Figure 1 – The shopping mall,
created by Richard Adolphus Came, on the corner of Station
Road and Tattershall Road. The shop on the corner is ‘H
Flower, purveyors of chocolate’.Photo
courtesy of Woodhall Spa Cottage Museum
These gardens
are where the Royal Hydropathic Hotel and Winter Gardens once stood.
The hotel was designed by London architect, Richard
Adolphus Came, who came here in the late 19th century. He saw
the possibilities for Woodhall Spa becoming a garden township and
was architect to the Syndicate of gentlemen who took over the Spa
in 1887. On this site, he created a quadrangular shopping mall
with a crystal covered promenade, around an open space with gardens
(Fig 1).
Later, Mr Came decided to build a hotel on the
site. The Spa was flourishing, with more visitors arriving
each year and, apart from several boarding houses, there were only
two hotels in which to accommodate them.
On 8 May 1907, it was reported in the Horncastle
News that the hotel had opened for visitors (Fig 2). It
was said to have been “modelled in a thoroughly up to date
and captivating style”. There were 120 rooms and suites
and the rateable value was rumoured to be £700, which, it was
said, would ease the burden on other ratepayers although it was unlikely
that a businessman such as Mr Came would accept this figure without
an appeal.
Figure 2 – The
Royal Hydro Hotel and Winter Gardens, not long after opening
in 1907, looking down Station Road. Note the sewer
stench pipe to the left of the picture, with street lights
attached.Photo courtesy of Woodhall Spa
Cottage Museum
A week after opening, the Royal Hydro was included in the newspaper’s
Visitors List for the Spa and 6 people were staying there. A
Select dance was reported to have been held, with “most of
the best known residents of the Spa and their friends attending”. At
the end of the month Mr Came applied for a licence to perform stage
plays in the Winter Gardens, pointing out that fire precautions included
4 hydrants and that as well as the large main entrance into the room,
there were 12 exits which could be used in an emergency
At the beginning of September, two titled ladies,
Lady Louisa Wells and the Dowager Duchess of Warwick, were among
the 40 or so guests staying at the hotel, one of whom was the popular
novelist of the late 19th century, Miss Marie Corelli. The
1907 Woodhall Spa Season ended on 11 September. It seems to
have been highly successful for the Royal Hydropathic Hotel and Winter
Gardens.
Mr Came did not close his hotel for the winter and
over the years it became greatly in demand for local functions. There
were dances and concerts to raise money for clubs and charities or
the Alexandra Hospital. End of year Prize Givings for Miss
Lunn’s High School for Girls, on the Broadway, were held there;
Smoking Concerts were enjoyed by the Cricket Club and the Golf Club
held its annual Fancy Dress Ball in the Winter Gardens each January.
Figure 3 – The Winter Gardens,
taken from the stage.Photo courtesy of Woodhall
Spa Cottage Museum
At this time, there was a constant search for new
springs of Spa water in the village and in February 1905, Mr Came
located one off Tattershall Road, not far from the Roman Catholic
Church. A 7 feet diameter shaft was sunk and water was found
at 492 feet. Several interesting fossils were reported as having
been found in the shaft, including an ammonite with a diameter of
2 feet. This water, when analysed, was found to contain all
the minerals of Spa water, with Epsom salts in addition. As
a result of this successful boring, Mr Came decided to build a Bath
House next to his hotel. Unlike the Spa Baths, his would remain
open in the winter.
By November 1906, the Baths were complete and an
advertisement appeared in the paper of the 24th of the month, to
the effect that they were open for villagers to use on 3 days each
week. Mrs Edith Bagshaw was Manageress at this time. In
1907, we read that she owned a terrier, which sadly was killed, when
chasing a train along the railway line behind the hotel.
The hotel had regular entertainments and sometimes
artists were brought from London. At a local level, we read
that on a Saturday afternoon in July 1907, Mr Allen, the band leader,
gave a concert for patients at the Alexandra Hospital who greatly
enjoyed the fine string band and also Mr Allen’s spirited whistling
solos. In August 1907 there were 55 visitors staying in the
Royal Hydro, compared with 40 at the Eagle and 95 at the larger and
grander Victoria.
Figure 4 – Advert
for the Royal Hydro Hotel and Winter Gardens taken from a
souvenir booklet of 1911.Photo courtesy
of Woodhall Spa Cottage Museum.
