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Text
Cohen”.
EAST SUSSEX AND BRIGHTON AND HOVE RECORD OFFICE The holdings of East Sussex and Brighton and Hove Record Office (ESBHRO) make up the majority of the archives at The Keep. The earliest document dates from 1101, but we will consider taking in records from last week if we think they’ll be of interest to future generations. ESBHRO’s holdings cover the whole of East Sussex andBrighton and Hove.
THE RISE AND FALL OF THE EDWARDIAN ELECTROBUS On 14 April (Easter Sunday), the first ‘electrobus’ acquired by the Brighton, Hove & Preston United Omnibus Company arrived in town. Many journalists had travelled on the bus from London to Brighton, and press coverage was enthusiastic. ‘The only omnibus in London which is at once unobjectionable and commercially successful is the THE MANY LIVES OF NINA HIBBIN In September 1939, the first month of the Second World War, Nina Hibbin (then Masel) sent her diary to the Mass Observation offices in London. Still at school and living in Romford, Essex, Hibbin had joined Mass Observation as ‘a tiny escape-hole for the dead-end tedium of small-town home and school’ (Hinton, 2013, p.172). BROOMHILL - THE KEEP Broomhill lies in the far east of the county, bordering on the English Channel to the south and the county of Kent to the east and north. A large part of the parish was in Kent until 1895 – it all remains in the diocese of Canterbury – but is not mentioned in the Domesday Book in either county. Broomhill church fell into decay in the MiddleLOGIN
Login. We are currently operating a reduced service. Numbers are limited and booking in advance is required. PARISHES AND SETTLEMENTS Parishes and Settlements. Parishes as we know them today first emerged in the 12th century as a means of providing religious pastoral care to the inhabitants of town and country. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Tudor and Stuart parliaments increasingly made use of these ecclesiastical units for administrative purposes – by 1800they
THE ASHBY FAMILY OF LITTLE PARK IN NINFIELD 15 August 2019 By Anna Manthorpe It can sometimes be a little difficult to decide whether a group of family papers is for us if part of the archive is not local. But it is not a good idea to split an archive, which can often contain overlapping themes and needs to beconsidered as
HOME - THE KEEPABOUTVISITCOLLECTIONSPLACESBLOGHELP The Keep is a world-class centre for archives that opens up access to all the collections of the East Sussex Record Office (ESRO), the Royal Pavilion & Museums Local History Collections and the internationally significant University of Sussex Special Collections. SEARCH COLLECTIONS- THE KEEP The Keep contains information, archives, resources and multimedia on a vast range of topics. You can explore these topics in various ways to help you find what you are looking for. Search our collections by entering a search term into the search bar above every page. SEARCH THE KEEP'S COLLECTIONS To search, use the search box displayed on all pages of the website. You can search using a keyword, phrase or reference number and click Search. This will return search results with the web pages or catalogue records displayed in order of the most relevant first. To search for an exact phrase use quotation marks, e.g. “LewisCohen”.
EAST SUSSEX AND BRIGHTON AND HOVE RECORD OFFICE The holdings of East Sussex and Brighton and Hove Record Office (ESBHRO) make up the majority of the archives at The Keep. The earliest document dates from 1101, but we will consider taking in records from last week if we think they’ll be of interest to future generations. ESBHRO’s holdings cover the whole of East Sussex andBrighton and Hove.
THE RISE AND FALL OF THE EDWARDIAN ELECTROBUS On 14 April (Easter Sunday), the first ‘electrobus’ acquired by the Brighton, Hove & Preston United Omnibus Company arrived in town. Many journalists had travelled on the bus from London to Brighton, and press coverage was enthusiastic. ‘The only omnibus in London which is at once unobjectionable and commercially successful is the THE MANY LIVES OF NINA HIBBIN In September 1939, the first month of the Second World War, Nina Hibbin (then Masel) sent her diary to the Mass Observation offices in London. Still at school and living in Romford, Essex, Hibbin had joined Mass Observation as ‘a tiny escape-hole for the dead-end tedium of small-town home and school’ (Hinton, 2013, p.172). BROOMHILL - THE KEEP Broomhill lies in the far east of the county, bordering on the English Channel to the south and the county of Kent to the east and north. A large part of the parish was in Kent until 1895 – it all remains in the diocese of Canterbury – but is not mentioned in the Domesday Book in either county. Broomhill church fell into decay in the MiddleLOGIN
Login. We are currently operating a reduced service. Numbers are limited and booking in advance is required. PARISHES AND SETTLEMENTS Parishes and Settlements. Parishes as we know them today first emerged in the 12th century as a means of providing religious pastoral care to the inhabitants of town and country. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Tudor and Stuart parliaments increasingly made use of these ecclesiastical units for administrative purposes – by 1800they
THE ASHBY FAMILY OF LITTLE PARK IN NINFIELD 15 August 2019 By Anna Manthorpe It can sometimes be a little difficult to decide whether a group of family papers is for us if part of the archive is not local. But it is not a good idea to split an archive, which can often contain overlapping themes and needs to beconsidered as
VISITING THE KEEP
Visiting The Keep Everyone is welcome to visit The Keep. If you are a first time visitor, take a look at our ‘Before You Visit’ guide, and see below for information on our opening hours, how to find us, and what to expect when you get here. REOPENING INFORMATION Visitors can order up to three documents in advance. This is done via the ‘View at The Keep’ tab on your desired catalogue entry, or through your Wishlist. These documents will be ready for you upon arrival in the reading room. Items will be placed in quarantine for three days once handled.CONTACT THE KEEP
Contact The Keep. AMS6786 Section of a map of land in Rodmell, 1829. This is one of thousands of beautiful and fascinating maps in the holdings of East Sussex Record Office and was executed by one of its most skilled and prolific map makers, William Figg. The word laine is the Sussex term for a large, unenclosed field.KEEPING UP!
Keeping Up! 16 December 2019. By Lindsey Tydeman. Last week at The Keep. A wonderful time was had by all at The Keep’s Christmas party. Staff gathered at a venue in nearby Lewes, where, after dinner and drinks, they enjoyed the healthy competition of The Keep’s Christmas Quiz. Accolades go to party organiser Sophie Unger and our twoKEEPING UP!
A lease from Battle, East Sussex. The Keep’s Conservator Melissa Williams has been working on a lease from 1633 (ACC7375/3). It concerns ‘The Kelkwood, Little Longebrooke and a little piece of rough ground adjoining, in Battle, occupied by Edward Walshe’. Melissa cleaned the parchment and ‘encapsulated’ it (put it in acustom-made
GENEVIEVE - THE FILM-STAR CAR! - THE KEEP 29 October 2019. By Esther Gill. Coming to The Keep this Saturday, 2 November, is a showing of Genevieve, the classic 1953 British comedy featuring the eponymous car and its travails in the London to Brighton Veteran Car Run.And the following day, the car herself will be motoring down to Brighton for the 2019 Run. LETTER FROM THE ARCHIVE: THE GREAT PLAGUE OF 1665-1666 Letter from the Archive: The Great Plague of 1665-1666. ‘Ring-a-ring a roses, a pocketful of posies, attischo, attischo, we all fall down.’. Most of us can recall this well-versed nursery rhyme from our childhood; dancing round in circles, hands clasped, spinning faster and faster before falling down in a heap of giggles. But in1665-1666
EAST SUSSEX
Religion and politics. West Sussex is a county of the established church and Catholicism, East Sussex of protestant nonconformity. Of the 40 men and women burnt for heresy in Sussex between 1555 and 1557, all but eight came from the Eastern Division. In the 1550s, a priest was far more likely to die in office if he held a benefice in West WILLINGDON - THE KEEP Willingdon was a demesne manor of the Honour of Pevensey, also called the Honour of The Eagle after its 12th-century owners. By 1240 the honour, including Willingdon, had become part of the Duchy of Lancaster, which passed to the Crown in 1399 when the Duke of Lancaster, Henry 4, deposed Richard 2. The other major estate in theparish was
THE ASHBY FAMILY OF LITTLE PARK IN NINFIELD 15 August 2019 By Anna Manthorpe It can sometimes be a little difficult to decide whether a group of family papers is for us if part of the archive is not local. But it is not a good idea to split an archive, which can often contain overlapping themes and needs to beconsidered as
HOME - THE KEEPABOUTVISITCOLLECTIONSPLACESBLOGHELP The Keep is a world-class centre for archives that opens up access to all the collections of the East Sussex Record Office (ESRO), the Royal Pavilion & Museums Local History Collections and the internationally significant University of Sussex Special Collections. SEARCH COLLECTIONS- THE KEEP The Keep contains information, archives, resources and multimedia on a vast range of topics. You can explore these topics in various ways to help you find what you are looking for. Search our collections by entering a search term into the search bar above every page. SEARCH THE KEEP'S COLLECTIONS To search, use the search box displayed on all pages of the website. You can search using a keyword, phrase or reference number and click Search. This will return search results with the web pages or catalogue records displayed in order of the most relevant first. To search for an exact phrase use quotation marks, e.g. “LewisCohen”.
