The diaries of Allen Grove
THE DIARIES OF ALLEN GROVE
Dr ROBERT SPAIN
I first met Allen Grove in the early 1960s and, as our friendship grew, I
learnt that he kept a diary with daily entries and had done so for some
time. In later years he showed some of them to me, and realising the
full, rich and varied life that he had led, I thought them to contain much
fascinating material from his experiences and observations. I said as
much to him on more than one occasion, when he and I sipped
Malmsey wine in the parlour of his beloved cottage at Hollingbourne.
Many years later, in the evening of his life, he told me that he had
arranged to leave his diaries to me, and in due course they came into
my hands as part of the legacy relating to all his manuscripts.
Allen apparently kept a diary during his youth but only fragments
remain transcribed into later volumes. The volumes which exist cover
the years 1923 (part), 1926 (part), 1929-30, 1930-34, 1934-37, 1938,
1948, 1965-69, and, thereafter, a full series, one volume for each year
until mid-1990, when Allen died. I cannot trace a 1939 diary though I
believe there to have been one because of the consistent daily record
which continued to the last day of 1938. However, the war years are
another matter. In the light of us knowing that Allen joined the navy,
and that members of the armed services were forbidden to keep diaries,
it is no surprise that diaries for that period have not come down to us.
However, the veil of darkness is lifted momentarily on several
occasions by comments and reminiscences that occur in later diaries.
What is perplexing is the absence of diaries for the years 1946 to 1959
with the exception of 1948. Having sight of the unbroken series of later
diaries, especially their size and the tremendous output from his pen, I
at first thought that we had lost similar large volumes belonging to the
late 1940s and 1950s. But we have three clues which suggest
otherwise.
First, the 1948 diary. This is quite unlike any other volume which I at
first took to be a rough notebook, or at least an appointment book such
were its irregular jottings, yet its contents have a parallel with pre-war
volumes. It has the same mixture of subject-matter of personal,
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R.SPAIN
topographical, contemporary events, museum business, meetings, etc.,
in other words the entries by their very nature and presentation confirm
that this was a diary essentially the same as earlier ones though very
much smaller. Furthermore quite a number of the original pencilled
entries have been inked over and further notes added which, according
to one annotation, were made by Allen in 1984. This more or less
proves that this was his definitive 1948 diary.
The second clue which suggests that the 1948 volume was his modus
operandi in the immediate post-war period comes from the 1965-69
volume, which starts the final unbroken series. This volume was a
present from Allen's relations and is believed to have encouraged Allen
to go back to the habit of keeping more detailed journals or diaries.
Both the word-count and the daily capacity of the 1965-69 volume is
intermediate and complementary in evolution terms between the 1948
diary and the volumes produced from 1970 onwards.
The final clue comes from the first entry in the 1970 diary.
[1 Jan. 1970] For the past five years I have written a few lines each day
in a Five Year Diary. It has been amusing to look back to see what I
was doing on a similar day two or three years before but space in such
diaries is restricted and one cannot indulge in long descriptions or
purple patches.
And so we may conclude with some confidence that Allen limited
himself to small pocket diaries during the late 1940s and 1950s, but
nearly all of them have been lost.
The volume of manuscript material in Allen's diaries is very large.
As the years passed, he tended to write more each day and the odd
shapes and duration of his early pre-war diaries gave way to separate
annual volumes from 1970, initially A4 and later, from 1977, AS. The
rate of writing increased through the late 1960s and 70s and reached a
considerable output following his retirement. I estimate that less than 5
per cent of all his diary writings occurred pre-war: the equivalent of
one of his volumes from the 1980s. In the 1960s, a typical year's diary
contained 15,000 words, in the 1970s 44,000 words and by the 1980s a
typical volume holds 108,000 words. At a conservative estimate there
are some 1.8 million words in his diaries.
On a few of t h e diaries the spines are badly damaged and
delaminated, but the pen-work through them all is very legible,
invariably executed with an oblique nib in a court or copper-plate hand.
Allen had a curious habit of converting any ink blots, which occurred
now and then, into figures and shapes according to his fancy and
imagination including heads, human figures and animals.
The diaries contain a plethora of material including his museum
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THE DIARIES OF ALLEN GROVE
work, nature observations, meetings, hobbies, especially his preoccupation
with music, references to contemporary events,
topographical and biographical notes. They form a record of a
perceptive observer leading a very busy and varied life who was,
moreover, a trained historian and naturalist.
For those of us who befriended Allen, not a difficult thing given his
gregarious and helpful nature, or listened to Allen giving formal talks,
they will recall his fondness of anecdotes invariably used with good
effect for demonstrative or humorous purposes. Conversation is the
natural milieu of the anecdote, and it is not surprising that entries in
many of his later diaries take the form of anecdotal memoirs or
reminiscences. These reflective records sometimes provide valuable
information of earlier darker periods or give an insight into his personal
views and beliefs.
Family relationships thread through these diaries, but they are
e ntirely concerned with appointments, comings and goings,
celebrations and health. In such entries personal health and more
private matters are rarely mentioned, and then only in the briefest terms
relating to himself or Eva, his wife.
Although Allen was quite capable of expressing derogatory views of
other people, such occasions were fairly rare. Only once in his pre-war
diaries did he vent his feelings against another person, words clearly
written whilst in a pique. Later in life, when his friendships and
acquaintances numbered many hundreds, and he experienced as curator
of a busy museum all the vicissitudes and moods of the public, and as
chairman overviewing political and polemic debates, his diary entries
were rarely personally targeted. His writings reflect his phlegmatic and
rather sanguine temperament. 1
Researching in diaries has a parallel to archaeology; sifting through a
mass of dateable material to learn about human activity, but in this case
a person rather than people. It is not possible to do justice to such a
great volume of personal history by extracting blocks of entries for,
even with time windows of a few days, the entries give a bewildering
range of subjects changing all the time like a slowly revolving
kaleidoscope. The reader might sense his daily pace of life, the press of
business, people and changing scenes but there would be no synthesis
of subject and the developments and general changes which Allen
experienced through time would be smothered.
An obvious way to present extracts from a diary is to give them in
strict chronological order, but the great disadvantage in doing it this
1 Allen would probably have been amused to be categorised by two of the four
classical temperaments defined by the fifteenth-century philosopher Galen.
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R. SPAIN
way, especially having regard to the range of subjects and the time
duration of the records, is that particular subjects will appear in a
fragmented and episodic manner dispersed amongst all other material. I
have, therefore, decided that Allen's life story, as reflected by his
diaries, is best presented by providing for each phase of his life, a
summary of the major features that were common to that situation.
Rather like the sequential scenes of a stage play, where each scene is
made up of a number of features. Hopefully this has the advantage of
making the story more interesting, allowing the mind of the reader to
dwell and reflect and provide flexibility in its telling. Furthermore, there
are times when the diary extracts require bonding with introductory or
scene-setting material, or by developments which were occurring, but
which cannot readily be captured or represented by extracts.
However, the disadvantage of this method of presentation is that it
sometimes fails to preserve features native to the informality of the
diary although I have kept excision to a minimum. This is balanced in
part by the fluidity of the autobiographical elements which bind
together the diary extracts.
