Biography of Alice
Beatrice Martha Cumberbatch

Alice was born on the 15 April 1888 in
Burnett, Newton, near Keynsham, Somerset, England (5c 6305). She was
baptised at the age of 3 years in the church at Queen Charlton,
Somerset, in August 1891. She died 9 April 1971 near her home town of
Cromer, Norfolk (Lothingland 4b 2506).
Her parents
were Charles Walter Cumberbatch and
Pamela, née
Pillinger. He was a "gentleman
artist". He lived all his life on the income from his widowed mother's
estate which almost certainly came from sugar plantations in Barbados.
She brought her two sons to England some time after the early death of
their father, John Edward Cumberbatch,
at the age of 38 in 1854. Charles wanted to be an artist but his mother
wanted him to enter the law as a profession. He was placed with a law
firm in Bristol but refused to comply with his mother's wishes and apply
himself to legal work. Presumably as a result hi mother's Will denied
him any access to her capital; it was administered on behalf of himself
and his children by his reliable younger brother, aural surgeon
Alfonso Elkin Cumberbatch, who was
known to his family as Elkin.
The family
story was that Charles took drawing lessons in Bristol, and married the
drawing master's daughter. However, census researches show a less
romantic account. Pamela Pillinger's
father was a farm servant, though on her marriage certificate she gave
her deceased father's occupation as a 'farmer'.
Pamela's mother Martha
was widowed in 1861 when Pamela was
only 11 years old.
Charles and
Pamela Cumberbatch's first family home is the manor house
in Queen Charlton, which was leased to them. They had four children:
-
Lilian Elizabeth Constance; born
1879
-
Elkin Percy (who always called
Percy); born 1880
-
Charles Belgrave; born 1884.
Charles died aged 6 years on 25 March 1891 in Hammersmith, but he is
buried in the churchyard at Queen Charlton. Perhaps this explain why
both Percy and
Alice were baptised in Queen
Charlton later in the year 1891 at the ages of 11 and 3
respectively.
-
Alice Beatrice Martha was the
youngest; born in 1888
By the time
Alice was three, in 1891, the family
had moved to Bradmore House in Hammersmith Broadway so that
Percy could go to St. Paul's
Preparatory School in Hammersmith Road. The fees for day boys were
approximately £18 per year back then, which is roughly £8,500 today;
based on the increase in average earnings inflation to 2007.
Bradmore
House belonged to George Willins
having been left to his adoptive maternal Grandfather,
Dr Simpson, by a grateful patient.
George, believed to be illegitimate,
lived there alone with his guardian, Miss Rae,
whom he greatly disliked. There was much speculation about
George's parentage involving
Lily Langtry and
The Prince of Wales. Another theory was
that his father was Fred Archer, the
well known jockey. However, George
was adopted by "Old Willins" and his
wife Pamela Jane, née
Simpson, who was said to be
particularly keen on adopting that baby and no other. Was this
indicative of some relationship? "Old Willins"
had been Pamela Jane's tutor and she
had been insistent on marrying him. After some years of marriage, when
they lived in Gargett Hall, Dereham, Norfolk, "Old
Willins" disappeared from the scene.
Pamela eventually moved to London to Bradmore House
looking for treatment for cancer. Presumably she died, as
George was there, living the life of
a gentleman of leisure on a Trust Fund, with is guardian, when the
Cumberbatches leased half the house
from him. He and Lily fell in love;
the story goes that he threatened to blow his brains out if she didn't
marry him. This did not prove to be necessary, as they were married.
They moved to Ealing, to Woodfield House, Woodfield Road, and had three
children:
-
Hugh Willins
-
Pamela Willins
-
Sylvia Willins
Lily's parents
Charles and Pamela,
with Alice and
Percy moved nearby to 79 Madeley Road. When
Percy married
Isabel they too bought a house nearby in Gordon Road,
Ealing. The families were close and visited each other often; they often
played terrifying games of Hide and Seek around the house and grounds of
Woodfield House.
In 1913 most of
Bradmore House was demolished to facilitate road
widening, but
the outer shell of the central part was left. The
facade of the beautiful house remains, surrounded by concrete roads and
flyovers. Percy went from St. Paul's
School to Keble College, Oxford, and in time became a doctor in Bart's
Hospital. In 1918 Percy Cumberbatch
married Isabel Gibbons and had two
children:
-
Richard
-
Eileen
They then
moved to Ethelburga, at 13 Elmgrove Road, Ealing.
