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Mazda Fountain

Colour postcard from 1939
By Maralyn Eden

This postcard was sent from Maralyn Eden's Grandmother to her Dad in 1939.

Photo:Mazda Fountain, Victoria Gardens, Brighton

Mazda Fountain, Victoria Gardens, Brighton

From the private collection of Maralyn Eden

Audio transcripts

Sent to the website on 28-03-04
This page was added on 22/03/2006.

Comments:

This is how I remember the fountain - really colourful, not just plain white light as now.
By Graham French (12/05/2004)
I never knew this sad fountain could look so stunning - so bright and colourful it looks like fairy land. Wouldn't it be great to see it like this again? But I fear we never will - very sad.
By Sharron (02/08/2005)

When I was a child, I used to look in wonderment at this fountain. I wonder why now it can not be got up to it's previous glory.

By Patrick Kite (16/12/2006)

With Brighton being the gay capital of the U.K., would it not be quite apropriate to reintroduce the rainbow colours to this relic of a vibrant fountain?

By Dave (06/02/2008)

I remember the Mazda Fountain too. In the summer, it was a treat for us as a family to walk from our house in Lower Bevendean, up Plymouth Avenue, over the top of the hill into Queen's Park road, down to the pier. As it got dark, we made our way to the wonderful site of the fountain in all it's colour. How did that work? us little uns said, then off to St Peter's Church and home on the bus. It would be great to see it working again.

By Pamela Carpenter now Mellish (17/04/2008)

My father Thomas Fry wired up the Mazda in 1930. I am not sure whether at the time he worked for Thomon-Houston or Brighton Electricity board. He told me the sequence of lights was obtained by a revolving cylinder of contacts. During the war he was responsible for the maintenance of searchlights in the southern command.
When he retired he was Chief Electrical Engineer for the British Sugar Corporation in Kings Lynn

By Alan Fry (28/05/2008)

This fountain was a highlight as we passed in my dad's van at night, always changing colour. In the 1960s Brighton was much brighter and more colourful, just a bit jaded now, sad really...

By Ernie Puddick (05/10/2008)

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