Stephen
Fortescue, solicitor, historian, author, campaigner, local politician and last
surviving founder of our Society, died peacefully on 8 August age 99 in
Born 17 July 1921 in Streatham, south
He qualified as a solicitor in 1946 and joined both the Surrey Archaeological Society and the Leatherhead and District Countryside Protection Society. He was invited to join the Committee of the latter and supported the formation of a local history and archaeological society. This was constituted on 16 October 1946 as the Leatherhead & District Local History Society. Stephen became treasurer and remained in that role until 1966. He would later become Chairman 1974-1980 and President 1990-1996.
During
his chairmanship, the Society reached membership of 350. To encourage further
growth he investigated buying Hampton Cottage in
He was well known in the local community as a property owner as well as running his legal practice. In 1959, as a committee member of the Bookham Residents Association, he was asked to stand for Leatherhead Urban District Council as an independent. He was subsequently elected to four council committees and in 1964 became Vice-Chairman of the Council itself, holding the office for two years before taking over as Chairman in 1966.
In the 1960s he backed the project to build a new theatre on the site of Leatherhead’s Crescent Cinema. Leatherhead Council agreed a grant of £10,000 and Stephen handed over the first instalment in 1968. He became a theatre trustee and was active in fund-raising for what became the Thorndike and later Leatherhead Theatre.
Stephen
retired in 1986 but never gave up many voluntary activities. A Fellow of the
Society of Antiquaries, in the 1970s he wrote a string of detailed local
history books on Bookham and the vicinity which now provide a crucial source
for researchers. He was also a keen supporter of The Children’s Society,
founded by his grandfather, his namesake. His first wife Mary, died in 1991 and
was buried at St Nicolas Church, Great Bookham. He later remarried and lived
very happily with Henrietta in Awliscombe,