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Fittleworth
seems remarkably rich in its broad cultural connections for a parish so small
and sleepy. For
generations the P.G.
Wodehouse’s fictional character George ‘Boko’ Fittleworth was a good
friend of Bertie Wooster. Bertie describes Jeeves, on meeting Boko for the first
time, as having "winced visibly and tottered off to the kitchen, no doubt
to pull himself together with cooking sherry." Pelham Grenville Wodehouse
was born in Guildford, Francis
James Dickins (of ‘Dickins and Jones’ extraction) was a Architect
Clough Williams Ellis produced terrace (1914) and loggia (1925) designs for the
Maxse Family at Little Bognor, and also produced plans for a War Memorial Seat
on Hesworth Common. In
1917, the composer Edward Elgar and family went to live at Brinkwells, just
north of the village. After several months, Elgar took an old Steinway from
storage and set to work on a sonata for
violin and piano, and Royal Academician
Charles Sims’s (1873-1928) first one-man show at the
Leicester Galleries in 1906 brought Sims financial success, enabling him to
relocate to Fittleworth where several of his paintings were set, now at Compton
Verney and the Tate. Sims
invented a method of combining tempera with oil paint. Working as an official
war artist brought about painful experiences which contributed to him ending his
life. In 1925, the Thornhill family started visiting
Fittleworth prior to the building of their new house, Rotherwood, which was
finished in 1926. Sculptor and a founding trustee of the Frink
Antarctic
explorer and former BBC Radio ‘Dick Barton’ star Duncan Carse found the
solitude he needed after a particularly gruelling solo expedition to South Georgia when his new wife Venetia
moved to ’a house with a garden’ at Fittleworth in 1963. The secluded garden was to
prove both sanctuary and nature reserve for over 40 years. After a noted
absence, spotted flycatchers returned to nest in the porch in 2007. I
find it evocative reading of a visit James Ivory made to Fittleworth whilst
directing Room with a View in 1985,
imagining his hosts, actress (now Dame) Maggie Smith and her husband playwright
Beverley Cross, travelling to a nearby hamlet to visit Laurence (Lord) Olivier
and wife Joan Plowright. One imagines that other contemporary artists such as
Bryan Ferry continue to find spiritual uplift here. Nearby, Hardham Church has some fine early-Romanesque work ('Sussex School') dating from the 12th century. The wall paintings are considered to form one of the most complete schemes of medieval painting in the UK. The environs produced Sussex Marble (also called Petworth Marble or Winklestone) for a number of centuries, although the industry died out in the late 1800s and the quarry sites are long forgotten. Much of this stone is present in Westminster Abbey tombs, Chichester Cathedral and an entire chair in Canterbury Cathedral. |