Seafront lighting in Hastings & St.Leonards | |
An article in Hastings’ local paper highlighted the theft of ornamental lamps from the frontage of the former Hastings College art block in Archery Road – itself a listed Burton building, and part of my life when I attended there in its guise as the Business Studies Department of Hastings College for Further Education in the middle 1960’s. Time has made my memory a little hazy so I can’t remember exactly whether the lamps were put there before, during or after my time at the college but I do remember that they were originally part of the seafront lighting scheme that Sydney Little in the early 1930’s when some of the traction poles erected for the new trolleybus system in 1928 doubled as lighting standards. With the end of the trolleybuses in 1959 the traction poles were redundant, the lighting appeared dated and the lamp standards and lamps were replaced. Someone at the college was far-sighted enough to salvage a number of the pendant elements and, thanks to the students half a dozen fully-refurbished lamps resulted. I looked through my seafront pictures to find a picture of the lamps in their original setting and found all sorts of others that had been features of our seafront. The biggest problem with seafront lighting is attack by the elements and several attractive schemes were found to be both unreliable and high maintenance. |
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Picture 1 – three of the recycled pendant lamps in position on the old art block of Hastings College. |
Picture 2. A magnificent display of lamps on both sides of the road. The additional ornamental lighting hasn’t yet been added. |
Picture 3. Immediately post-war, Damage to Marine Court is still evident and lampless traction poles merely support the landward end of the trolleybus span wires. |
Picture 4. Between Warrior Square and the pier, this is what we have today, the top light illuminates the road, the lamp lower down does the same for the promenade and the boxes either side of the pole house the downlighters that form an attractive low-maintenance coloured display. |
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Picture 6. These are the lamps that replaced the 1930’s set. Note the AEC Reliance on the right and the coach is probably a Leyland TD4 with Beadle Bodywork. The card is dated 1967 |
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Picture 8. A very early picture (1880’s?) Some of the lamps here are quite small and probably lit by gas (the Hastings & St Leonards Gas Company was founded in 1832) |
Picture 9, dating from 1867 shows a fine lamp standard of the pattern still to be seen in the back streets of Hastings & St Leonards today, without the gas lantern top of course and converted to electricity. The pole to the left is a flagpole |
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Picture 11. About 1904. The nearest buildings were demolisked to build Marine Court at the end of the 1930’s but note the magnificent lamps |
Picture 12, similar to picture 11 but at White Rock |
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Picture 14, postmarked 1912. If you look closely between the tram tracks you can see the studs of the Dolter Surface Contact system, so no traction poles. |
Picture 15, postmarked 1909 is a nice study of a long-gone lamp |
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Ion Castro June 2011