One question which came early in the researches was what criteria
should be used in the selection of material to illustrate Allen's life? The
minutiae of a person's life are of little interest to other people for each
of our lives is different from all others, unique with a my riad
experiences. Perhaps, we should attempt to illustrate the essence of
Allen's life with a patchwork of pro-active experiences balanced with
his reactive observations, reminiscences and reflections. Should we not
also record his achievements and his works together with his thoughts
and feelings on them? But this is not enough. If this work is to act in
some way as a biography, then it must reflect his personal qualities that
we came to know him by and respect him for, especially his learned and
endearing qualities. I recognise the danger of subjectivity distorting the
view when writing of a close friend, especially a backward-looking view
that is dimmed by passing time and an unremitting fondness for the
man. For this reason I have sought the views of friends on this study.2
Another question which presents itself, but intriguing and difficult to
answer is: Are there as·pects of Allen's character or life which are
missing from or not reflected in the diaries, and if so, why? There are,
2 I am most grateful for the general comments and valuable suggestions provided by
Natalie Coney made during the drafting of this paper. Having never met Allen Grove, her
discernment and objectivity of this work are unaffected by physical sensibilities and
personal memory. I am also indebted to Michael Connolly for editorial comment, and
especially to Dr Peter Draper and Paul Oldham whose long-standing friendship with
Allen has helped to produce a balanced and fair record of his character.
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THE DIARIES OF ALLEN GROVE
of course, several private and personal subjects which need not concern
us because they did not form part of the image he gave to the world.
But one area of his life which is barely recorded in his diaries are his
writings and publications. Few are mentioned. Another area, which is
surely larger, was his commitment to paper o f his knowledge,
enquiries, observations, etc., on all things relating to his curatorship
and his innumerable interests. Such writings can be found in separate
volumes sometimes devoted to particular subjects such as places or
themes. Most of these volumes are to be found in his legacy of
manuscripts, but there is evidence of missing volumes.
On at least two occasions in his diaries Allen touches upon the
reason for keeping them, and they confirm that he intended them
primarily to provide solace in his old age. I suspect also that he knew
they were likely to be read by other people, and we must, therefore,
bear in mind that his writings may have been influenced, perhaps
subconsciously, by what he wanted people to read. One tenuous clue to
this is that, just occasionally, there are to be found lines of writing
which he obliterated and rendered indecipherable, which I believe was
done at a later date, probably to remove indiscretions or views which
he did not want readers to see.
His marriage in 1938, combined with the onset of war, formed the
first natural division in his life. Youth, university life and his early
career moves, his professional and personal development, all occur in
this period. I have identified this as the Formative Years. The next
phase of his life, once the darkness of war had lifted, was dominated by
his Curatorship at Maidstone. As the years passed his diary entries
steadily increased, but his writings were greatly concerned with his
museum work. The last phase of Allen's life commenced with two of
the greatest changes that man experiences, the loss of his wife Eva and
retirement. With the changing circumstances of his private life his
writings underwent a thematic change marked by a substantial increase
in production. I have called this period the Evening of Life.
THE FORMATIVE YEARS
In Allen's diaries there are comments which tell us a little about his
ancestors. Apparently he had male ancestors by the surname of Allen,
his third christian name, which he adopted and was known by. They
were fishmongers in Woolwich3 and his grandmother Grove, his uncles
and his father were raised at Plumstead and Woolwich.4
3 25 Aug. 1972.
4 10 Oct. 1989.
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R.SPAIN
[10 Oct. 1989] Bought a horizontal sugar-loaf cutter similar to the
example which Grandmother Grove had in her shop at Abbey Wood
and which she used for cutting up plug tobacco. Purchased 'in
memoriam Evae et Mariae Annae Grove' .5
[22 Sept. 1974] Visited St. Nicholas's Church, Plumstead. I spoke to the
Vicar about my great grandfather Christopher Allen's gravestone in the
churchyard. The probability is that it was destroyed by the V2 which
fell there.
[14 Dec. 1989] We had some talk about Fred Karno 's activities and the
presence of Charlie Chaplin in Kent. I told him about my grandfather's
conviction that Chaplin had stayed in his Mount Pleasant, Plumstead,
house when he took in theatrical boarders. My grandfather Allen was
not one to imagine things or to romanticize.
Leonard Robert Allen Grove was born 27 November 1910 at Northfield
Cottage, Gillingham Green.6 We know very little of his childhood but
we glean from later reminiscences that he lived for a while at Nigg,
Scotland, near to Nigg Point below Dunskaith Castle. 7
[27 Aug. 1981] Later in the morning we set off for Maxstoke where we
had a picnic luncheon and looked at the church of St. Michael. In the
churchyard is a memorial to Captain Eric Coventry Pack who was
blown up and drowned when HMS Natal sank off lnvergordon in 1915.
I was grateful to see this as it was due to this incident that I owe my
love of Scotland. A while after the disaster the Government built a
submarine boom defence between the North and South (Cromarty
Firth) Sutors. My father, having been trained in the submarine's
electrical techniques, was taken off HMS Euryalus and put in charge.
In 1917 my mother, brother Evan and I took the long journey to Nigg
and stayed there until the War's end. At low tide we used to see the
Natal's mast above water and frequently after rough weather we
collected sailor's hats and electric light bulbs by the water's edge. 1 am
most grateful to the shades of Captain Pack.
[21 Jan. 1977] I saw the pipers and sword dancers of the first battalion
of the Black Watch, my favourite Scottish regiment. Some of the
soldiers of this regiment were kind to a small English boy in Nigg ( Ross
& Cromarty) during the closing years of the 1914-18 War. They took
me to school on the backs of their bikes and treated me as an equal.
[23 June 1974] 1 suppose that with two of my most impressionable
s Allen's wife Eva had died in 1973 and his mother in 1978. See below.
6 25 June 1973.
7 27 June 1981; 8 Nov. 1974.
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THE DIARIES OF ALLEN GROVE
years spent in Scotland amongst the Highlanders I cannot help being a
Jacobite.
During the remainder of his youth Allen lived at Mount Pleasant,
Plumstead, with his parents and his brother Evan. In 1922, he started
school at St. Olave's in Southwark. His diaries suggest that he
remained an Olaverian all his life, keeping in touch with his old
school.8
The oldest diary of Allen's in my possession commenced in 1929 but
towards the back are three entries from earlier diaries. It seems likely
that Allen kept a diary from boyhood days, but those early volumes
have disappeared, perhaps discarded by Allen himself a fter he
transcribed parts into the 1929 volume. One of the transcriptions was
made in February 1933 and another, much later probably in 1963,
showing that Allen, at that time, still had some very early diaries. The
1933 transcript is the first evidence we have of Allen's habit of reading
his older diaries, which he often did in later life judging from the
annotations scattered through them, which were always dated. The
earliest evidence of a diary note by Allen was made when he was
nearly twelve years old.
[19 Sep. 1922] Personal Notes collar size 13½
Hat7"
height 4' 7"
Date 19 9 22
weight 5st. 3 oz. 19 9 22
The next entries in chronological order come from a 1923 diary
transcribed on 9th February, 1933. They cover the period 1st January to
the 14th September, 1933, and are very irregular with a gap between
11th February and 19th June. These entries, written by Allen when he
was twelve years old, are made in the briefest of terms.
[1 Jan. 1923] Went to the pictures
[2 Jan. 1923] Piano Practice
[3 Jan. 1923] Choir Pay Allen 5/- Evan 216d.
