The Cockpit - Chislehurst Society
Transcription
The Cockpit - Chislehurst Society
~------------------------ - -- - THE COCKPIT A Publication of the Chislehurst Society (Founded 1934) The CockpiJ, on Chislehurst Common, has been the tradiJional meeting place for Chislehurst people on all great occasions from time immemorial No. 66 June 1995 A Teenager's War Memories It was a beautiful, calm and peaceful day on Sunday September 3rd 1939 when war was declared. I was 12 years old. Everyone was filled with apprehension when the air raid siren on the roof of the Police Station wailed a few minutes after Mr Chamberlain's broadcast. Living over our baker's shop at 68 High Street we had a good view up and down the High Street. An air raid warden, complete with tin hat and gas mask, cycled hurriedly up Red Hill. Towards London we could see the rapidly ascending barrage balloons swaying and flapping as they rose in the gentle breeze. Soon there was not a soul to be seen and a hush descended on the village as if it were holding its breath. Having the bakery in the back yard, we had no room for one of the Anderson shelters which were hastily being erected in back gardens. In view of the international situation, my father had arranged for a load of flour to be stacked against the outside wall of our kitchen to act as sandbags and to absorb the effects of bomb blast. It was a great relief when the All Clear sounded and we emerged like everyone else to discuss what had provoked such an early action . to assist in case of fire after incendiary bombs. There was one on the village pound and another opposite the main G.P.O. The blackout was irksome but necessary and some ARP wardens and police were very pernickety about breaking regulations. People could be fined for carelessness or for persistently offending. Some of our doctors left for active service leaving only the older ones and refugee doctors who had arrived here Dr before the war to escape Nazi persecution. O'Donnell, whilst operating on board a hospital ship found himself treating Don Turner, one of his patients back home. Hornbrook House (now the site of the upper High Street car park) was the headquarters for the local Red Cross . They ran courses on First Aid and Home Nursing, provided medical equipment and collected our offerings of balaclavas, socks and knitted squares for blankets. A modern First Aid Post was where the entrance to Bushell Way is now situated and was manned by volunteers working under a qualified nursing sister covering the full 24 hours. Situated on the railway loop line which joins the main and Victoria line, Aquila was constructed as a hospital for the anticipated wounded from France. It was never used for this purpose and was later acquired by the Ministry of Defence. Chislehurst, like everywhere else in London and the suburbs, had been taking reluctant steps to prepare for war. Small concrete ARP (Air Raid Precaution) posts were set up at intervals around the area, manned by voluntary wardens with schoolboys running messages on bicycles. This ARP system was controlled from Bonchester, a house in Camden Park Road. GaS masks were fitted, causing great amusement with the children on hearing the loud 'raspberries' emitted when breath was exhaled. Public air raid shelters in the form of trenches were situated in the recreation ground and on the common at the top of the High Street opposite Lash's Forge and Garage (now Barclays Bank). Huge static water tanks were distributed around Chislehurst Page 1 Society Social Evening Later this year, Foxbury will be re-opening after a refurbishment programme lasting much of the past year. Members of The Chislehurst Society will be among the first to visit this beautiful old house and discover the improvements for themselves when we enjoy a buffet supper on Friday 29 September. The evening will begin at 7.3Opm with supper served at 8pm. Further details and tickets will soon be available from Pat Bushell on 0181 467 2118. So the 'phoney war' started and the village gradually began to prepare for what was to come. The first winter of the war was bitterly cold with lots of snow. At the bakery we were regularly supplied with coal to keep the furnaces hot enough to bake the bread, so we never suffered the fuel shortage which became acute as the years passed by. There was skating on the ponds, particularly on the Overflow which has now nearly disappeared . The common looked beautiful covered in a white mantle and bathed in moonlight as we made our way home from skating and tobogganing . Troops were billeted in many of the large houses in Kemnal, Lubbock, Manor Park and Camden Park Roads. We had the Scots Guards and Grenadiers and there was much dating with the local girls . Farringtons School had evacuated to the country and the premises were taken over