A 1930s Broadstairs home has been transformed into five luxury holiday apartments in Gladstone Road, Broadstairs Kent

We completely redeveloped this 1930’s property in central Broadstairs at the invitation of the Dallison family, who had lived here since 1959 and purchased it in 1965.

Working sympathetically with our team of Planning Consultant, Architect, Interior and Landscaping Designers to get the correct planning approval was a key element to the success of this project.

The building required total renovation. The dramatic redevelopment was sympathetically undertaken, retaining many period features including stained glass windows and wooden paneling, while creating 5 new stunning design-led apartments.

The story of the Dallison family

THE DALLISON FAMILY were the last owners of 71 Gladstone Road, the original 1930s home which has now been redeveloped as Broadstairs Apartments.

The Dallison’s relocated from Yorkshire to Kent in 1947 and rented the top two floors of the house from October 1959. In 1965, they had the opportunity to buy the whole house. They managed to negotiate a sale price of £4,000!

Joseph (Joe) and Maisie Dallison were both born in the late 1890s, married in 1925 and had two boys, Robert (Bob) born in 1926 and Peter in 1933.

Joe had an accident at the colliery where he worked as a teenager, which ultimately led to the amputation of his left leg at the age of 21. He was very nimble on his crutches and could go up and down stairs as fast as anyone! He enjoyed a full life until his death in 1973.

Maisie ran a china shop in Market Street, Margate. She also bred champion white Persian Cats in the 1950s and 60s. One kitten was sold to King Feisal of Iraq! Maisie loved the gardens of No. 71 and kept them looking beautiful and full of colour in the summer.

Bob served in the Army during World War 2 and afterwards worked as a clerk in Canterbury. Bob loved films, so the house became filled with all forms of related media and literature.

Peter joined the RAF on leaving school and served 5 years as a radar technician before deciding to leave the service and become a geography teacher. While training in London, he joined the St. Paul’s Cathedral Choir as a tenor. Peter taught at Charles Dickens Secondary Modern School in Broadstairs for 27 years from 1958 and became a well-respected Head of Geography. Peter enjoyed ‘treading the boards’ especially Gilbert & Sullivan. He was an actor and Business Manager for Ramsgate Amateur Operatic Society.

Neither Bob nor Peter married. They read extensively and the house became a library for their books. Both retired early when their mother became terminally ill in 1985 and shared their Mum’s care until she died later that year.

Bob then fell ill in the 1990s and spent his last years in a local nursing home until his death in 2012. Peter visited him every day possible and chose to remain living at No.71, the family home. Peter lived mainly in just two rooms of the large house until his death in 2016.

The Dallison family are now reunited in St. Peter’s Churchyard, in Broadstairs – a short walk from Gladstone Road.

Discuss your selling options

Start a confidential, no-obligations meeting with Melissa, our lead buyer, who will call you back shortly.

Melissa Mayhew

Lead buyer - Maybank Homes

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