[5 Jan. 1923] Choir Practice. Went to the Natural History Museum &
the 2 Science Museums at S. Kensington.
[6 Jan. 1923] Bought a Magic Lantern. Bought Mother a present of 3
handkerchiefs & a bottle of scent.
[7-9 Jan. 1923] Ill.
8 27 August, 1975. He continued to receive The Olavian until his death.
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R.SPAIN
[l Feb. 1923] Election for School Parliament
[3 Feb. 1923] Saw 'Dick Turpin's Ride to York' on the Pictures.
[19 June 1923] Went to school ground at Dulwich for cricket. Caught
for 0.
[20 June 1923] Went Swimming
[21 July 1923] Had Smut our cat, destroyed in the Lethal Chamber.
[25 July 1923] Sang at Southwark Cathedral
[26 July 1923] Prize giving. Free buns & lemonade after the prize
distribution.
[l Aug. 1923] Visited Priory Park Museum.
[7 Aug. 1923] Went to the fields. Caught 57 butterflies & 40 fish. (what
a little swine I must have been)
[15 Aug. 1923] Bought some coins at an antique shop in Southend
High St.
[16 Aug. 1923] Visited Hadleigh Castle Made some sketches of it.
[21 Aug. 1923] Went for a tramp to Hadleigh Woods.
In these entries we can already see appearing the primary interests of
music, old buildings, sport and the countryside, which were to develop
through his formative years and remain with him for life. The following
extracts, which he copied from a 1926 diary covering the period March
to June, are typical of this period, which is devoted almost entirely to
sport, attending the theatre, buying and reading books and walking.
[ 18 March 1926] Read some of Bacons Essays of a story about Charles
& Buckingham's called the Spanish Match.
[19 March 1926] Went to the pictures with Phyllis Rumble.
[20 March 1926] Match with Garrison Church Football cancelled.
Took P.R. over the Common with us.
[24 March 1926] Went to church to hear organ recital. Met Phyllis
afterwards.
[26 March 1926] Went to the Globe to see Dicken 's 'Little Dorrit' .
[ 12 April 1926] Literature exam at School. Did well.
[19 April 1926] Went to Gamages. Bought small volumes of Modern
Essays.
Two-thirds of this small diary are devoted to the period 10th
January 1929 to 13th September, 1930. It covers the last two terms at
St. Olave's and the first year at University. This diary is a record of
the music which he heard nearly every day, filling page after page,
with every entry beginning 'Heard on the wireless' or 'Listened in'
which he later shortened to 'L.I.' Every piece of music is listed with
title, composer, conductor and orchestra detailed, sometimes with
Allen's comments included. Interspersed amongst these manuscript
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THE DIARIES OF ALLEN GROVE
records and glued to the pages are newspaper cuttings of the music
critics' work.
Later entries show other interests and towards the end of term
academic focus takes over, followed by holidays.
[29 Jan. 1929] Heard at school, at a select gathering a gramophone
recording of 'The Emperor' Concerto.
[2 Feb. 1929] Went to see Macbeth at the Old Vic.
[2 March 1929] Saw Merry Wives of Windsor at the Old Vic.
[13 April 1929] 'Henry VIII at the Old Vic'.
[June & July] Solid swatting for the Oxford and Cambridge Higher
Cert. Gained entrance to University College, London.
[1-15 Aug. 1929] Camp at Bridport. Visited Lyme became lost in a
swamp which a farmer kindly told us he would not enter, with even his
leggings on, for a guinea because of the "wipers". Gave the pubs a
wide berth this time only had three lots of cider.
[7 Oct. 1929] Started at University College.
[3 July 1930] Passed special Intermediate Exam.
During Allen's first year at University his diary was largely devoted
to recording music, including all the BBC Promenade Concerts
conducted by Sir Henry Wood, but in the next volume, which starts in
September 1930 and ends in January 1934, other activities are recorded
as well as some personal notes. In the last two years at University
reading understandably occupied much of his time.
[11 Nov. 1930] I find lately that I am dipping into books instead of
reading them right through. Henceforward I shall only note here the
books I thoroughly read. Infrequency of entries will not mean therefore
that I am getting lazy but that I am becoming a better research student.
(Oh yes!)
Numerous lists of books which he had read occur both before and
after the above entry showing that his consumption and capacity of
literature was enormous.
Late in 1930 he lost both his grandparents.
[11 Oct. 1930] Grandfather died, this evening from peritonitis. My
grandfather, Christopher Allen, apparently went about for a week or so
suffering intense agony and mind (for his wife was in St. Nicholas'
Hospital slowly dying after a severe stroke), yet saying not a word. His
death really came at an appropriate moment, for he did not see his wife
die and she was never told of his death. Besides which, he had lost the
solace of his old age his violin, for his sight was becoming dim, so that
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R.SPAIN
he could not see his music, and his fingers were stiff and swollen
through rheumatism.
[21 Nov. 1930] Grandmother died.
[26 Nov. 1930] Grandmother buried. Raining all morning but soon
shone the moment the coffin went out the door. Half an hour after we
went back, it started to rain again. Enough to make a weak mind
superstitious or religious.
Whilst at University he continued walking and kept up swimming
especially during the summer holidays . In July 1931, he swam on
fourteen days in the month.
[16 Sep. 1930] Went botanizing with Leslie Gibbon in Castle Woods.
[27 Nov. 1930] My birthday now left my teens behind.
[31 March 1931] Did some gardening and dug up a backache.
[23 June 1931] Went to Lister's Swimming Club
[4 April 1931] Went to Baths. Reggy, Mary & Evelyn all there. Met
Hilda King in the evening.
[29 Mar. 1931] Concert at the Albert Hall.
[8 May 1931] Went to the Flickers to see an American film called
'W hoopee'.
[6 April 1931] Went to Blackheath Fair & Borstal Hill Fair. Both very
muddy after the week end rain. All the fair people seemed depressed
through such a wretched Easter.
[11 Feb. 1978] ... dancing, a practice in which I do not indulge as I
have had little training. My parents did not encourage such cavortings as
my brother Evan and I were supposed to concentrate on our studies. We
were only allowed the consolation of swimming, football, cricket, music
and church socials. Later we added young ladies and tennis to this list.
The earliest reference that I have found of Allen playing the organ in
public occurs in July 1931 but more engagements followed.
[26 July 1931] Played the organ at the morning service
[25 Dec. 1931] Played the organ at 8'oclock Mass. Noticed quite a few
youngsters of about 15 or 16 drunk early in the afternoon.
[24 July 1932] Mr. Pope LRAM organist of St. John's went away on
holiday, so I played the organ all day there (for ten shillings).
[21 Aug. 1932] Played organ at St. Matthews.
In the same period references to singing became regular.
[20 Aug. 1931] Was introduced to Bishop Taylor Smith, who came in
whilst I was teaching the Holy Trinity Choir Boys to sing a plainsong.
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THE DIARIES OF ALLEN GROVE
Stibbings made us entertain him with some descants etc. The Bishop
was delighted and made his exit exhorting the boys to sing 'Carefully
and prayerfully' .
[25 Sept. 1931] Went to the Institute t o join the choir which is
conducted by Hubert Borden, lay-vicar Westminster Abbey.
[8 Jan. 1932] Sang in Holy Trinity Choir.
In June 1932 his parents moved.
