes to the trades in recent years The sub post office has returned to the premises it formerly occupied in the 1950s when the shop was a traditional grocer s today it is a self service store For comparison the 1940 street directory lists 21 types of business premises in Meads Street a baker three banks two boot repairers two builders two butchers three garages two grocers one with sub post office a car hire firm a chemist a confectioner two dairies a fishmonger a fruiterer a greengrocer a hairdresser an ironmonger two pubs a stationer a tobacconist a wine merchant and a wool shop 8 nbsp The building of the 19 storey South Cliff Tower in 1965 caused such controversy that a local protest committee was formed In 1965 the 19 storey South Cliff Tower was built on the seafront at the junction of Bolsover Road and South Cliff The storm of protest which followed led to the formation of The Eastbourne and District Preservation Committee which in due course became Eastbourne Civic Society and has subsequently been renamed The Eastbourne Society 7 Despite demolitions over the years Meads still retains many of its large Victorian and Edwardian houses most of which have been converted into flats A powerful lobby in the latter regard is The Meads Community Association which was created in 1990 With some 700 members its two principal aims are to preserve the unique character of the Meads area of Eastbourne consistent with change which does not interfere with this aim and to alert the residents of Meads to plans for development or redevelopment of property which the Committee are of the opinion should be resisted The association also organizes social activities to foster a community spirit and liaises with local traders 16 The former All Saints Hospital a Grade II listed building was converted into 53 flats with a further 52 newly built apartments within three separate buildings in the grounds 17 The listed chapel however was retained 18 Population editThe total population of Meads is 11 769 19 Demographics edit Population by age groups Population by age Total 0 14 yrs 15 29 yrs 30 44 yrs 45 64 yrs 65 74 yrs 74 84 yrs 85 yrs Eastbourne 94 816 16 0 17 3 18 4 24 8 10 2 8 9 4 3 Meads 10 867 6 8 19 4 10 2 21 0 14 3 18 5 9 9 Meads has an average age of 54 1 and the national average is 39 8 that is a difference of 14 3 years 20 Population by ethnic group Ethnicity All people White Mixed Asian or Asian British Black or Black British Other ethnic group Eastbourne 94 412 94 1 1 8 2 8 0 8 0 5 Meads 10 725 93 0 1 7 3 8 0 8 0 6 Population density Year 2001 2011 Eastbourne 20 3 22 5 Meads 7 8 8 6 21 Educational establishments editUniversity of Brighton edit In 1947 a teacher training college opened in Meads the first students being troops who had recently returned to civilian life 6 The college was centred on Darley Road at two schools which had evacuated because of the war Queenwood Ladies College and Aldro Also in 1947 Chelsea College of Physical Education moved from London establishing itself at the former Hill Brow School in Denton Road In 1966 a new building was opened on the site by the Queen 6 The buildings and grounds of both the above colleges now form part of the Eastbourne campus in Meads Darley Road Site Hillbrow and Welkin Site of the University of Brighton 22 Schools edit Private sector edit nbsp St Bede s Preparatory School one of the two remaining independent schools in Upper Meads In Victorian times Meads became a favoured area for private boarding schools a tradition which persisted until economic factors brought about their gradual demise Examples of the latter include Clovelly Kepplestone girls school which closed in Meads in 1934 23 and St Christopher s Girls School which closed the same year 24 Pike s Eastbourne Directory of 1911 12 25 shows five Ladies Schools located in Bolsover Road together with Hill Brow boys school which subsequently took over the premises of St Christopher s girls school in Denton Road when that school closed in 1934 A street directory for 1940 prepared in 1939 lists ten private schools in Upper Meads alone 8 However the war signalled the final phase for private schools and only eight of those which evacuated from the town returned to Eastbourne 6 One of the post war returners was Ascham St Vincent s School a preparatory school for boys in Meads which subsequently closed in 1977 The site was sold for property development and a merger with St Andrew s took place The Ascham Memorial Arch in Carlisle Road commemorates former pupils who lost their lives in the First World War 26 Two independent schools now remain in Upper Meads St Andrew s Prep and St Bede s Preparatory School now called Bede s Prep School The public school Eastbourne College is in Lower Meads State sector edit St John s Meads is a Church of England Aided Primary School with approximately 215 children on its roll Undergoing many additions and changes over the years the school has been located on its present site for over a century 27 References edit East Sussex in Figures East Sussex County Council Retrieved 27 September 2008 Eastbourne Ward population 2011 Retrieved 8 October 2015 Eastbourne Town Centre Ward Map Eastbourne Borough Council archived from the original on 28 March 2009 retrieved 17 April 2009 Meads Conservation Area Map Eastbourne Borough Council Find a Ward Councillor Eastbourne Borough Council Archived from the original on 20 October 2014 Retrieved 20 October 2014 a b c d e Surtees John 2005 Eastbourne s Story Eastbourne SB Publications ISBN 1 85770 298 0 a b c d e Spears Harold Stevens Lawrence Crook Richard Hodsoll Vera 1981 Eight Town Walks in Eastbourne Eastbourne Eastbourne Civic Society a b c Kelly s Directory of Eastbourne London Kelly s Directories Limited 1940 Listed Buildings Eastbourne Eastbourne Borough Council retrieved 17 April 2009 Eastbourne Society Newsletter 140 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a Missing or empty title help Milton John 1995 Origins of Eastbourne s Street Names Eastbourne Eastbourne Local History Society ISBN 0 9504560 6 3 a b c Ockenden Michael 2006 Canucks by the Sea Eastbourne Eastbourne Local History Society ISBN 0 9547647 1 4 Allom V M 1966 Ex Oriente Salus A Centenary History of Eastbourne College Eastbourne Eastbourne College Black Friday Sussex Life August 1980 a b Humphrey George 1989 Wartime Eastbourne Eastbourne Beckett Features ISBN 1 871986 00 1 Meads Community Association Meads Digital Arts archived from the original on 9 May 2008 retrieved 30 May 2008 Berkeley Homes News Berkeley Homes retrieved 5 June 2008 All Saints Hospital Site Eastbourne Borough Council permanent dead link East Sussex in Figures Population 2017 Retrieved 19 October 2023 East Sussex in Figures Median age 2017 Retrieved 19 October 2023 East Sussex in Figures 2011 Retrieved 20 October 2014 University of Brighton Prospectus 2009 PDF University of Brighton archived from the original PDF on 14 June 2011 retrieved 5 June 2008 Eastbourne Local History Society Newsletter 179 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a Missing or empty title help Wickens P amp Stimpson J 2006 The Intriguing Story of Saint Christopher s Eastbourne Jose E Stimpson Eastbourne ISBN 0 9553556 0 5 Pike s Eastbourne Hailsham and District Blue Book and Local Directory 1911 12 Garnett Mepham amp Fisher Limited 112 Gloster Road Brighton History Lost Generation Find a Memorial Channel 4 retrieved 1 June 2008 Meads CE Primary School Meads CE Primary School archived from the original on 4 June 2008 retrieved 30 May 2008External links editThe Meads Website St John s Church Meads Eastbourne a brief history Eastbourne College St Andrew s Prep Bede s Prep School St John s Meads C of E Primary School Aldro School Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Meads amp oldid 1215522757, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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