by the War Department, together with a large number of temporary buildings on the opposite side of Perry Street. Kemnal Manor and Oakwood were other such buildings where secret work was carried out. SIDKA, now SIRA, was taken over by Southern Railway for offices and Norland Nursery took up residence behind the cricket ground. After the fall of France and the miracle of Dunkirk, Chislehurst knew that the war had begun in earnest and with Winston Churchill in command it never entered my head that we should not be victorious. The Battle of Britain had begun and being in a direct line to London from the continent we became accustomed to witnessing the massive formations of Dorniers, Heinkels and Junkers flying towards the capital, harried by Hurricanes and Spitfires. The contrails wove fantastic patterns in the sky and the sound of gunfire was very close. No wonder Chislehurst bore a heavy burden of casualties and bomb damage. Nothing alarmed the village more than hearing that Biggin Hill Airfield was under attack and had been severely damaged with a great loss of life. The National Fire Service was housed in the garage opposite the Police Station and regularly turned out at a moment's notice for service in Chislehurst or elsewhere if needed. It was such a time when the East End Docks were targeted and fire appliances for miles around were sent to assist on that terrible Saturday afternoon. The sky was crimson in the direction of the river so with others we climbed Red Hill to look across the city. The sight was appalling; it seemed to me as if the whole of London was ablaze. Great palls of smoke rose through the flames and when I thought of the human suffering the tears rolled down my cheeks. On returning to Chislehurst the firemen spoke of wading knee deep in butter oil in the warehouses and docksides. All the iron railings were taken for the war effort, including the magnificent gates at Camden Place. They were made for Napoleon III and exhibited at the Paris Exposition of 1867 and installed when the Emperor was exiled here after the Franco-Prussian War. There was a salvage shop set up on Burlington Parade and volunteers would sort out all manner of rags, saucepans, bones and paper which were dumped on the doorstep. Everything possible was recycled including shrapnel, which descended in showers of deadly rain during air raids. Food refuse was collected from 'pig bins' which were placed around the area. All the local dogs knew their location and it was a common sight to see their heads buried deep amongst the potato peelings. Canon Greaves's bull terrier "Gripper" lived up to his name and 'fixed' any dog intruding on his territory . Fortunately, a well aimed bucket of water usually settled the argument. Bombs were dropped in a haphazard fashion all over Chislehurst. They were relatively small in view of what was to come later. It was wonderful when the news filtered through that my school in Beaverwood Road had been badly damaged with incendiary bombs. Thankfully no one was hurt but a fair number of the classrooms were gutted. After an extended holiday we gradually returned there part-time until the repairs were completed. We carried our gas masks everywhere and kept a rug and a tube of Horlicks tablets in case we had a prolonged stay in the trenches. The shelters were of concrete, cold and damp, but we anticipated no danger when we were all together. It was not unknown for exams to be taken in these subterranean tunnels and it was the custom for the lessons to be continued as near normal as possible in these unusual circumstances. The raids intensified and classes were reformed as numbers of the children were evacuated to the country until the raids subsided. Some children never returned. Sometimes Perry Street would be closed, either with bomb damage or perhaps an unexploded bomb. Under these circumstances we had a designated meeting place with one of the teachers who escorted us in groups across the fields at the bottom of Belmont Lane, through Foxbury estate, to enter the school from the playing fields at the rear . As the days grew shorter the Blitz developed in earnest and everyone who could would be secure in their shelters with blankets, torch and thermos before nightfall. Burlington Parade was a large block building and I was convinced that the Germans would assume it was an army barracks and attack it accordingly. My apprehension was increased as I lay huddled up in the cellar, knowing that a half-sized billiard table was just above me ready to crash down and there was coal on one side of the cellar and flour the other! Bombs fell Page 2 regularly, some singly and others in sticks of six or eight. Everyone who could took regular turns fire watching in their own area. One night a stick of bombs descended on the High Street. The Fox & Hounds was destroyed (one of the oldest buildings in the High Street) and so was Deans (grocers, now the Victoria Wine Co). Another caught the Annunciation School, one made a crater in the middle of the road, the cottage disappeared where the Surgery is now and the south porch of the church was damaged. In no time the stables at the rear of the Fox and Hounds were opened up as the pub - it was very humble and rustic. Deans opened their china shop (now the Pet Shop) as the grocer's shop and were soon dispensing Spam and dried egg. Some of the large houses were commandeered as Rest Centres where bombed-out people could stay until more suitable accommodation could be found or their own houses patched up . Many of our lovely old buildings were destroyed or severely damaged. Old Crown Cottage, which was originally an ancient inn, and Bishops Well, in Watts Lane, were lost. St Meddens burned down and Mulbarton Court in Kemnal Road was levelled. The old Working Mens Club owned by Mr Easdon and stacked with stored furniture was destroyed. Luson House in Willow Grove was obliterated by a flying bomb with serious loss of life and countless smaller homes suffered a similar fate. My grandmother's Tudor cottage opposite the Bull's Head sustained a direct hit, the bomb landing in an enormous lead water tank. The volume of water absorbed much of the blast but everywhere was saturated and there was hardly a whole piece of china left in the house. Later in the war when a rocket fell in Bull Lane the old house sustained more damage. Nevertheless the old timber-framed house stood firm and is still doing so. Not daunted by this experience my grandmother, who by then was well into her seventies, applied for an allocation of rations and opened her dining room for the War Department people at Farringtons. This proved a huge success and her lounge and the room behind the shop were annexed for the diners. For people living alone it was difficult to eke out the weekly rations and a British Restaurant was erected alongside the Library . Food was basic 'and the whole venture operated on canteen lines. After Dunkirk the fear of invasion was very great and all the signposts and milestones were removed. I often thought it was unrealistic to suppose the Germans had no maps but I suppose it was an elementary precaution. Even the names of the railway stations were painted over and on moonless nights it was easy to alight at the wrong one. Even if one counted the number of stations the system was thrown out if the train made an extra stop at a red signal. Unfortunately the milestones were never returned after the war and we have lost that link with the past (White Horse Hill summit 10 miles to London Bridge, Royal Parade opposite the Bull's Head II miles to London Bridge). Periodically money was raised for the war effort by various means . All sorts of methods were employed to encourage the public to buy National Savings Certificates or to donate money. One favourite method was to collect a mile of pennies which covered the mile I have just mentioned . The local cinema (now St Patrick's R.C. Church) was well patronised by we young folk, especially the 6d or 9d seats. The films were old and the projector often broke down causing the children in the front rows to stamp their feet on the bare floor boards . The pubs did a roaring trade selling anything they could obtain. Dances were. held regularly at the Bull's Head and at Christmas and New Year it was a riot. Our own land mines which were captured by the Germans at Dunkirk were dropped on us, descending slowly on attached parachutes. It was one of these which landed in the middle of the recreation ground creating an enormous crater. Damage was extensive in the adjacent area and windows were blown out, including our own shop windows . This was repeated twice more before the end of the war. On one such occasion the glass splintered over trays of precious cakes and buns, all of which had to be destroyed . Our vulnerability became apparent when the enemy dropped magnesium flares which floated in the air as giant chandeliers and lit up the whole place as if it were day . The bakers worked all through the nights to produce bread for the public. Through the severity and tension of the raids they never took shelter. Perhaps it was easier to have something which had to be done than sit in a shelter or under the stairs to listen and wait for the drone of the planes approaching and the relief as the noise receded. Sometimes a policeman on night duty would call at the bakery to ensure everything was in order. He would be offered a cup of tea from a 7 lb stone jam jar which was continually left brewing by the ovens, and probably would be given a hot loaf to take home. Everyone was encouraged to dig for victory . The nutritional value of carrots