EAST SUSSEX AND BRIGHTON AND HOVE RECORD OFFICE The holdings of East Sussex and Brighton and Hove Record Office (ESBHRO) make up the majority of the archives at The Keep. The earliest document dates from 1101, but we will consider taking in records from last week if we think they’ll be of interest to future generations. ESBHRO’s holdings cover the whole of East Sussex andBrighton and Hove.
THE RISE AND FALL OF THE EDWARDIAN ELECTROBUS On 14 April (Easter Sunday), the first ‘electrobus’ acquired by the Brighton, Hove & Preston United Omnibus Company arrived in town. Many journalists had travelled on the bus from London to Brighton, and press coverage was enthusiastic. ‘The only omnibus in London which is at once unobjectionable and commercially successful is the THE MANY LIVES OF NINA HIBBIN In September 1939, the first month of the Second World War, Nina Hibbin (then Masel) sent her diary to the Mass Observation offices in London. Still at school and living in Romford, Essex, Hibbin had joined Mass Observation as ‘a tiny escape-hole for the dead-end tedium of small-town home and school’ (Hinton, 2013, p.172). BROOMHILL - THE KEEP Broomhill lies in the far east of the county, bordering on the English Channel to the south and the county of Kent to the east and north. A large part of the parish was in Kent until 1895 – it all remains in the diocese of Canterbury – but is not mentioned in the Domesday Book in either county. Broomhill church fell into decay in the MiddleLOGIN
Login. We are currently operating a reduced service. Numbers are limited and booking in advance is required. PARISHES AND SETTLEMENTS Parishes and Settlements. Parishes as we know them today first emerged in the 12th century as a means of providing religious pastoral care to the inhabitants of town and country. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Tudor and Stuart parliaments increasingly made use of these ecclesiastical units for administrative purposes – by 1800they
THE ASHBY FAMILY OF LITTLE PARK IN NINFIELD 15 August 2019 By Anna Manthorpe It can sometimes be a little difficult to decide whether a group of family papers is for us if part of the archive is not local. But it is not a good idea to split an archive, which can often contain overlapping themes and needs to beconsidered as
HOME - THE KEEPABOUTVISITCOLLECTIONSPLACESBLOGHELP The Keep is a world-class centre for archives that opens up access to all the collections of the East Sussex Record Office (ESRO), the Royal Pavilion & Museums Local History Collections and the internationally significant University of Sussex Special Collections. SEARCH COLLECTIONS- THE KEEP The Keep contains information, archives, resources and multimedia on a vast range of topics. You can explore these topics in various ways to help you find what you are looking for. Search our collections by entering a search term into the search bar above every page. SEARCH THE KEEP'S COLLECTIONS To search, use the search box displayed on all pages of the website. You can search using a keyword, phrase or reference number and click Search. This will return search results with the web pages or catalogue records displayed in order of the most relevant first. To search for an exact phrase use quotation marks, e.g. “LewisCohen”.
EAST SUSSEX AND BRIGHTON AND HOVE RECORD OFFICE The holdings of East Sussex and Brighton and Hove Record Office (ESBHRO) make up the majority of the archives at The Keep. The earliest document dates from 1101, but we will consider taking in records from last week if we think they’ll be of interest to future generations. ESBHRO’s holdings cover the whole of East Sussex andBrighton and Hove.
THE RISE AND FALL OF THE EDWARDIAN ELECTROBUS On 14 April (Easter Sunday), the first ‘electrobus’ acquired by the Brighton, Hove & Preston United Omnibus Company arrived in town. Many journalists had travelled on the bus from London to Brighton, and press coverage was enthusiastic. ‘The only omnibus in London which is at once unobjectionable and commercially successful is the THE MANY LIVES OF NINA HIBBIN In September 1939, the first month of the Second World War, Nina Hibbin (then Masel) sent her diary to the Mass Observation offices in London. Still at school and living in Romford, Essex, Hibbin had joined Mass Observation as ‘a tiny escape-hole for the dead-end tedium of small-town home and school’ (Hinton, 2013, p.172). BROOMHILL - THE KEEP Broomhill lies in the far east of the county, bordering on the English Channel to the south and the county of Kent to the east and north. A large part of the parish was in Kent until 1895 – it all remains in the diocese of Canterbury – but is not mentioned in the Domesday Book in either county. Broomhill church fell into decay in the MiddleLOGIN
Login. We are currently operating a reduced service. Numbers are limited and booking in advance is required. PARISHES AND SETTLEMENTS Parishes and Settlements. Parishes as we know them today first emerged in the 12th century as a means of providing religious pastoral care to the inhabitants of town and country. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Tudor and Stuart parliaments increasingly made use of these ecclesiastical units for administrative purposes – by 1800they
THE ASHBY FAMILY OF LITTLE PARK IN NINFIELD 15 August 2019 By Anna Manthorpe It can sometimes be a little difficult to decide whether a group of family papers is for us if part of the archive is not local. But it is not a good idea to split an archive, which can often contain overlapping themes and needs to beconsidered as
VISITING THE KEEP
Visiting The Keep Everyone is welcome to visit The Keep. If you are a first time visitor, take a look at our ‘Before You Visit’ guide, and see below for information on our opening hours, how to find us, and what to expect when you get here. REOPENING INFORMATION Visitors can order up to three documents in advance. This is done via the ‘View at The Keep’ tab on your desired catalogue entry, or through your Wishlist. These documents will be ready for you upon arrival in the reading room. Items will be placed in quarantine for three days once handled.CONTACT THE KEEP
Contact The Keep. AMS6786 Section of a map of land in Rodmell, 1829. This is one of thousands of beautiful and fascinating maps in the holdings of East Sussex Record Office and was executed by one of its most skilled and prolific map makers, William Figg. The word laine is the Sussex term for a large, unenclosed field.KEEPING UP!
Keeping Up! 16 December 2019. By Lindsey Tydeman. Last week at The Keep. A wonderful time was had by all at The Keep’s Christmas party. Staff gathered at a venue in nearby Lewes, where, after dinner and drinks, they enjoyed the healthy competition of The Keep’s Christmas Quiz. Accolades go to party organiser Sophie Unger and our twoKEEPING UP!
A lease from Battle, East Sussex. The Keep’s Conservator Melissa Williams has been working on a lease from 1633 (ACC7375/3). It concerns ‘The Kelkwood, Little Longebrooke and a little piece of rough ground adjoining, in Battle, occupied by Edward Walshe’. Melissa cleaned the parchment and ‘encapsulated’ it (put it in acustom-made
GENEVIEVE - THE FILM-STAR CAR! - THE KEEP 29 October 2019. By Esther Gill. Coming to The Keep this Saturday, 2 November, is a showing of Genevieve, the classic 1953 British comedy featuring the eponymous car and its travails in the London to Brighton Veteran Car Run.And the following day, the car herself will be motoring down to Brighton for the 2019 Run. LETTER FROM THE ARCHIVE: THE GREAT PLAGUE OF 1665-1666 Letter from the Archive: The Great Plague of 1665-1666. ‘Ring-a-ring a roses, a pocketful of posies, attischo, attischo, we all fall down.’. Most of us can recall this well-versed nursery rhyme from our childhood; dancing round in circles, hands clasped, spinning faster and faster before falling down in a heap of giggles. But in1665-1666
EAST SUSSEX
Religion and politics. West Sussex is a county of the established church and Catholicism, East Sussex of protestant nonconformity. Of the 40 men and women burnt for heresy in Sussex between 1555 and 1557, all but eight came from the Eastern Division. In the 1550s, a priest was far more likely to die in office if he held a benefice in West WILLINGDON - THE KEEP Willingdon was a demesne manor of the Honour of Pevensey, also called the Honour of The Eagle after its 12th-century owners. By 1240 the honour, including Willingdon, had become part of the Duchy of Lancaster, which passed to the Crown in 1399 when the Duke of Lancaster, Henry 4, deposed Richard 2. The other major estate in theparish was
THE ASHBY FAMILY OF LITTLE PARK IN NINFIELD 15 August 2019 By Anna Manthorpe It can sometimes be a little difficult to decide whether a group of family papers is for us if part of the archive is not local. But it is not a good idea to split an archive, which can often contain overlapping themes and needs to beconsidered as
HOME - THE KEEPABOUTVISITCOLLECTIONSPLACESBLOGHELP The Keep is a world-class centre for archives that opens up access to all the collections of the East Sussex Record Office (ESRO), the Royal Pavilion & Museums Local History Collections and the internationally significant University of Sussex Special Collections. SEARCH COLLECTIONS- THE KEEP The Keep contains information, archives, resources and multimedia on a vast range of topics. You can explore these topics in various ways to help you find what you are looking for. Search our collections by entering a search term into the search bar above every page. SEARCH THE KEEP'S COLLECTIONS To search, use the search box displayed on all pages of the website. You can search using a keyword, phrase or reference number and click Search. This will return search results with the web pages or catalogue records displayed in order of the most relevant first. To search for an exact phrase use quotation marks, e.g. “LewisCohen”.