[8 June 1932] Moved from JO Mount Pleasant to 61 W hitworth Road
Plumstead. Managed to transfer my herbarium & the inmates of the
pond.
In the same month Allen took and passed the B .A . Honours
Examination in History but despite his academic success Allen was
unable to find work for a few months and he turned his hand to other
things.
[31 July 1932] I sent some poems off to the London Mercury but
apparently with no effect.
[20 Oct. 1932] Stibbings engaged me to write the centenary history of
Holy Trinity.
But early in 1933 his calling was beckoning.
[31 Jan. 1933] Met Mr. C.H. Grinling for the first time. He is going to
get me some museum work.
[13 Feb. 1933] Made a survey of all the historical material in the
Plumstead Museum. Met Mr. Luke the Plumstead Librarian.
[17 Feb. 1933] Went botanizing for the Museum in the morning and
afternoon.
Although there was no mention in the diaries of Allen being given a
post in the Museum, it was clear that he was working there by the rota
work that he mentions. Years later he confirmed that he had been an
Honorary Assistant at Plumstead Museum.9
On the 15th March, 1933, Allen met his future wife.
[15 Mar. 1933] 8pm. Choir Committee meeting at King's Warren School
(Plumstead Literary Institute Choral Society). Met Eva Walker. Had a
9 11 Sept. 1972.
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R.SPAIN
long talk. She is going to be transferred from the Psychology class to
the Choir.
Allen naturally became involved with other organisations.
[ 11 May 1933] Attended the Annual Meeting of t h e Woolwich
Historical & Scientific Society. Dr. R.E. Mortimer W heeler, M.A.,
(retired president) was present.
[24 Oct. 1933] Meeting of the Museum Executive Committee. Elected
representative of W H & SS on the Council of Social Services.
[6 Dec. 1933] Appointed Minute Secretary of Meteorological
Committee.
[27 Nov. 1933] 23 today & still a nonentity except in Woolwich, where I
am rapidly becoming well known thanks to Grinling & Stebbings.
In these formative years Allen's love of music continued to grow and
by 1934, when Allen was 23 years old, he was apparently well
established as an organ player of some repute.
[ 18 March 1934] Played the organ for evensong at St. Jo hn's
Plumstead.
[22 March 1934] Played for a funeral at Holy Trinity.
[20 May 1934] Played organ at Mass at Brook Hospital.
[ 16 Sept. 1934] Played organ for Mass & Evensong at St. Augustine 's
Slade Green. (Mr. A.L. Lyons, the organist, on holiday).
His listening to the wireless, which he recorded once or twice a
week, appears to have been limited entirely to music and only rarely
did he record momentous events.
[11 Dec. 1936] King Edward's broadcast Apologia pro sua abdicatione.
A very fine speech in the best tradition of British rhetoric.
Allen was an active member of Plumstead Literary Institute Choir
and also attended lectures, which were a common feature of pre-war
suburbia and the provinces.
[21 Feb. 1934] Went from CHG's to the Polytechnic for a lecture by the
Hon. Mrs. Victor Bruce on 'Flying alone round the World'. Mrs. Bruce
has the usual futile, aimless, mind of the idle rich. Not one fact she told
us, not one picture she showed us, has the slightest interest. It was as if
one was listening to the society column of a newspaper being read aloud.
[ 13 May 1936] Acted as steward at the lecture by Fl. Lt. 'Tommy' Rose
at the Large Town Hall. (on his record flight to the Cape and back).
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THE DIARIES OF ALLEN GROVE
But there were darker brooding themes in many of the lectures
reflecting developments in Europe.
[27 June 1934] Lunch Club Reginald Reynolds on No More War. Good
talk, pointing out the dangers of the League of Nations & International
Air-Forces.
[30 May 1934] Lunch Club Speaker Mrs. B. Paddon on 'The Private
Manufacture of Arms' .
[17 Oct. 1934] 'Pooled Security' a talk by Mrs. B. Duncan Harris on
an International Air Force.
[21 Nov. 1934] Lunch Club; Frl. Margrit Weidmann (speaking
delightful, broken English) on 'War Resisters' International 1934
Conference' .
Allen's duties at Plumstead Museum frequently involved outside
activity.
[ 16 Mar. 1934] Went to the County Hall with Philpot to take the N.
Woolwich Tidal Readings.
[18 May 1934] Walk with CHG10 on Woolwich Common.
However, the incidence of nature observations in the diaries
throughout this period is so great that it is not possible to determine
how much came from official duties. Observation permeated his life,
daytime, evening and night, every day of the week.
[9 Feb. 1934] 2 Tree Sparrows in Birdy Bill's (nr. Dockyard entrance).
Birdy Bill is a wretch who traps wild birds and sells them.
[25 Jan. 1934] 2 Greenfinches in Birdy Bill's shop. I suppose this
scoundrel will continue to put all heaven in a rage until next May when
the new Bill comes into force. I have seen Bullfinches, Linn ets,
Chaffinches, Yellowhammers, Brambling's, Skylarks, Song Thrushes
and Goldfinches.
[7 Mar. 1934] Brown owl in a tree opposite Perseverance Inn,
Woolwich Common.
[25 Mar. 1934] Frogs in love-embrace.
[29 July 1935] Evan found several female Lampyris nocticula. Kept the
one with the most powerful glow as a nightlight & let the others go.
Allen regularly walked through all the local parks, woods and green
spaces, making lengthy lists of all that he saw, invariably in Latin,
10 Mr. C.H. Grinling.
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sometimes with the common name. If the list of observations was long
he would sub-divide it into crustacea, insects, mammals, algae, myxos,
lichens, fungi, liverworts, mosses, ferns and flowers. Now and then he
devoted a walk to 'fungi forages'. On rare occasions in these jottings
Allen mentions other notebooks, but it is not clear if these were private
or museum records. To confuse matters, he sometimes listed in his
diary the contents of a particular collection in the Museum.
In 1934, Allen was apparently restless and actively seeking another
post. There is no indication that his relationship with his aged boss, the
Rev. Grinling (74 years old in 1934) was anything but harmonious.
Indeed, Grinling was apparently much respected for a few years later,
after Allen had moved on
[3 May 1937] CHG made the first Freeman of the Borough of Woolwich
a fitting recognition after some 40 years work in Woolwich ( spending
not a little of his own money in the doing).
It seems likely that Allen was looking for a career move and was
prepared to move away, if necessary, from Kent and his family.
[20 March 1934] Went to Leicester Museum to be interviewed by Dr.
Lowe for the post of museum assistant. Got in the last two. A friend of
Charles Foster named Lane, a B.Sc. (Botany) of UCL, obtained the
post; if he had died on the spot, I should have had the job.
[10 May 1934] At Museum all day. Was interviewed by St. George Gray
as a prospective filler of the vacancy at Taunton Castle Museum. Had
tea with Gray, Luke & CHG.
Early in the following year Allen was successful.
[ 19 Feb. 1935] Appointed Senior Museum Assistant at Reading
Museum & Art Gallery. Had lunch with Mr. Smallcombe, the Curator.
[25 Feb. 1935] Started work at the Reading Museum.
During the following months Allen settled down to travelling home to
Woolwich at odd week-ends, combined with letters passing between Eva
and him. Being in a completely new social and natural environment the
content of his life and its pattern went through some change. His organ
playing literally disappeared and his listening to the wireless lessened
noticeably. New activities occurred and some old ones continued.
