Normandie, 22 Severn Road / 409 The Peak [????-????]

Submitted by CL on Fri, 12/24/2010 - 22:52
Current condition
Demolished / No longer exists

Can anyone please tell me what happened to the old colonial house on Severn Road called Normandie.  It used to be on Number 22 Severn Road, right next to Number 20.  

Many thanks!

Photos that show this Place

Comments

"Normandie", 22 Severn Road, belonged to very good friends of my parents, Norma and Bertie Rasmussen.  It was a spectacular house and I was often a guest there as a child.  The last time I visited Norma and Bertie was in 1988.  As far as I remember, it was also a haunted house.  Apparently, the ghost of the former owner - who had committed suicide - walked around the attic at night.  I believe the house has now been pulled down - such a pity.

 

Apologies, but the house was not owned by Bertie and Norma. It was owned by Coy a French gentleman who was a good friend of my father. We lived at 16 Severn Road. I believe that Coy took Bertie and Norma in when they fled Shanghai because of the Japanese invasion. They then just all kept living together. When Coy died Norma inherited the house. I mean no disrespect to Norma or Bertie, Norma was kind of a grandmother to me.

I believe you are right.  I also knew Coy very well - I used to go over and have French lessons with him and I knew that the three of them had lived together for years.  I adored Norma.  The last time I saw her was when she was living in Italy with her daughter Kiki but unfortunately I do not have any contact any more.  They were all very good freinds of my parents and I knew the house well.  Would love to see Norma again.

 

I am glad that you also have such lovely memories. It was such a lovely house and a shame it was destroyed. After all these years I still live on the Peak and go past the driveway occasionally. The strange thing is that I have never met anyone else who remembers Coy. I still struggle to spell his last name as my French is so bad.

I will tell you a funny story about Coy. My father was about 45 and Coy 80. My father asked him "When do you stop worrying about your kids?" And Coy said "At 50". My father replied "Well I only have 5 more years!"  to which Coy said "Not when you are 50 but when the children are 50!"

As you may know, it is a difficult question as to whether Coy ever had a son. He was a kind man and I think he did his best.

Lucky you still living on the Peak.  I now live in Bremen in Germany with my German husband.  The last time I saw Coy was in 1988 when I went to Hong Kong for a visit with my husband.  It was also the last time I visited "Normandie".  They still had that fabulous grand piano in the sitting room and the view, unforgettable to both sides!  I used to walk to "Normandie" every Saturday morning for my French lessons.  We lived at 86 Peak Road in front of the Peak Police Station at the beginning of Gough Hill Road.  At that time, I was at school at St.Pauls Convent School, by the way, recommended by Norma!

By the way, "Normandie" was in fact haunted by the former owner.  Norma confirmed this to me and, although this sounds crazy, I also had a strange exprience there.  It was during my French lessons, the door handle went down although nobody was there and the dog, who was sitting in front of the door, started to growl.  As a child, I was always a little afraid of the house.  One of the last photos taken of my dad before he died of a stroke in 1966 was of the two of us standing in the garden of "Normandie".

Our family moved into Normandie around 1956 to 1959. My father, William Stevenson, was a foreign correspondent for the Toronto Star. I have many memories from Normandie and most impressionable of all was the view. 

I have bought a 1930s film reel recently and I could find the garden and exterior of Normandie from part of the video clip. I believe the two ladies in the garden might be the occupiers.

Normandie 1930s(1).jpg
Normandie 1930s(1).jpg, by Au
Normandie 1930s(2).jpg
Normandie 1930s(2).jpg, by Au
Normandie 1930s(3).jpg
Normandie 1930s(3).jpg, by Au
Normandie 1930s(4).jpg
Normandie 1930s(4).jpg, by Au
Normandie 1930s(5).jpg
Normandie 1930s(5).jpg, by Au

 

I remember Kiki as one of Carol Bateman's star pupils when I took ballet classes under Miss Bateman at the Helena May Institute around the early to mid fifties.  We younger pupils admired and looked up to Kiki for her talent.  She, along with Raymond Liao, were the lead dancers in two of the productions Miss Bateman presented at the Lee Theater in Causeway Bay. I was in her Mother Goose production in which I performed a solo dance about a Portuguese fishergirl.  I was also a part of another production she presented, where a group of us performed to the music of the Swedish Rhapsody, with Kiki and Raymond as the leads.  I still have the book, Ballet for Boys and Girls by Hugh Fisher, that Miss Bateman gave to me and personally signed, wishing me a Merry Christmas and dated 1954.

Carol Bateman was my mother. My parents were very good friends of the Rasmussens. I was born in 1952 and have a photo of Kiki at my christening at St. John's Cathedral.

Adrienne, thank you for following up on my comment.  I knew Miss Bateman's maried name was Howell and that you were her daughter.  It was such an honor to learn ballet from your mother.  She was the most prestigious and well known ballet instructor in Hong Kong, still remembered and honored by the school of dancing that carries her name.

Thank you so much for your kind comment. My mother was such an example for me in so many ways. I am afraid I disappointed her as I did not like ballet at all.

As a child, I used to go in and out of Normandie. I had weekly French lessons with Claude Fournier - did not help me mu h as I now live in Germany with my German husband. I absolutely adored my Auntie Norma and was a bridesmaid at Kiki's first wedding.

I remember Kiki (actually Kirsten) Rasmussen from 1a KGV 1953-4, when we were in the same class. She was also a very talented singer.

She and I travelled together by bus after school once a week to the studio of Maestro Elizio Gualdi in Nathan Rd, she for singing training preparatory to some competition - which I think she won with "Somewhere in Dalmatia lived a little girl...." (Must have made an indelible impression) - then onto me for piano lessons when she had finished.

I don't think she stayed on at KGV in subsequent years.