EAST SUSSEX AND BRIGHTON AND HOVE RECORD OFFICE The holdings of East Sussex and Brighton and Hove Record Office (ESBHRO) make up the majority of the archives at The Keep. The earliest document dates from 1101, but we will consider taking in records from last week if we think they’ll be of interest to future generations. ESBHRO’s holdings cover the whole of East Sussex andBrighton and Hove.
THE RISE AND FALL OF THE EDWARDIAN ELECTROBUS On 14 April (Easter Sunday), the first ‘electrobus’ acquired by the Brighton, Hove & Preston United Omnibus Company arrived in town. Many journalists had travelled on the bus from London to Brighton, and press coverage was enthusiastic. ‘The only omnibus in London which is at once unobjectionable and commercially successful is the THE MANY LIVES OF NINA HIBBIN In September 1939, the first month of the Second World War, Nina Hibbin (then Masel) sent her diary to the Mass Observation offices in London. Still at school and living in Romford, Essex, Hibbin had joined Mass Observation as ‘a tiny escape-hole for the dead-end tedium of small-town home and school’ (Hinton, 2013, p.172). BROOMHILL - THE KEEP Broomhill lies in the far east of the county, bordering on the English Channel to the south and the county of Kent to the east and north. A large part of the parish was in Kent until 1895 – it all remains in the diocese of Canterbury – but is not mentioned in the Domesday Book in either county. Broomhill church fell into decay in the MiddleLOGIN
Login. We are currently operating a reduced service. Numbers are limited and booking in advance is required. PARISHES AND SETTLEMENTS Parishes and Settlements. Parishes as we know them today first emerged in the 12th century as a means of providing religious pastoral care to the inhabitants of town and country. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Tudor and Stuart parliaments increasingly made use of these ecclesiastical units for administrative purposes – by 1800they
THE ASHBY FAMILY OF LITTLE PARK IN NINFIELD 15 August 2019 By Anna Manthorpe It can sometimes be a little difficult to decide whether a group of family papers is for us if part of the archive is not local. But it is not a good idea to split an archive, which can often contain overlapping themes and needs to beconsidered as
HOME - THE KEEPABOUTVISITCOLLECTIONSPLACESBLOGHELP The Keep is a world-class centre for archives that opens up access to all the collections of the East Sussex Record Office (ESRO), the Royal Pavilion & Museums Local History Collections and the internationally significant University of Sussex Special Collections. SEARCH COLLECTIONS- THE KEEP The Keep contains information, archives, resources and multimedia on a vast range of topics. You can explore these topics in various ways to help you find what you are looking for. Search our collections by entering a search term into the search bar above every page. SEARCH THE KEEP'S COLLECTIONS To search, use the search box displayed on all pages of the website. You can search using a keyword, phrase or reference number and click Search. This will return search results with the web pages or catalogue records displayed in order of the most relevant first. To search for an exact phrase use quotation marks, e.g. “LewisCohen”.
EAST SUSSEX AND BRIGHTON AND HOVE RECORD OFFICE The holdings of East Sussex and Brighton and Hove Record Office (ESBHRO) make up the majority of the archives at The Keep. The earliest document dates from 1101, but we will consider taking in records from last week if we think they’ll be of interest to future generations. ESBHRO’s holdings cover the whole of East Sussex andBrighton and Hove.
THE RISE AND FALL OF THE EDWARDIAN ELECTROBUS On 14 April (Easter Sunday), the first ‘electrobus’ acquired by the Brighton, Hove & Preston United Omnibus Company arrived in town. Many journalists had travelled on the bus from London to Brighton, and press coverage was enthusiastic. ‘The only omnibus in London which is at once unobjectionable and commercially successful is the THE MANY LIVES OF NINA HIBBIN In September 1939, the first month of the Second World War, Nina Hibbin (then Masel) sent her diary to the Mass Observation offices in London. Still at school and living in Romford, Essex, Hibbin had joined Mass Observation as ‘a tiny escape-hole for the dead-end tedium of small-town home and school’ (Hinton, 2013, p.172). BROOMHILL - THE KEEP Broomhill lies in the far east of the county, bordering on the English Channel to the south and the county of Kent to the east and north. A large part of the parish was in Kent until 1895 – it all remains in the diocese of Canterbury – but is not mentioned in the Domesday Book in either county. Broomhill church fell into decay in the MiddleLOGIN
Login. We are currently operating a reduced service. Numbers are limited and booking in advance is required. PARISHES AND SETTLEMENTS Parishes and Settlements. Parishes as we know them today first emerged in the 12th century as a means of providing religious pastoral care to the inhabitants of town and country. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Tudor and Stuart parliaments increasingly made use of these ecclesiastical units for administrative purposes – by 1800they
THE ASHBY FAMILY OF LITTLE PARK IN NINFIELD 15 August 2019 By Anna Manthorpe It can sometimes be a little difficult to decide whether a group of family papers is for us if part of the archive is not local. But it is not a good idea to split an archive, which can often contain overlapping themes and needs to beconsidered as
VISITING THE KEEP
Visiting The Keep Everyone is welcome to visit The Keep. If you are a first time visitor, take a look at our ‘Before You Visit’ guide, and see below for information on our opening hours, how to find us, and what to expect when you get here. REOPENING INFORMATION Visitors can order up to three documents in advance. This is done via the ‘View at The Keep’ tab on your desired catalogue entry, or through your Wishlist. These documents will be ready for you upon arrival in the reading room. Items will be placed in quarantine for three days once handled.CONTACT THE KEEP
Contact The Keep. AMS6786 Section of a map of land in Rodmell, 1829. This is one of thousands of beautiful and fascinating maps in the holdings of East Sussex Record Office and was executed by one of its most skilled and prolific map makers, William Figg. The word laine is the Sussex term for a large, unenclosed field.KEEPING UP!
Keeping Up! 16 December 2019. By Lindsey Tydeman. Last week at The Keep. A wonderful time was had by all at The Keep’s Christmas party. Staff gathered at a venue in nearby Lewes, where, after dinner and drinks, they enjoyed the healthy competition of The Keep’s Christmas Quiz. Accolades go to party organiser Sophie Unger and our twoKEEPING UP!
A lease from Battle, East Sussex. The Keep’s Conservator Melissa Williams has been working on a lease from 1633 (ACC7375/3). It concerns ‘The Kelkwood, Little Longebrooke and a little piece of rough ground adjoining, in Battle, occupied by Edward Walshe’. Melissa cleaned the parchment and ‘encapsulated’ it (put it in acustom-made
GENEVIEVE - THE FILM-STAR CAR! - THE KEEP 29 October 2019. By Esther Gill. Coming to The Keep this Saturday, 2 November, is a showing of Genevieve, the classic 1953 British comedy featuring the eponymous car and its travails in the London to Brighton Veteran Car Run.And the following day, the car herself will be motoring down to Brighton for the 2019 Run. LETTER FROM THE ARCHIVE: THE GREAT PLAGUE OF 1665-1666 Letter from the Archive: The Great Plague of 1665-1666. ‘Ring-a-ring a roses, a pocketful of posies, attischo, attischo, we all fall down.’. Most of us can recall this well-versed nursery rhyme from our childhood; dancing round in circles, hands clasped, spinning faster and faster before falling down in a heap of giggles. But in1665-1666
EAST SUSSEX
Religion and politics. West Sussex is a county of the established church and Catholicism, East Sussex of protestant nonconformity. Of the 40 men and women burnt for heresy in Sussex between 1555 and 1557, all but eight came from the Eastern Division. In the 1550s, a priest was far more likely to die in office if he held a benefice in West WILLINGDON - THE KEEP Willingdon was a demesne manor of the Honour of Pevensey, also called the Honour of The Eagle after its 12th-century owners. By 1240 the honour, including Willingdon, had become part of the Duchy of Lancaster, which passed to the Crown in 1399 when the Duke of Lancaster, Henry 4, deposed Richard 2. The other major estate in theparish was
THE ASHBY FAMILY OF LITTLE PARK IN NINFIELD 15 August 2019 By Anna Manthorpe It can sometimes be a little difficult to decide whether a group of family papers is for us if part of the archive is not local. But it is not a good idea to split an archive, which can often contain overlapping themes and needs to beconsidered as
HOME - THE KEEPABOUTVISITCOLLECTIONSPLACESBLOGHELP The Keep is a world-class centre for archives that opens up access to all the collections of the East Sussex Record Office (ESRO), the Royal Pavilion & Museums Local History Collections and the internationally significant University of Sussex Special Collections. SEARCH COLLECTIONS- THE KEEP The Keep contains information, archives, resources and multimedia on a vast range of topics. You can explore these topics in various ways to help you find what you are looking for. Search our collections by entering a search term into the search bar above every page. SEARCH THE KEEP'S COLLECTIONS To search, use the search box displayed on all pages of the website. You can search using a keyword, phrase or reference number and click Search. This will return search results with the web pages or catalogue records displayed in order of the most relevant first. To search for an exact phrase use quotation marks, e.g. “LewisCohen”.
