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Reproduced by permission of the Hereford
Times.

Saturday 6th
September 1927
Letton Court Gutted.
Mid Day Blaze
BURNT OUT IN
TWO HOURS
MAIDS' THRILLING WORK
Letton Court, Herefordshire, the beautiful home of
Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Dew, a red brick mansion in Mediaeval
style, today lies in ruins.
In the space of two hours on Wednesday it was reduces
to ashes by a fire which broke out at half past ten
in the morning - a day and time when the village is
usually denuded of men, who are drawn to Hereford by
the markets.
The Household staff, consisting of four maids and others
who responded to the alarm, performed prodigies of valour
in trying to save the contents, but the all-devouring
flames spread from window to window, door to door, enveloping
room after room, with such overwhelming rapidity that
their efforts were of little avail.
What the damage sustained is it is yet impossible to
estimate, but it must be many thousand pounds' worth
that lie, irreplaceable in the ashes.
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THE OUTBREAK
From what can be gleaned, the cause of the outbreak
was quite an unusual one. The work of repainting the
exterior of the building was in progress, the contract
being in the hands of Messrs. Beavan and Hodges, Hereford.
Two men were engaged on the job - Wm. Johnson, of 31,
Friars St., Hereford and Fred Godsall, who recently
came to Hereford to live. Precisely what happened is
difficult to to establish, but certain it is that a
blow lamp figured in the incident. Johnson, it is stated,
was using it on the outside of a spare bedroom window
over the study on the east side of the house, when the
woodwork and curtains suddenly caught fire and blazed
up furiously in a high wind favourable to the spreading
of the flames.
An alarm was raised, and Johnson mounting his cycle,
rode off to telephone for the Hereford Brigade. Not
being aware that the local Post Office had been lately
transferred to the Cross Roads in the village of Staunton
on Wye, Johnson rode down to the Portway, only to find
that he had to double back to Hanmer's Cross, considerably
over a mile away. He reached here in an exhausted condition
(on the journey he had to climb Tin Hill), and it had
just turned eleven o'clock when the call was put through
to Hereford.
From the Post Office he cycled back with all speed
to Letton Court to help with the work of fighting the
flames, which by then had got such a firm hold on the
place that the whole building seemed doomed; but on
reaching the scene he was so exhausted and prostrated
that he fell from his bicycle in a fainting fit, tragically
exclaiming, "Oh my God, that man is ruined.". He was
picked up and carried to a place of safety, and as he
continued very ill he was later taken home to Hereford.
he is still in a prostrate condition.
MAID'S THRILLING
STORY.
It appears that the outbreak of the fire was discovered
accidentally. Miss Ellen Vale, a member of the Domestic
Staff, had occasion to go upstairs, and a smell of smoke
attracted her attention. She knew that men were using
blow lamps on the bedroom windows, and went to them
to ask if they had been burning anything. Receiving
the reply that they had not, Miss Vale made further
investigations, and was joined by Miss Nelly Passey,
the Cook, who said it could not be a chimney on fire,
because only the kitchen range was in use.
The happenings of the next half hour or so are described
in the words of Miss Passey, who heroically led the
domestic staff in a brave fight against overwhelming
odds. "We noticed that the bottom of the window sill
in the Nursery was smouldering, " she said "and all
of a sudden the blind broke into flames which spread
like lightning. 'Look', I cried ' the blind is gone.'.
We shouted 'Fire!' and while we ran to get fire extinguishers,
someone went to the tower to toll the bell and raise
the alarm. For some reason or another the bell would
not ring, and so she got a hand bell and kept ringing
it as she went about spreading the news of the outbreak.
"It was not long before everybody came rushing up to
see what they could do. One of the men took the fire
extinguisher from Miss vale and Miss vale ran out for
water. It was just awful. The flames went from one room
to another so quickly that within ten minutes of the
outbreak the whole of the bedroom seemed to be a mass
of flames. The roar of the fire was tremendous, and
the big glass dome in the roof appeared like a big red
ball.
"We emptied the fire extinguishers, filled them and
emptied them again. We kept throwing water on the flames,
but it made no difference. We could not stop the fire
spreading and then pieces of the roof began to fall
in. We were frightened but continued to throw water
on the flames until the members of the Fire Brigade
came and told us we had to get out of the house, because
it was too dangerous for us to stay.
