Quick Thoughts on Queen Elizabeth’s Passing

We just heard the news while vacationing in Austria.

As you may know, I’m an American living in the UK, who is not a British citizen (though that’s an ambition). I was born just a couple of years before Princess Elizabeth became Queen Elizabeth II. So she was “the Queen” all my life, even if she wasn’t my monarch. And no other queen could answer to the title. I am saddened by her passing, and as I heard the news before my British Bride, to me it fell the task of telling her. It was not easy to do without choking up. May Her Majesty be greeted on the other side with the words, “Well done, thou good and faithful servant!”

They may not read this, but my condolences go out to her family and all who loved her.

And finally: God save the King!

Drone Flights in Sussex and Devon

A New Video is Posted

We recently spent a week and a half in Devon, and while I’m working on at least two videos concerning what we found there, I thought I would put out a short video showing some of the drone footage I’ve gotten on various occasions. Since aerial photos and videos can show what one is telling about much better sometimes, I’ve made some efforts to learn how to use the two higher-quality drones I now have.

The video is just 5 1/2 minutes long:

Visiting Chartwell

Back in June 2021 we visited Chartwell, in Kent. Chartwell is a country estate not terribly far from London, and was the home of Winston and Clementine Churchill for over 40 years, from 1922, until not long after Winston’s death.  It was given to the United Kingdom’s National Trust by the Churchills in 1946, and has been a favorite of visitors since that time.

Just this week I completed a video for my YouTube channel about our visit, Visiting Chartwell, and uploaded it to the channel before realizing that an important detail in my narration had changed since the visit. So I had to make a new voice introduction to the video and re-upload it. No doubt other things may change in the future, but I like to make my videos accurate as of the time I upload them!

Here follows the text of my narration.

Visiting Chartwell

On a recent visit to East Sussex and Kent, the British Bride and I dropped in at Chartwell and went exploring for an afternoon. Chartwell is a country estate not terribly far from London, it was the home of Winston and Clementine Churchill for over 40 years, from 1922, until not long after Winston’s death. It was given to the United Kingdom’s National Trust by the Churchills in 1946, and has been a favorite of visitors since that time.

Since we visited while some degree of lockdown due to the Covid pandemic was in place, we had to book our entry for a particular date and time, but this has changed since our visit. Booking entrance to the grounds is no longer required. But if you want to tour the house and Winston’s studio, one must make a reservation, which can only be done at the time of entry to the grounds, on a first-come first-served basis. Another couple we spoke with, who arrived not long after us, were unable to enter the house, as the available slots had been used up for the day. Early arrival seems to be a key factor here!

In the event, we managed to get to Chartwell in time to reserve a visit to the house, although we had to wait a couple of hours after arrival to go in. This was not a problem, however, as this is a large estate, and there is plenty of space to wander in and much to see.

The Chartwell House front entrance

Arrival

Our grounds visit arrival slot was on a Saturday between 12:30 and 1:00 pm, having reserved it the previous day. Upon arrival, we were able to secure a reserved slot to visit the house, starting a couple of hours later, at 2:40pm. As noted, the available house visit time slots were almost exhausted, so we kind of lucked out.

Here’s a map of the estate.

The house sits on the west side of a valley and faces into that valley. There are bodies of water in the low places, and I later discovered that these weren’t natural – Churchill himself had them added during the estate’s renovation soon after he bought it. Apparently he gave a great deal of attention to their construction – and no wonder! They help make the estate quite an idyllic setting. Churchill later said that he had bought Chartwell mainly because of the view across the valley from the house.

Estate History

It’s worthwhile to consider the history of this place.

The earliest recorded mention of the land itself dates to 1362. The origin of the name “Chartwell” is the name of an attesian spring that is to the north of the current house, which is “Chart Well”. The word “chart” in this case is an Old English word for “rough ground.” The first buildings at the site were constructed at least as early as the 16th century. The estate at that time was called “Well Street,” obviously for the spring. Reputation has it that King Henry VIII stayed in the house while he was wooing his future queen Anne Boleyn at nearby Hever Castle. Parts of the original Tudor house are still visible in the brickwork of some of the external walls.

As I mentioned earlier, Churchill bought the property in 1922. This was kind of unbeknownst to his wife, Clementine – he surprised her with it, not entirely to her delight, since although she had liked the property when they viewed it together, she was worried about the cost of renovating it, as it was not in the best of shape. And her worry was not unfounded! Dry rot was everywhere, and it would have to be largely rebuilt.