EAST SUSSEX AND BRIGHTON AND HOVE RECORD OFFICE The holdings of East Sussex and Brighton and Hove Record Office (ESBHRO) make up the majority of the archives at The Keep. The earliest document dates from 1101, but we will consider taking in records from last week if we think they’ll be of interest to future generations. ESBHRO’s holdings cover the whole of East Sussex andBrighton and Hove.
THE RISE AND FALL OF THE EDWARDIAN ELECTROBUS On 14 April (Easter Sunday), the first ‘electrobus’ acquired by the Brighton, Hove & Preston United Omnibus Company arrived in town. Many journalists had travelled on the bus from London to Brighton, and press coverage was enthusiastic. ‘The only omnibus in London which is at once unobjectionable and commercially successful is the THE MANY LIVES OF NINA HIBBIN In September 1939, the first month of the Second World War, Nina Hibbin (then Masel) sent her diary to the Mass Observation offices in London. Still at school and living in Romford, Essex, Hibbin had joined Mass Observation as ‘a tiny escape-hole for the dead-end tedium of small-town home and school’ (Hinton, 2013, p.172). BROOMHILL - THE KEEP Broomhill lies in the far east of the county, bordering on the English Channel to the south and the county of Kent to the east and north. A large part of the parish was in Kent until 1895 – it all remains in the diocese of Canterbury – but is not mentioned in the Domesday Book in either county. Broomhill church fell into decay in the Middle PARISHES AND SETTLEMENTS Parishes and Settlements. Parishes as we know them today first emerged in the 12th century as a means of providing religious pastoral care to the inhabitants of town and country. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Tudor and Stuart parliaments increasingly made use of these ecclesiastical units for administrative purposes – by 1800they
LOGIN
Login. We are currently operating a reduced service. Numbers are limited and booking in advance is required. THE ASHBY FAMILY OF LITTLE PARK IN NINFIELD 15 August 2019 By Anna Manthorpe It can sometimes be a little difficult to decide whether a group of family papers is for us if part of the archive is not local. But it is not a good idea to split an archive, which can often contain overlapping themes and needs to beconsidered as
HOME - THE KEEPABOUTVISITCOLLECTIONSPLACESBLOGHELP The Keep is a world-class centre for archives that opens up access to all the collections of the East Sussex Record Office (ESRO), the Royal Pavilion & Museums Local History Collections and the internationally significant University of Sussex Special Collections. SEARCH COLLECTIONS- THE KEEP The Keep contains information, archives, resources and multimedia on a vast range of topics. You can explore these topics in various ways to help you find what you are looking for. Search our collections by entering a search term into the search bar above every page. SEARCH THE KEEP'S COLLECTIONS To search, use the search box displayed on all pages of the website. You can search using a keyword, phrase or reference number and click Search. This will return search results with the web pages or catalogue records displayed in order of the most relevant first. To search for an exact phrase use quotation marks, e.g. “LewisCohen”.
EAST SUSSEX AND BRIGHTON AND HOVE RECORD OFFICE The holdings of East Sussex and Brighton and Hove Record Office (ESBHRO) make up the majority of the archives at The Keep. The earliest document dates from 1101, but we will consider taking in records from last week if we think they’ll be of interest to future generations. ESBHRO’s holdings cover the whole of East Sussex andBrighton and Hove.
THE RISE AND FALL OF THE EDWARDIAN ELECTROBUS On 14 April (Easter Sunday), the first ‘electrobus’ acquired by the Brighton, Hove & Preston United Omnibus Company arrived in town. Many journalists had travelled on the bus from London to Brighton, and press coverage was enthusiastic. ‘The only omnibus in London which is at once unobjectionable and commercially successful is the THE MANY LIVES OF NINA HIBBIN In September 1939, the first month of the Second World War, Nina Hibbin (then Masel) sent her diary to the Mass Observation offices in London. Still at school and living in Romford, Essex, Hibbin had joined Mass Observation as ‘a tiny escape-hole for the dead-end tedium of small-town home and school’ (Hinton, 2013, p.172). BROOMHILL - THE KEEP Broomhill lies in the far east of the county, bordering on the English Channel to the south and the county of Kent to the east and north. A large part of the parish was in Kent until 1895 – it all remains in the diocese of Canterbury – but is not mentioned in the Domesday Book in either county. Broomhill church fell into decay in the Middle PARISHES AND SETTLEMENTS Parishes and Settlements. Parishes as we know them today first emerged in the 12th century as a means of providing religious pastoral care to the inhabitants of town and country. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Tudor and Stuart parliaments increasingly made use of these ecclesiastical units for administrative purposes – by 1800they
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Login. We are currently operating a reduced service. Numbers are limited and booking in advance is required. THE ASHBY FAMILY OF LITTLE PARK IN NINFIELD 15 August 2019 By Anna Manthorpe It can sometimes be a little difficult to decide whether a group of family papers is for us if part of the archive is not local. But it is not a good idea to split an archive, which can often contain overlapping themes and needs to beconsidered as
REOPENING INFORMATION Visitors can order up to three documents in advance. This is done via the ‘View at The Keep’ tab on your desired catalogue entry, or through your Wishlist. These documents will be ready for you upon arrival in the reading room. Items will be placed in quarantine for three days once handled.CONTACT THE KEEP
Contact The Keep. AMS6786 Section of a map of land in Rodmell, 1829. This is one of thousands of beautiful and fascinating maps in the holdings of East Sussex Record Office and was executed by one of its most skilled and prolific map makers, William Figg. The word laine is the Sussex term for a large, unenclosed field.KEEPING UP!
A lease from Battle, East Sussex. The Keep’s Conservator Melissa Williams has been working on a lease from 1633 (ACC7375/3). It concerns ‘The Kelkwood, Little Longebrooke and a little piece of rough ground adjoining, in Battle, occupied by Edward Walshe’. Melissa cleaned the parchment and ‘encapsulated’ it (put it in acustom-made
KEEPING UP!
Keeping Up! 16 December 2019. By Lindsey Tydeman. Last week at The Keep. A wonderful time was had by all at The Keep’s Christmas party. Staff gathered at a venue in nearby Lewes, where, after dinner and drinks, they enjoyed the healthy competition of The Keep’s Christmas Quiz. Accolades go to party organiser Sophie Unger and our two PARISHES AND SETTLEMENTS Parishes and Settlements. Parishes as we know them today first emerged in the 12th century as a means of providing religious pastoral care to the inhabitants of town and country. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Tudor and Stuart parliaments increasingly made use of these ecclesiastical units for administrative purposes – by 1800they
GENEVIEVE - THE FILM-STAR CAR! - THE KEEP 29 October 2019. By Esther Gill. Coming to The Keep this Saturday, 2 November, is a showing of Genevieve, the classic 1953 British comedy featuring the eponymous car and its travails in the London to Brighton Veteran Car Run.And the following day, the car herself will be motoring down to Brighton for the 2019 Run.EAST SUSSEX
Religion and politics. West Sussex is a county of the established church and Catholicism, East Sussex of protestant nonconformity. Of the 40 men and women burnt for heresy in Sussex between 1555 and 1557, all but eight came from the Eastern Division. In the 1550s, a priest was far more likely to die in office if he held a benefice in West LETTER FROM THE ARCHIVE: THE GREAT PLAGUE OF 1665-1666 Letter from the Archive: The Great Plague of 1665-1666. ‘Ring-a-ring a roses, a pocketful of posies, attischo, attischo, we all fall down.’. Most of us can recall this well-versed nursery rhyme from our childhood; dancing round in circles, hands clasped, spinning faster and faster before falling down in a heap of giggles. But in1665-1666
WILLINGDON - THE KEEP Willingdon was a demesne manor of the Honour of Pevensey, also called the Honour of The Eagle after its 12th-century owners. By 1240 the honour, including Willingdon, had become part of the Duchy of Lancaster, which passed to the Crown in 1399 when the Duke of Lancaster, Henry 4, deposed Richard 2. The other major estate in theparish was
RESTITUTION CASES IN THE ILSE ETON PAPERS 2 September 2016. By Samira Teuteberg. Thanks to the work of the Centre for German-Jewish Studies at the University of Sussex, Special Collections holds a number of collections of family papers donated by people who came to the UK as refugees in the 1930s and 1940s.Recently, the University has been able to secure project funding to catalogue and digitise these archives to make HOME - THE KEEPABOUTVISITCOLLECTIONSPLACESBLOGHELP The Keep is a world-class centre for archives that opens up access to all the collections of the East Sussex Record Office (ESRO), the Royal Pavilion & Museums Local History Collections and the internationally significant University of Sussex Special Collections. SEARCH COLLECTIONS- THE KEEP The Keep contains information, archives, resources and multimedia on a vast range of topics. You can explore these topics in various ways to help you find what you are looking for. Search our collections by entering a search term into the search bar above every page. SEARCH THE KEEP'S COLLECTIONS To search, use the search box displayed on all pages of the website. You can search using a keyword, phrase or reference number and click Search. This will return search results with the web pages or catalogue records displayed in order of the most relevant first. To search for an exact phrase use quotation marks, e.g. “LewisCohen”.
