
Avis Crocombe (c. 1839–1927) was an English
domestic servant
A domestic worker or domestic servant is a person who works within the scope of a residence. The term "domestic service" applies to the equivalent occupational category. In traditional English contexts, such a person was said to be "in service ...
who was the head cook during the 1880s at
Audley End House
Audley End House is a largely early 17th-century country house outside Saffron Walden, Essex, England. It is a prodigy house, known as one of the finest Jacobean houses in England.
Audley End is now one-third of its original size, but is st ...
, a 17th-century country house near
Saffron Walden
Saffron Walden is a market town in the Uttlesford district of Essex, England, north of Bishop's Stortford, south of Cambridge and north of London. It retains a rural appearance and some buildings of the medieval period. The population was 15, ...
in England. She found fame nearly a century after her death due to being portrayed in a series of
YouTube
YouTube is a global online video sharing and social media platform headquartered in San Bruno, California. It was launched on February 14, 2005, by Steve Chen, Chad Hurley, and Jawed Karim. It is owned by Google, and is the second most ...
videos made by
English Heritage
English Heritage (officially the English Heritage Trust) is a charity that manages over 400 historic monuments, buildings and places. These include prehistoric sites, medieval castles, Roman forts and country houses.
The charity states that i ...
, who now manage the site. These include a small selection from her own manuscript cookery book. Crocombe and other individuals from the 1880s are the focus of a long-running live interpretation project at Audley End, which started in 2008 and is still ongoing as of 2022.
Life
Avis Crocombe was born into a large family at
Martinhoe
Martinhoe is a small settlement and civil parish in North Devon district of Devon, England. Martinhoe is within the Exmoor National Park, the smallest National Park in England. In the 2011 census Martinhoe Parish was recorded as having a populat ...
, Devon, around 1839
[Avis Crocombe England and Wales Census, 1881.]
Family Search. Retrieved 4 October 2018. to Richard Crocombe, a farmer, and Agnes Crocombe.
Avis entered domestic service before her 13th birthday.
She initially worked for her brother John in Devon, but by 1861 was working as a kitchenmaid for
John Townshend, Viscount Sydney, one of a staff of at least 10, including a male cook and several footmen. By 1871, she was working as a cook and housekeeper in the household of
Thomas Proctor Beauchamp at
Langley Hall
Langley Hall is a red-brick building in the Palladian style, formerly a country house but now a private school, located near Loddon, Norfolk, England. It is a grade I listed building.
The house was built in the Palladian style of nearby Holkham ...
, Norfolk, one of 16 servants employed by the family. Sometime before 1881, she became cook to the family of
the 5th Baron Braybrooke
Baron Braybrooke, of Braybrooke in the County of Northampton, is a title in the Peerage of Great Britain. It was created in 1788 for John Griffin, 4th Baron Howard de Walden, with remainder to his kinsman Richard Neville-Aldworth. Lord Howard ...
whose country seat was at
Audley End House
Audley End House is a largely early 17th-century country house outside Saffron Walden, Essex, England. It is a prodigy house, known as one of the finest Jacobean houses in England.
Audley End is now one-third of its original size, but is st ...
near
Saffron Walden
Saffron Walden is a market town in the Uttlesford district of Essex, England, north of Bishop's Stortford, south of Cambridge and north of London. It retains a rural appearance and some buildings of the medieval period. The population was 15, ...
.
As was usual for cooks, she also worked at the family's home in London at
Upper Brook Street
Brook Street is an axial street in the exclusive central London district of Mayfair. Most of it is leasehold, paying ground rent to and seeking lease renewals from the reversioner, that since before 1800, has been the Grosvenor Estate. Named ...
, and for them in their seaside home at Branksome Towers in Bournemouth.
[ She replaced a male French chef (a Mons. Merer), as the family was probably cost-cutting. Avis would have been substantially cheaper. Although staff wages are not known at Audley for 1881, in general male cooks commanded around £100-120 p.a., (the upper end if French), whereas women's salaries ranged from £40-60. Those who, like Avis, had trained under male cooks could expect higher wages than those who had not.
Avis Crocombe left Audley End in 1884 when she married Benjamin Stride, who ran a lodging house in London. He died in 1893, leaving £496.6s.8d, and she continued to run the business, along with his daughter (her step-daughter) Anna-Jane.][ ] She died in 1927, aged 88, by now a servant-keeper herself.
