This website, created by Valerie Martin, contains scenes from her home village of Findon, West Sussex, U.K.
THE LAWBROOK GHOST
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Edwin and Christiana Douglas in the garden of Lawbrook House, Shere, Surrey. |
Copyright Valerie Martin 2000
Originally printed in Along the Furlong, March 2002.
Please note that I cannot enter into correspondence on valuations of paintings nor advise on where best to sell items.
Edwin Douglas the Scottish artist living in Surrey in the mid-Victorian era had, at the time, no plans to live in Findon — the idea to move to Sussex came much later in his life.
I have discovered that he met and fell in love with Christiana Maria Feake-Martin, a young lady who had been born on Christmas Day in 1845. When Edwin was 26 years old they were married on St. George's Day, 23rd April 1874.
Christiana was well connected; she was the fifth daughter of Philip Stuart Feake-Martin J.P. Her father was Master of the East Essex Foxhounds, Lord of the Manor of Henham in Essex, and a direct descendent of Sir Richard Martin, the Master of the Mint who was knighted by Queen Elizabeth I. Christiana had quite a pedigree and was definitely a lady.
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Portraits of himself and Christiana in 1874 at Lawbrook House, Shere by Edwin Douglas. It was obviously fashionable to be smoking a cigarette in those days. |
2nd January 2006
Edwin Douglas Daniel James Keeping, Hong Kong. |
I have found that Edwin and Christiana moved into Lawbrook, an old manor house in Shere, Surrey. The house was a higgledy-piggledy combination of old with new and was set in a niche cut out of a southern slope of the sandy North Downs. Although they did not realise it at the time, they were within sight (on a clear day) of their future home on the South Downs at Findon.
It seems that Lawbrook was very commodious with a charming garden plus another seven acres that Edwin quickly put to use for his painting. The most useful aspect of the manor house, (from Edwin's artistic point of view), was the combination of riding-school and studio. This is where he painted the greatest number of his canvases in comfort indoors. This obiously proved to be a great boon in inclement weather. It was an enormous room some 50 ft by 30 ft, built at the back of the stables and contained convenient trap-windows looking into the loose boxes. The required northern light for painting came through a large window.
If he needed to paint a cow, there was an area in which it could be safely tethered. In one corner there was a small three-cornered stall that could hold a calf. In another, was a raised "throne" that could accommodate a dog awaiting its portrait. In this set-up a cow, horse or dog could I think have had its portrait painted by Edwin with as much ease as his sitters would allow in those days.
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Edwin and Christiana Douglas |
Lawbrook had been uninhabited for some six years before Edwin and Christiana moved in. It had gained the reputation, like so many ancient houses before it, of being haunted. I can now relate the story. The couple had a brush with the supernatural and lost their first cook and parlour maid following a ghostly appearance.
These two servants shared a bedroom together on a landing approached by a staircase at the rear of the property, and a considerable way from the family's accommodation.
One night the cook awoke her companion by screaming loudly. When the poor housemaid had quietened her, the cook declared that she had just witnessed a ghostly form floating out of their bedroom. The frightening apparition had been that of an old crone wearing a black poke bonnet and carrying before her two tall lighted candles. The cook was obsessed by the constantly recurring memory of what she had seen but no one could find any trace of the eerie form.
The housemaid could not help but be amused and they decided between themselves that the cook might have been dreaming.
However, about a week later the cook this time was awakened by loud screams from the housemaid. This young woman declared she had now seen the same supernatural being — the old stooped lady in the black poke bonnet.
Both of these worthies promptly handed in their notices from the Douglas' employ as soon as they conveniently could after the event. The offending bedroom was only used as a sitting room from then on, and the old woman bearing her lighted candles did not visit again — at least no one reported such a recurrence of the visitation.
Every day life continued as normal at manor house from then on.
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12th February 2006 Hello Valerie, Lawbrook Pauline Placzhowski, Wyoming, U.S.A.
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Pauline's great grandfather would have been the Estate Manager or Head Gardener in the 1920s at Lawbrook at some point after Edwin Douglas had moved on.
Continue if you would like to read about Grousie.
Back to Edwin James Douglas Index
This is Findon — www.findonvillage.com is a continually growing record created by Valerie Martin exclusively for documenting life in Findon.
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E-mail: valeriemartin@findonvillage.com |