While living
in Ealing, Alice wrote articles for
the local newspaper, the West Middlesex Gazette. Thus she met
Mr Chambers, the editor, and they
became engaged to be married. It seems that they were engaged for over
20 years, and he appears on many family photographs, but
Alice would never "name the day". It
seems that after waiting all this time he got fed up; the story goes
that Lily's daughter Sylvia saw him on the underground with "another
woman". At all events he married someone else, following which
Alice sued him successfully for
breach of promise, to the mortification of her family.
It was
probably a short time after this that Alice
used the resulting funds to commission the cup from
Omar Ramsden, an internationally
renowned silversmith. No doubt she did not wish it to appear that she
had sued Mr. Chambers for financial
motives. The magnificent cup was to be awarded to the individual or firm
who made the greatest contribution to aviation safety and was first to
be presented to the Hanworth Club. Later it came by agreement to be
presented through the Guild of Air Pilots and Navigators (GAPAN). This
was in the 1930s, when flight was very much in the developmental stage.
Hanworth
Airfield was near her home in Ealing and she was a member of the
Hanworth Flying Club. Her sister Lily's
oldest child, Hugh Willins was an
aeronautical engineer, Alice had been instrumental in helping him to
find employment at Hanworth in the difficult years of the 30s.
Lily's older daughter
Pamela was married to
Omar Ramsden's son, an actor, though
this marriage was annulled in due course.
Pamela then married Hugh Buckingham,
a Test Pilot who went on to become Managing Director of de Havilland.
These are the closest connections found and they explain the choice of
Omar Ramsden for the commission.
Even today, members of the family have several of his pieces; dressing
table sets and other items.
Alice seems to have been a strong
minded and determined woman, looked upon as eccentric. She was
physically very small and chain-smoked always, lighting one cigarette
from another. She always smoked Park Drive, which are thought to be
named after her as she lived at 6 Park Drive. Perhaps she knew someone
in the tobacco world? In fact a mistake was made as she actually lived
in Park Road. She only ever wore navy blue, with a touch of cream, and
made all her own clothes, Lily's
granddaughter Teresa, the daughter
of Pamela Buckingham, tells how
Alice would walk up and down
Kensington High Street with her to Derry and Toms' to buy fabrics and
help her make exotic clothes. She also warned
Teresa that a particular boyfriend she had at the time was
"attractive enough to be dangerous".
It appears
that Alice dominated her gentler
sister Lily, though
Lily was several years older, and
when Lily was considering moving to
Cromer where Alice already lived she
told her son Hugh she would need him
to protect her from Alice.
Alice also dominated
Isabel, another gentle lady, when
she married Alice's brother
Percy. It seems
Alice insisted on choosing all the
furniture for the couple's home, selecting heavy Victorian pieces which
were not at all to Isabel's more
elegant taste. Alice's own house in Cromer was filled with antiques,
some of which had been in the Great Exhibition.
Men seemed
fascinated by Alice.
Teresa tells how, a few years before
she died in 1971, she brought home a man of about 50 who was very keen
to marry her. Teresa's father
Hugh thought he was after her money
and chased him away, Teresa
remembers that it was all very dramatic and she felt sorry for her
Aunt Alice.
Alice
achieved a great deal in her public life. Her father had died in 1920
when she was 31 and on the outbreak of war and bombing in 1939
Alice decided to move her mother
Pamela, "the Mater", to Cromer where
they had often holidayed with other members of the family. In time
Hugh and his family,
Sylvia and hers,
Lily and George lived
there also. In Cromer Alice started
the Fisherman's Benevolent Fund with the famous coxswain
Henry Blogg, to help local fishermen
in times of poverty. She is still remembered in the town by some of the
fishermens' families. While still living in Ealing she had held events
to raise money for the RNLI (Royal National Lifeboat Institute),
including one year arranging for a Lifeboat to be drawn through the
streets of suburban Ealing to increase awareness of their work.
She did a
great deal of work as Chairman of the West Middlesex Hospital. As the donor of the
Omar Ramsden trophy, she was made an Honorary Life Member of the Guild
of Air Pilots and Air Navigators and also made a Freeman of the City of
London on 8 December 1960.
Alice died on 9 April 1971, just
days before her 83rd birthday. She is buried in the family
plot in Cromer, with her sister Lily
and brother-in-law George and their
daughter Sylvia, and
Alice and
Lily's mother Pamela. Her
obituary appeared in the Eastern Daily Press 14 April 1971.
Source: Helen
Ashton who is descended from Eileen Cumberbatch and other family
members.
