St. Mary's Road

From Historical Hastings
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St. Mary's Road
Junctions
Junctions
Construction
Completion1899

Some nine of the houses were built in 1879 by George Weeks[1], the rest of the road being built between 1873 and 1899 with construction appearing to start from the Milward Road end - a tenanted corner property with adjoining buildings being placed on the market for sale in 1880[2]. Numbering of the road, together with the nearby roads on the West Hill took place in the same year - it being noted that a number of plots were still empty in all of the roads and the numbering scheme was to make provision for these[3]. Properties number 52 to 60 have mews garages beneath them, accessible via a lane between numbers 49 and 52. This mews was known in 1893 as "St Mary's Road Mews".

Numbers 48, 49 and 50 were demolished during WW2 in 1940 (although it is not clear whether this was related to enemy action) and rebuilt as two houses numbering 48 and 49[4], as was number 51, this subsequently becoming the entrance to the mews[5].

Numbers 61 to 63 were destroyed in an air raid during WW2 and a larger, detached property was rebuilt post-war - number 63, the remaining gap being filled by a garage/workshop accessed via the mews.

Images[edit]



References & Notes

  1. Hastings & St Leonards Observer 07 June 1879 pg. 7
  2. British Newspaper Archive Hastings & St. Leonards Observer 3 July 1880 Pg. 0004
  3. British Newspaper Archive Hastings & St. Leonards Observer 4 December 1880 Pg. 0007
  4. East Sussex County Council Archive The Keep GB179_DH_C_6_1_3727
  5. East Sussex County Council Archive The Keep GB179_DH_C_6_1_6992