REOPENING INFORMATION Visitors can order up to three documents in advance. This is done via the ‘View at The Keep’ tab on your desired catalogue entry, or through your Wishlist. These documents will be ready for you upon arrival in the reading room. Items will be placed in quarantine for three days once handled.CONTACT THE KEEP
Contact The Keep. AMS6786 Section of a map of land in Rodmell, 1829. This is one of thousands of beautiful and fascinating maps in the holdings of East Sussex Record Office and was executed by one of its most skilled and prolific map makers, William Figg. The word laine is the Sussex term for a large, unenclosed field. THE MANY LIVES OF NINA HIBBIN In September 1939, the first month of the Second World War, Nina Hibbin (then Masel) sent her diary to the Mass Observation offices in London. Still at school and living in Romford, Essex, Hibbin had joined Mass Observation as ‘a tiny escape-hole for the dead-end tedium of small-town home and school’ (Hinton, 2013, p.172).LOGIN
Login. We are currently operating a reduced service. Numbers are limited and booking in advance is required. PARISHES AND SETTLEMENTS Parishes and Settlements. Parishes as we know them today first emerged in the 12th century as a means of providing religious pastoral care to the inhabitants of town and country. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Tudor and Stuart parliaments increasingly made use of these ecclesiastical units for administrative purposes – by 1800they
BROOMHILL - THE KEEP Broomhill lies in the far east of the county, bordering on the English Channel to the south and the county of Kent to the east and north. A large part of the parish was in Kent until 1895 – it all remains in the diocese of Canterbury – but is not mentioned in the Domesday Book in either county. Broomhill church fell into decay in the Middle WILLINGDON - THE KEEP Willingdon was a demesne manor of the Honour of Pevensey, also called the Honour of The Eagle after its 12th-century owners. By 1240 the honour, including Willingdon, had become part of the Duchy of Lancaster, which passed to the Crown in 1399 when the Duke of Lancaster, Henry 4, deposed Richard 2. The other major estate in theparish was
HOME - THE KEEPABOUTVISITCOLLECTIONSPLACESBLOGHELP The Keep is a world-class centre for archives that opens up access to all the collections of the East Sussex Record Office (ESRO), the Royal Pavilion & Museums Local History Collections and the internationally significant University of Sussex Special Collections. SEARCH COLLECTIONS- THE KEEP The Keep contains information, archives, resources and multimedia on a vast range of topics. You can explore these topics in various ways to help you find what you are looking for. Search our collections by entering a search term into the search bar above every page. SEARCH THE KEEP'S COLLECTIONS To search, use the search box displayed on all pages of the website. You can search using a keyword, phrase or reference number and click Search. This will return search results with the web pages or catalogue records displayed in order of the most relevant first. To search for an exact phrase use quotation marks, e.g. “LewisCohen”.
REOPENING INFORMATION Visitors can order up to three documents in advance. This is done via the ‘View at The Keep’ tab on your desired catalogue entry, or through your Wishlist. These documents will be ready for you upon arrival in the reading room. Items will be placed in quarantine for three days once handled.CONTACT THE KEEP
Contact The Keep. AMS6786 Section of a map of land in Rodmell, 1829. This is one of thousands of beautiful and fascinating maps in the holdings of East Sussex Record Office and was executed by one of its most skilled and prolific map makers, William Figg. The word laine is the Sussex term for a large, unenclosed field. THE MANY LIVES OF NINA HIBBIN In September 1939, the first month of the Second World War, Nina Hibbin (then Masel) sent her diary to the Mass Observation offices in London. Still at school and living in Romford, Essex, Hibbin had joined Mass Observation as ‘a tiny escape-hole for the dead-end tedium of small-town home and school’ (Hinton, 2013, p.172).LOGIN
Login. We are currently operating a reduced service. Numbers are limited and booking in advance is required. PARISHES AND SETTLEMENTS Parishes and Settlements. Parishes as we know them today first emerged in the 12th century as a means of providing religious pastoral care to the inhabitants of town and country. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Tudor and Stuart parliaments increasingly made use of these ecclesiastical units for administrative purposes – by 1800they
BROOMHILL - THE KEEP Broomhill lies in the far east of the county, bordering on the English Channel to the south and the county of Kent to the east and north. A large part of the parish was in Kent until 1895 – it all remains in the diocese of Canterbury – but is not mentioned in the Domesday Book in either county. Broomhill church fell into decay in the Middle WILLINGDON - THE KEEP Willingdon was a demesne manor of the Honour of Pevensey, also called the Honour of The Eagle after its 12th-century owners. By 1240 the honour, including Willingdon, had become part of the Duchy of Lancaster, which passed to the Crown in 1399 when the Duke of Lancaster, Henry 4, deposed Richard 2. The other major estate in theparish was
SEARCH THE KEEP'S COLLECTIONS To search, use the search box displayed on all pages of the website. You can search using a keyword, phrase or reference number and click Search. This will return search results with the web pages or catalogue records displayed in order of the most relevant first. To search for an exact phrase use quotation marks, e.g. “LewisCohen”.
REOPENING INFORMATION Visitors can order up to three documents in advance. This is done via the ‘View at The Keep’ tab on your desired catalogue entry, or through your Wishlist. These documents will be ready for you upon arrival in the reading room. Items will be placed in quarantine for three days once handled.CONTACT THE KEEP
Contact The Keep. AMS6786 Section of a map of land in Rodmell, 1829. This is one of thousands of beautiful and fascinating maps in the holdings of East Sussex Record Office and was executed by one of its most skilled and prolific map makers, William Figg. The word laine is the Sussex term for a large, unenclosed field. TITHE MAPS - THE KEEP Tithe maps are useful for local, building and family history studies. They include the boundaries of fields, woods, roads and rivers and locations of buildings. Most date from the 1840s and follow old parish boundaries. The maps are usually large scale and vary in detail. They can show you whether there was a house on the site of your own home WILLINGDON - THE KEEP Willingdon was a demesne manor of the Honour of Pevensey, also called the Honour of The Eagle after its 12th-century owners. By 1240 the honour, including Willingdon, had become part of the Duchy of Lancaster, which passed to the Crown in 1399 when the Duke of Lancaster, Henry 4, deposed Richard 2. The other major estate in theparish was
GENEVIEVE - THE FILM-STAR CAR! - THE KEEP 29 October 2019. By Esther Gill. Coming to The Keep this Saturday, 2 November, is a showing of Genevieve, the classic 1953 British comedy featuring the eponymous car and its travails in the London to Brighton Veteran Car Run.And the following day, the car herself will be motoring down to Brighton for the 2019 Run. LETTER FROM THE ARCHIVE: THE GREAT PLAGUE OF 1665-1666 Letter from the Archive: The Great Plague of 1665-1666. ‘Ring-a-ring a roses, a pocketful of posies, attischo, attischo, we all fall down.’. Most of us can recall this well-versed nursery rhyme from our childhood; dancing round in circles, hands clasped, spinning faster and faster before falling down in a heap of giggles. But in1665-1666
RESTITUTION CASES IN THE ILSE ETON PAPERS 2 September 2016. By Samira Teuteberg. Thanks to the work of the Centre for German-Jewish Studies at the University of Sussex, Special Collections holds a number of collections of family papers donated by people who came to the UK as refugees in the 1930s and 1940s.Recently, the University has been able to secure project funding to catalogue and digitise these archives to makeLITTLE HORSTED
The name Horsted is of English origin, indicating ‘place where horses are kept’. Little Horsted, or Horsted Parva in Latin, distinguishes the parish from Horsted Keynes in the Rape of Lewes, but since 1974 in West Sussex. The Domesday Book records a population of 7.5 households at Little Horsted, which it PIDDINGHOE - AN INTRODUCTION TO THE PARISH INTRODUCTION. We don’t, we live Piddinghoe. The parish of Piddinghoe lies 5 miles south of the County town of Lewes, in the valley of the River Ouse. It is situated downstream from Southease, and borders the parishes of Telscombe, and Newhaven; across the river, on HOME - THE KEEPABOUTVISITCOLLECTIONSPLACESBLOGHELP The Keep is a world-class centre for archives that opens up access to all the collections of the East Sussex Record Office (ESRO), the Royal Pavilion & Museums Local History Collections and the internationally significant University of Sussex Special Collections. SEARCH THE KEEP'S COLLECTIONS To search, use the search box displayed on all pages of the website. You can search using a keyword, phrase or reference number and click Search. This will return search results with the web pages or catalogue records displayed in order of the most relevant first. To search for an exact phrase use quotation marks, e.g. “LewisCohen”.
