Lewes History Group Talk: Monday 14th October 2024 at 19:30 – Builders, designers and decorators of interiors – the Georgian Craftsmen of Lewes and local country houses 1710-1820

Builders, designers and decorators of interiors – the Georgian Craftsmen of Lewes and local country houses 1710-1820,   Sue Berry

The talk explores the impact of patronage and its decline and other influences on the work of craftsmen in Lewes , especially Arthur and John Morris snr. It also puts them into the broader context of rivals in Lewes at the time, asking whether Arthur and John were unique in the amount of work that they did on local country houses as well as in Lewes by exploring what we know about rivals such as Joseph and Amon and Amon Henry Wilds.

Whilst there are a lot of examples of local craftsmen working on country houses in eastern Sussex between the 1720s and the 1760s, such work then seems to fall away. Archives show little during the later period. And the houses seem to freeze. The craftsmen of Lewes had to find other sources of income.

That the way in which craftsmen sought work had changed is reflected in the work undertaken by craftsmen based in Lewes from the 1780s. The leading families of craftsmen moved to speculative housing and incomers found plenty of work in Lewes and Brighton, both of which had building booms. Of which Brighton’s is the greatest and lasts longest. The resort becomes a magnet for builders from the 1750s. When Dr Poole wished to revamp his substantial house overlooking the Steine in the 1760s, he used builders from the resort apart from John Morris who built his stables (HOOK 23/1/13). 1 This suggests that Brighton was so well supplied with craftsmen that Lewesians struggled to become established there without good contacts. The Wilds of Lewes initially depended on the patronage of Thomas Kemp of Lewes who moved to Brighton to develop land that he had inherited and that helped them make contact with other clients.

We will look at country houses and churches where the Morris dynasty of Lewes made their mark and the work by them and other craftsmen in Lewes.

LHG Members can attend our talks for free.

Non-members can buy a ticket (£4) from TicketSource.co.uk/lhg

See the Talks page for a list of forthcoming monthly events organised by Lewes History Group.

Posted in Lewes, Local History, Sussex, Uncategorized | Comments Off on Lewes History Group Talk: Monday 14th October 2024 at 19:30 – Builders, designers and decorators of interiors – the Georgian Craftsmen of Lewes and local country houses 1710-1820

Lewes Archaeology Group meeting – Friday 18 October: The landscape and archaeology of the Cuckmere Valley

Posted in Sussex, Uncategorized | Comments Off on Lewes Archaeology Group meeting – Friday 18 October: The landscape and archaeology of the Cuckmere Valley

Hut Stories Volunteers needed – 26th/27th October 2024

Hut Stories will celebrate the histories of the Lewes Green Huts, with key highlights including an exhibition and performances celebrating the men of the British West Indies Regiment who used this building as a church in 1915-16, and a display of creative responses by young people to the objects found abandoned in the huts.

Learn more on the Visit Lewes website : https://www.visitlewes.co.uk/whats-on/hut-stories or on Facebook : https://fb.me/e/48WNe5AKh .

This is a volunteer-run community event and we need your help! Can you spare a few hours to help make it happen? It is taking place on 26th/27th October, from 11.00am – 5.00pm.

Sign-up form for those who would be kind enough to help steward: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1CmnDG6vozottNDgLc7m6YwGGMrU_1vaRbImpjIe0PdY/edit

N.B This is not an LHG project – posted on behalf of Lewes Town Council

Posted in Ecclesiastical History, Lewes, Military History, Social History, Uncategorized | Tagged , | Comments Off on Hut Stories Volunteers needed – 26th/27th October 2024