and potatoes was greatly extolled by the Ministry of Food and home-grown fruit and vegetables were a vital addition to the nation's food supply. Having no garden ourselves, we had an allotment where Red Hill School is now. Allotment gardens appeared all over Chislehurst and surplus Page 3 produce was freely shared. With the advent of serious air raids, thousands of people flocked to the Chislehurst Caves for security. Some were bombed out and had no proper homes, others just wanted to get out of London for the relative safety of the suburbs. As dusk approached these grey figures with their children and old people, carrying what they could, would arrive at the station, disgorge from the crowded trains and stream towards the caves. Here in the early stages conditions were primitive. Sanitation was basic and there was no electricity . I can remember the eerie sight of candles propped on every conceivable ledge in the rock . There were hundreds of them, magnifying the shadows into grotesque shapes. Later, living conditions were improved. Electricity was installed, regular church services were held and a canteen provided food . The Caves became a haven for the homeless and frightened. With the arrival of the Flying Bombs the barrage balloons were moved to the North Downs, as the area was less populated than the suburbs and the loss of life was not so great when the V Is were shot down by fighters or gunfire. Despite these precautions many got through our defences and 45 landed in Chislehurst, with devastating results . As D Day approached the troops who had been billeted all over Chislehurst disappeared and the houses were deserted. A large number of army lorries and equipment, permanent! y stationed under the trees in St Pauls Cray Road and in Holbrook House, vanished. Convoys of troops and gear moved endlessly around the south-east thundering through the village. It has since become apparent that these manoeuvres were part of the deception operation, code named Fortitude, to bluff the enemy into thinking the coming invasion would be by way of the Pas de Calais area. The war progressed and I became old enough to join the W.R.N.S. at 17'/'. So I left school at Chislehurst during the period of the V2 attacks but returned in time to take part in the official peace celebrations in 1945. The people were becoming war weary and tired after the long years of heartache and deprivation and the V2s , against which we had no defence, were hard to bear. One rocket fell on the Crooked Billet at Bicldey (now a Harvester Restaurant) and caused great damage and loss of life. I remember at night seeing the great arc lamps playing on the wreckage in an effort to detect any human life. The people of the village grew closer together during the war years; there was less social distinction as everyone faced the common danger. Trades-people lived above their shops, even Inspector Frazer with his wife and two daughters lived at the Police Station where the cells were still in use. We were concerned with basics - to have enough to eat and a roof over our heads. Of course there were the grousers and grumblers and those who tried to undermine our national morale like Lord Haw Haw . Despite all this, the local people were working in their various ways towards victory. Everywhere was shabby, propped up, unglazed and unpainted and when VE Day arrived the relief mingled with sadness was inevitable. Little did we realize at the time that restrictions of all kinds would continue for a further seven years. As an adolescent and teenager the war made an indelible image on my memory and I am thankful and proud to have lived through such an historic era. Rosemary Chapman Editor's Note: Thinking it would be good to have a photograph to illustrate this article, I asked Rosemary Chapman if she had anything suitable. She explained that she did not, as film was not generally available during the war. When we think of war time shortages, we tend to think offood and fabric but many things that we now take for granted were unavailable during the war. Midsummer Day in Petts Wood The PeltS Wood and Hawkwood Committee warmly invites members of the Chislehurst Society to join in their celebration of the National Trust Centenary which takes place in Petts Wood itself and in the Towncourt Room of Petts Wood Memorial Hall on Saturday, 24th June. In addition to the Trust's Centenary, 1995 marks the seventieth anniversary of the Summer Time Act. So this celebration will also honour William Willett, the originator of Daylight Saving, in whose memory part of Petts Wood was bought by local subscription and handed to the National Trust for safe-keeping. Please come and join in one of the guided walks through the Wood to visit the Willett Memorial Sundial - which tells the correct time during "Summer