SEARCH COLLECTIONS- THE KEEP The Keep contains information, archives, resources and multimedia on a vast range of topics. You can explore these topics in various ways to help you find what you are looking for. Search our collections by entering a search term into the search bar above every page. EAST SUSSEX AND BRIGHTON AND HOVE RECORD OFFICE The holdings of East Sussex and Brighton and Hove Record Office (ESBHRO) make up the majority of the archives at The Keep. The earliest document dates from 1101, but we will consider taking in records from last week if we think they’ll be of interest to future generations. ESBHRO’s holdings cover the whole of East Sussex andBrighton and Hove.
COPING WITH A HEALTH CRISIS 17 February 2020 By Andrew Bennett, Brighton & Hove Archivist The current health crisis is a reminder of the huge challenges facing local authorities when dealing with the spread of infectious diseases. As is so often the case, however, there are precedents in the archives. Seventy years ago, the swift and decisive action ofBrighton’s
THE MANY LIVES OF NINA HIBBIN In September 1939, the first month of the Second World War, Nina Hibbin (then Masel) sent her diary to the Mass Observation offices in London. Still at school and living in Romford, Essex, Hibbin had joined Mass Observation as ‘a tiny escape-hole for the dead-end tedium of small-town home and school’ (Hinton, 2013, p.172). BROOMHILL - THE KEEP Broomhill lies in the far east of the county, bordering on the English Channel to the south and the county of Kent to the east and north. A large part of the parish was in Kent until 1895 – it all remains in the diocese of Canterbury – but is not mentioned in the Domesday Book in either county. Broomhill church fell into decay in the MiddleLOGIN
Login. We are currently operating a reduced service. Numbers are limited and booking in advance is required. PARISHES AND SETTLEMENTS Parishes and Settlements. Parishes as we know them today first emerged in the 12th century as a means of providing religious pastoral care to the inhabitants of town and country. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Tudor and Stuart parliaments increasingly made use of these ecclesiastical units for administrative purposes – by 1800they
THE ASHBY FAMILY OF LITTLE PARK IN NINFIELD 15 August 2019 By Anna Manthorpe It can sometimes be a little difficult to decide whether a group of family papers is for us if part of the archive is not local. But it is not a good idea to split an archive, which can often contain overlapping themes and needs to beconsidered as
HOME - THE KEEPABOUTVISITCOLLECTIONSPLACESBLOGHELP The Keep is a world-class centre for archives that opens up access to all the collections of the East Sussex Record Office (ESRO), the Royal Pavilion & Museums Local History Collections and the internationally significant University of Sussex Special Collections. SEARCH THE KEEP'S COLLECTIONS To search, use the search box displayed on all pages of the website. You can search using a keyword, phrase or reference number and click Search. This will return search results with the web pages or catalogue records displayed in order of the most relevant first. To search for an exact phrase use quotation marks, e.g. “LewisCohen”.
SEARCH COLLECTIONS- THE KEEP The Keep contains information, archives, resources and multimedia on a vast range of topics. You can explore these topics in various ways to help you find what you are looking for. Search our collections by entering a search term into the search bar above every page. EAST SUSSEX AND BRIGHTON AND HOVE RECORD OFFICE The holdings of East Sussex and Brighton and Hove Record Office (ESBHRO) make up the majority of the archives at The Keep. The earliest document dates from 1101, but we will consider taking in records from last week if we think they’ll be of interest to future generations. ESBHRO’s holdings cover the whole of East Sussex andBrighton and Hove.
COPING WITH A HEALTH CRISIS 17 February 2020 By Andrew Bennett, Brighton & Hove Archivist The current health crisis is a reminder of the huge challenges facing local authorities when dealing with the spread of infectious diseases. As is so often the case, however, there are precedents in the archives. Seventy years ago, the swift and decisive action ofBrighton’s
THE MANY LIVES OF NINA HIBBIN In September 1939, the first month of the Second World War, Nina Hibbin (then Masel) sent her diary to the Mass Observation offices in London. Still at school and living in Romford, Essex, Hibbin had joined Mass Observation as ‘a tiny escape-hole for the dead-end tedium of small-town home and school’ (Hinton, 2013, p.172). BROOMHILL - THE KEEP Broomhill lies in the far east of the county, bordering on the English Channel to the south and the county of Kent to the east and north. A large part of the parish was in Kent until 1895 – it all remains in the diocese of Canterbury – but is not mentioned in the Domesday Book in either county. Broomhill church fell into decay in the MiddleLOGIN
Login. We are currently operating a reduced service. Numbers are limited and booking in advance is required. PARISHES AND SETTLEMENTS Parishes and Settlements. Parishes as we know them today first emerged in the 12th century as a means of providing religious pastoral care to the inhabitants of town and country. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Tudor and Stuart parliaments increasingly made use of these ecclesiastical units for administrative purposes – by 1800they
THE ASHBY FAMILY OF LITTLE PARK IN NINFIELD 15 August 2019 By Anna Manthorpe It can sometimes be a little difficult to decide whether a group of family papers is for us if part of the archive is not local. But it is not a good idea to split an archive, which can often contain overlapping themes and needs to beconsidered as
REOPENING INFORMATION Visitors can order up to three documents in advance. This is done via the ‘View at The Keep’ tab on your desired catalogue entry, or through your Wishlist. These documents will be ready for you upon arrival in the reading room. Items will be placed in quarantine for three days once handled.CONTACT THE KEEP
Contact The Keep. AMS6786 Section of a map of land in Rodmell, 1829. This is one of thousands of beautiful and fascinating maps in the holdings of East Sussex Record Office and was executed by one of its most skilled and prolific map makers, William Figg. The word laine is the Sussex term for a large, unenclosed field. THE RISE AND FALL OF THE EDWARDIAN ELECTROBUS The Brighton, Hove & Preston United Omnibus Co bought four buses from the London Electrobus Company, itself set up in 1906.The company asked local architects Clayton & Black to design a garage and recharging station in Montague Place.Plans were approved in October 1908 and Brighton’s four electric buses entered service in June the followingyear.
KEEPING UP!
Keeping Up! 16 December 2019. By Lindsey Tydeman. Last week at The Keep. A wonderful time was had by all at The Keep’s Christmas party. Staff gathered at a venue in nearby Lewes, where, after dinner and drinks, they enjoyed the healthy competition of The Keep’s Christmas Quiz. Accolades go to party organiser Sophie Unger and our two PARISHES AND SETTLEMENTS Parishes and Settlements. Parishes as we know them today first emerged in the 12th century as a means of providing religious pastoral care to the inhabitants of town and country. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Tudor and Stuart parliaments increasingly made use of these ecclesiastical units for administrative purposes – by 1800they
KEEPING UP!
A lease from Battle, East Sussex. The Keep’s Conservator Melissa Williams has been working on a lease from 1633 (ACC7375/3). It concerns ‘The Kelkwood, Little Longebrooke and a little piece of rough ground adjoining, in Battle, occupied by Edward Walshe’. Melissa cleaned the parchment and ‘encapsulated’ it (put it in acustom-made
GENEVIEVE - THE FILM-STAR CAR! - THE KEEP 29 October 2019. By Esther Gill. Coming to The Keep this Saturday, 2 November, is a showing of Genevieve, the classic 1953 British comedy featuring the eponymous car and its travails in the London to Brighton Veteran Car Run.And the following day, the car herself will be motoring down to Brighton for the 2019 Run. LETTER FROM THE ARCHIVE: THE GREAT PLAGUE OF 1665-1666 Letter from the Archive: The Great Plague of 1665-1666. ‘Ring-a-ring a roses, a pocketful of posies, attischo, attischo, we all fall down.’. Most of us can recall this well-versed nursery rhyme from our childhood; dancing round in circles, hands clasped, spinning faster and faster before falling down in a heap of giggles. But in1665-1666
EAST SUSSEX
Religion and politics. West Sussex is a county of the established church and Catholicism, East Sussex of protestant nonconformity. Of the 40 men and women burnt for heresy in Sussex between 1555 and 1557, all but eight came from the Eastern Division. In the 1550s, a priest was far more likely to die in office if he held a benefice in West WILLINGDON - THE KEEP Willingdon was a demesne manor of the Honour of Pevensey, also called the Honour of The Eagle after its 12th-century owners. By 1240 the honour, including Willingdon, had become part of the Duchy of Lancaster, which passed to the Crown in 1399 when the Duke of Lancaster, Henry 4, deposed Richard 2. The other major estate in theparish was
HOME - THE KEEPABOUTVISITCOLLECTIONSPLACESBLOGHELP The Keep is a world-class centre for archives that opens up access to all the collections of the East Sussex Record Office (ESRO), the Royal Pavilion & Museums Local History Collections and the internationally significant University of Sussex Special Collections. SEARCH THE KEEP'S COLLECTIONS To search, use the search box displayed on all pages of the website. You can search using a keyword, phrase or reference number and click Search. This will return search results with the web pages or catalogue records displayed in order of the most relevant first. To search for an exact phrase use quotation marks, e.g. “LewisCohen”.