[21 July 1935] Went to the Lido with Jack Edwin. We were the only two
swimmers there for quite a while. Reading produces fair weather
swimmers.
294
THE DIARIES OF ALLEN GROVE
[8 June 1935] Played for Reading Corporation N.A.L.G.O. against
Park Prewett C. C. Park Prewett is an asylum just outside Basingstoke.
T he lunatics all turned out to see the game and cat-called their own
keepers and doctors. We lost by 134 to 48. Not a very successful day for
me but 1 enjoyed watching the antics of some of the lunatics -
especially one who was flying a kite.
[ 17-18 Mar. 1935] Travelled overnight to Liverpool to attend the
Diploma Course of the Museums Association.
[ 16 Sept. 1935] To Bristol ... to attend a week's course ( advanced) for
the Museums Association's Diploma.
Once again Allen became involved with several local organisations;
[29 April 1935] Joined Reading Natural History Society.
[8 Jan. 1936] Preliminary meeting of the Reading Nat. Hist. Soc.
Discussion Group.
[24 Feb. 1936] Attended Committee meeting of Berks. Local History
Recording Scheme. Co-opted on to this.
[7 May 1936] Discussion Group walked to Sonning. I took the dog &
consequently was chased by a bull.
Allen obviously enjoyed films.
[18 Jan. 1936] Greta Garbo & Frederick March 'Anna Karenina'.
[30 Jan. 1936] Jack Hulbert in 'Jack Ahoy'.
[30 April 1936] Robert Donat 'The Ghost Goes West'.
[9 May 1936] Cherry Kearton 's 'Big Game of Life'.
[21 May 1936] Errol Flynn in 'Captain Blood'.
In the autumn of 1936 Allen's attention was drawn to a vacancy
which was due to appear in York.
(8 Oct . 1936] Dr. Kirk wrote to Mr. Smallcombe about the vacant
curatorship in York Castle Museum.
[25 Oct. 1936] Up to York to meet Dr. Kirk.
[26 Oct. 1936] Provisionally appointed Curator of York Castle Museum
& Kirk Collection of Bygones.
[29 Oct. 1936] Received note from Town Clerk of York & gave in my
notice at Reading.
In November Allen resigned as Honorary Secretary of the Reading
Natural History discussion group and left Reading with a parting gift from
Mr. Smallcombe, the Curator, of a Dallmeyer (x8) pocket lens . At the end
of this month Eva and Allen became engaged and he gave her an opal ring.
295
R.SPAIN
[30 Nov. 1936) Caught J.20pm for York. Eva came to see me off. Said
goodbye to her out of the ventilating window of one of these new
carriages with the 'view' windows.
[I Dec. 1936) Started my duties as Curator of the Castle Museum, York
at the temporary address, Houndgate, Pickering. Dr. Kirk, my Hon.
Director, sounds formidable but his bark is much worse than his bite.
His passion for cats & his kindness to them betrays him. His bedside
manner, when he was in practice, must have been disconcerting.
Whilst Allen was living at Pickering he was preparing the Castle
Museum for its opening.
[ 6 Jan. 1938) Interviewed Miss Violet Rodgers of Bradford to come for
a months trial. She will live at Thornton-le-Dale for the present until
we transfer permanently to York.
[8 Mar. 1938) Art Gallery Committee Meeting. Decided to retain Miss
Rodgers for 6 months as pupil assistant at £1 per week and to have
another museum attendant.
[6 April 1938) Appointed Pink to the post of assistant caretaker former
Minster choir-boy.
Allen also found time to advance his qualifications.
[30 March 1937) Elected a Fellow of the Royal Entomological Society.
[3 April 1937) Elected a Member of Yorkshire Museum's Federation.
[28 Mar. 1938) Started specialised course for the Museums Diploma at
London Museum. Dr. Wheeler told us how he ran the museum.
This was not the first time that he had met and talked with Dr.
Wheeler, later Sir Mortimer Wheeler.
[1 Sept. 1936] Maiden Castle was our next port of call. Dr. Wheeler
showed us over the main section.
[2 April 1938] To St. Albans. Lunch with Dr. Wheeler at the 'Fighting
Cocks'. All listened to the boat-race, the results of which pleased
Wignall & Morty much.
[30 Oct. 1938) Sent Museum Diploma thesis off.
[18 Nov. 1938) Learnt that my Museum diploma thesis had been
accepted.
Many years later Allen wrote:
[22 July 1976) Sir Mortimer Wheeler died today, aged 86. 1 have lost
touch with him since the last War. In my early museum days, in the mid-
296
THE DIARIES OF ALLEN GROVE
30's, he helped me very much. He acted as my tutor for the museum
diploma and gave me my viva voce. His active encouragement probably
provided the incentive for my becoming one of the first seven to pass
the examination.
Allen kept his hand in with music.
[23 Jan. 1938] To Dr. Kirk's for tea. Mrs. Kirk and I played Grieg's
Cello Sonata.
[20 Feb. 1938] Temp. conductor of Snape Prize Silver Band.
He stayed as conductor of the Snape Band throughout the year. I can
remember him once telling me how he went into the wilds of
Yorkshire, conducting a group of men who were predominantly redheaded.
He was convinced that they represented an enclave of Viking
descendants. About this time Allen formed his view of northern wit
which may have come from working with the band.
[10 March 1938] / am slowly but surely coming to the view that North
Riding folks have a peculiar sense of humour. T hey are definitely not
quickwitted and do not appreciate subtle wit. And there are very few
exceptions.
Allen took up another interest related to music, one of the pleasures
which had been denied him by his parents.
[13 Jan. 1938] After my tea, we went up to the deserted Newton Road
and Donald showed me some new dance steps he had learnt during
Christmastide. At 9 o' clock an unusual spectacle was to be seen two
figures engrossed in dancing the West Riding form of the Palais Glide.
[19 Jan. 1938] Had my first lesson in the art of ball-room dancing in
the old barn at the back of Maud's in Houndgate. Petrol-lights, 2
portable gramophones, a dozen men, half-a-dozen women, fish and
chips and beer supper. A delightful evening.
The Castle Museum opened on 23rd April, 1938, and shortly
afterwards Allen moved from Eastgate Lodge, Pickering, into York.
[12 May 1938] Took up my new 'digs' at 3 Ninthorp Avenue, York.
In June a development occurred in his life which he never regretted
when he married the woman that he loved for the rest of his life.
[10 May 1938] Had the banns put up at St. Mary Bishophill senior with
297
R.SPAIN
St. Clement for my marriage to Eva. Mrs. Turner, the verger, was
abrupt to me at first but grew gracious when she knew I came from
Kent, like herself
[4 June 1938] Met London party at 1.30 at York Station. Wedding at
St.Clement's Church, Scarcroft Road, York at 2.30. Went off very well.
[20 June 193 8] Went after a house in Beckfield Lane, A comb & decided
to take it.
[23 June 1938] Got possession of our new house at 51 Beckfield Lane.
In the middle of the year there are large gaps in Allen's entries and
among the last few are the following.
[14 Sept. 1938] Queen Mary, the Princess Royal, the Earl of Harewood
to the Museum. Royal party arrived at 3.45.
[30 Sept. 1938] Anglo- Viking bone hair piece in the ARP trenches in
front of the Museum.
