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Oceania, West Parade: Difference between revisions

From Bexhill Heritage: Local List
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Sources say the house was built by a gentleman to commemorate the sinking of a ship called Oceania, which he had personally witnessed.<ref>[https://archive.org/details/bexhillonsea-beginning-people-district-1983/page/18/ Bexhill-on-Sea: It's Beginning, the People & District by H. G. Carey (1983)]</ref> The architect was Arnold Bidlake Mitchell (1863-1944) and the builder was William McCormick with work being completed in 1903.
Sources say the house was built by a gentleman to commemorate the sinking of a ship called Oceania, which he had personally witnessed.<ref>This is sometimes wrongly linked to the P. & O. liner Oceana, which sank off the coast after a collision in 1912 - after the house was already built.</ref><ref>[https://archive.org/details/bexhillonsea-beginning-people-district-1983/page/18/ Bexhill-on-Sea: It's Beginning, the People & District by H. G. Carey (1983)]</ref> The architect was Arnold Bidlake Mitchell (1863-1944) and the builder was William McCormick with work being completed in 1903.


It has polygonal bay windows, a large triangular pedimented gable and extensive use of terracotta.
It has polygonal bay windows, a large triangular pedimented gable and extensive use of terracotta.

Latest revision as of 00:09, 10 March 2026

Oceania, West Parade
File:Oceania, West Parade, Bexhill.jpg
LL ref: 54
Start date: 1903
Architect: Arnold Bidlake Mitchell
Builder: William McCormick
Original use: Residential
View on map: Local List | Bexhill-OSM

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Sources say the house was built by a gentleman to commemorate the sinking of a ship called Oceania, which he had personally witnessed.[1][2] The architect was Arnold Bidlake Mitchell (1863-1944) and the builder was William McCormick with work being completed in 1903.

It has polygonal bay windows, a large triangular pedimented gable and extensive use of terracotta.

Once a single residence Oceania has now been converted into 5 flats.

  1. This is sometimes wrongly linked to the P. & O. liner Oceana, which sank off the coast after a collision in 1912 - after the house was already built.
  2. Bexhill-on-Sea: It's Beginning, the People & District by H. G. Carey (1983)