SEARCH COLLECTIONS- THE KEEP The Keep contains information, archives, resources and multimedia on a vast range of topics. You can explore these topics in various ways to help you find what you are looking for. Search our collections by entering a search term into the search bar above every page. EAST SUSSEX AND BRIGHTON AND HOVE RECORD OFFICE The holdings of East Sussex and Brighton and Hove Record Office (ESBHRO) make up the majority of the archives at The Keep. The earliest document dates from 1101, but we will consider taking in records from last week if we think they’ll be of interest to future generations. ESBHRO’s holdings cover the whole of East Sussex andBrighton and Hove.
COPING WITH A HEALTH CRISIS 17 February 2020 By Andrew Bennett, Brighton & Hove Archivist The current health crisis is a reminder of the huge challenges facing local authorities when dealing with the spread of infectious diseases. As is so often the case, however, there are precedents in the archives. Seventy years ago, the swift and decisive action ofBrighton’s
THE MANY LIVES OF NINA HIBBIN In September 1939, the first month of the Second World War, Nina Hibbin (then Masel) sent her diary to the Mass Observation offices in London. Still at school and living in Romford, Essex, Hibbin had joined Mass Observation as ‘a tiny escape-hole for the dead-end tedium of small-town home and school’ (Hinton, 2013, p.172).LOGIN
Login. We are currently operating a reduced service. Numbers are limited and booking in advance is required. BROOMHILL - THE KEEP Broomhill lies in the far east of the county, bordering on the English Channel to the south and the county of Kent to the east and north. A large part of the parish was in Kent until 1895 – it all remains in the diocese of Canterbury – but is not mentioned in the Domesday Book in either county. Broomhill church fell into decay in the Middle PARISHES AND SETTLEMENTS Parishes and Settlements. Parishes as we know them today first emerged in the 12th century as a means of providing religious pastoral care to the inhabitants of town and country. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Tudor and Stuart parliaments increasingly made use of these ecclesiastical units for administrative purposes – by 1800they
THE ASHBY FAMILY OF LITTLE PARK IN NINFIELD 15 August 2019 By Anna Manthorpe It can sometimes be a little difficult to decide whether a group of family papers is for us if part of the archive is not local. But it is not a good idea to split an archive, which can often contain overlapping themes and needs to beconsidered as
HOME - THE KEEPABOUTVISITCOLLECTIONSPLACESBLOGHELP The Keep is a world-class centre for archives that opens up access to all the collections of the East Sussex Record Office (ESRO), the Royal Pavilion & Museums Local History Collections and the internationally significant University of Sussex Special Collections. SEARCH THE KEEP'S COLLECTIONS To search, use the search box displayed on all pages of the website. You can search using a keyword, phrase or reference number and click Search. This will return search results with the web pages or catalogue records displayed in order of the most relevant first. To search for an exact phrase use quotation marks, e.g. “LewisCohen”.
SEARCH COLLECTIONS- THE KEEP The Keep contains information, archives, resources and multimedia on a vast range of topics. You can explore these topics in various ways to help you find what you are looking for. Search our collections by entering a search term into the search bar above every page. EAST SUSSEX AND BRIGHTON AND HOVE RECORD OFFICE The holdings of East Sussex and Brighton and Hove Record Office (ESBHRO) make up the majority of the archives at The Keep. The earliest document dates from 1101, but we will consider taking in records from last week if we think they’ll be of interest to future generations. ESBHRO’s holdings cover the whole of East Sussex andBrighton and Hove.
COPING WITH A HEALTH CRISIS 17 February 2020 By Andrew Bennett, Brighton & Hove Archivist The current health crisis is a reminder of the huge challenges facing local authorities when dealing with the spread of infectious diseases. As is so often the case, however, there are precedents in the archives. Seventy years ago, the swift and decisive action ofBrighton’s
THE MANY LIVES OF NINA HIBBIN In September 1939, the first month of the Second World War, Nina Hibbin (then Masel) sent her diary to the Mass Observation offices in London. Still at school and living in Romford, Essex, Hibbin had joined Mass Observation as ‘a tiny escape-hole for the dead-end tedium of small-town home and school’ (Hinton, 2013, p.172).LOGIN
Login. We are currently operating a reduced service. Numbers are limited and booking in advance is required. BROOMHILL - THE KEEP Broomhill lies in the far east of the county, bordering on the English Channel to the south and the county of Kent to the east and north. A large part of the parish was in Kent until 1895 – it all remains in the diocese of Canterbury – but is not mentioned in the Domesday Book in either county. Broomhill church fell into decay in the Middle PARISHES AND SETTLEMENTS Parishes and Settlements. Parishes as we know them today first emerged in the 12th century as a means of providing religious pastoral care to the inhabitants of town and country. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Tudor and Stuart parliaments increasingly made use of these ecclesiastical units for administrative purposes – by 1800they
THE ASHBY FAMILY OF LITTLE PARK IN NINFIELD 15 August 2019 By Anna Manthorpe It can sometimes be a little difficult to decide whether a group of family papers is for us if part of the archive is not local. But it is not a good idea to split an archive, which can often contain overlapping themes and needs to beconsidered as
VISITING THE KEEP
Visiting The Keep Everyone is welcome to visit The Keep. If you are a first time visitor, take a look at our ‘Before You Visit’ guide, and see below for information on our opening hours, how to find us, and what to expect when you get here. REOPENING INFORMATION Visitors can order up to three documents in advance. This is done via the ‘View at The Keep’ tab on your desired catalogue entry, or through your Wishlist. These documents will be ready for you upon arrival in the reading room. Items will be placed in quarantine for three days once handled.CONTACT THE KEEP
Contact The Keep. AMS6786 Section of a map of land in Rodmell, 1829. This is one of thousands of beautiful and fascinating maps in the holdings of East Sussex Record Office and was executed by one of its most skilled and prolific map makers, William Figg. The word laine is the Sussex term for a large, unenclosed field. THE RISE AND FALL OF THE EDWARDIAN ELECTROBUS The Brighton, Hove & Preston United Omnibus Co bought four buses from the London Electrobus Company, itself set up in 1906.The company asked local architects Clayton & Black to design a garage and recharging station in Montague Place.Plans were approved in October 1908 and Brighton’s four electric buses entered service in June the followingyear.
KEEPING UP!
Keeping Up! 16 December 2019. By Lindsey Tydeman. Last week at The Keep. A wonderful time was had by all at The Keep’s Christmas party. Staff gathered at a venue in nearby Lewes, where, after dinner and drinks, they enjoyed the healthy competition of The Keep’s Christmas Quiz. Accolades go to party organiser Sophie Unger and our twoKEEPING UP!
A lease from Battle, East Sussex. The Keep’s Conservator Melissa Williams has been working on a lease from 1633 (ACC7375/3). It concerns ‘The Kelkwood, Little Longebrooke and a little piece of rough ground adjoining, in Battle, occupied by Edward Walshe’. Melissa cleaned the parchment and ‘encapsulated’ it (put it in acustom-made
GENEVIEVE - THE FILM-STAR CAR! - THE KEEP 29 October 2019. By Esther Gill. Coming to The Keep this Saturday, 2 November, is a showing of Genevieve, the classic 1953 British comedy featuring the eponymous car and its travails in the London to Brighton Veteran Car Run.And the following day, the car herself will be motoring down to Brighton for the 2019 Run. WILLINGDON - THE KEEP Willingdon was a demesne manor of the Honour of Pevensey, also called the Honour of The Eagle after its 12th-century owners. By 1240 the honour, including Willingdon, had become part of the Duchy of Lancaster, which passed to the Crown in 1399 when the Duke of Lancaster, Henry 4, deposed Richard 2. The other major estate in theparish was
EAST SUSSEX
Religion and politics. West Sussex is a county of the established church and Catholicism, East Sussex of protestant nonconformity. Of the 40 men and women burnt for heresy in Sussex between 1555 and 1557, all but eight came from the Eastern Division. In the 1550s, a priest was far more likely to die in office if he held a benefice in WestLITTLE HORSTED
The name Horsted is of English origin, indicating ‘place where horses are kept’. Little Horsted, or Horsted Parva in Latin, distinguishes the parish from Horsted Keynes in the Rape of Lewes, but since 1974 in West Sussex. The Domesday Book records a population of 7.5 households at Little Horsted, which it HOME - THE KEEPABOUTVISITCOLLECTIONSPLACESBLOGHELP The Keep is a world-class centre for archives that opens up access to all the collections of the East Sussex Record Office (ESRO), the Royal Pavilion & Museums Local History Collections and the internationally significant University of Sussex Special Collections. SEARCH THE KEEP'S COLLECTIONS To search, use the search box displayed on all pages of the website. You can search using a keyword, phrase or reference number and click Search. This will return search results with the web pages or catalogue records displayed in order of the most relevant first. To search for an exact phrase use quotation marks, e.g. “LewisCohen”.