[1 7 Dec. 1938] Eva bought me Aymer Vallance 's Old Crosses &
Lytchgates for a Christmas present.
During the war, although Allen would have been discouraged from
keeping diaries; it appears that he kept some sort of records either
during or immediately after those years. I have found only one
reference to war-time records, made many years later, when Allen was
taking part in formal discussions about wartime experiences.
[31 March. 1989] / described operation 'Zipper' in Malaysia with
extracts from my notebook diary.
Unfortunately these notebooks are not among the manuscripts which
came to me; however, there are several entries in Allen's later diaries
which provide us with reminiscences of his war-time experiences. Allen
records that he served six years in the Royal Navy11 which apparently
commenced with him being stationed near Great Yarmouth'2 at Caister.13
[ 12 July 1972] 'Our old bungalow still standing at Caister '.
[25 June 1985] / met him when I was a naval stores assistant at Great
Yarmouth at the beginning of the 1939 war.
[25 May 1971] I can remember the sinking feeling I had when the Hood
disaster news came through to HMS Watchful at Great Yarmouth.
11 7 Feb. 1981.
12 20 April, 1986; 28 March, 1981.
132Oct.1972.
298
THE DIARIES OF ALLEN GROVE
A comment following the sinking of the battleship Bismarck 27 May
1941.
[14 Aug. 1966] On the TV saw service from Great Yarmouth parish
church where I once played the organ and which I saw go up in flames
during the war. (preference was given to fighting the Distillery fire!)
Thereafter Allen's active service appears to have been associated
with a particular type of invasion vessel called, Landing Ship Tanks
(LST), which took him to several wartime theatres.
[1 Feb. 1986] Went through five wartime invasions in North Africa,
Sicily, Italy, Normandy and Malaya.
Many years after these experiences odd references to them occur in
his diaries.
[31 March 1971] Graeco-Italian bucchero ware oinochoe [c. 250BCJ
which I obtained at Nisida in 1944.
[30 Nov. 1975] / saw on television an American film about Anzio. Not
much resemblance to the Anzio I experienced.
[1 April 1980] On invasion day we were laying off Ostia and had a
RAF team with direction finding apparatus with us. Our crew lived in
as remote a world as some of the soldiers ashore. We knew of the
sinking of the allied hospital ship (St. David) but of little else.
[10 Nov. 1974] I rushed back home to listen to readings of Edward
Thomas 's poems and extracts from the diary he kept almost to the
moment he died, killed by a passing shell. I can understand the feeling
of hopelessness he felt before going in to action I have experienced it
myself. The compensation is an enhancement of the sensibilities, a
passionate approach to the manifestations of Nature and, with Thomas,
the production of real poetry. I wonder if he wrote anything so
revealing when he lived at Bearsted.
[24 Jan. 1978] It vividly reminded me of my wartime trip in a landing
ship (tanks) from New York to Mostaginem.
[6 June 1984] 40 years ago today I was on board HMS LST 430 and
waiting to leave The Solent and sail to Normandy. I cannot recall much
of the occasion beyond the sight of so many ships around us. I suppose
I was too busy doing my chores below decks.
[ 4 May 1985] VE Day 40 years on. It didn't do much for the crew of
LST 280 who stored ship at Port Said in the stinking heat. The buntingtossers
dressed the ship overall and the Egyptians sounded their
hooters and horns as if they had done some worthwhile job. All on
board knew we were heading east to tackle the Japanese. What joy!
299
R.SPAIN
[7 July 1981) For supper I had a simple meal of curried vegetables and
boiled rice. Almost like wartime days in India.
[25 Oct. 1981] On television I saw a film about the railway from
Bombay to Poona, Guntakal, Bungalore, Ooti and Coclim. Coclim
looked much better than I remember. Georgina says that the smell
which intoxicated us when LST 280 was almost a mile off shore came
from the Bombay duck industry at the fishing village.
[4 April 1989) I was reminded of the auspicious occasion when I,
supervised by the coxswain, took HMS Landing Ship Tanks 280 into
Singapore harbour (we had a depleted crew and that's why I had the job).
There was one anecdote coming from his war years which Allen related
to me though I never heard him repeat it in private or public. I have not
found it in his memoirs but I make no apology for including it because it is
a singular demonstration of his observational powers and objectivity. The
experience he described was strange, and had it been related by anyone
else I would have doubted it. He had found himself in a village in India
whilst on shore leave and he and a ship-mate came upon a gathering of
people obviously excited by something taking place in their midst. Allen
and his friend pushed through the standing observers at the back until they
could see the cause of the commotion. Sitting on the ground, cross-legged,
was a holy man, a fakir, with his back against a tall wall. In front of him on
the dusty ground lay a wooden stick-doll or manikin in a collapsed state.
Circled around the little arena were his audience, the nearer ones seated.
After some while and incantations from the holy man, the stick-doll
became animated, stood up and walked around. No one stood near the doll
nor were there trees or anything overhanging the arena. Allen had no
explanation as to how this occurred and made no attempt to fabricate one
as others might when faced with something beyond experience.
The war had an everlasting effect on Allen which is reflected in the
following diary entries:
[10 April 1988) After my trip I was glad to sit down and see again (on
television) Noel Coward's 'In W hich We Serve'. How many times have I
seen this film? And yet it still upsets me. Nostalgia overtakes me. I am
proud to have been a sailor in the Royal Navy.
[9 Dec. 1989) I saw once again Noel Coward's film 'In Which We Serve'. For
me nostalgia and sadness. Of my naval family I am sadly the only person left
all dead, my mother and my father14 (RN), my brother Evan RN (HO), Mary
his wife and my Eva. But of course I have my nephews and nieces.
14 I have failed to find within Allen's diaries the dates of his father's death and that of
his brother Evan.
300
THE DIARIES OF ALLEN GROVE
In the front of his 1971 diary Allen wrote:
'All that is necessary for the complete triumph of evil is that good
men should do nothing'
THE CURATOR
Twenty years of Allen's life, from 1938 to 1959 inclusive, are not
covered by him in extant diaries except for one year, 1948, the year that
he became the Curator of the Maidstone Museum and Art Gallery. The
entries in the first two months or so are very sparse but later it settles
down to approximately half the days having entries but with occasional
gaps of several days. In the first three months' entries there is evidence
suggesting that Allen was at a museum called Bankfield at Halifax.
[23 Jan. 1948] To Halifax Barracks with Councillor Robinson to see
Colonel Baker about the transference of the Duke's Museum to
Bank.field.
[15 Mar. 1948] Lord Mackintosh came to Bankfleld to see his pictures.
He seemed to look on them as only investments.
[22 Mar. 1948] Museum Cttee. held at Bankfleld. Mayor & Mayoress
came at 5 & they & the C t tee spent an hour looking over the
improvements at the Museum.
[31 Mar. 1948] To Maidstone.
[1 April 1948] Started work as Curator of Maidstone Museum.
We have no record of how Allen obtained his post, but we can
speculate that he had his eyes on Kent and wished to move back into
his native county close to his family and where his ancestors had lived.
