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EXPRESS—DECEMBER 31, 1982
Harry, guardian of a part of Lytham's heritage, calls it
a day
A MAN who spent the last 12 years helping in the
day-to-day running of Lytham Hall, once ancestral home of the Clifton
family, spoke this week about its new and developing role in the social
life of Fylde, and Lytham in particular.
He is Mr Harry Jeffery, security officer and along with his wife,
Violet, housekeeper in charge of the hall since 1971, who recently
retired. Both assisted in the hall's gradual process of "going public"
after more than 200 years hiding behind a very private and mainly
historical identity.

Its owners, the Guardian Royal Exchange Assurance
Company, who bought the hall in 1965 and saved it from ruin, set the
process in motion and funded it to the tune of £200,000 plus. That is
the cost of renovation and restoration to date. And the end of the
spending is not yet in sight.
Few Lytham people in the real world outside the hall ever saw the inside
of this monument to a bygone age when the Clifton family lived there.
And the last Clifton, Harry, never lived there after the war, although
his mother, Mrs Violet Clifton, did for a few years from the late 1950s
to the early 1960s when she died.
At that time, after spending some years in a convent, she occupied the
first floor of the hall which was adapted into a flat. She had a butler
whose wife was the cook, a lady's maid and a general housekeeper. She
entertained a number of people in the literary circles in which she
moved, and had dinner parties for a few selected guests.
Unlike many of Britain's stately homes, it was not open to the public
and maintained its distant low-key lifestyle until the Guardian Royal
Exchange took it over. Then they used it temporarily for office and
storage accommodation, and finally set about the task of slotting it
slowly into the social life of the district.
This process began to accelerate in more recent years when
Workington-born Harry Jeffery, St Annes police sergeant from 1954 to
1971, retired and moved into The Cottage, adjoining the hall, along with
his wife to assist in the task.
Lifestyle
In the last decade, Harry Jeffery and his wife have
helped to establish the hall in its new Lytham lifestyle. He has
conducted many parties of 20 or 30 visitors round the old building, at
the same time dispensing a potted history of its legendary past.
Occasional civic gatherings and open weekends have also been held there.
It has been, too, a natural headquarters for shooting parties, although
this is nothing new for many prominent figures in the upper crust of the
business and professional world, instead of the old aristocracy, have
enjoyed their favourite sport on the estate.
The hosts for these shoots is usually Mr Ernest Bigland MBE, formerly
the Guardian Royal Exchange managing director, now a full director and
the group's deputy chairman.
His guests have included Sir Charles Forte, executive chairman of
Trusthouse Forte Ltd; the late Sir Keith Showering, founder director
Showerings Vine Products and Whiteways Ltd, the chief executive of the
merged company and chairman and chief executive Allied Lyons (formerly
Allied Breweries); Sir Patrick Dunn, DFC, who was an RAF Air Marshall
before he retired and Col Sir Thomas E. St Johnstone, once Chief
Constable of Lancashire and Harry's boss between 1950-67.
This small sample from the guest lists at the shoots reflects in
miniature the shifts of influence and power which have taken place in
Britain in the last 50 or 60 years.
Just as the world of big business, in the shape of The Guardian Royal
Exchange, took over the traditional role of the aristocracy from the
Cliftons at Lytham, so national figures in the business and professional
world have replaced the aristocrats who visited the hall to shoot.
These, in the days of John Talbot Clifton, Harry's father, included a
Crown Prince of Russia, the Duke of Norfolk and the Duke of St Albans,
who was a Beauclerk and cousin to Mrs Clifton, also a Beauclerk.
Today's shoots are also. enjoyed by local farmers who might have had to
touch their forelock to the guests of long, long ago!
Instead, all the guests today, whatever their role in life, are mainly
concerned, in groups of eight or 10, with hunting pheasant, duck,
partridge and hare every fortnight between October and the end of
January.
Since the office staffs moved out of the hall, only five members of the
Guardian Estates, once employed in the old Clifton Estate Office in
Hastings Place, Lytham, remain to administer the estate from the West
Wing.
During their 12-year spell there, Harry and his wife have lived in The
Cottage at the back of the hall. This was a dairy in the original
building when the hall was rebuilt in the 1950s. It was renovated to a
cottage when the Guardian took over in the mid-sixties.
Today, they live in Orchard Road, St Annes, after 17 years on police
premises at St Annes, and 12 at The Cottage on the estate. |
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