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19 October 2025This article, by Barry Lawrence, first appeared ine the 2010 society Journal
Since coming to live in this area fifteen years ago I have been intrigued by the occasional reference in speech or print to the wartime visits to Bromyard by the children of the MichaelRedgrave/ Rachel Kempson acting family. What were they doing here? Whom were they visiting? What connections did they have with this area? These were questions I hoped I could answer by some diligent searching. Various theories were put to me as to the reason for the visits but nobody seemed to have any positive information.
Over the years I have built up snippets of backgroundmaterial on the Kempson family greatly assistedrecently by the amount of detail available from theinternet. A further impetus was the Centenary of theMorgan Car in 2009 which put the focus on to StokeLacy for it was here in 1836 that the Herefordshirebased Kempson story started.
In that year John Kempson(Senior) who was born in 1751 and was a Druggist from Hornsey in Middlesex purchased Rectory House in Stoke Lacy from Thomas Hill. During his long life (he died in 1851, aged 90) he also purchased the Birchyfields estate. These properties were inherited by his sons John (Junior) –Birchyfields,and William – Rectory House.
William Brooke Kempson, born in 1796 became Rector of Stoke Lacy from 1839 until his death in 1859. It was from him and his wife Elizabeth (nee Robertson) that the Kempson line descended into the 21st century. The couple had seven children – four sons and three daughters. It was two of the sons who particularly interested me but for very different reasons and it was from researching them and their families that the answers to my queries were eventually revealed.
William John Kempson was born in Newcastle upon Tyne in 1835, the first son of his parent’s marriage in 1831. He joined the Army and on his marriage in Pembrokeshire in 1864 he is recorded as a Brevet Major in the 99th Foot Regiment. His bride was LouisaFrances Wedgwood the elder daughter of Henry Allen Wedgwood who was himself the grandson of Josiah Wedgwood of pottery fame. William’s profession meant that the family had no settled home with their first child, Jessie born in Worcester in 1867 and hersiblings, Hester Louisa b.1869, John Wedgwood b.1870 and Lucy Caroline b.1874 all born whilst staying with relatives in Kent. Sadly William died in Folkestone in 1877 of a ruptured aneurism aged only 42 which left his family scattered once again. In the 1881Census Louisa is staying with her sister-in-law Madeleine Kempson at Hampton Park, Hereford whilst her children were with their grandfather Henry Wedgwood now in Cheltenham. In 1887 the family were reunited in the house which was to become their home for the next thirty years. They rented from Mrs.Elizabeth Higgins what was then called “New House” (now Moreton House) at Moreton Jeffries which had been vacated by Rev.Henry George.Morgan who moved to Stoke Lacy Rectory on the death of his father and who was Rector there until 1937. He was the father of the founder of the Morgan Car Company who was born at New House.
New House at Moreton Jefferies
The Kempsons entered into the social life of the district with frequent mentions of their activities in the Diaries of Ruth Bourne of nearby Cowarne Court. In 1903 Louisa Kempson died and both she and her husband are remembered on a window in Stoke Lacy church. Another mystery then presented itself as Louisa’s death is not recorded in any of the U.K. national Death Indexes. It is only recently that due to the previously mentioned internet I found that she died on April 18th in Las Palmas, Grand Canaria with her Death Certificate signed by the British Vice Consul. Passenger Lists record her leaving London for Las Palmas in January of that year accompanied by her daughter. She left a three page Will made in 1899 with her major assets divided between her four children.Regrettably I have been unable to trace where she (or her husband) were buried.The “children”, now all grown up had gone their separate ways and at that time all remained unmarried. Jessie and Hester are recorded as” living on their own means”, whilst John was aLieutenant in the Royal Artillery who then emigrated to America where he ranched for several years only returning to England on the outbreak of the First World War. Lucy Caroline, the youngest daughter is recorded in her obituary as being “among those women who were the first to receive a university education”. She had a distinguished academic career but both she and Hester kept their base at the house in Moreton Jeffries. Hester surprised everyone when in June 1911 at the age of 42 she married Henry Richardson, a retired bank manager from Torquay. The marriage was however a short one as Henry died in 1914 and Hester remained at Moreton Jeffries. After the War John returned to Bromyard as a Captain and built “Whitegate” on the Hereford road – now “Whitegates” and used as a nursing home. He died in London after an operation in 1928 aged 58 and was buried in Stoke Lacy. His three sisters inherited his property but Hester was herself to die in 1930 and is also buried at Stoke Lacy.The house in Moreton Jeffries had to be relinquished in 1918 on the death of John Smith of Thinghill Court who had purchased the Moreton Jeffries Estate in 1898 from the executors of Mrs.Higgins. Jessie who had lived for many years in London also had a cottage in Bosbury and later moved to West Malvern where she died in 1939 leaving her property to her remaining sister Lucy and her jewellery to her great niece Rachel Redgrave. Jessie was buried at Bosbury.By the time of the Redgrave children’s visits to Bromyard in the 1940s and 1950s Lucy Kempson had retired and was living at Whitegate. Ruth Bourne (then Ruth Baily) remarks in her Diary of that time that she was “invited to a sherry party at Lucy Kempson’s charming house in Bromyard”. Miss Kempson had a busy retirement – she was a governor of Queen Elizabeth’s Grammar School, a Cottage Hospital Trustee, a member of the Bromyard Parochial Church Council and had involvement in many other town activities. Unlike the rest of her family she had a long life and died in 1958 aged 83. After cremation her ashes