| NALGO
House, Matlock - the Derby & Derbyshire Convalescent Home |
| Matlock, Twentieth Century Photographs, Postcards, Engravings & Etchings |
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In the nineteenth century NALGO House was a guest house and the
poet and artist "Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Elizabeth Siddall,
later his wife, stayed there in 1857[1]".
Rossetti, together with Holman Hunt and
John Everett Millias, "was a leading spirit in founding the
pre-Raphaelite brotherhood[2]".
He married Elizabeth Siddall in 1860; Elizabeth "had been
a model for a number of paintings including Millais' Ophelia[2]".
The property on Lime Tree Road, Matlock Bank, was purchased in
December 1888 for £1,950 with money raised entirely by donations
for what was to be the Derby & Derbyshire Convalescent Home,
linked to the one already established at Derby for the sick poor[3].
A Board of Trustees and management and officers were appointed[3].
The property had been chosen because it had to be capable
of receiving 35 patients and for its position "situated
on Limetree-hill ... about 500 feet above the [river] Derwent[4]". When
it was bought there was still a sitting tenant in but they were
due to leave on 25th March 1889[3].
A fundraising grand bazaar was held in the Drill Hall in February
1889 and a large sum was raised[3];
this was repeated in subsequent years.
Advertisements were placed in
local papers during February 1889 and Miss Peet was appointed as
the matron; Miss Eastland later took over[5].
The venture was opened by Lady Edward Cavendish in June 1889[4].
Annual meetings were held and in 1900 the board reported extensive
repairs to the boundary walls and building as well as redecoration
both inside and out[6].
They also tried to help the war effort that year.
"In January last, at a special meeting, the Board decided
to place ten beds at the disposal of the War office for convalescent
soldiers returning from the front, giving the preference to members
of the Derbyshire Regiments or men from Derby and the county." By
the date of the meeting they had only received one application
and he wasn't from Derbyshire[6]!
This postcard dates from the days the property was run by NALGO
as a Convalescent home for its members[7].
Later in the twentieth century it became The Lindens[1] residential
home for the elderly but has been converted into three private
homes in recent years. |
A Real Photograph Postcard, No 18. Unused
Postcard in the collection of, provided by and research © Ann
Andrews Intended for personal use only
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References (coloured
hyperlinks are mainly to transcripts elsewhere on this website):
[1] Barton,
David A. "Around Matlock in Old Photographs",
(1998) part of a series called "Britain
in Old Photographs", Budding Books, ISBN 1-84015-076-9, p32
[2] "Dante Gabriel Rossetti" (1967),
The Masters, No. 89 (text by William Gaunt), Purnell & Sons
Ltd
[3] "The Derby
Mercury", Wednesday,
February 20, 1889
[4] "The Derby Mercury",
Wednesday, June 19, 1889
[5] Miss Peet was the matron of the Derby & Derbyshire
Convalescent Home from about 1891 and references include:
1891 Kelly's
Directory | 1891
Census | 1908
Kelly's Directory.
Miss E. Eastland, was the sister in charge in 1916
Kelly's Directory
[6] "The Derby Mercury", Wednesday,
July 25, 1900
[7] Trade directory references to
Nalgo House Convalescent Home for Local Government Officers
have been found in Kelly's 1932 Directory (Miss Pacey, Matron)
and Kelly's 1941 Directory (Miss Mary L. Bridges, matron).
NALGO, or the National Association of
Local Government Officers, even provided Holiday Camps for the
members.
An interesting
website, with a short history
of NALGO is Trade
Union Ancestors (this will open in a new window).
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