SEARCH COLLECTIONS- THE KEEP The Keep contains information, archives, resources and multimedia on a vast range of topics. You can explore these topics in various ways to help you find what you are looking for. Search our collections by entering a search term into the search bar above every page. EAST SUSSEX AND BRIGHTON AND HOVE RECORD OFFICE The holdings of East Sussex and Brighton and Hove Record Office (ESBHRO) make up the majority of the archives at The Keep. The earliest document dates from 1101, but we will consider taking in records from last week if we think they’ll be of interest to future generations. ESBHRO’s holdings cover the whole of East Sussex andBrighton and Hove.
COPING WITH A HEALTH CRISIS 17 February 2020 By Andrew Bennett, Brighton & Hove Archivist The current health crisis is a reminder of the huge challenges facing local authorities when dealing with the spread of infectious diseases. As is so often the case, however, there are precedents in the archives. Seventy years ago, the swift and decisive action ofBrighton’s
THE MANY LIVES OF NINA HIBBIN In September 1939, the first month of the Second World War, Nina Hibbin (then Masel) sent her diary to the Mass Observation offices in London. Still at school and living in Romford, Essex, Hibbin had joined Mass Observation as ‘a tiny escape-hole for the dead-end tedium of small-town home and school’ (Hinton, 2013, p.172).LOGIN
Login. We are currently operating a reduced service. Numbers are limited and booking in advance is required. BROOMHILL - THE KEEP Broomhill lies in the far east of the county, bordering on the English Channel to the south and the county of Kent to the east and north. A large part of the parish was in Kent until 1895 – it all remains in the diocese of Canterbury – but is not mentioned in the Domesday Book in either county. Broomhill church fell into decay in the Middle PARISHES AND SETTLEMENTS Parishes and Settlements. Parishes as we know them today first emerged in the 12th century as a means of providing religious pastoral care to the inhabitants of town and country. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Tudor and Stuart parliaments increasingly made use of these ecclesiastical units for administrative purposes – by 1800they
THE ASHBY FAMILY OF LITTLE PARK IN NINFIELD 15 August 2019 By Anna Manthorpe It can sometimes be a little difficult to decide whether a group of family papers is for us if part of the archive is not local. But it is not a good idea to split an archive, which can often contain overlapping themes and needs to beconsidered as
HOME - THE KEEPABOUTVISITCOLLECTIONSPLACESBLOGHELP The Keep is a world-class centre for archives that opens up access to all the collections of the East Sussex Record Office (ESRO), the Royal Pavilion & Museums Local History Collections and the internationally significant University of Sussex Special Collections. SEARCH THE KEEP'S COLLECTIONS To search, use the search box displayed on all pages of the website. You can search using a keyword, phrase or reference number and click Search. This will return search results with the web pages or catalogue records displayed in order of the most relevant first. To search for an exact phrase use quotation marks, e.g. “LewisCohen”.
SEARCH COLLECTIONS- THE KEEP The Keep contains information, archives, resources and multimedia on a vast range of topics. You can explore these topics in various ways to help you find what you are looking for. Search our collections by entering a search term into the search bar above every page. EAST SUSSEX AND BRIGHTON AND HOVE RECORD OFFICE The holdings of East Sussex and Brighton and Hove Record Office (ESBHRO) make up the majority of the archives at The Keep. The earliest document dates from 1101, but we will consider taking in records from last week if we think they’ll be of interest to future generations. ESBHRO’s holdings cover the whole of East Sussex andBrighton and Hove.
COPING WITH A HEALTH CRISIS 17 February 2020 By Andrew Bennett, Brighton & Hove Archivist The current health crisis is a reminder of the huge challenges facing local authorities when dealing with the spread of infectious diseases. As is so often the case, however, there are precedents in the archives. Seventy years ago, the swift and decisive action ofBrighton’s
THE MANY LIVES OF NINA HIBBIN In September 1939, the first month of the Second World War, Nina Hibbin (then Masel) sent her diary to the Mass Observation offices in London. Still at school and living in Romford, Essex, Hibbin had joined Mass Observation as ‘a tiny escape-hole for the dead-end tedium of small-town home and school’ (Hinton, 2013, p.172).LOGIN
Login. We are currently operating a reduced service. Numbers are limited and booking in advance is required. BROOMHILL - THE KEEP Broomhill lies in the far east of the county, bordering on the English Channel to the south and the county of Kent to the east and north. A large part of the parish was in Kent until 1895 – it all remains in the diocese of Canterbury – but is not mentioned in the Domesday Book in either county. Broomhill church fell into decay in the Middle PARISHES AND SETTLEMENTS Parishes and Settlements. Parishes as we know them today first emerged in the 12th century as a means of providing religious pastoral care to the inhabitants of town and country. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the Tudor and Stuart parliaments increasingly made use of these ecclesiastical units for administrative purposes – by 1800they
THE ASHBY FAMILY OF LITTLE PARK IN NINFIELD 15 August 2019 By Anna Manthorpe It can sometimes be a little difficult to decide whether a group of family papers is for us if part of the archive is not local. But it is not a good idea to split an archive, which can often contain overlapping themes and needs to beconsidered as
VISITING THE KEEP
Visiting The Keep Everyone is welcome to visit The Keep. If you are a first time visitor, take a look at our ‘Before You Visit’ guide, and see below for information on our opening hours, how to find us, and what to expect when you get here. REOPENING INFORMATION Visitors can order up to three documents in advance. This is done via the ‘View at The Keep’ tab on your desired catalogue entry, or through your Wishlist. These documents will be ready for you upon arrival in the reading room. Items will be placed in quarantine for three days once handled.CONTACT THE KEEP
Contact The Keep. AMS6786 Section of a map of land in Rodmell, 1829. This is one of thousands of beautiful and fascinating maps in the holdings of East Sussex Record Office and was executed by one of its most skilled and prolific map makers, William Figg. The word laine is the Sussex term for a large, unenclosed field. THE RISE AND FALL OF THE EDWARDIAN ELECTROBUS The Brighton, Hove & Preston United Omnibus Co bought four buses from the London Electrobus Company, itself set up in 1906.The company asked local architects Clayton & Black to design a garage and recharging station in Montague Place.Plans were approved in October 1908 and Brighton’s four electric buses entered service in June the followingyear.
KEEPING UP!
Keeping Up! 16 December 2019. By Lindsey Tydeman. Last week at The Keep. A wonderful time was had by all at The Keep’s Christmas party. Staff gathered at a venue in nearby Lewes, where, after dinner and drinks, they enjoyed the healthy competition of The Keep’s Christmas Quiz. Accolades go to party organiser Sophie Unger and our twoKEEPING UP!
A lease from Battle, East Sussex. The Keep’s Conservator Melissa Williams has been working on a lease from 1633 (ACC7375/3). It concerns ‘The Kelkwood, Little Longebrooke and a little piece of rough ground adjoining, in Battle, occupied by Edward Walshe’. Melissa cleaned the parchment and ‘encapsulated’ it (put it in acustom-made
GENEVIEVE - THE FILM-STAR CAR! - THE KEEP 29 October 2019. By Esther Gill. Coming to The Keep this Saturday, 2 November, is a showing of Genevieve, the classic 1953 British comedy featuring the eponymous car and its travails in the London to Brighton Veteran Car Run.And the following day, the car herself will be motoring down to Brighton for the 2019 Run. WILLINGDON - THE KEEP Willingdon was a demesne manor of the Honour of Pevensey, also called the Honour of The Eagle after its 12th-century owners. By 1240 the honour, including Willingdon, had become part of the Duchy of Lancaster, which passed to the Crown in 1399 when the Duke of Lancaster, Henry 4, deposed Richard 2. The other major estate in theparish was
EAST SUSSEX
Religion and politics. West Sussex is a county of the established church and Catholicism, East Sussex of protestant nonconformity. Of the 40 men and women burnt for heresy in Sussex between 1555 and 1557, all but eight came from the Eastern Division. In the 1550s, a priest was far more likely to die in office if he held a benefice in WestLITTLE HORSTED
The name Horsted is of English origin, indicating ‘place where horses are kept’. Little Horsted, or Horsted Parva in Latin, distinguishes the parish from Horsted Keynes in the Rape of Lewes, but since 1974 in West Sussex. The Domesday Book records a population of 7.5 households at Little Horsted, which itERROR 525
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