The purchase price was £5,000, or about £291,000 in 2020 pounds. In 1922 US dollars this would have been $23,810, or $382,000 in 2020 dollars. Even for the time this was not a huge amount of money. But Clemmie was right, the renovation turned out to be very expensive! The original estimate of the cost was “just” £7,000, but by the time the renovation was complete, in 1924, the cost had ballooned to £18,000, or £1,120,000 in today’s money.

The Overlook and Garden

After checking in at the main entrance building, we walked southwards to the overlook. From here we could see across the Weald into Kent and East Sussex. And down into the walled garden!
I was quite impressed by this garden – despite my great dislike for gardening work itself, I love looking at and walking through beautiful gardens, and this one is quite lovely! And in late spring and early summer with all the plants flowering like nobody’s business, there were hundreds of jolly bees buzzing about, including these impressive specimens of bumblebee.

At the foot of the garden is the Marycot, a little child-sized brick cottage that Winston built for his daughter Mary. The features and fittings are sized to fit a child, and I’m sure she greatly appreciated playing in this little house.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

The Studio

Leaving the garden we found our way out this portal and to the line of cottages that include Winston’s studio. Like the Marycot, Winston laid the bricks himself for at least the studio portion of these cottages. He was reputed as a good bricklayer, and at one point he was a member of a professional bricklayers’ association. Oddly enough, they expelled him from their membership when he joined the Conservative Party! Must have been some kind of political statement on their part.

Besides his chief fame as soldier, author, politician, and statesman, Churchill is well known as an amateur painter. He took to this hobby as a distraction from his heavy responsibilities in June 1915, after he had been removed from his position as First Lord of the Admiralty in the wake of the disastrous Gallipolli campaign during the First World War. His introduction to the hobby was on a family holiday, when he observed his sister-in-law painting in watercolor. He took at turn at the brush, and was instantly entranced. He first painted in watercolors, but soon graduated to oils. During his life he painted over 500 paintings. He frequently took painting equipment with him during his travels, and did so even while serving in World War I as the combat commander of a battalion of the Royal Scots Fusiliers in France! During the time of his Prime Ministership, however, he was so busy that he apparently completed only one painting.

Churchill described himself as nothing more than an amateur. He mainly gave away his paintings, which he self-deprecatingly described as “daubs”. This hasn’t stopped people from paying large sums for his paintings when they have come onto the market, however. One of his paintings, the only painting he did during WW2, is this one here, entitled “Tower of the Koutoubia Mosque.”

He painted while still in Morocco after the Casablanca Conference in 1943, and he later gave it to US President Franklin Roosevelt as a birthday gift. Eventually, after passing through a number of hands, in March 2021 it was sold at auction for over 8 and a quarter million British pounds!


Painting was an important activity in Churchill’s life, and helped him in dealing with his occasional bouts of depression, which he described as his “black dog.” In an interview with Life magazine in 1946 he said “When I get to heaven I intend to spend a considerable portion of my first million years in painting, and so get to the bottom of the subject.”

The Estate Grounds

After leaving the Studio we took a walk on the estate grounds, down to the south end of the ponds. We had seen a notice at the entrance to the grounds about the black swans that we found on the pond. The notice was a warning not to bother or approach the swans too closely because they could be quite aggressive. Fortunately, they were too busy to get all aggro with us when we passed by. And aside from photographing them, we left them well enough alone.

At the foot of the larger of the ponds we found a statue of the founding couple of Chartwell, Winston and Clementine Churchill. This is labelled “Nemon Statue” on the official map of Chartwell, and before we arrived there I found myself wondering who or what on earth “Nemon” was. Looked like “lemon” with an “n”.

The Nemon Statue

Of course, this isn’t what it is – it turns out that Oscar Nemon was Winston’s favorite sculptor, and a good friend besides, and Nemon’s output included a number of sculptures of Winston, including one found in the House of Commons, in the Parliament building in London. There was a bit of turnabout as fair play between the two men, as Churchill made Nemon the subject of the one and only sculpture he himself ever made! Here you see the sculptor Nemon with his bust of Churchill, and Churchill’s bust of Nemon!

Leaving Winston and Clementine, we then ascended up the trails into the trees. My physical conditioning (or lack thereof) made this ascent rather exhausting, but it was nevertheless quite enjoyable. There are a few interesting features in the woods up there, including a recreation of a military camp, called the Canadian Camp. There are hammocks and wooden camp furniture, but no explanation at the site as to why it’s Canadian, or even why it’s portrayed. I later looked this up and it turns out that there were Canadian soldiers who camped out here in the woods at Chartwell during the Second World War. One of their tasks was to pull camouflage over the lakes when there was an air raid, so the German pilots would not recognize Chartwell from the air, for navigation purposes.