There is more than one reference in his diaries to the fact that his
brother Evan had been a teacher at Northborough School i n
Maidstone 15 b u t there is no indication when, except that a l l the
references refer to it in the past tense, so that he may have been there at
the time Allen came to Maidstone. No matter whether or not this
influenced him, Allen surely saw the vacancy at Maidstone, the County
town of Kent, as attractive. At that time Maidstone was still the premier
market town of Kent, commanding as it had done for centuries, the
development and produce of the Weald. By the late 1940s Kent still
enjoyed the title of Garden of England, though more by tradition than
fact. Maidstone's legacy of historic buildings, such as it was, was
1s 4 May, 1970.
301
w
s
f;�t!}(
Fig. 1. The Museum, Art Gallery and Public Library, St. Faith's Street, Maidstone. 1897. Curator's House on the extreme left, c. 1900. Given to
LRAG by Dr Peter Draper.
r'
(/.)
z
THE DIARIES OF ALLEN GROVE
largely intact being relatively unscathed by war and untouched by
developers, central government and the town council.
When Allen first moved to Maidstone he lodged at a house in
Greenside whilst improvement works were being undertaken to his flat
at the Museum.
[10 June 1948] Corporation workmen started o n house (flat)
(plumbers).
[14 June 1948] Slept at Museum (instead of at Greenside).
[ 1 July 1948] Eva & furniture arrived.
[16 July 1948] Plumbers all day at flat .
Allen quickly learned that much was expected of him.
[9 April 1948] Sir Edward Harrison came to see me. Agreed to act as
Curator for K.A.Soc.
[10 April 1948] Spent an hour at the coach museum with Sir Garrard.
[22 April 1948] App. Hon. Sec. of Museum Auxiliary Fund Comm.
[28 April 1948] AGM of KAS appointed Soc. Curator.
[15 July 1948] Morning Sir Garrard & self arranged layout for upper
floor of Coach Museum.
His first recorded involvement with a local group occurred in May.
[22 May 1948] With Bearsted Local History Group under leadership of
Elliston-Erwood, to Thurnham Church, Goddard's Castle, Allington
Church.
Allen's title, according to a membership card of the National Art
Collection Fund was 'The Curator & Librarian The Museum & Public
Library'.
We learn from his early diaries that Allen was responsible for
overviewing the Museum at Hythe, which he visited once a month.
Regular contact was also maintained with most of the other museums in
Kent, especially Rochester, Tunbridge Wells, Cranbrook and
Folkestone. The Curator's responsibilities included arranging displays
of the Museum's art collection - over 1,000 pieces - in the gallery
which had a capacity of approximately 100 pictures. Maidstone Art
Society and the local photographic club held competitions and displays
each year, and additionally, at Allen's discretion, local artists held their
own shows in the gallery. Throughout his curatorship at Maidstone
Allen helped many up-and-coming local artists to enjoy the experience
of a public show and become established.
The Curator's office at the Museum was a large high-ceilinged room
303
R. SPAIN
with tables and tall glazed cabinets overburdened with books,
documents and maps giving it a studious and Dickensian air. To a
newcomer entering through the large oak door, with its imposing sign
'Curator's Office', the senses, which had already been assaulted by the
distinctive smell of oak, stone and ancient fabric when entering the
darkened entrance hall of the Museum, were further entranced by the
indiscriminate collection of curios and objets d' art, statuary and other
artifacts scattered in the office.
In 1965, Allen started a five-year diary, a present from his relations.
[10 May 1965] Started reading Wilfrid Blunt's book on Sir Sydney
Cockerell. 'The pity is that by using a printed diary with a fixed space
allotted each day, he could permit himself no more than the smallest
rubato when memorable occasions demanded expanded treatment' .
(page 7) verb sap!
Allen's diary shows that there were occasions when most of his
working day was taken up by visitors, sometimes by appointment,
especially parties and groups, but often individuals coming without
warning which could affect his other commitments.
[25 May 1974] A woman brought a patent candle snuffer and asked me
what it was. I informed her. She denied my attribution. I told her that I
wondered why she bothered to consult me if she didn't want to listen to
my advice. She calmed then I clinched the affair by showing her the
illustration of a similar example in Seymour Lindsay's book.
One of the endearing qualities that Allen possessed was that of
encouraging and patronising youngsters and those who were on a path
of learning. Whether it was a first venture or someone on an established
career, casual or intense, his willingness to guide and help was
constant. There are very few people who have worked with Allen,
regardless of circumstance, that can deny attributing some of their
learning, knowledge and personal development to him, such was his
legacy to us. He tended to be an open person and never saw his
proteges and others who became successful as a threat to his reputation
or work.
He displayed this quality as Curator and throughout his later life, and
I suspect it was a characteristic present in earlier years, though I have
no oral traditions or written evidence of it.
[4 Nov. 1974] Examination for Girl Guide Local History Badge.
(20 Nov. 1970] Helped Colin Martin of Oldborough Manor School to
make a map of Maidstone to show the distribution of ancient buildings .
304
THE DIARIES OF ALLEN GROVE
[21 Nov. 1970] Colin Martin in again this morning. He is 11 years old
and has just started at Oldborough Manor School. He is diabetic and
injects himself with insulin every day. On Fridays he tests his blood and
if the sugar content is wrong he takes a sample to the West Kent Hospital.
[13 April 1966] Helped Miss Drummond with her thesis on medieval
pottery kilns in the SE, with especial reference to Rye.
[12 July 1966] Occasionally I obtain much pleasure in taking school
parties round the Museum for anything up to two hours. Today I had a
good deal of fun with the pupils of North Secondary Girls School,
Ashford, and their mistress, Aline Beckwith.
There seems little doubt that the Museum was popular.
[5 Jan. 1966] Attendance for 1965 nearly 100,000.
Allen's museum life was busy and varied.
[27 Dec. 1966] Went into Museum and replenished the water bowls of
the bank and field voles.
[5 Feb. 1967] To B.B.C. rehearsal.
[15 May 1968] Became Chairman of the vetting comm. of the autumn
Maidstone Antiques Fair .
[22 April 1969] Caught 12.45 train to Broadstairs. Met Mr. Denne,
Clerk to Broadstairs UDC and went with him to Dicken 's House (Betsy
Trotwood's) to see the tenant, Miss Gladys Waterer, who was sick in
bed. Inspected the house in order to make a report on its suitability as a
museum (for Area Council). Miss Waterer gave us green ginger wine
and biscuits.
[22 June 1967] Made Chairm. of Antiq. & Hist. Advisory Panel of the
Area Mus. Service.
[ 18 Jan. 1965] Eric Philp and I went out to see Lady Mellor at
Ulcombe Place and to collect the JO pieces of Delft which she has
given the Museum. All the rest of Sir Gilbert's collection is to be sold at
Christie's to pay for estate upkeep.
Meetings related to the museum occur regularly in the calendar.
[14 Nov. 1970] I attended a committee meeting of the Queen's Own
Royal West Kents at the increment Room in the Barracks. Sir William
Oliver ('General Bill') was there.
[ 2 7 Jan. 1965] T he great day!! Visit of the members of the SE
Federation of Museums to Maidstone. My last meeting as President
and I feel that it was a great success. I was nominated for the Council
of the Museums Association.
305
R.SPAIN
[5 July 1966] Welcome by Lord Mayor of Sheffield, the University ViceChancellor
and Sir Frank Francis. Afternoon AGM of Society of
Museum Officers. Took chair for first part until Mitch [Bruce-Mitford]
was elected President. I become a Vice-President.