Time" only. Children who visit the Sundial will receive a Centenary badge. The walks, lasting about an hour, will start from the tunnel under the railway between numbers 6 and 8 Hazelmere Road hourly from 1O.30am, with the last departure at 3.3Opm. Waymarks will be available for Page 4 walkers who prefer shorter or independent visits. In the Towncourt Room, from lOam to 4pm, there will be an exhibition about William Willett, the acquisition of Petts Wood and Hawkwood and events on the property over the past 70 years . VisitOrs will be able to view the video A Year in Petts Wood, which is being filmed specially for the occasion. Photographs of the property and National Trust goods will be on sale and coffee and tea will be available. The Petts Wood and Hawkwood Committee looks forward to seeing you on Midsummer Day in Petts Wood. National Trust Centenary Lecture Readers may also be interested in the National Trust's Centenary Lecture by Ron Rowland at 8pm at Crofton Hall, Crofton Road, Orpington on 27th July . The title is "The State of The Trust in its Centenary Year" . Heritage Weekend 1995 As in 1994, there will be a programme of Heritage Open Days across Britain - this time on the weekend of 16th and 17th September. This year a limited range of events will be arranged in Chislehurst. Both the Church of the Annunciation and the Methodist Church will be celebrating their 125th anniversaries that weekend while Farrington's School will celebrate their Chapel's sixtieth anniversary. Members will recall that in 1993 The Chislehurst Society played a major part in a pilot scheme for Heritage Open Days. This was very successful. The main events this year are the anniversaries mentioned above but in addition two guided 'heritage walks' are planned for the same weekend. Further details will be available nearer the time. A boolclet describing 'heritage walks' in Chislehurst will be published soon by the Society to help local people and visitors explore and appreciate our local heritage. Claverly Cottage - a Gift to The Society supporter of the Society and our aims for many years, but was worried by what she considered to be the overdevelopment of many parts of Chislehurst. After discussion with a friend, Tony (A .R.) Turner who was also her road steward and a long time resident of Lubbock Road, Mrs Corderoy decided that as she could no longer manage the cottage and was moving to sheltered accommodation, she would donate it to the Society with the express wish that the site be saved from further development. Unfortunately the cottage is in a somewhat poor state of repair but when it is put into good order it will be capable of providing the Society with a rent income. It is not of a size suitable to meet the Society's need for a headquarters. Readers may be interested to learn a little about Margaret Corderoy. She is the daughter of Lady Dunlop and came to live at Claverly Cottage in 1972 following the death of her mother who had lived there for many years . The location and peaceful surroundings of Claverly Cottage were ideally suited to Margaret's quiet temperament. She is a reserved and unassuming person with a kindly disposition, always ready, where possible, to help anyone in need. Her interest in her garden, ideally set among trees, ensured her full support for the Conservation Area and for the aims and work of The Chislehurst Society. Her appreciation of this work in her immediate area led her to give Claverly Cottage to the Society with the understanding that the cottage and its garden would be preserved. Margaret Corderoy also has a life-long interest in the reading and study of philosophical teachings, which she greatly enjoys discussing and from which she often quotes. No doubt she continues to follow this interest from her Manor House retirement home where she can enjoy the surroundings of leafy Hampshire. We thank our benefactress and wish her well for the future . Readers may recall a Cockpit article entitled "Give now - pay later", urging members to make bequests to the Society in a tax-free way . Margaret Corderoy decided to act in her lifetime - an option not open to everyone but her magnificent gesture is an inspiring example to us all. By now, members will be aware that the Society has received the generous gift of Claverly Cottage, a property in Lubbock Road. Some background to this gift will no doubt be of interest. Church Row, Chislehurst Mrs Margaret Corderoy, the donor, has been a Passersby often stop to look at the houses in Church Charles Dunn and Tony (AR) Turner Page 5 • Row, because many of them are old and those at the southern end, nearest to the church, are listed. before and after 1878 through the Census Returns, which were compiled every 10 years. Recently members of the Local Studies Group have seen interesting legal documents