The Canadian Camp

Further along are other features, including a “bomb crater,” which is the remnant of an incident when bombs are said to have fallen on the estate at Chartwell as the planes left London. Another feature is a rather elaborate treehouse, a recreation of the original treehouse Winston built or had built for his children.

But we were out of time, and couldn’t visit the treehouse or the crater, since our house entry timeslot was coming up, and we had to hurry back down into the valley and up again to the house. We barely made it! They’re quite strict about keeping to your appointment.

The Marmalade Cat

In a letter to his son Randolph written in May 1942, Churchill wrote of a brief visit to Chartwell the previous week, in which he wrote “the goose and the black swan have both fallen victim to the fox. The Yellow Cat however made me sensible of his continuing friendship, although I had not been there for eight months”.

The tradition of keeping a marmalade, or ginger cat in comfortable residence at Chartwell is maintained by the National Trust in accordance with the family’s wishes. Each cat is to have a white bib, four white socks, and is named Jock.

Unfortunately, in our visit we didn’t see the current marmalade cat. Jock here is the seventh in a long line of ginger cats and has been on staff since May 2020, when the National Trust welcomed a six-month-old rescue kitten to the property to take up this unique role. The staff at Chartwell say that he has developed into a mischievous character, and his favourite pastimes are investigating what the gardeners are up to and trying to persuade people to give him snacks. He also likes lots of cuddles on the sofa after an eventful day.

Jock VII predecessor was Jock VI, who joined the staff in 2014, but retired in 2020 due to ill health. This previous Jock is now enjoying the life of a former celebrity with Chartwell’s House and Collections Manager in a much quieter, more peaceful garden of his own.

Chartwell House

After the war, the Churchills were considering selling Chartwell due to the expense of running it properly, but friends arranged for the UK’s National Trust to buy it for posterity, on condition that the Churchills retained the right of living there for the rest of their lives. And so they did, until shortly after Winston passed away in 1965, when Clementine relinquished ownership and the Trust took full possession. Much of the furnishings were likewise relinquished and remain with the house to this day, and many other Churchill-related artifacts have since been obtained and are on display.

The NT remodeled the house’s interior somewhat, in the interest of making it easy for the public to tour, but the basic building remained as it was. Now, I quite like the building’s exterior design, but who am I? Just some guy, right? So my opinion is not shared among the cognoscenti of the art of architecture. I gather that the original building as purchased in 1922 wasn’t very distinguished in the first place, but even after Winston had the place renovated, it remained “undistinguished.” Descriptions by professionals include such portrayals as being of “dull red brick and an odd undecided style” and “Victorian architecture at its least attractive.”
Well, who cares what they think! I find the house’s exterior quite inspiring!

I should have taken more photographs and videos while we toured the house’s interior. But I was exhausted by the time we had rushed back over from the woods and the hill. My spectacles were fogging up terribly with all the huffing and puffing through my facemask, and then the stair climbing. It wasn’t pretty, even though the house was! So, I’m having to supplement my own photos of the house with ones from the Chartwell website and other photos found on the web.

Of particular interest in all these rooms was a display of 50 important objects in Churchill’s life.

One of them is this damaged flashlight (known as a “torch” in the UK). While commanding a service battalion of the Royal Scots Fusiliers in World War I, Churchill’s life was saved by this item in battle when it blocked a piece of shrapnel from wounding and probably killing him.


Sir Winston Churchill was one of very few people to have been given the title of “Honorary Citizen of the United States,” something which he received in 1963 not long before his death. Here is Winston’s Honorary Citizen Document, which was given to his son Randolph by President John F. Kennedy. This status of honorary citizen did not confer upon him true citizenship, however. The document here could not be used as a passport, for example, nor could he used it to vote in US elections.

On the other hand, Winston’s mother was a natural-born US citizen, born in New York City to an American family, and this arguably gave him the right to actual natural-born US citizenship. Granting him honorary citizenship was, nevertheless, a signal honor, and expressed great love, gratitude, and respect.

I’m not going to go into deep explanations of all that I saw, as what we saw is tied up tightly with Winston Churchill’s own history – and that is to be found everywhere described in books, films, documentaries, and web pages. It happens that I have been a great fan of Sir Winston Churchill – he was an immensely important leader and individual, of both international as well as national importance. Because of the high regard I have for this great Prime Minister, I was most interested and pleased to be able to tour his house.

I highly recommend a visit to Chartwell if you ever happen to be in the vicinity. It will be worth it.