"We saved a few things from the rooms downstairs after
we came down, but we were not able to get into the drawing
room at all. The roof was all alight and cracking and
pieces of burning wood kept falling. It was terrible
to know that so many beautiful things were being destroyed;
and yet we were powerless to get them out.
BRIGADE WORK
The Hereford Brigade, once they received the call,
made a quick journey with the motor fire engine, Mr.
T. Rawson, the captain, being in command. On their arrival
it was realised that the mansion, in the main, was doomed,
so attention was paid to saving the north-east wing,
comprising the servants quarters and the ornamental
water tower. This section, lying to windward, they were
able to keep intact. Then they concentrated on the three
strong rooms stored with silver and estate documents,
and when the still smouldering ruins have cooled off
it is expected that it will be found that little harm
has been done to them. Practically the whole of the
wine cellar was salved too.
Incidentally, it was a thorough test for the fire
engine, which came through the ordeal of pumping continuously
through four jets a distance of 200 yards from 11.45
a.m. till 10.30 p.m., water being obtained from a stream,
which in times past supplied the moat by which the former
building was surrounded.
DESERTED VILLAGE.
The interior fittings of the mansion were, it seems,
largely of an inflammable nature. It was unfortunate
that the outbreak occurred so near the roof, as the
interior of this was matchboarded throughout, and once
the flames got a hold on this, which they did in the
early stages, it was impossible to stop them spreading
with devastating rapidity. Almost before the Brigade
received the summons, the entire roof had fallen in,
and when they arrived the place was blazing fiercely
from side to side and corner to corner, the flames leaping
high in the air. There was only one fortuitous circumstance
in the calamity. That was, that it did not occur at
dead of night while the members of the household were
asleep.
As it was, the number of helpers available in the incipient
stages was small, owing to so many men being in Hereford
attending the markets. Mr. Dew's bailiff, Mr. Albert
Abraham, was among them. He was in the stock market
when he heard the news, and, after assuring himself
that the rumour was true, taxied out to the scene.
When he reached there the house was a seething mass
of fire. No doubt the main staircase, of pitch pine,surmounted
by a glass cupola, acted not only as fuel but as a chimney,
creating an immense draught, which could not be stifled.
MENTIONED
IN DOMESDAY
Letton is one of Hereford's ancient villages with
a church dating back to Norman times. The Court stands
- or stood, for only the shell now remains - in close
proximity, separated only by a belt of beautiful trees,
one of them a unique hybrid pine. So close together
are the two that a bridge over the old moat serves as
an entrance to both from the main road leading from
Hereford to Hay. The Court was formerly the seat of
the Blisset family, whose head, the Rev. Henry Blisset,
rebuilt the court in 1859. The place is mentioned in
Domesday. The present owner, Mr. Tom Millet Dew, married
a Miss Blisset as his first wife, and secondly - nearly
twenty years ago - Miss Sisum of Garsdon, Malmesbury,
Wilts. On the day of the fire, Mrs Dew was away from
home paying a visit to relatives in Malmesbury, and
was hurriedly fetched back by car on Wednesday night
to find her once beautiful home a blackened ruin. Mr.
and Mrs. Dew - in their irreplaceable loss - for no
insurance can restore their many treasures and family
heirlooms - will have the sympathy of the entire county.
The material damage must amount to many thousands of
pounds. For the present the homeless Squire and Mrs
Dew are staying at the Rectory with the Rev. A. L. Osman
and Mrs. Osman. Mr. Osman was formerly a Minor Canon
of Hereford Cathedral.
Mr. Dew, who is a J.P. for Herefordshire with a seat
on the Weobley Bench, is Lord of the Manor of Letton
and the chief landowner in the parish. He is also a
member of the Weobley Board of Guardians and District
Council.
The Court and the Rectory were built
in the same style of architecture, being designed by
the famous Bodley. Of red brick, the Court was one of
the few mansions in Herefordshire built on these lines.
It was an exceedingly handsome structure, not familiar
perhaps to many people, owing to its invisibility from
the main road, being hidden by trees which are the growth
of centuries. Erected on a natural dais, the terraced
lawns afford a charming vista of pastoral scenery with
the wooded Bredwardine Hills as a background, celebrated
as the site of King Arthur's Stone, and for the glorious
views obtainable from the cairn on Meerbach edge.
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