An advertisement
in a souvenir booklet in 1911 shows that the hotel was well established
(Fig 4). The name of the Medical attendant
is not given, but Dr Gwyn, who lived on Horncastle Road, was Medical
Superintendent of the Royal Hydro Baths for some time. He died
in 1922. A lady named Adeline Pacey, who was born in 1904,
recorded that she remembered seeing Bath attendants in red dresses
through an open door, when she was a girl.
Mr Came had a flat in his hotel, situated at the
end, next to what is now the Mall car park. At the other end,
on Tattershall Road, there was a ladies’ hair dressing establishment,
at one time occupied by Miss Hattie Rose, then Miss Phyllis Gresham
and later Mrs Duffy. Mr Leslie Chapman and his wife lived in
a flat overlooking Station Road, when they were married in 1932. Miss
Rose, a niece of the bakers at Kirkstead, lived underneath. They
were great friends and she allowed them to go downstairs for baths. Later,
Mr Chapman remembers Mr Oyler, who was the manager of Abbey Lodge,
lived in that flat.
Famous visitors included Dame Nellie Melba, the
Australian singer, after whom the dessert “Peach Melba” is
reputedly named, when she was a guest of the Weigalls at Petwood
House.
The hotel was closed at the outbreak of war in 1914. On
1 April 1915, the newspaper reported “the worst blizzard remembered” when
trees were uprooted, trains delayed and property damaged, in the
Spa. Two large chimneys were blown off the Royal Hydro Hotel.
In 1918, every effort was made to return to the
life before the war, but the Spa did not really recover and by 1920,
the Royal Hydro was virtually empty. However, it continued
to be a popular venue for dances and every type of village function. Mr
Scott Targett became Manager of the hotel in 1936. He was a
Methodist and a teetotaller and so he stopped the sale of alcohol. Previously,
there had been a popular bar. He introduced a Boxing Ring and
invited champions from places as far away as Manchester. Both
local people and many from further afield, such as Boston and Cranwell
came to watch. He also ran a Table Tennis Club for young men
and invited the National Champion to give an exhibition.
Figure 5 – The
site of the Royal Hydro Hotel, not long after the bomb fell.Photo
courtesy of Woodhall Spa Cottage Museum
Mr Targett continued the tradition of engaging well known artists
and Paul Robeson, the famous bass singer, is still remembered as
coming to Woodhall Spa. During the early years of the Second
World War, Ivy Benson’s Ladies’ Band made a popular visit.
The army requisitioned the hotel in 1940. They concreted
over the beautiful dance floor and gun carriers ploughed up the car
park. Mr Targett returned to London in 1941, leaving Mr Brookman
in charge.
Then came disaster. On the night of 17 August 1943, two German parachute
retard bombs were dropped over Woodhall Spa, one of which hit the
Royal Hydro Hotel. Fortunately, none of the many soldiers stationed
in the hotel was hurt, as they were away on manoeuvres that night,
but the building was badly damaged. Some of the brickwork
survived, but the roof was missing, doors were blown out, window
frames were useless and there was glass everywhere (Fig 5).
Figure 6 – The
Royal Square Gardens, as seen in late 2005, with the Dambuster
Memorial at the rear of the gardens.Photo
courtesy of Woodhall Spa Cottage Museum.
The next day was spent clearing the site and sweeping
up glass. It was decided that it would be too expensive to
rebuild the hotel and eventually it was dismantled and the debris
carried away. Mrs. Joyce Dowse remembered carting stone away
on a tractor for a local builder at 1 shilling (5p) per load.
A beer garden was suggested as a replacement, but
Mr Targett was certainly not having that! In the end it was
decided to give the piece of land on which the hotel had stood to
the Urban District Council as a memorial to the village.
The Royal Hydropathic Hotel and Winter Gardens is
still remembered fondly by older residents of the village. Mr
Peter Wilson recalls it well and comments, nostalgically, that his
bungalow was built on what had been the pretty gardens of this lovely
hotel. The Royal Square Gardens (Fig 6), a
public car park and the car park of The Mall Public House now occupy
the site of the Royal Hydro Hotel and Winter Gardens.
The Heritage Trail
Click
on the numbers to visit the next point on the Woodhall Spa Heritage
Trail (Under construction - only 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 10, 11, 16, 17 & 19
are currently active)
The trail
can be started at any location, but we suggest you also visit the
Cottage Museum to see the photographs taken by John Wield during
the heyday of the Spa and items associated with this
unique Victorian Spa town.