[5 Dec. 1966] 4 committee meetings from 5 till 7 (Bentlif, Fine Arts,
Brenchley and Full Museum). Safely negotiated the extra estimate
needed for the Carriage Museum booklet.
[3 April 1968] Attended the informal opening of the new Powell Cotton
Museum.
Other diary entries touch upon the industries and trades of Maidstone
and remind us of the changes that were taking place.
[28 April 1969] Mr. Poole brought for the Museum some implements
from Hugh Baird and Sons Ltd, maltsters, who are moving from
Maidstone. These include a malt plough and a plough plane.
[16 May 1969] To the Cooper's W heelwrights' shop in Upper Stone
Street to have another talk with Mr. Cooper (who is selling the business
and site) and to collect some more of his tools.
[5 June 1969] The hop dolly arrived from Faversham.
[13 June 1969] ... to Plantation Lane Bearsted, to see Mr. F.W. Guppy
(aged 93; formerly Maidstone's Postmaster) and the antiques he is
leaving to Maidstone Museum.
The Curator's work also involved the management of staff. There
were twelve in the Museum and a further two in the Carriage
Museum.16 He kept detailed notes in his diary of their health and
absences, and various happenings in the Museum.
[ 8 Mar. 1974] The museum store officially handed over to the
Corporation.
[22 Dec. 1970] Museum sub-co mmittee and Museum & Library
committee discuss appointment of junior assistant to learn my trade of
local historian before I retire.
[15 Jan. 1974] Beneath the floor of the Archaeological Gallery
branches of gorse have been found today. Later Alice Clark told me
that her grandfather put gorse under floors in order to absorb damp.
Burglary and thieving were a problem, 17 and in 1971 the museum
suffered the loss of several Japanese prints18 valued at £7,000. Hardly
16 9 April, 1974.
174Oct.1971; lSJan.1971; I3Oct. 1970.
1s June 1971; 17 July, 1971; 20 Aug. 1971.
306
THE DIARIES OF ALLEN GROVE
surprising that close circuit TV with twelve cameras and monitors were
installed in the museum and the Carriage Museum during 1970.
The museum life was never dull.
[21 Aug. 1970] An army bomb disposal squad arrived to take away the
bomb sent in to the Museum with a box of miscellaneous material.
[7 June 1970] This morning the museum bees swarmed (under one of
the seats in the Adult School's forecourt) and soon afterwards retreated
into the museum hive.
[8 June 1970] At approximately the same time as yesterday the museum
bees put on a repeat performance.
[9 June 1970] This morning the bees repeated their swarming performance.
[20 May 1974] As I took my rubbish down to the dustbin a grey squirrel
landed with some noise near my front door. He must have come from
the Adult School roof - some thirty feet. I bet his feet are bruised.
[9 Mar. 1966] Mr. Cripps came in. Told me about his father who used to
collect vipers on the N. Downs, kill them and take them home where they
were cut into sections. These pieces were tied on a line in the sun and the
vipers' fat melted into pots. Used for whooping cough relief ( taken orally).
[26 June 1972] 0005 (five minutes past Sunday midnight) burglar alarm
sounded. A spider was on the face of the sonic device.
After noon - warm and sunny (two girls c aused a sensation in
Brenchley Gardens by stripping to the waist in order to sunbathe).
Borough meetings and social events featured heavily in Allen's
working life.
[29 May 1970] Called on the Mayor and went with her to the Royal
Star to meet Sir Charles and Lady Ponsonby, Lord Cornwallis, Sir
William Mullens and representatives of the West Kent (Queen's Own)
Yeomanry . . . Sir Charles then presented the Mayor with a collection of
yeomanry books and records for the Museum.
[24 May 1967] Attended the Mayor's breakfast at the Royal Star and
Mayor-making ceremony at the Town hall.
[21 July 1966] Eva and I had an invitation to the Mayor's tent at the
Mote Cricket ground.
[3 Nov. 1967] Eva and I attended the Mayor's Banquet at the Royal
Star. Norman Cook19 proposed a toast of 'The Mayor and Corporation'
and mentioned that Elgar20 had told him about the 19th centu ry
banquets in the Grammar School at Corpus Christi Hall.
19 Sub-Curator of Maidstone Museum in 1936, later Curator of Guildhall Museum, City
of London.
2° Curator of Maidstone Museum, 1924-31.
307
R. SPAIN
[15 Jan. 1967] Eva and I went to Cobtree to have tea with Lady Edna
Tyrwhitt-Drake. Walked both ways .
[4 June 1967] Mayor's Sunday. Procession to All Saints.
[12 Nov. 1967] Armistice Day services in Town and Brenchley gardens.
Allen became involved with numerous other organisations outside of
his curatorship. These included:
Antiquities and History Committee
Kent Field Club - Allen held the Honorary Editor's post for many
years under the chairmanship of Sir John Best Shaw
Woolwich & District Antiquarian Society - A llen retained
membership since before the war.
Kent Numismatic Society - Allen was the Chairman for many years.
Maidstone Antiquarian Society formerly Maidstone Scientific and
Antiquarian Society.
Maidstone Area Archaeological Group - Allen was its first
Chairman from April 1969 to April 1971 and remained a member for
many years.
Kent History Teachers Association - Allen was Vice-President from
February 1966 at least until 1972-73.
County Local History Committee, later Kent History Federation.
Allen was Chairman for at least ten years from June 1976.
Kent Buildings Preservation Trust.
CPRK/KAS Joint Committee, from 13 October 1972 Kent Historic
Buildings Committee.
Society of Antiquaries. Allen was a Fellow at least from 1965 and
remained a Fellow all his life.
Friends of Rochester Cathedral.
T he Iris Society. Allen's favourite flower.
Kent Archaeological Society, President, 1986-87.
In 1966, well before his intended retirement, Allen and Eva became
interested in finding a cottage.
[28 Aug. 1966] Morning walk on the N. Downs. After we had lunched
went to look over a cottage just below the Old Forge.
[30 Aug. 1966] Saw Haydon Parker and Sid Diggle about buying the
cottage at Hollingbourne.
[4 Sept. 1966] To Hollingbourne to see the house we have bought.
[16 Oct. 1966] Eva and I signed all the documents needed for taking
over Hollingbourne house.
In the back of his 1975 Diary Allen wrote, 'Miss Wratten told me
308
THE DIARIES OF ALLEN GROVE
TtlEMAltJSTONr ANTIQYARlAN SOCIETY H
(incorpora.tlng TH£ f:Rl1!ND5 OF OLD MAIDSTONE)
wislies n, show Lts appreciatwn, for t1ie-vaiuahw neCp •
9.tven over tlit'" past' twenty stven years 6X Mr. L.R.
GROVE B.A., F.S.A.., F.M.A:., r.R.tS., 6ot1i as tvrme
l'resid"ent: as Honora.ri Cura.tor, and" organ.Lser fi,r-- • • 0
various curslons, as wea as Cecturer oti severaC
occitSi.cns. Jn, ac{c(itwn. Fus fritnaCy h.eCp to those mem6m
wlio na.ve- wislied' to mrry out researcn wori lias aCwa,ys
6een fortncomi,tyJ, ana thLs SpeciaC Muting. lieCa in tne-
Towti tlalC on Weanesaay tgtn Novem6er 1975, wisliu,u
oti Iii& retirem.ent' as Curator of M