referring to the origin of these houses. More recently one of our members, Rosemary Chapman, received from a former Chislehurst resident, who was a G.I. bride and is now living in the USA, details of the auction of eleven of these houses in April 1878. Some of the local histories incorrectly describe these houses as Georgian; they are Georgian in style, but not in age. Those who saw the excellent project on Willow Grove by Rebecca Kinahan, a junior school pupil, which won the Joy Jones Award in the 1994 Alun & Joy Jones Environmental Studies Competition, could learn how interesting information can be obtained from early directories, Council Minutes and maps, of the history of a road or street. Victorian directories and early Ordnance Survey maps, such as the one of 1861 had previously alerted me to the fact that originally the houses were numbered from St. Nicholas's Church and not from Royal Parade. For many years No . 19, for example, was No . 1 and No. 16 was originally two houses Nos . 4 & 5. The dates of the original leases varied. The houses, now numbered 12 to 15, did not have bays originally; the first date of the leases appears to be 1842 . The taller houses at the southern end appear to have leases dating from about 1862. These houses are therefore not Georgian in date, but Victorian. Their proportions however are Georgian. Only by looking carefully at the architecture can you see that there have been more recent alterations . In some cases the porch overhang was originally an inverted V, but No. 18, for example, now has a semi-circular one. The brickwork above the front door of No . 17 shows the lines of the high-gabled Victorian canopy. Alice Se,mett Excavations at Scadbury Moated Manor, Chislehurst 1995 On Saturday 16th and Sunday 17th September the archaeological excavations at the medieval moated manor site at Scadbury will be open to the public. Members of the Orpington and District Archaeological Society (ODAS) will give guided tours, showing the work that is currently being done on the site as well as the remains of the foundations of the buildings associated with the Walsingham family . Unlike many similar moated sites the island is still completely surrounded by water. Guided tours will be given at 15 minute intervals throughout both afternoons, the first at 2pm and the last at 4.3Opm. There will also be a· slide show, refreshments and bookstall. The auction details of 1874 name the residents and the rents they paid. The houses were originally all leased. "Purbright", the double-fronted house, now No . 19, was leased at £90 per year. This included a three-stall stable and coach-house with loft and a man's three-roomed cottage in the south-east corner of the garden. These outbuildings are no longer in existence. No. 2 Church Row, now No . 18, was leased at a 'moderate' rent of £46 per year. In today's prices these rents seem exceedingly low. One has to remember however that at that time a working man might have to keep a whole family for a year with that amount of money. In the descriptions of these houses mention is made of WCs and in some cases dressing-rooms, but no mention is made of bathrooms. It is always interesting to know who lived in these houses. In 1874 Canon Murray, who was Rector of St. Nicholas' Church, leased the former Nos. 2 and 3. His father-in-law John Lavicourt Anderdon lived at what was then No. 2 Church Row. Further research is needed in Bromley Local Studies Library to trace the residents Admission is free. Limited car parking is available close to the site, by ticket only, for which application should be made (enclose s.a.e. and stating for which day required to: Mr M Meekums, 27 Eynsford Close, Petts Wood, BRS lOP. A Forum on Chislehurst Caves The Methodist Church Hall was filled on Tuesday 21st February for a joint forum of The Chislehurst Society and the BromJey Borough Local History Society, on the subject of Chislehurst Caves. Background to the meeting The Caves are a popular tourist attraction, but visitors get a rather one-sided view, with stories of Druids and Romans on the one hand, or of shelterers in the Second World War on the other and scarcely anything at all about the true nature of the Caves - that they are no more than an extensive series of chalk mines. Their potential as a subject for Industrial Archaeology is thus ignored. Information about them is rather scattered, so Page 6 i an attempt to co-ordinate this information has been commenced by Eric Inman of the BromJey Local History Society. Many people have memories of the Caves as war-time shelters, and possess relics of those days, and these memories and relics are worth recording . With all these factors in mind, the meeting was arranged as a starting point for further action. that the archaeology of mining was almost unknown