Legacy
In 2008, English Heritage, a charity which cares for over 400 monuments and sites across England, including Audley End, undertook a multi-million pound restoration of the service wing, funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund
The National Lottery Heritage Fund, formerly the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF), distributes a share of National Lottery funding, supporting a wide range of heritage projects across the United Kingdom.
History
The fund's predecessor bodies were ...
. As part of the interpretation, historical interpretation company Past Pleasures provided costumed characters, who animated the service wing portraying the servants as listed in the 1881 census. The project centred around live cookery, with the team in character, talking to the public and sharing with them recipes from the era. It was initially led by food historia
Annie Gray
and then by experienced historical interpreter and educator
Kathy Hipperson
Initially, recipes were sourced from books appropriate to the era, but in 2009, Benjamin Stride's descendant Robert Stride bought tickets to see a concert at Audley End. The name sparked a memory, and he realised that he had Avis's hand-written recipe book in a drawer. He donated it to English Heritage, and the costumed team were able to integrate the recipes written by Avis into their work. The book also enabled Gray to work more closely on the sources available to Crocombe, and the style of cookery likely to have been seen at Audley in the 1880s. Crocombe copied several recipes from Eliza Acton
Eliza Acton (17 April 1799 – 13 February 1859) was an English food writer and poet who produced one of Britain's first cookery books aimed at the domestic reader, '' Modern Cookery for Private Families''. The book introduced the now-un ...
's ''Modern Cookery for Private Families'' (1845), for example, while others were sourced from newspapers and visitors to the house.[Meet the YouTube cook going viral - 140 years after her death.](_blank)
Freddie Lynne, Cambridgeshire Live, 9 September 2018. Retrieved 4 October 2018.
Avis Crocombe is regularly portrayed as part of the interpretation at the house, and is played by a number of different interpreters.
YouTube
English Heritage has commissioned a number of videos for their YouTube
YouTube is a global online video sharing and social media platform headquartered in San Bruno, California. It was launched on February 14, 2005, by Steve Chen, Chad Hurley, and Jawed Karim. It is owned by Google, and is the second most ...
channel featuring Kathy Hipperson playing Avis. Coming under the banner of 'The Victorian Way', they are part-demonstration, part-historical showcase, and draw upon recipes from both Avis' book and many others from the period, to both engage and entertain as part of English Heritage's mission, to 'inspire and entertain', with 'authenticity, quality, imagination, responsibility and fun'. The videos were produced by Gareth Clifford of the Digital Content Team, assisted by Annie Gray, and several English Heritage staff have also appeared, including historian Andrew Hann (whose work on Avis has enabled positive identification of a photograph donated with the recipe book as probably being Avis and Benjamin), and the current curator of Audley End, Peter Moore. In 2018 English Heritage also collaborated with James Townsend & Son, an American costumed interpretation and historic props company, with crossover videos featuring packages sent from the UK to the US and vice versa. English Heritage has also collaborated with dress historian Bernadette Banner
Bernadette Banner (born ) is an American YouTuber, author, and former costume assistant currently based in London. She is known for her interest in and promotion of historical dress reconstruction and study of a range of historical fashion period ...
in three videos.
The Victorian Way videos had received over 200 million views as of June 2021.[Victorian cook's 1880s recipes inspire millions online.](_blank)
BBC News, 30 August 2018. Retrieved 4 October 2018. In June 2019, English Heritage won both Breakthrough Advertiser and the Grand Prix awards at the YouTube
YouTube is a global online video sharing and social media platform headquartered in San Bruno, California. It was launched on February 14, 2005, by Steve Chen, Chad Hurley, and Jawed Karim. It is owned by Google, and is the second most ...
Works (UK) awards. In late 2019, a tie-in book was announced with recipes and history. The book was eventually released in September 2020 and titled "How To Cook The Victorian Way With Mrs Crocombe".
File:Audley End House & Gardens (EH) 06-05-2012 (7710677416).jpg, Kathy Hipperson playing Avis Crocombe
File:Audley End House & Gardens (EH) 06-05-2012 (7710680614).jpg, Kathy Hipperson and assistant
File:Audley End House & Gardens (EH) 06-05-2012 (7710682888).jpg, Kitchens at Audley End House seen in 2012
References
External links
* The ful
Victorian Way
playlist on the English Heritage YouTube channel
*Th
Service Wing
page at the Audley End website, including link to event days when the costumed team can be seen on site.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Crocombe, Avis
People from North Devon (district)
English domestic workers
Hoteliers
English chefs
Women chefs
19th-century British women
20th-century British women
1830s births
1927 deaths
Year of birth uncertain
Women of the Victorian era