were buried in the grave of her sister Hester at Stoke Lacy.By far the better known of the two brothers, in this locality at least, was Frederick Robertson Kempson who was born in Stoke Lacy in 1838 and who died in Chelsea in 1923. He trained as an architect and in 1866 married Julia Madeleine Jay with whom he had six children amongst whom were Eric William Edward b.1879 and Helena Joan b.1882.Frederick Kempson became a Diocesan Architect in the 1860s and as such was responsible for the restoration or rebuilding of many of Herefordshire’s churches including Stoke Lacy (1863) and St.Paul Tupsley (1864).Frederick’s second son Eric married Beatrice Ashwell in Totnes in 1908 and it was in Dartmouth where he was a master at the Royal Naval College that his daughter Rachel was born in May 1910. Eric Kempson became a Major in the Royal Engineers during the First World War where he saw service in Egypt. He died in London in 1948 aged 69.Eric’s sister Helena had a distinguished nursing career and retired to Dumbleton Cottage in Church Street, Bromyard and like her kinswoman Lucy had a very active retirement involving herself giving lectures and demonstrations for the Britsh Red Cross and becoming the Society’s County Nursing Superintendant. She too was a member of the Bromyard P.C.C. and assisted the town in many other ways. She died in December 1957 aged 75. Amongst the mourners was Lucy Kempson who was herself to die three weeks later and at both funerals “Mrs.Michael Redgrave” who was by then the famous actress Rachel Kempson and themother of Vanessa, Corin and Lynn.It is obvious from my researches that Rachel Kempson, her father Eric, and later her children kept in constant contact with the family in Bromyard and sought there the relative peace and tranquillity during the days of the Second World War. The two Miss Kempsons still living in the town at that time must have had many storiesto tell these young children and it is good to know that the family name is perpetuated today in the playing fields off York Road.
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13 October 2025By Jean Hopkinson. This article was first published in the 2011 society Journal.
A strong wind rolled dark brown ‘golf balls’ down the bank at the end of the Bromyard underpass in August and I remember resolving to find out which conifer had borne the cones. I then forgot about them until reading through a file of Phyllis Williams’sworking papers in the History Centre I came across the following invoice dated Christmas 1890 amongst others relating to Mr James Jenks’s business at the Tan Yard in Pump Street:A.Marshall, High St., Bromyard, Green Grocer, Fruiterer, Florist etc.1 Wellingtonia 10s 0d1 Irish Yew 4 01 Cupresus 5 0Men getting up and planting tree 1 02 men ¾day each, 1¼ days 4 61 laurel tinns 2 61 Cupresus Erecta 4 0Purple beech tree 5 0
From the Ordnance Survey map surveyed in 1884 it appears that there was no garden next to the Tan House, however it does show that the present Nunwell Surgery, on the opposite side of the road, stands on a sizeable plot marked Tannery that may havefilled this role. The area, which by 1845 had already been cleared of the burgage plots developed by the bishop of Hereford in the 12th century, was an orchard and extended from the boundary with Nunwell House to include all the land at present occupied by the surgery, the width of the bypass and the ground up to the row ofcottages that stand on the west of Tower Hill. It fronted onto Pump Street, and on the west was bounded by a footpath which still stretches from Highwell Lane to the top of Little Hereford Street, passing a kissing-gate now beached forlornly at Old DitchCottage. When the surgery was still in Nunwell House this land was a paddock where Dr King-Lewis kept a pony for his trap before he acquired a Daimler.
Being in the tanning business Mr Jenks would have been knowledgeable about the properties of various woods, and probably chose his purchases with care. There appear to have been six pits in the middle of the plot and maybe the intention was for the new trees to act as a screen. I determined to see if any had survived.There is no sign of the Irish yew and a Laurelstinus might not be expected to live that long. There is, however, a pallid offspring of the purple beech, and happily spared when the bypass was put through in 1966-7 is a towering Wellingtonia only six yards from the pavement, whose cones are the origin of my ‘golf balls’ and which can remain green and hang on the tree for twenty years. Standing on council land, it is automatically protected and there is no need for one of the tree preservation orders first introduced as part of the Local Government Act of 1947. Wellingtonias were brought to Britain in 1854 and the naming of the tree after the Duke ofWellington who had died two years previously, caused an international row between the British and the Americans who wanted it called the ‘Washington’. After years of dispute it was finally named Sequoiadendron giganteum because of its similarity to the Coast Redwood, Sequoia sempervirens.Among other conifers are several Cupressus Lawsonia with their small spherical cones, augmented by two possible White Cedars, Thuja occidentalis, with cones that turn an attractive yellowish green as they mature; ‘by their fruits ye shall know them!’ I have visited the surgery since 1964 and never noticed the spectacular tulip tree by the entrance. Across the bypass in what remains of Mr Jenks’s garden is Nunwell Park carefully preserved as an open space thanks to the foresight of the then parish council and now home to Time Tower, Philip Bews’s sturdy Millennium wooden sculpture. There are also a couple of London Plane trees, but unfortunately it is impossible to say whether Mr Jenks bought these.I have no doubt, however, that the magnificent Wellingtonia was the one planted by him, a generous benefactor during his lifetime, still ‘benefactoring’ Bromyard over a century later.SourcesB&DLHS/AWa B56/2/8 Bills relating to Mr Jenks’ business at the Tan YardRoger Phillips, Trees in Britain (1983)Ordnance Survey 1887bbc co.uk/gardening/design – Victorianwikipedia.org/wiki/sequioadendronwww.bewsgorvin.co.uk […]
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10 October 2025By Hugh Langrishe.