ground, "and as throwing light upon the history and development of mining, the Chislehurst Caves are of first-rate importance". In addition to these papers, there was Webb's History of Chislehurst, and J W Marriott's Shon History of Chislehurst, the fourth chapter of which summed up all the then current arguments about the Caves . Apart from a few other references, there was nothing more on the subject until the Chelsea Spelaeological Society conducted their surveys of the Caves and the smaller chalk mine at the bottom end of Lubbock Road in the 1970s and published reports, with maps, in their Journal. The excellent summary by John Cooper already mentioned and the results of the trawl through Chislehurst and Sidcup UDC Minutes for references to the use of the Caves as shelters, made by Eric Inman, brought the material up-to-date. In addition, there was a plan of the Caves at Chislehurst Library, dated 1941, which showed their relationship to the roads above. Four speakers with different points of view were invited to make brief presentations, following which the meeting was opened for questions and discussion . The speakers were Chris Manning-Perry, manager of the Caves; Roy Hopper, librarian at Chislehurst and custodian of much readily available material; Austin Lockwood, chairman of the Ravensbourne Geological Society; and Eric Inman, chairman of the BromJey Local History Society, who also chaired the meeting. For the following notes of the proceedings we are indebted to John Cooper of the Department of Palaeontology, Natural History Museum, whose active interest in the Caves has proved extremely stimulating; he led a field visit by the Geological Association to the Caves in January, and his thorough and concise account of Caves history prepared for that visit, together with a bibliography, forms a valuable addition to the literature of the subject. Thus there is a considerable amount of material available locally, which has now been brought together in one folder for ease of reference; but there is a need for much more original research. Business Problems Geology Chris Manning-Perry spoke of the recent past, in which the Caves reception area had changed from a First World War wooden hut to the present purpose-built accommodation. The main problem was that this had not increased the numbers of visitors, which remained at the same steady predictable level. He said there was a need for more publicity, advertising and promotion to broaden the appeal of the Caves, and for proper business plans to be produced. It is important to know just who the visitors are, and how they should be entertained. Mr Manning-Perry said he would be grateful for any suggestions from the audience. Readers with their own comments should contact the new manager at the Caves. Austin Lockwood gave a concise account of the deposition of the chalk, which was formed largely from the shells of microscopic coccoliths. He referred to records at the BromJey Local Studies Library, which gave dates of visits to Chislehurst Caves, and the smaller Camden Park chalk mine in Lubbock Road, in 1872 and 1897. These dates agreed with inscriptions cut in the chalk walls of the Caves. He thanked Chris Manning-Perry for allowing Ravensbourne Geological Society (RGS) to begin serious study of the Caves, one purpose of which was to establish exactly where they lay in the upper chalk. This could be done by identifying typical fossils of particular zones in the chalk and he called upon John Cooper to say something about these. Existing records Roy Hopper spoke of the wealth of material available at Chislehurst and the Central (BromJey) Libraries. Most of this dated from the late 19th and early 20th Centuries. An important part of this was contained in three learned papers, dating from 1903-4, two by W J Nichols and one by T E and R H Forster. Mr Nichols was the originator of the Druid stories; he failed to see the evidence around him for the Caves being chalk mines. This theme was taken up by the Forsters, who were mining engineers and instantly recognised the true nature of the Caves. Their paper concluded with the remark Mr Cooper spoke of bivalve shellfish, echinoids and sponges, all small fossils; large ones were not common, although there was one 24 inch diameter ammonite visible. Establishing precisely what fossils were there would enable geologists to place the Caves accurately in the chalk strata. Fossils like these were represented in the Natural History Museum collections, but were labelled as from "BromJey". As the only significant chalk exposed in the BromJey area was at Chislehurst, it might be rossible to identify these as Chislehurst fossils, using the same method. What has been described as the fossil of an ichthyosaur is nothing more than curiously shaped flints. He intended to assist