Henfield Village

Yesterday we were in the town of Worthing doing a bit of shopping and other errands, and by the end of the day the British Bride was not very keen on cooking dinner (note that I do my fair share of meal prep!) so she decided we would pick up fish and chips at one of the “chip shops” in a neighboring village. There’s a chip shop in our own village, but unfortunately their chips are, in her words, rubbish. I’ve tried them, and she’s right!

Parenthetically, just in case you’re a Yank like me and are unfamiliar with British terminology, “chips” are “french fries”. And what we call “chips” (potato chips) are called “crisps” here in England.

So we popped in at King Fish and Chips in Henfield. We’ve been here before and they make good food.

Like most chip shops, this is for “take out” only

Henfied is a cute little village, although it’s not quite as bucolic as others, being that a semi-major road passes through it (the A2037). It’s quite on the track between Worthing and the towns northwards, so it can get busy at certain times during the day.

Here’s a short video of the traffic of Henfield in the late afternoon:

Traffic down the A2037 around 5:30 pm. Notice how the cars are driving on the left! That’s the custom in the United Kingdom.

Since the shop has limited seating, we went outside to enjoy the fresh air and the ambiance of the village. While we were communing with the traffic flowing along the road, waiting for our order to be completed I noticed a cottage on the opposite side of the street with a VERY odd brick chimney! I wondered if this had been made this way deliberately, but of course it had to have been. It actually curves in two horizontal directions, not just one. I didn’t notice the additional curve until we were driving away, too late to get a better photo!

Whoever built this chimney must have gotten quite a kick out of imagining the startlement that future generations would get upon noticing this for the first time!

Right next door to the cottage with the sinuous chimney is The White Hart, a really classic English pub! I haven’t been inside yet, but when I do I will be sure to get some photos — even better I’ll sample the food! In case you’re wondering if they are misspelling “heart” on purpose, or if it was just the way they spelled it back in 1777 when the pub was opened, that would be a “No.” “Hart” is actually an old English word for “stag deer”, which you can see in the pub’s sign of business.

If you’re not familiar with the British Isles, this pub name is extremely common, in fact the 5th most popular pub name, possibly because of the wonderment that people would have greeted the discovery of an albino deer, a very rare phenomenon indeed. But more likely it is due to the white hart being the personal badge of King Richard II.

” The historical White Hart Henfield dates from the 16th century and is a classic oak-beamed pub with a wealth of detail that will delight lovers of genuine English architecture. ” — From the website of Henfield’s White Hart.

A View Across the Adur Valley

A few days ago I was out at Beeding Hill in West Sussex testing my Hubsan H501S quadcopter to see if I could determine why it was malfunctioning. It appears to be an antenna problem, by the way. But I got a nice shot of the view from Beeding Hill across to Chanctonbury Hill. The major geographic feature between Beeding and Chanctonbury is the Adur Valley, through which the River Adur flows on its way to the English Channel.

A View from Beeding Hill across the Adur Valley to Chanctonbury Hill

There’s nothing particularly special about Beeding Hill, by the way, so there won’t be a Yank in Sussex video forthcoming about it, but Chanctonbury is another matter! Chanctonbury Hill features a prehistoric structure called the Chanctonbury Ring. The Ring is a late Bronze or early Iron age hill fort — but whether it was originally intended as a defensive, religious, or agricultural structure is unknown. Although it has apparently been used for all three purposes over the 2,700-ish years of its existence, it was essentially abandoned as a purposeful structure sometime around 400 CE.

The probable reason why there’s a fort on the hill is because of the hill’s evident prominence: you can see it from everywhere — it rather stands out. As you can see, there is a copse of trees on the hill, but they haven’t always been there. They arrived as a personal project of a certain 16-year old young man, Charles Goring, whose family owned (and still owns) the land the Ring sits on. Charles wanted to beautify the site, so in 1760 he planted a ring of beech trees just inside and outside the rampart of the hill fort. It was this ring of trees that gave the site its name, by the way, and not the hill fort’s rampart.

About 150 years later the Goring family decided to plant beech trees in the interior of the hill fort. Which actually ended up being somewhat fortunate, since during preparations for planting they discovered large quantities of Romano-British pottery and building rubble, which prompted the first archaeological excavation of the hill fort. In the course of the excavation two Roman temples were uncovered within the ramparts of the fort! There have been further archaeological investigations at the site since that day.

Some time this summer I will be climbing that hill in order to take videos and photographs of the site, and thus in a few months time there will be A Yank In Sussex video about Chanctonbury Hill on my YouTube channel. I’m looking forward to working on it!

Map of Chanctonbury Hill and Ring from a 1934 Ordnance Survey Map