This article first appeared in the 2010 society Journal. The Rev. Prebendary Henry George Morgan was a keen motorist owning several motor cars before 1910. They were serviced and repaired by A&E Pettifer in their Rowberry Street garage, as were the early cars of his son Henry Frederick Stanley Morgan also known as Harry Morgan or HFS. Albert Pettifer was a keen motorist and one of 35 drivers to tackle the first Shelsley Walsh Hill Climb in 1905. HFS also gained a taste of competitive motoring when he entered the Shelsley Walsh Hill Climb on 13 July 1907. He also competed in the 1906 Fromes Hill, hill climb.It was not until 1910, approximately five years after Pettifer’s new garage was built replacing the old one which had burnt down, that Mr. Pettifer was commissioned to build the first body and chassis for HFS’s final prototype single-seater three wheeler “Runabout”. This was the final development of the first car to be fitted with a Peugeot Vee-twin engine.The 1910 car was shown at the 1910 Olympia Motor Show. It attracted much favourable comment but few orders. Those that were built were bodied by Pettifer. For the 1911 Motor Show the car was re-bodied as a two seater, again by Pettifer, and attracted many orders.HFS accepted an offer by Harrods for an exclusive agency which lasted for about a year although there were at least two other agencies. All chassis were delivered to London and Harrods arranged all body building. By August 1912 construction of bodies for the Morgan Runabout ceased in Bromyard as distance from Malvern and increasing demand for the car was beyond the ability of Albert Pettifer to provide successfully. Instead HFS used the resources of William Clare Coach Builders, ½ mile from the Morgan Co. Works.The panels for Pettifer bodies were shaped in his tinsmith’s shop which occupied the upper floor of the small detached building in Tin Pan Alley, between Broad and Rowberry streets. They were assembled on the chassis in the garage. The wooden patterns for the body patterns were cut in the upper floor of the building across the yard. In those early years of the motor car, manufacturers did not build their own bodies and supplied the chassis “bare”. It is possible that Pettifer used his experience from building the Morgan bodies to offer a body-building service to other car owners in the area.Connection between HFS/Malvern College/Pettifers/Stoke Lacy and the Morgan PrototypeHFS was also a keen cyclist and would cycle from Malvern to Stoke Lacy. He tried a motor cycle but after a short while turned his thoughts to a ‘cyclecar’ which would be light and flexible to accommodate hills and poor roads around the area. In Malvern, his friend was William J. Stephenson-Peach, engineering master at Malvern College. HFS was an engineer but his true talent lay in his ability to merge the best features of contemporary design to create the simplest yet most efficient vehicle of its type adding his own additions like independent suspension, better weight distribution and reduced weight in the braised chassis. Items werebought from local suppliers and the body framework was made of wood in the carpenter’s shop. The 3-wheel prototype was tested on his frequent visits to his family in Stoke Lacy during 1909 and the stables would have been used also as temporary workshop as modifications were made en route. Finally the crude model was entrusted to A.E. Pettifer of Bromyard where his workmen’s expert skills could produce high quality brazing to create the supports, chassis and body parts in his tinsmith’s shop and garage on Rowberry Street.
Hugh Langrishe 2010
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11 September 2025One of the most famous polar shipwrecks has been filmed in detail on the sea floor for the first time.
The Terra Nova carried Captain Scott and his men on their doomed expedition to reach the South Pole more than a century ago.
Terra Nova – Getty Images / Royal Geographic
The British party lost the race to the pole, and died on their return journey in 1912.
The footage shows the Terra Nova colonised with sea life, but key features of the wooden ship are still visible including its wheel, winch and mast.
The wreck lies 170m down off the coast of Greenland. After the polar expedition with Scott, the ship continued in service and eventually sank in 1943 while carrying supplies to US bases during World War Two.
The Terra Nova was discovered in 2012 by the Schmidt Ocean Institute, but the new expedition has been the first opportunity to record extensive footage of the wreck.
For the full story visit the BBC website here
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