About Me

  • Living with my beautiful wife in the most fabulous town in the entire world, Royal Tunbridge Wells. We love to generally soak up the culture, nature and the countryside in this idyllic part of the Weald and because we love our town so much I made this blog to share it with the rest of you. Eating Out in Tunbridge Wells

Links

  • Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells
    The persona of Disgusted lives on. This time though he's online and on a mission.
  • Friends of the Commons
    Website of the wonderful Friends of Tunbridge Wells and Rusthall Commons. If you enjoy the Commons as much as we do, please pay them a visit, become a friend and help contribute to the conservation of our wonderful commons.
  • Royal Tunbridge Wells Civic Society
    Promoting the conservation and enhancement of our town. An independent group with a lively membership of people who care about the town we live in, and a group that does all it can to protect our unique heritage from destruction and to encourage planners, builders and developers to meet the highest standards, so that we may be proud of what is done in our time.
  • High Weald Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty
    Awe inspiring website about the green rolling hills that surround Tunbridge Wells. This website will make you switch off your computer, strap on your shoes and get outside and explore our truly gorgeous countryside
  • Three Beautiful Things
    A woman after my own heart. Clare finds three beautiful things in her life every day. So should we all.
  • Tunbridge Wells Commons Conservators
    The commons are administered by the Commons Conservators. This website aims to inform, entertain and above all provide the opportunity for you to put forward your ideas for the future management and improvement of Tunbridge Wells' most valuable open space.
  • Street Photography in Tunbridge Wells
    Great photographs of street life in Tunbridge Wells, can you spot yourself?
  • Friends of Woodbury Park Cemetery
    The Friends of Woodbury Park Cemetery are volunteers who plan to clear away brambles and saplings, find out more about the local people buried there, and prepare a conservation plan for its magnificent trees, wildflowers and wild life.
  • York Road
    On this site you can learn and see how York Road developed from 1839 to the present day by looking at some wonderful historic maps and pictures. You will appreciate what it is like to live in the centre of this historic town. The amenities are excellent, the location fantastic.
  • Gaztronomy
    Tunbridge Wells resident, Gaz, rates and reviews his favourite restaurants, and usually with a vegetarian slant.

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Strange Characters

Giraffe2Have you noticed that we have some wonderful characters here in Tunbridge Wells, but how many of you have met Petal? Petal can be seen standing outside on Monson Road on fine days watching the traffic and shoppers pass by, sometimes not moving all day. Oh, and she's a giraffe. Yes, the picture kind of gave it away. Petal is the guardian giraffe of M Saltmarsh the artist supply store, which at over 170 years old is the oldest surviving retail supplier of art materials in the entire country, and pretty noteworthy for any retailer in the town.
M Saltmarsh has changed position and ownership several times during the period of its existence. However descendants of the very first owner, John Saltmarsh, still survive and maintain a connection with the shop to this day.
The history begins during 1835 when a young man from Brighton came to Tunbridge Wells to open an art shop at 7 Edger Terrace, a long since lost row of buildings that stood at the bottom of Grove Hill Road. The young mans name was John Saltmarsh and he gave his business the family name.
The shop prospered and in 1837 John and his wife Elizabeth had a son, Mark, who was destined to take over the business and from whom the ‘M’ in M Saltmarsh derives. Sadly, the thriving new business was hit by a couple of disasters when in 1841, not long after opening his shop, John died from a psoas abscess. Also the business was forced to move from its Edger Terrace premises due to the coming of the railway, as the buildings sat where the tunnel now exits from the railway station. This was actually the first of several moves, occupying a couple of locations on the High Street over the next few years.
By 1950, the shop had passed from the Saltmarsh family, passing through many different owners and not really fulfilling its potential, until 1998 when the current owner Sue Luck purchased the whole kit and caboodle. In fact although a Saltmarsh didn't own the company, a Saltmarsh still worked there. Louisa Saltmarsh was, apparently, still working in the shop into her 90s, teaching drawing as a sideline.
Much of the old shop furniture has been retained and is still in used in the shop and makes for a fascinating rainy day peruse.
If the sun is out after your artistic dip and you fancy a walk, myself and another keen-eyed reader found another strange character gathering last week in Hanover Road. It seems a large party of jumbled characters are permanently embroiled in a mock field battle. Go take a walk, take a camera and check it out, let me know what you think.

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