the Page 7 RGA in their investigation. He also thanked the Caves manager for this special access, and thought that a published account of any findings would enhance the appeal of the Caves for geologists, teachers and pupils. Chris Manning-Perry said that if visitors required a more serious tour it could be provided, though more information might be needed to do so. A video tour of the Caves is being prepared and might provide some income. Air raid shelters In conclusion, Eric Inman suggested two ideas: that a "Friends of Chislehurst Caves" group might be formed and that a serious tour of the Caves should be organised. He invited interested parties to leave their names and addresses. Eric Inman spoke of plans he had seen, of war-time ventilation and drainage systems in the Caves, and of the harsh and malodorous facts of life for the shelterers. In this 50th Anniversary year of the end of the War there is to be a reunion of the original shelterers, which would provide an opportunity to record reminiscences and make copies of any memorabilia from the period. He also remarked upon the many carvings and inscriptions on the walls of the Caves; an attempt should be made to record these, for many might be of historical interest, and some could help to date the earlier and otherwise unrecorded history of the Caves. Postscript and Conclusions The result of this appeal was encouraging; 14 potential "Friends" and 39 would-be visitors . One notable name in this connection is that of Rod Le Gear, of the Kent Underground Research Group, and author of several publications on caves and mines. His excellent Bexley Dene Holes, 1992, sheds a great light upon chalk mines . Question-time and discussions Most questions focused upon current business problems. Chris Manning-Perry said that between 60 and 70 thousand people per year visited the Caves, which provided adequate income when the old huts were still in use. The new building had cost a great deal, and was more expensive to run, with a larger Council Tax bill, and a loan to payoff. Unless the numbers of visitors could be increased, financial problems could become insuperable, and this might result in closure of the Caves . Therefore ideas for widening the appeal of the Caves were welcome. As far as he and his staff were concerned, they were in the leisure industry and were out to give the public what it wanted, regardless of how inaccurate the guides' stories seemed to be. A suggestion was made that management-consultancy students from local colleges might like to make assessments of the Caves' present and potential value, at 1ittle or no cost. As an illustration of what the Caves could still yield for the historian and archaeologist, Roy Hopper produced a flint core and flake, a relic of the gun-flint industry that had thrived in the Caves during the Napoleonic era. This had been provided by Seymour de Lotbiniere, an expert on the subject, who had found several examples in the Caves many years ago . Eric Inman confirms the date for the proposed SheIterers Reunion as Saturday 15th July. Anyone who sheltered in the Caves during the War is invited to contact Eric: 28 Downs Hill, Beckenham, Kent BR3 2HB, telephone 0181 650 8342. (Similarly, if anyone is interested in the idea of "Friends", they should contact him; this is no more than an idea at this stage). Full details of the Reunion will be posted in Chislehurst Library or may be obtained by telephoning Eric Inman. John Cooper has put forward a suggestion that what has been done at Amberley Chalk Pits, by way of replicating a lime kiln, winding gear, barrows, trucks and tools and other equipment known to have existed at the Caves, might also be done here in Chislehurst to reinforce the industrial archaeological aspect. The potential for widening the interest in the Caves, to accommodate all kinds of visitors, be they holiday makers, students of geology, industrial archaeologists, mining enthusiasts and so-on, is considerable. Little serious attempt has been made until now to establish their history as chalk mines. If anyone reading this article has any sort of interest in the Caves , they are invited to contact Roy Hopper at Chislehurst Library, by post, or by telephone, 0181 467 1318. ROY will be pleased to make available for inspection any of the documents in his care, and provide an up-to-date bibliography as compiled by John Cooper. Ray Hopper The Cockpit is a Publication of the Chislehurst Society*. All material is copyright. For further information or to discuss any issues raised in The Cockpit, please contact the editor at The Cockpit, PO Box 82, Chislehurst, Kent BR7 5TT "The Chislehurst Society . Registered Charity No . 298413 Page 8 ACT Lithographic Printers, Chislehurst. BR7 SAP. Tel: 0181·467 9090
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